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XV The Little Rebel1 MY father
used to
be a bookkeeper in a Fredericksburg store, and for two years before the
war he
had just been dying of dispepsia. He didn’t weigh over one hundred and
twenty
pounds and was nothing on earth but a frame of bones. One day he came
home from
work and said, "Well, war has been declared, and I must join the
army." He got an
appointment as quartermaster. We thought he could never stand army
life, but he
had to go out foraging, and the knocking about did him good. He
recovered from
his dispepsia, put on flesh, and became hearty and strong. However, after he'd been in the army about a year he was taken sick with typhoid fever down in Richmon'. Presently he began to get better, and he felt that he must come home. The Yankees had control of Fredericksburg at that time. So he didn’t dare come straight here, but stopped a few miles away at the home of a Mrs. Smith, who was a friend of ours. He asked her to get word to Maw, and she sent her little boy with the family carriage and a note that said: "Come at once. Have a surprise in store for you." We lived
in a nice
large house on the main street in the business part of the town. I was
sixteen
then, and I had two brothers who were both younger, and a sister who
was a
little tot just beginning to walk. The
carriage that
our friend sent was drawn by one horse, but it had two seats, and me
and Maw
and my little sister got in and went along. When we reached Mrs.
Smith's house,
there was Father, and he looked like death itself he was so white and
thin, for
he'd been ill a long time. I suppose his full black beard and long
black hair
made him appear all the paler. We got there in time for supper, and we
stayed
two days. It was on a Sunday afternoon that we started for home. Father
walked
along with us as far as the road gate to bid us good-by. We got in the
carriage
and left him standing there, and Mother called back, "When you get to
Richmon' be sure to write." He was a
great home
body, and it like to have killed him to have to part from us. He just
thought
to himself, "Can I give them up and not see the others?" and instead
of going to our friend's house he came right on toward Fredericksburg.
The
railroad track made a short cut into the town, and he followed that. He
had on
citizens' clothes, and nobody paid any attention to him. So he walked
on and on,
and at last came in at the front gate of his own home. That was shortly
after
we'd got here, and Mother had just gone across the street to tell some
of the
neighbors that she'd seen him. We sent for her, and when she came and
found out
who was there she was perfectly miserable. of course she was glad to
see him,
but she was just wild she was so 'fraid the Yankees would ketch him. The Yankee
suttlers
had stores in the town, and we knew a little Northern drummer boy who
worked
for one of them. He had been sick a while before, and Maw was so sorry
for him
that she had him stay at our house where she could take care of him. On
the day
after Paw came into town this drummer boy spoke to me and said he 'd
like to
give my father some oranges and bananas. "You're
foolish,
boy," I said. "You haven't seen any man in our house." "Yes," he
said, "I saw one go in yesterday, and I thought he looked like you." "Oh, no!"
I said, "but you can bring that fruit to me. I'll eat it myself." Father
stayed in
town a week, but he went to the house of a friend for the last three
days, we
were so fearful he would be discovered if he remained with us. Sunday
came, and
about seven o'clock in the morning he went out on the street carrying a
little
bucket in his hand as if he was going blackberrying. Mother had told
him
good-by the night before. "Don't come again, please, till after the
war," she begged. Things
were getting
too hot here, and it was certainly high time that he made his way out.
The town
was just filled with Confederate soldiers spying, and we'd heard there
was
goin' to be a general search for 'em. Sure enough, on Sunday afternoon,
when
Paw had only been gone a few hours, a dozen men with an officer came to
the
house, and the officer said to Maw, "Have you seen Captain Turner?" "No," she
said, and she considered that she was tellin' the truth because she
called him
Jim. But the
officer
insisted on searching the premises. Maw was nervous, and I did most of
the
talking, and I followed the officer as he went about. He noticed that I
wore a
breastpin with a man's portrait on it, and he said, "Is that Captain
Turner's picture on your breastpin?" "You can
find
out, sir, if you are able," I retorted. "You're lookin' for Captain
Turner, and you ought to know whether this is the picture of the person
you're
after." "Isn't
that
your father?" the officer asked. " I
haven't
told you who it is," I answered. "You're a
saucy little minx," he said. There we
were —
only him and me — up on the third floor jawing. He searched from the
cellar to
the roof. There wasn’t any place he didn’t search in, I tell you. He
turned up
the beds, and he looked in the wardrobes and closets. He even pulled
open the
bureau drawers, and I said, "Do you think Captain Turner is small
enough
to get in there?" At last he climbed out of a dormer window onto the slate roof, crawled up to the ridge, and looked down the chimney. I don't know how on earth he ever got up there. When he was comin' back his feet slipped, and I leaned out of the window and just managed to ketch him by his two arms. I held on and hollered, "Help!" A NARROW ESCAPE One of his
men come
rushing up the steps, and Maw come, too. They helped pull him in.
"Oh!" he gasped, "you have saved my life." He was
speakin' to
me. "I didn’t do it from choice," I said, "but because I didn’t
want a dead Yankee on the place on Sunday afternoon." That was a
close
call for him. If he'd fallen three stories onto our brick-paved yard
he'd have
been killed. Father had
started
off as if he was goin' berrying, and he didn’t meet a soul. He went
right out
the plank road west of the town, and kept on walkin', walkin', till he
just had
to sit down to rest himself. But finally he got to Mrs. Smith's where
he was
before. "Well, for
heaven's sake! where are you goin' now?" she asked, when she found him
at
her door. "I'm
tryin' to
make Richmon'," he said. He stayed
at Mrs.
Smith's over night. Next morning, while he was eating breakfast, he
looked out
and saw a dust rising from the road in the distance. "I believe there
are
soldiers comin'," he said. But Mrs.
Smith told
him the dust was raised by cattle, and Father went on eating. Presently
he
heard the sound of horses' hoofs and saw from the window a whole
company of
cavalry entering the yard. He dodged out of a back door and started
down the
hill toward the woods. The cavalrymen saw him, and five of them charged
after
him. By the time he 'd crossed the yard they were so close they struck
at him
with their sabers. He made a dive through the barnyard gate, and the
gate
closed after him. His pursuers had to stop and open it, and that gave
him a
chance to jump the barnyard fence into a field. Then he ran on down the
hill to
a little spring branch in among a right heavy growth of trees. The
cavalrymen
had a little difficulty in getting their horses over the fence, and
their
leader was very angry. He stood up in his saddle and shouted to his
followers:
"Circle to the right two abreast. We'll find that man if we find him in
hell to-night." Father had
got into
the woods, and he lay down right in the water of the little branch —
and him
gettin' over the typhoid fever. The cavalrymen dashed about huntin' for
him,
and if he'd had a three foot stick in his hand he could have touched
them with
it they came so close, but they didn’t find him. By and by,
the men
gave up their search, and Mrs. Smith sent a negro woman to get some
water down
at the spring, which was near where she'd seen Father disappear among
the
trees. "If you see Captain Turner," she said, "tell him to keep
on in the woods and not try to come back to the house." The woman
went to
the spring, and Father crawled out of the branch and spoke to her, and
she
said, "Ain't they done killed you?" She was
excited and
talked louder than he thought was necessary. "Hush!" he said.
"Where are those men who were chasin' me?" "Their
commander called 'em back, to the house," she answered. "Well,"
he said, "you can tell Mis' Lizzie I'm safe so far." Then the
colored
woman gave him the message her mistress had sent, and walked off with
the
bucket of water on her head as if nothing had happened. The cavalrymen
were
still at the house, and they questioned her, but didn’t discover her
secret.
She was right smart not to give it away. Father
kept out of
sight on the wood roads till he got way up country, and in the end he
reached
Richmon' in safety. The front
room of
our house was made for a store, and a man by the name of Jones rented
it and
kept groceries. He often sold things to the Union soldiers who were
camped on
the other side of the Rappahanock for several months before the battle.
We had
burnt the bridges in '61, but a wire bridge for foot passengers had
been fixed
up, and the soldiers would come over on that, eighteen or twenty in a
bunch, to
visit the city. Sometimes the streets would be thronged with 'em. One day a
soldier
came into the grocery store and went behind the counter and took a
piece of
tobacco, and he wasn’t goin' to pay. The tobacco only cost ten cents,
and he
took it for a projec' more than anything else. That was his idea of
fun.
"Stop!" Mr. Jones said. "Pay for what you've taken or I'll have
you arrested, sir." But the
man went
off with the tobacco. Then Mr. Jones just spoke to a guard, and the
soldier was
locked up for a certain number of days as a punishment. The officers
were right
strict with the men and tried to make 'em behave themselves, but in a
crowd
like that, you know, there's bound to be some rowdies. Early in
December
that soldier hollered across the river to our pickets: "You tell Roy
Jones
he'd better get out of town. We 're goin' to hang him if we ketch him,
and
we're goin' to burn his store." The threat
was
reported to my mother, and she was very uneasy. Mr. Jones had begun to
move his
business to a town farther south, things were so unsettled at
Fredericksburg,
and Mother said to him, "Please take your sign along with your
goods." "Oh,
yes!" he said, "I'll sure take that. I'll need it where I'm
goin'." He got it
off from
the store front and put it inside, and there he left it while he went
with a
load of goods to his new location. He'd got to come back for another
load, and
then he intended to carry along the sign. But a couple of days later
our
minister came to the house and said to Mother: "Sister Turner, orders
are
bein' sent around that we must leave before daybreak to-morrow. The
Yankees are
goin' to shell the town." The
Northern
commander and General Lee had consulted under a flag of truce, and
they'd
agreed to give the citizens that warning. Maw didn’t want to leave. Our
soldiers were in the town then, and she vowed she would stay cookin'
and
handin' out things to 'em. But it
seemed as if
everybody else was gettin' out of here. They went up the road by the
dozen
carrying bundles of clothes. I set up there in our second story window,
and
watched 'em. One man went past with such a large bundle I couldn’t help
laughing. I pointed him out to Maw and said, "It looks to me as if that
man had a feather bed on his back." "Mary, I
believe you'd laugh at your own
funeral," Maw told me. "Well," I
said, "I reckon I'm half-past silly." Lots of
people went
out of town on the cars. Others went in teams, and they hired
everything in the
world in the shape of a vehicle that was available. They were branchin'
out
from the town anywhere they could get. There were families of means
that took
refuge in little log cabins — even in the negro cabins — and were glad
of the
shelter. At last
Maw
consented to leave, but when I went for a carriage I couldn’t get one,
nor a
cart, nor a vestige of anything. But General Lee sent in ten big
canvas-covered
army wagons, late that night, and I got one of those. We put in a bed
and some
provisions, and then got in ourselves. My aunt, who lived across the
street,
went with us. It was just getting daylight in the morning when we
started. I
had a Confederate flag hanging out of the rear of the wagon, and my
aunt was
scared to death because the batteries across the river had a direct
line on us.
She was afraid the Yankees would shoot us as we was drivin' up the
street. "I don't
care," I said; "I'm goin' to fly my colors. They have no business
makin' us go out of town, If they don't want me to fly my flag they can
let us
stay here." We'd gone
a mile or
two, and I was settin' there in the wagon when we met some troops
comin' up the
road. General Lee and his staff were with 'em, and I waved my flag and
the
general saluted it. About three miles farther on we got beyond the
firing line,
and the captain of the wagon train spoke to us and said, "Now here's
where
I'm ordered to dump everybody, and you'll have to get out." "No,
indeed," I said, "you'll not put us out here. I'm Captain Turner's
daughter." All the
army men
knew Captain Turner, and the wagon master said he'd take us wherever we
wanted
to go. A friend of ours, Mr. Holliday, lived eight miles from town out
on that
road, He had a big farm and was quite a wealthy man before the war. He
must
have owned hundreds of slaves. Their cabins were all around his house,
almost
like a village, and each family had a little garden spot. The first
time I was
ever there I went with Father, and we met some little darkies as we
approached
the house. Father asked them who they belonged to. "We belong
to
Mr. John Holliday," they said, "and he's a mighty nice man." "Doesn't
he
whip you?" Father said. "No, sir,"
the oldest child replied, "and he wouldn’t let my mammy whip me if he
knew
it." When we
refugeed I
had the army wagon take us to Mr. Holliday's. I only weighed
sixty-eight
pounds, but I'd put on three dresses that morning — in fact, I was
wearing nearly
all the clothes I possessed; and the colored man who helped us out of
the wagon
thought I looked so big and strong that I didn’t need any assistance,
and I
just flopped out. A good
many others
had flocked to Mr. Holliday's, and when night came we had to sleep
anywhere we
could. I shared a room with twelve others. We arranged blankets and
quilts on
the floor so we could lie side by side, one right after the other. When
they
had all lain down except me I counted 'em and said : "I won't be the
thirteenth.
I 'm goin' to sit up in a chair." Don't you
know,
speakin' of that, the war was a sad thing, and it was often a hardship
bein'
knocked around as we were, but we had right much fun. We didn’t
have
pillows that night, and we tipped chairs down so the backs would slant
up for
us to rest our heads on. But after the first night we arranged things
so we
were more comfortable. Mr.
Holliday's
house was heated only by fireplaces, and I shall never forget how cold
it was
there in those days of early winter. We had great big fires, but you
had to sit
right on top of 'em to keep warm. I said to Maw, "I feel like my face
was
burning up and my back freezing up here before this fire." We'd been
at Mr.
Holliday's nearly a week and there'd been no bombarding yet; so I
decided to go
to town and see if I could save some furniture. I walked, and two other
ladies
came with me. A part of the way we went around by paths and through
strips of
woods to flank the pickets. But we finally met a picket down here back
of the
town, and he says, "Ladies, where are you goin'?" We told
him what we
wanted to do, and he let us come on in. The place was almost deserted.
There
were just a few people about, and all the stores were closed except one
or two
and the eating-places for the soldiers to get a lunch. I went to an
officer,
and he ordered two men to take a four horse wagon and go with me. He
said I
could fill that with whatever we wanted to carry off, and he would
provide an
ambulance for me and my friends to ride back in. I packed away some of
the
things at the house, and had the men put in the wagon such articles as
we
needed for every-day use. I know the load included considerable
clothing,
several chairs and beds, and a couple of bureaus. Later in the day we
returned
to Mr. Holliday's. That was December 12th. The next
morning,
about five o'clock, I reckon, I was waked by the report of a cannon. It
shook
the glassware in the china closet that stood in the room where we were
sleeping. The gun was fired by the Confederates to announce that the
Yankees
were attempting to cross the river. After some sharp fighting the
Federals
succeeded in making pontoon bridges, and in order to drive back the
Confederates they shelled the town off and on all day. Finally they got
across
and our men retreated. When the
town fell
into their hands some of them went into a house near ours and asked a
negro
servant, who was the only person at home there, for a firebrand. He
wanted to
know what they intended to do with it. They said,
"We're goin' to burn that house across the way because Roy Jones, who
treated us so bad has his grocery store in it." "But Jones
has
moved away," the negro told 'em. "You can't
fool us," they said. "We've looked through the window, and we can see
his sign inside." So they
took a chunk
of fire from the kitchen fireplace and went into our cellar and started
a
blaze. We had thirteen cords of wood in the cellar and the greatest
quantity of
groceries that my Paw had put in to last two or three years. He was a
splendid
provider. When he was buying supplies for the army he would get
supplies for
us, and we had everything in the world we wanted. There were three
barrels of
flour, two barrels of sugar, a sack of coffee, and a barrel of corned
beef, and
there were the hams and shoulders of three hogs hung up ready cured.
All that
was burned, and so was our china-ware and library and everything. I
never
bothered with any deep literature then, but Father said he had books he
could n
't replace to save his life. The house of our nearest neighbor caught
fire from
ours, and went up in flames; and all that destruction was the result of
the
soldiers' antipathy toward one man — our tenant, Jones. On the
night of the
twelfth the ladies who were at the Hollidays' scraped lint, and I have
n 't
made any since. I got my share of makin' it then. We certainly did work
hard. I
scraped two tablecloths into lint with my penknife. Indeed, I scraped
right
down through my clothing to the flesh, and I said to the others, "It's
time I was dressin' my own wounds." After the
fightin'
began the next day I walked with a lady friend up to within three miles
of the
town. The bullets were flying, and there were lots of wounded who
needed
attention, and we thought we would help take care of them. We came to a
field
hospital where they had amputation tables all about among the trees of
an
orchard close to the main road. The doctors were cutting off arms and
legs, and
the amputated limbs lay in piles by the tables. It was such a terrible
sight
that we did n 't stay there long. We could n 't stand it, and we
returned to
Mr. Holliday's. All day
the
ambulances were going past the house on their way to the nearest
railroad
station. You could hear the wounded men in them groanin' a quarter of a
mile
away, it hurt the poor things so to jolt over the road. A good many of
the
ambulances stopped in front of the house to have the men's wounds
dressed, and
sometimes the men would be laid out on the grass. The rags on their
wounds got
so dry they chafed them, and we had to wash the wounds and put on clean
cloths.
I don 't know how many sheets we tore up. "O lady!
we do
thank you so much," they'd say when they were leaving. They were taken
six
miles farther to the railroad and sent on to Richmon'. The sight
of blood
makes me faint. I can't bear it. I can't even cut a piece of fresh meat
for my
dogs. But I think you can get used to anything when you have to; and it
seems
to me, on that battle day, I got to helping with the wounded before I
knew it,
and I wasn’t affected by what I saw at all. Most of
the
fighting was done just back of the town where the Yankees tried to
force the
Confederates from their position on Marye's Hill. Lines of cannon
crowned the
height, and the sides were covered with rifle-pits which concealed a
host of
sharpshooters, and at the base of the hill was a stone wall behind
which
crouched several regiments of infantry. Six assaults were made, but not
a
single Yankee could get beyond that wall. The Union loss was twelve
thousand,
and ours less than half that number. You have
no idea
what a wreck this town was after the battle — so many buildings burned,
and so
many battered by the balls and shells, and so many of them pillaged.
The
soldiers went into the house of an old lady who lived the second block
from us,
and they took her haircloth parlor suite out into the street and some
of the
things were broken all to pieces. They pulled a lot of clothing out of
the
wardrobe, emptied the oil can and two or three cans of preserves onto
the
clothes, mopped 'em around, and threw 'em in a corner. I reckon they
did the
same thing in all the houses. They seemed to want to ruin whatever they
could
lay their hands on. I don't think they found much silver in their
rummaging.
Our people connived every way in the world to hide and keep that. I heard a
man tell
how at his house they made batter in a bureau drawer and opened the
piano and
poured the batter all over the wires. He never saw such a mess in his
life.
He'd refugeed, but he came back right after the battle to find out how
things
were lookin' at his place. He had a mirror that his daughters could see
themselves in full length from head to foot, and the soldiers had
busted that
all to pieces, and they had taken an axe and split a wardrobe from end
to end.
He was a real ignorant old man, but he had sense enough to make plenty
of
money. Oh, yes indeed! It was the
fall of
'63 when we moved back to town. The place looked pretty desolate. There
were a
good many women here, but only a few men and those all old. Supplies
were
scanty and prices way up in G. We toasted wheat and rye and used it for
coffee.
Some one from the country told me the other day that at his house they
had
drank wheat coffee ever since the war. They liked it better than the
real
coffee and thought it was much healthier. Another substitute for coffee
was
made out of sweet potatoes. We peeled the potatoes and sliced them very
thin,
then toasted the slices in the oven and ground them up, and that potato
coffee
tasted splendid. The first
year of
the war Mother took a tin box that had two compartments, and filled one
side
with Java coffee, and the other with crushed loaf sugar. Each
compartment had a
lid and held about five pounds, I reckon. We'd just use the coffee once
in a
while when we wanted it for extra occasions. Once we
went to
Richmon', and Mother took her box of coffee and sugar along. The
baggage master
who put it on the train for her said, "You surely must have all your
gold
and silver in this, it is so heavy." "What I've
got
in there is just as precious as gold to me," Maw said, and she told him
what the box contained. We used to
buy
things of an old gentleman who ran the blockade. He never would tell
how he
managed it, but I know he went up to Alexandria to get the goods. He
just
brought shoes and drygoods and articles of that sort. Toward the end of
the war
Mother got a pair of Congress gaiters from the old man. He said they
would be
two dollars in silver, or two hundred dollars in Confederate money.
Mother said
she didn’t have the silver, so she paid him the two hundred dollars.
About the
same time she paid twenty-four dollars for a pound of sugar. My
brothers went
barefoot. They had good shoes, but they didn’t want to wear them out
because
they were 'fraid they wouldn’t get any more. When Grant
was
fighting in this region in 1864 a boy roomed with us who carried
newspapers and
writing materials on to the front to sell to the Northern soldiers. He
went
back and forth on horseback. One day he brought me a haversack of
French patent
leather and the skirt of a saddle that he'd picked up on the Wilderness
battlefield. "You can make a pair of shoes out of these," he said. I took
them to a
shoemaker and paid twenty dollars to have him make me some shoes. The
leather
was very nice and soft, and I had those shoes yet after the war was
over. A good
many of the
Northern wounded and stragglers came here at the time of the Wilderness
fight.
They'd hardly begun to arrive when some of the officers went to the
stores and
got all the casks of whiskey they could find and broke the heads and
emptied
the whiskey into the gutters. The officers were fearful, if the men got
to
drinking, they'd tear up the town. I remember looking out of the window
and
seeing some of the soldiers with cups and canteens trying to save what
they could
of the whiskey from the gutters, and I said, "Maw, will you please look
at
that." At last
the war
ended, and Paw came home directly afterward. He had bought a lot of
tobacco in
Richmon' just before the surrender, but lost it in the fire that burned
the city.
If it had escaped the fire he could have sold it for thirty-five
thousand
dollars. When he reached home he said, "Richmon' has gone up, my
tobacco's
gone up, and I'm goin' up." Pretty
soon the
Union troops were passing through the town going home North. There was
cavalry,
artillery, and men on foot. We had some nice meat, and we went to
cooking for
'em. Mother and the servant and I sat up all one night cooking. We got
ready
ham and beef sandwiches and I told
him,
"Don't say whipped — just overpowered," The men
were pretty
well worn out, and it seemed to be quite a treat to 'em to get soft
bread.
Well, that was not to be wondered at considering how long they'd been
living on
hardtack. One of the
men had
a mule that he said he'd sell us, saddle and all, for twenty-five
dollars. It
was the prettiest thing I ever laid my eyes on — just like a butter
ball. Paw
told him he s'posed he'd stole it, but the man said, "No, I only want
to
sell the mule because I can't conveniently take it North." Mother and
I had
the money, and we bought the mule. Father had rode a horse home, and
now that
we had the two creatures it gave us a little impetus. He rented a piece
of
ground and put in a crop of corn, and then he secured the position of
bookkeeper in a flour mill, and we got along very well. We had a
Northern
man who was wounded in the Battle of the Wilderness staying at our
house for
three weeks after the battle. I was always telling him funny things.
"You
want to kill me laughing," he'd say. He was
wounded in
the cheek bone, and it hurt him to laugh. To retaliate and tease me,
he'd say,
"You'll marry a Yankee." "Never in
the
kingdom!" I'd declare. "I'm too much of a Rebel." Just
before he left
us an army friend of his who'd called to see him remarked to me: "I've
seen you before. One day you were down by the river, and I was on the
other
side. You wore a brown dress and had a little slat bonnet in your hand.
I was
looking through my field glasses." I recalled
the time.
Some men on horses across the river had called out: "Hello, sis! Want a
cup of good coffee?" They
thought I was
a child, I reckon, I was such a little bit of a midget. "Want a
hot
biscuit?" I called back, and pointed to a cannon that was near me. It's
curious, but
after the war I met the Northern soldier who saw me that day through
his field
glasses as he looked across the Rappahannock, and we married. I've
spent a good
deal of my life since up in Connecticut, but I haven't become a Yankee.
My
friends there call me, "The Little Rebel." ___________ |