Web
and Book design,
Copyright, Kellscraft Studio 1999-2007 (Return to Web Text-ures) |
(HOME)
|
XLI The Trucker's Lad 1 I WAS
eight years
old when Lee and Grant fought at Cold Harbor. We're right on the
battlefield
now, and hyar on this little rising ground is whar Lee's army was
posted. The
woods all around was full of rifle-pits. My boys found one of those
rifle-pits
this morning when they were digging up a stump. If the bullets were
flying, a
soldier wouldn’t stop more 'n five minutes before he'd start scraping a
hole to
get into. Dad was a
trucker,
and we lived two mile from hyar in an old-fashioned farmhouse. In those
days
folks raised more variety than they do now, and we got about everything
we
needed to eat and wear right off our own land. But late years we haul
our
produce to market and spend nearly all the money that is paid for it
before we
come back. We had
four hundred
acres of cleared land and grew corn and potatoes, and wheat, oats, and
grass,
and all kinds of truck stuff such as watermelons, cabbage, tomatoes,
and sweet
potatoes. We carried the truck stuff to Richmond, which is about a
dozen mile
away, in two-wheeled carts drawn by one horse. In summer time we kept
from
three to five carts going constantly, and even on Sundays we didn’t
stop work
entirely. For instance, if the cantelopes were ripe, they had to be
picked every
day, and we'd gather and pack 'em up on Sunday morning. Such work was
considered a necessity. Besides, it was a case of "Everybody's doing
it," as the song says. I know that my mother didn’t find fault, and she
was a regular fightin' Methodist. Nor did the preachers themselves
complain.
But we didn’t work all day. We had to go to church. McClellan
was
through hyar in 1862 and fought in this neighborhood for nearly a week
night
and day right along. Thar was a complete roar all the time. But we
didn’t see
much of the Yankees then at Cold Harbor. No sooner did they get hyar
than they
was gone. It look like they didn’t pause a minute, but was swept right
off just
as you might blow out a candle. Grant
moved more
gradual. He and Lee had been fight-in' pretty steady for a month,
beginnin'
with the Battle of the Wilderness, before they fought hyar on June 3d,
1864. We'd got
along very
well with McClellan's men. They paid for every drop of milk and
anything else
they got, but Grant's troops simply took all that they could lay their
hands
on. Sheridan arrived several days ahead of the main army, and, as a
general
thing, what he couldn’t carry along he destroyed. He picked up all the
horses
that were any good. We had four or five beauties on our place and he
got them.
But he didn’t find the things we had in our cellar, and he didn’t
usually take
quite all of a man's corn. Out our
way the
Cold Harbor fight began on a Friday at Old Church, five mile northeast
of hyar.
They had a right smart skirmish over thar. It was about mid-day that
the
Confederates went past our house goin' in that direction. Thar was
fifteen
hundred cavalry ridin' four abreast. They run right into the Yankees
and come
mighty near not gettin' out. You see we had only a little handful of
men down thar,
and they had to fall back. Some of 'em come back fast enough to be
fallin',
too. They reached our place at three o'clock to the best of my memory.
The
officers tried to form a line right south of the house, but when the
Yankees
got within quarter of a mile the line broke. I can't
say that I
was scared. I was runnin' around to see what was goin' on, and Dad was
after me
with a big stick tryin' to drive me into the basement. He wanted me to
go into
the ground whar I'd be safe from the flyin' bullets. The
Confederates
had hardly gone when the Yankees swarmed around the house, and General
Merritt
rode up to the door. He'd lost his hat and was wearing one he'd picked
up. It
was an old yellow hat that had gone to seed and had a hole in it. When
McClellan was hyar General Merritt had camped in our yard, and now he
spoke to
Dad and said, "Well, old man, I'm glad to see you"; and he asked for
some whiskey. Dad owned
about
fifty hogs and twelve or fifteen head of cattle. We got most of the
cattle up
that evening from whar they were grazing and penned 'em close to the
house.
General Merritt put on a guard and wouldn’t let the soldiers trouble
'em, but
we lost one yearling. The hogs ran wild, and they were scared by the
noise and
commotion and got off in the creeks and swamps whar they were safe. Thar was
shelling
Friday night, and we had to go in our cellar, but the gunners didn’t
get any
range on our house, and late in the night we went upstairs. The
soldiers were
all over our place, and Dad used to say after the war that every man in
Grant's
army had camped on his farm one time or other. Near our house was an
old field,
and I'll bet two or three thousand soldiers was layin' around thar that
Friday
night. In the
morning the
whole country as far as I could see, everywhar, was covered with tents
and men.
The big battle was soon being fought and the noise of the firearms was
p-r-r-r-r-r — just like that all the time. It sounded more like a
corn-sheller
rattlin' than anything else. Besides thar was the boom, boom! of the
cannon. The
Yankees had to
charge across swampy low ground and up a slope where the Confederates
had fixed
up some rough breastworks to protect 'em. Lee's position was a strong
one that
could only be attacked in front, and Grant's troops saw that they were
goin' to
be slaughtered. Many of 'em attached labels to their clothes givin'
their names
and addresses so that when their bodies were picked up friends at home
could be
informed of their death. The bullets just mowed 'em down, and history
records that
Grant lost five thousand men in eight minutes. Thar was
an officer
who had some soldiers camped just back of our house. He was settin' in
the shed
with my father when an officer higher up rode into the yard and said to
him:
"Your men haven't had any fun yet. Take 'em along and put 'em to the
front." One
hundred and
twenty men marched off in accord with that order. Late in the day
twenty-one
returned to their camping-place. The bullets had got the rest. The really
hard
fightin' was all done inside of half an hour, and it was the bloodiest
half
hour ever known in America. Twelve thousand Union men had been killed
or
wounded, and Grant said, in later life, that the assault hyar at Cold
Harbor
was his greatest military mistake. The armies
had a
heap of ambulances, but thar wasn’t enough of 'em, and every kind of
wagon you
could think of was used also. Plenty of those wagons had no springs.
They were
on the road in one continual line with the men inside layin' flat on
their
backs any way the wagon men could fix 'em. Most of the wagons carried
the
wounded fifteen mile to the railway. Thar was a
hospital
tent put up on a level piece of land on our place. Seem to me it was as
much as
forty feet wide and two hundred feet long. At its far end were some
doctors while
the wounded were arriving. The doctors had their sleeves rolled up like
butchers, and they'd whack a leg off, bind up the stump, and send the
poor
fellow along; then do the same for the next one. Just after
the
battle a wounded man came to the house. A bullet had passed straight
through
the middle of his wrist. Mother bandaged the wound. All those
old-fashioned
women knew how to doctor. While she dressed it up for him the man stood
and
cried like a baby. He told her he'd been to our place when McClellan
was down
hyar and at that time had stole a hive of bees from us. He put the hive
on his
shoulder and ran like the dickens so that the bees flew back and didn’t
sting
him much. "You
called me
a nasty, stinkin' bloodhoun'," he said to Mother, "and I thought if
I'd got so low as that it was time for me to mend my ways. I've never
stole
from anybody since, but have made out on my rashions." The troops
left the
vicinity of the battlefield within twenty-four hours, and on Sunday
morning Dad
sent me and my brother, who was three years older than I was to a day,
to see
how my sister had got along. She was married, and her house was about
half way
to Richmond. We had to go on foot because our horses were all stolen,
and we
left the road and cut right through the country hyar. It was probably
ten
o'clock when we started. We soon struck the battlefield, and we could
judge
something of how hot the fight had been by the looks of the trees. They
had no
more bark on 'em than the side of a house. Plenty of
guns and
knapsacks were scattered about thar, and the dead men were layin' on
the ground
putrifyin'. The battlefield was as blue as could be with dead Union
soldiers.
They lay just as thick as watermelons ripening in a patch. I never seen
anything like that battlefield in my life. People said you could walk
on the
bodies from hyar to Gaines's Mills, two mile, without touchin' your
foot to the
ground. I know you couldn’t get through whar the bodies lay thickest
without
steppin' sideways between 'em. In one place the troops had to clear the
bodies
out of the road so they could get up and down it, and they made great
piles —
thirty, forty, and fifty in a pile. Two local
men was
thar on the battlefield that Sunday morning searchin' dead men's
pockets. One
of 'em was white and the other black. I began to feel sick. Lookin' at
the dead
men didn’t agree with me, but my brother didn’t mind anything, and he
was
interested to watch those two fellers robbin' the bodies. It was a
gruesome
business that they were at. The bodies had fallen on top of each other
in the
ditches whar thar were breastworks, and the men had to pull the top
ones off to
get at the pockets of those that lay underneath. Often they found a
half dollar
or so, or a medal, or something else of value. I expect they got right
smart in
all, and I reckon the sight of that plunder kept their stomachs all
right. We was
thar maybe
an hour. By that time I was gettin' pretty weak and my brother led me
off. Oh!
it was a horrid sight. I wouldn’t want to look at it again. A good many
bodies
lay on the field for quite a while, but I suppose they were all buried
and
covered up in the course of a week. We found
things was
all right at my sister's, and we come home that same day and walked
across the
battlefield again. I got away from it that time as quick as I could
without any
stoppin'. _______________ 1 He was a
typical
Southern countryman with a long moustache and a black slouch hat. We
visited
together while he stood leaning against a porch post of a rude,
shanty-like
rural store. His gray, saddled mule was hitched near by waiting
patiently till
its owner was ready to start for home. |