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XXV The Soldier's Wife 1 THIS old
house here
on the heights of Fort Hill overlooking Vicksburg and the river and all
the
surrounding country was where my father and husband lived at the time
they went
away to join the Southern army. The hill was fortified by the
Confederates, and
you might think that fact accounts for its name, but really the name is
inherited from an old Spanish fort that was here long, long before on
the
topmost height — a ridge known as the Devil's Backbone. After the war had dragged on for about two years the Yankees began to close in around the town. They had a fleet of war vessels up beyond the turn of the Mississippi, and one day a curious thing happened. A Northern gunboat came down the river with a white flag a-flying, I watched her. Presently she approached the shore, and down went the flag. The commander stood with one foot raised ready to spring off, and right behind him were his men all armed and prepared to follow him. Evidently the plan was to come so close with the boat that the water-batteries couldn’t depress their guns enough to hit her. A few moments more and the troops would have landed, but just then a ball was sent through the boat's hull, and she backed out and started up the river. They hoisted their white flag again, but our batteries kept firing till she went in among the willows across the river and sank. It was an unfair deception to use a white flag that way. Our people
were
always on the lookout for attempts to run boats down past the
batteries, and of
course we wanted to thwart any such undertaking and destroy the boats.
We had
what was called the "Mosquito Fleet" which consisted of several
skiffs rowed by men belonging to the river batteries. As soon as the
enemy's
boats were detected coming the Mosquito Fleet was to row to the
opposite shore
and set fire to some houses there. That would light up the whole river
like
day, and then our guns could be aimed at the Yankee vessels. I recall
the first
alarm. We were in bed and asleep way in the night, and the signal
cannon
boomed. It had hardly fired when the Mosquito Fleet men had the houses
across
the river blazing. We jumped up and ran out on the gallery. First the
Yankees
sent down some scows filled with hay and that sort of thing. They
waited to see
how those dummies would fare, and afterward, on two different nights,
started
out with gunboats and transports. We looked on while some of the
vessels burned
or sank and the cannon balls flew back and forth. When the
enemy
began to bombard the town we fixed up a shelter over in a gully hardly
a
stone's throw from the house. Mother didn’t want to have a cave. She
was afraid
the roof would come down on her, and she said she'd rather be killed
and buried
than be buried alive. So we shoveled away enough dirt to make a level
place
like a shelf on the side of one of the steep slopes there in the
hollow. Then
we laid a floor and leaned some good long plank against the hill and
drove
stubs into the ground at the lower ends of the plank to hold 'em in
place. We
put mattresses inside, and we generally slept in the shelter at night
and were
often there in the daytime. One
morning I was
going along a cattle path on my way to the hollow when the Yankees
commenced
shooting, I stopped and said, "Never mind, I'm going to stay here and
see
what you are doing." About a
minute
later a shell dropped so close that the dirt it threw up buried me
nearly to my
knees. We had so
many
hairbreadth escapes! Our house was in an exposed position, and by the
end of
the siege the north side was like a pepper box with holes made by the
Minie
balls that had passed through it. When those balls were flying thick it
just
sounded like the biggest hail I ever heard. But I wasn’t frightened. I
never
thought a bullet was made for me. I remember
the
soldiers told us, "Ladies, this is no place for you," but we wouldn’t
desert our home. Late one
day as I
was in the front part of the house getting ready to go over to our
night
rendezvous, a shell came down in our kitchen. I thought from the sound
that it
had smashed the stove all to pieces. So out I rushed to the kitchen to
investigate, and I fell through a gaping hole in the floor. I didn’t
get out of
there till they chopped me out with an axe. I bear the scars yet. Another
time two of
us girls were at the table eating, The Yankees were firing, and Mother
had sent
the younger children over to the hollow. Suddenly she said, "Get right
up
and come out because I know something is going to happen." She was so
earnest
about it that we thought we would humor her, and we stepped out to the
gallery.
Almost instantly a shell passed right through the room. It would have
taken our
heads off where we had been sitting. It's very strange — those warnings
to get
out of danger. I s'pose we have to thank the good angel that is always
with us.
I used to
have a
little fun with two of the guns that were firing from the other side of
the
point. They were what were called Columbiads. I don't think they ever
did any
damage. They had a certain range and I soon learned just where the
balls from
each would fall. I 'd get on my horse to ride, and the Yankee gunners
would see
me and imagine I was a courier. Bang! would go the first gun and the
ball would
fall in a near gully. At once I would gallop on till I approached the
range of
the second gun. Then I'd stop till the gun fired, and afterward I'd
canter
along about my business, Blackberries
were
plentiful all around us, and one afternoon I went out back of the house
to pick
some. I wanted them to take to the sick and wounded soldiers in the
hospitals.
As I was stooping down reaching for some a Minie ball passed in front
of my
face and took off a piece of the bush I was picking from. Oh! I've felt
the
wind of many a Minie ball. I had about a quart of berries, but that
wasn’t
enough, and I didn’t go to the house till I had filled my pail and
eaten all I
wanted besides. One day I
went to
call on a woman who lived over on the Jackson Road, a mile and a half
away. I
walked, and Mother told me just how long I could stay. We never thought
of
disobeying our mother. It so happened that I had a curiosity to go to
some
other place, and in order not to overrun my allotted time I cut short
my call.
Hardly five minutes after I left the woman a shell came into her house
and
struck her and scattered her brains about, People who were there said I
hadn’t
got out of sight. Mother heard that shell explode and knew pretty near
where it
fell, and she never had a moment's peace till I came home. I got there
on time.
My husband
was in a
detachment at the extreme right of the Confederate lines. I used to
ride over
there on my horse three times a week. He was sort of a dudish fellow,
and I
liked to see him look nice. So I always carried him some clean clothes,
and I'd
cook up biscuit and meat to take. I had an old-fashioned carpetbag that
would
hold a bushel, and I put the things into that and hung it to the pommel
of my
side-saddle. There were five men in my husband's mess. He divided the
food I
brought with his comrades, and they watched for my approach as much as
he did.
"Your wife's coming," I'd hear them holler to him. Firing
from both
sides was common, and their situation was not very safe, though it was
protected by entrenchments. Sometimes the lieutenant would tell me to
go way
back behind a large tree. Then I'd go and sit down in the rear of their
tent
for a few minutes, but as soon as the lieutenant's attention was
engaged I'd
return. We saw
hard times
during the war. We didn’t have very much to begin with, and a good deal
of that
was stolen. But let me tell you — I've seen the armies of both sides,
and
there's a class that follows the troops and steals things even if they
don't
want 'em, and the blame is put on the soldiers. of course, though, the
soldiers
took a good deal, too. Once we
filled some
candle molds full of tallow that had a little beeswax in it to make it
harder,
and we set 'em out to cool. We left 'em there till after dark. Then I
went to
get one of the candles to light, and the molds and all were gone. I
suppose
some of our soldiers had candles up at camp that night. Sometimes
they
would be shooting and hit a cow or a calf, and then they'd have fresh
meat.
They were quite apt to accidently kill a beef creature when they got
very
hungry. We managed to keep our cow. But chickens! oh my heavens! they
disappeared long before the surrender. The last survivor was a pet hen.
My
little girl, only two years old, just loved that chicken. One day a
soldier
came along and saw the hen, and he stopped and wanted to buy it for a
sick
comrade who couldn’t eat anything but chicken soup. I called the little
girl
and said: "Gerty, a poor sick man wants your chicken. He's mighty
hungry,
and this friend of his will pay you two dollars for it. That's enough
money to
buy you a pretty dress." She
consented to
part with the hen, but she didn’t want to see the man ketch it, and she
run out
of sight. Once we'd
just
finished churning and had taken the butter out and put it away when the
shells
came so thick that we went over to the hollow. We left the churn with
the
buttermilk in it on the table in the dining-room. While we were gone it
was
taken. No doubt the buttermilk was what was wanted, and we'd have been
glad to
spare that if we could have retained the churn. That made
us more
careful than ever. We had a barrel and a half of flour, and I said, "It
would be a good plan to put our flour in two different places," So we set
the half
barrel in the back hall where it would be most convenient, and we put
the full
barrel in one of the bedrooms and threw some soiled clothes over it.
The next
morning we came over from the hollow to cook breakfast, and there was
only
enough flour left of the half barrel for one meal. We tracked the
thieves to
camp, and then I said: "Oh Ma! it's the soldiers. Let's go back." By the end
of the
siege not a fence was left in the suburbs. They'd been taken for
kindlings. The
soldiers began destroying them, and then the people saw that the fences
were
doomed and concluded they might as well use them for firewood
themselves. We
couldn’t get wood hauled in from the farm districts. When the war began
the
town was surrounded with great forest trees — wa'nut trees, oaks, and
sycamores. But the soldiers cut them down because they were in the way,
or
because they needed them for firewood or breastworks. The camps were
everywhere,
and the stumps were to some degree a convenience, A soldier could build
a fire
against one and it served for a backlog as long as it lasted. We had a
garden
plot, but we couldn’t raise anything in it. Somebody was sure to pull
every
sprig that came up, However, there was a kind of wild onion that grew
over back
of the garden near the stable where the soldiers didn’t get hold of it.
We
secured enough of those wild onions to flavor hash and things like
that. At last
our flour
got reduced to three pounds and our cornmeal to a single half bushel.
Until
nearly that time we had rice, and we could always buy brown sugar and
molasses
and cowpeas. We ground up the cowpeas and made mush and baked bread out
of it.
But the bread didn't taste done. It tasted like it was raw. For variety
we
boiled up the cowpeas with water till they fell to pieces. We had no
meat or
salt to put in, but we called it soup, I don't eat many beans now like
I used
to in my young days because they remind me of the war and cowpeas. Toward the
end of
the siege the soldiers, sick and well, didn’t have much else. Just
think of a
man lying there with chronic dysentery and fed with cowpeas! No wonder
the
soldiers died. I heard of an instance where three of them who were
brothers
starved to death in a tent out in a field here. One
evening a
soldier came along the road to our house, and spoke to me. "Madam,"
he said, "could you give me a piece of bread?" He was
actually
staggering for want of food. I got a plate of bread, and the children
came out with
me to see him. There were five of them. "Do all these children belong
here?" he asked. "Yes," I
replied. "I have a
houseful of children myself at home," he said, "and I'd want to
murder any man who'd go there and eat their bread. Save every crumb you
have.
You don't know how long this siege will last." He turned
and
walked off as fast as he could go, apparently in haste to get away from
the
food which he might be tempted to accept. Two of the little girls ran
after
him, each with a slice of the bread, and urged him to take it. But he
refused
to do so in spite of his sore need. I consider him one of the bravest
men among
the defenders of Vicksburg. His was
not an
isolated case either. When the Federals got into the city they broke
open the
warehouses and were dumbfounded to find in them great quantities of
provisions.
Our starving troops had never touched them because they were private
property. After a
siege of
about seven weeks poor Vicksburg was humiliated into a surrender, and
we sat in
sackcloth and ashes. The surrender occurred on the Fourth of July, a
day that
belonged to North and South alike. It could just as well have taken
place on
the third, but Grant wanted the big thing of capturing the stronghold
on the
Fourth, even though men were suffering here for lack of food. Many a
good
fellow starved to death because of that delay, It was a mean thing in
Grant to
demand such an arrangement and a mean thing in Pemberton to agree to
it. I've
never forgiven them. They both got their reward. Grant himself starved
to death
— not because he didn’t have food but because he couldn’t eat; and
Pemberton
died in obscurity and no one had any respect for him. The
Federal troops
marched into town right past our place. Among the rest were some
colored
troops, and every last one of those negro men had on a big blue army
overcoat.
It was a hot midsummer day and they were sweating to beat the band, but
no
doubt they were happy in their gay military attire and proud of their
release
from slavery. They were Uncle Sam's children now, and every man was
going to
get forty acres and a mule — at least that was what they were told as
an
inducement to enlist. One of the
niggers
was carrying an American flag. He had it over his shoulder and it was
trailing
along in the dirt. The road was very dusty. I don't believe it had
rained but
once during the entire siege. That sight took away all the respect I
had for
the flag and I said, "They've turned their flag over to the niggers —
let
the niggers have it." Ever since
the
Union forces closed in about the city there had been one of their flags
over on
their breastworks that we could see from our house. I used to point to
it and
say to our soldiers: "If you capture that flag treat it with respect.
Roll
it up and bring it to me. I'll take care of it." But after
what I
saw of the way its defenders allowed it be mistreated when they were
marching
into Vicksburg I can't think of it with affection any more. I've made
up my
mind, too, that it is not nearly so beautiful as our original
Confederate flag
— the one that had three broad stripes and a blue field of stars.
Really, the
American flag looks like an old bedquilt. The
Confederates
had a cannon on this hill that they called "Whistling Dick," because
its discharge was always accompanied by a peculiar whistle. No matter
how many
other guns were firing you could distinguish that sound; and, besides,
the gun
had individuality in its appearance, for it was very, very long. We
could
depend on its accuracy, and it was a pet with the soldiery, and the
citizens
thought a whole pile of it, too. The troops hated to have Whistling
Dick fall
into the hands of the Federals, and on the night of July 3d they
disposed of
it. The story is that it was taken out in the Mississippi and sunk. Another
thing the
soldiers did was to roll some of the cassions down into the gullies
along here.
There was a good deal of powder on the cassions, put up in red flannel
sacks,
and the boys got hold of it. They'd learned from the soldiers how to
lay a
string of powder and touch it off so as to make a kind of fireworks.
The boys
stored the powder around here and there where they would have it handy.
One
day, by some mischance, a lot of it went off. It tore a great hole in
the
ground and blackened a near house and injured some of the boys. My little
brother
Lem, six years old, was one of the boys who was there. Mother had
started out
to find him and call him to dinner when she heard the explosion. Some
colored
people got to the spot first. Lem and a colored boy of about the same
age had
been blowed up. The powder was damp or it would have killed them. One
of those
who hurried to the spot, alarmed by the explosion and the screams, was
the
mother of the colored boy. His clothes were on fire, and she stripped
him. Next
she stripped Lem, for his clothes were smoldering, too. Then one of the
colored
people brought some molasses and put it on the boys' burns, and another
put on
some flour. They had
started to
carry Lem home when Mother and I met them, and I couldn’t help but
laugh to
save my life, Lem was such a sight. His face was scorched and his
eyebrows
burnt off. Usually he wore a palmetto hat that we'd woven ourselves,
but some
soldier had given him an army cap, and all his hair was singed off
right up to
the edge of that cap. His fingernails were blowed off, and we thought
he'd lost
his sight. "Are your eyes burnt out?" Mother asked. "No," he
said, "I can see," and he opened his eyes, "but you better go
and find my shoes. I left 'em down there where the powder blew up." Lem's
fingers had
to be tied up separately, and he couldn’t feed himself for six weeks.
We had to
pick the powder out of his face or he 'd have been marked for life, The
colored
boy was permanently disfigured because he took a knife and scraped his
scabs
off. Unexploded
shells
were numerous all around here, and a free darky named David Foot
gathered 'em
up out on the line, took the powder out, and sold 'em for old iron. But
one
day, as he was digging up a shell, he struck it in such a way that it
exploded
and blew his legs off. He died shortly afterward. I had one
serious
war-time adventure a year after the surrender. I was out with my horse
riding
on the battlefield. It was all grown up with tall weeds, and I was
pushing
along through 'em when I heard a negro's voice call, "Halt!" I didn’t
want to be
stopped by a negro, even if he was a government guard, and I pulled my
horse
aside down into a trench out of sight. I knew some of those ditches ran
a mile.
That was farther than I cared to ride through a jungle of weeds. So
after I had
gone a short distance I urged the horse till he jumped with me up on
the bank.
Again I heard the negro shout, "Halt!" I rode up
to him
and said: "Uncle, I'm lost. My patience alive! how these weeds do hide
everything! Won't you please show me the way to the road?" "Lady,"
he said, "if it hadn’t been for the wind blowing your veil just as you
came up out of the gully so I knew you was a woman I should have shot
you." I suppose
it was
his duty to take me to headquarters, but I persuaded him to show me the
road,
and then I galloped back home as fast as I could. Father had
left the
army and returned to us. He owned a wagon and two horses and for a
while he
drove regularly out into the country making trips that were ostensibly
for the
Yankees. But his main purpose was to smuggle medicine and things to the
Confederates. The Union authorities caught onto his game presently, and
confiscated his team. Mrs.
Vinton, a
friend of ours, was another blockade runner, She was such a sweet-toned
person
you wouldn’t think sugar would melt in her mouth. Oh! she'd be so sweet
to
those Federal officers up at the courthouse that they'd do anything on
earth
for her; and yet she'd have helped the Confederacy to the last drop of
blood in
her body. She lived two or three miles out and drove back and forth in
a little
spring wagon. Apparently she was making her living by carrying the mail
and
bringing in vegetables, but all the time she was smuggling supplies to
the
Confederates and getting information for them. My mother
was born
in Ohio, and that was one thing she was ashamed of and wouldn’t tell
unless she
had to. She came South when she was twelve, and she and all the rest of
us were
thorough-going Rebels. Half a
dozen
Federal officers boarded with us for a time, and I was quite spiteful
to them,
and they were spiteful to me. We were always saying cutting things back
and
forth. But our family didn’t have better friends in the world than some
of
those Northern men. Once Mother was very ill and my sister went for
help to a
neighbor's and found a Federal doctor there seeing a sick child. She
got him to
come to our house, and as soon as they arrived she took me aside and
told me
who he was. "H'm!" I
said, "you call that man a doctor — that rough-looking feller! He can't
come in to see my mother." The man
needed
shaving very badly, and his hat was crushed in, and he was in his shirt
sleeves. But my sister urged, and I yielded; and he certainly did bring
Mother
through her illness without any serious consequences. We've kept
up a
correspondence with him ever since, and he always calls us "Dear
Girls" in starting his letters. Not long ago he was here to a reunion
and
called on us. I saw him at the gate, and, thinks I, "In the name of
sense,
who is that great tall feller comin' in our yard?" "You don't
know me, do you?" he said when he got to the door. "Hold
on," I responded, "I'll place you in a minute. Yes, you're our Yankee
doctor." In one of
the later
battles of the war my husband was shot in the neck. When the men who
were
picking up the wounded found him they looked at his wound and said:
"It's
no use carrying him off. He can't live." He held a
cloth to
the wound and lay there with the battle still going on. By and by a
cavalryman
took pity on him and got him onto his horse. The cavalryman sat in
front and my
husband behind. They hadn’t gone far when the cavalryman was shot and
fell off
dead. My husband fell off, too, and then he crawled and crawled until
he got to
a hospital. The doctors thought his was a hopeless case, and he lay
there two
days before he got any attention. They never probed for the bullet. He
couldn’t
talk above a whisper for a year afterward, and he always had to speak
very
slowly. Do you
know, that
ball was the cause of his death? It shifted and pressed on a nerve
going to the
brain and gradually paralyzed him, but that was after he'd got to be a
rather
old man. We had to lead him around, and he didn’t recognize any one but
me. He
coughed right hard and choked, and he'd perhaps get only one meal a
day. The
rest of what he ate all came up. Besides, he had the rheumatism caused
by
walking in the army on ice and things without shoes. Suddenly,
one
Friday afternoon, his paralysis left him, and he asked me how I was
getting
along and if I had kept up his life insurance. I knew he was failing
and I
talked with him about the things he might like to have done. One
question I
asked him was whether he wanted the minister to come to see him. "I can
get the Episcopal minister," I said, "but there isn't a Presbyterian
minister in the town just now." "The
Episcopal
minister needn't call," he said. "I was born a Presbyterian and I'll
die a Presbyterian." The next morning, while I was getting breakfast, he wandered outdoors, and we found him in the yard dazed and helpless. He lived for three months, but he never knew anything again. ______________________ 1 She said she was
seventy, yet was
so youthful in appearance and so sprightly in manner that I would more
readily
have assented to thinking her fifty. I called on her in a pleasant
farmhouse on
the suburbs of the city. We sat and talked in the parlor one warm
afternoon
while a grateful breeze blew in at the open windows. |