.1 p pH8J E 528 .8 lsl.D2 Copy 1 Personal Narratives SEVENTH SERIES, No. 6 Campaign of Battery D, First Rhode Island Light Artillery, in Kentucky and East Tennessee By EZRA K. PARKER, [Late First Lieutenant Battery E, First Rhode Island Light Artillery] FIRST LIEUT. EZRA K. PARKER (Picture taken June, igo8) PERSONAL NARRATIVES OF EVENTS IN THE War of the Rebellion, BEING PAPERS READ BEFORE THE ' RHODE ISLAND SOLDIERS AND SAILORS HISTORICAL SOCIETY. Seventh Series No. 6. PROVIDENCE : PUBLISHED BY THE SOCIETY. 1913. •7 SNOW & FARNHAM CO., POINTERS. GKit 'Rj* Society *osition on both sides of the river. Our artillery made no reply. When the rebel artillery stopped firing we all knew that the assault would promptly follow. We were peering through the fog and smoke and darkness to see the advancing gray lines of the rebel infantry. We well knew that in a minute they might be upon us, as they had crowded up to within 200 yards of Fort Saunders. 42 BATTERY D, FIRST R. I. LT. ARTLY. In front of the fort telegraph wires had been wound round the stumps of trees lately cut down, and this wire, not being known to the enem}-, threw them into much confusion. Lieutenant Benjamin's 20-pounders were not well adapted to the short range required to repel the assault, although they were as well served as any men could serve them, so that it devolved upon the three brass Napoleons of Battery D to do the effective work. As soon as the charging ''columns by division closed en masse" of the enemy appeared, Battery D sent in to the columns double rounds of canister at fifty yards. The veterans of Fl-edericksburg, Chancellorsville, and Chickamauga began to quail. It was not possible for them to stand such an onslaught from big guns and rifles. Many fell from the deadly fire and others on account of contact with the entangling wire, but then in the fog and smoke, it was not possible to tell why it was that nearly every man in the first rank fell. To those brave men it seemed death to advance or retreat, and by force of numbers they pushed on. and some got into the ditch in front of the fort, it being some eight feet deep and twelve feet wide ; to the top IN KENTUCKY AND BAST TENNESSEE. 43 of the parapet was at least twenty feet, and the out- side of the parapet was covered with smooth ice. When they gained the ditch they were sheltered from our fire. It was not an agreeable duty for our in- fantry to peer over the top of the parapet to shoot the rebels below, so Lieutenant Benjamin took a number of his shells, lighted the fuses and rolled them over the parapet into the ditch among the en- emy. A half dozen explosions of these shells brought them to terms, and soon something as white as any- thing they had, was raised upon a ramrod. They were told to enter by a certain embrasure, leaving their arms in the ditch. They came along rapidly, about 300 of them, and were marched into Knoxville. The rest of the charging columns fell back, and the battle was at an end. Four brigades, consisting of nineteen regiments, from 4,000 to 6,000 men, were sent forward against Fort Saunders. News soon came that General Gtrant had won a de- cisive victory at Chattanooga, and that General Sher- man was rapidly coming to our relief. Joy reigned in Knoxville, and in all the hearts of the thousands of loyal people in East Tennessee. APPENDIX, Incidents (Personal). At Campbeirs Station Sergeant Gideon Spencer, of the fourtli piece, had a close call. He was taking his piece from its position and passing along t'le Knoxville road. A high worm fence was standing by the side of the road and one of the slanting stakes in it hung out over the road so that the sergeant on horseback had to turn his head over to the right in order to avoid a collision. Just as he turned the head, a 20-pouiid shell came from the Washington artillery and cut off the stake, opposite the ser- geant's head. In this case, dodging paid. During the siege of Knoxville Private William Oakes was down in a ravine near the teams. A bul- let fired from the rebel lines came over and passed through his head just above the tongue, carry-ing away two or three of his teeth. He was in a hospital a short distance away, and the next day after he was APPENDIX. 45 wouDded I went to see him. I found him with his cheeks swollen to an enormous size. I shook his hand and expressed my regret at his misfortune, and hoped that he would soon be out of the hospital, etc. I did not think that he could articulate. I saw that he was about to speak, or to attempt it, and so 1 leaned over to catch his words. Hie managed to sa}' in a distressed voice that he was unable to eat pop- corn. I thought that he would get back to Rhode Is- land, and told him so. While lying with my section on the right of F^rt Saunders, on a cold, wet day, the colonel command- ing the brigade to which I was attached directed his quartermaster to furnish me with a tent. There was sent round an old sibley tent and my men pitched it a short distance in rear of the line, on a slightly ele- vated dry patch of ground. I w^ent inside, but found that as the top of the tent was above our parapet, the rebels were shooting bullets through the top in a lively manner. I went outside and estimated about how low the shots could come through the tent. T made a mark on the inside, and those who happened to be in the tent kept h^ads below the line. The 46 APPENDIX. colonel referred to this line as the dead line. A sol- dier brought to me a beautiful copy of the works of the Latin poet, Virgil, and I spent the time in read- ing his poetic account of the siege of "Lofty Illium." On the morning of the great assault upon our lines, Sergeant Charles C. Gray was in charge of the fourth piece of our battery. He often loaded his piece witli double canister and fired with terrible effect, for the range was only from fifteen yards to fifty yards. He moved his piece from its first position en barbette on the right of the fort, to an embrasure that more ef- fectually commanded the rebel advance. Here he fired with great rapidity, until the enemy appeared to recoil. He had his gun loaded with double canis- ter and ceased firing. At this time a rebel oflScer climbed out of the ditch, and standing at the muzzle of the cannon placed his sword upon it and said : "Surrender this gun." The man who held the lan- yard was ready to fire, and asked for the order. Sergeant Gray replied: "Don't waste double canis- ter on one man." At this juncture, three other rebels came into the embrasure at the muzzle of the gun. and then the order was given to "fire." Of these APPENDIX. 47 four men, nothing was left but atoms. The brav^ sergeant was publicly thanked and congratulated by General Burnside a few hours later. The Governor of Rhode Island, at the general's request, sent him a commission as second lieutenant. This case is unique. Nothing but the stout heart of Sergenat Gray made him a commissioned officer. He owed his promotion to no political or personal influence with the Governor of Rhode Island. Sergeant Frank Tucker, of Battery D, was a cool, brave man, and the best shot in the whole battery. Some 600 or 700 yards from our lines, just in the edge of a piece of woodland, a rebel sharpshooter, with a big target rifle that sent explosive bullets, had secreted himself in a pine tree. A number of men had been killed by him. General Ferrero had barely escaped a bullet through his head. The gen- eral sent for me, as my section was in position nearly opposite the sharpshooter, and requested me to open fire upon him. I stated that nothing would please me better, but as Lieutenant Benjamin had ordered me to waste no ammunition, I did not feel that he would permit me to ojien fire on one man. He gave 48 APPENDIX. me a written order to proceed, and so I went back to my section to carry out the order. We placed a cap upon a ramrod and slowly raised it above our para- pet. 1 looked through a field glass while the men looked with naked eyes. The cap had no sooner come above the parapet than a ball was put through it. We all saw the smoke about ten or fifteen feet from the ground. I directed Sergeant Tucker to load with solid shot, to take his time about computing distance, elevation of piece, and aiming it. When he had the gun ready, we once more raised the cap, and promptly the bullet came. The sergeant had his piece ready aimed and he quickly said "fire." The next I saw the pine tree break off and topple over, and down fell a man with his gun in his hand. Cur men sent up a great shout. General Ferrero was de- lighted with such an exhibition of marksmanship. I noticed that as soon as the reb. struck the ground he jumped up and ran into the thicket to the rear of his tree. I said nothing about this, and it was un- derstood that Tucker had dropped his man at the first fire. CONFEDERATE LOSS IN ASSAULT UPON FORT LOUDON, ALIAS SAUNDERS ON NOVEMBER 29, I863. Killed, 129. Wounded, 458. Missing, 226. Aggregate, 813. See War of the Rebellion, Official Records, Vol. 31, Part I, page 475. General Burnside makes Confederate total loss about 500. See Ibid page 270. Union entire loss about 20, Ibid page. In the assault upon Fort Saunders, November 29, 1863, I do not find that Battery "D" suffered any loss. E. K. Parkek. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 703 668 n ^ \ LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 703 668 A