■l/l/^li HoUinger Corp. pH8.5 ^' Experiences of an Enlisted Man IN THE HOSPITAL IN THE EARLY PART OF THE WAR. PAPER READ BEFORE THE OHIO COMMANDERY OF THE LOYAL LEGION DECEMBER 2, 1908, BY XENOPHON WHKELER, Sergeant 67th O. V. 1.; Captain 129th O. V. I. OF Chattanooga, Tenn. ^^^ IN EXCHANGE JAN 5 . 1915 THE Gxperienccs of an Enlisted man in tbe l)0$pital IN THE EARLY PART OF THE WAR. It is with many misgivings I have consented to read a war paper before the Commandery. I have nothing-, perhaps, out of the ordinary to relate, nothing ini- famihar to the experience of any soldier who carried a musket, or com- manded a compan}'. My command never happened to be on hand at the crisis of a battle, so far as I know. I was never of the inner circle, to give advice, which had it been followed, the war would have closed years before it did. I never was of counsel to a general commanding an army, or gave him information which averted a dire catastrophe to the Union Arms ; I didn't perform one single heroic exploit deserving to be preserved in prose or song. The future historian will find no material in my paper which he can use to make his history more realistic, or confirm theories respecting the proper conduct of the war. Indeed, I have always been confident, the Rebellion would have been suppressed without my assistance. It might have taken longer, but it would have been suppressed all the same. Inasmuch, therefore, as I have no startling exploits to narrate, nor can tell from personal experience how battles should have been fought and won, is it surprising that I should hesitate to read a paper dealing with the war, in the presence of so many men, who did so much more than I, and whose exciting experiences have added so much to the his- tory of the Rebellion? Possibly, however, a little incident of the hospital experience of an enlisted man, in the early part of the war, will not be entirely devoid of interest. In the early part of March, 1862, a portion of the Division of the Armv of the Potomac, was landed from the cars of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroadj at Martinsburg. We had been spending most of the Winter of 1861-2 in the moun- tains, guarding the line of the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. Lander, who commanded the Division had died, and Shields succeeded to the command. Almost at once we were started up the Valley of Mrginia. We understood we were a part of the great movement of the x\rmy of the Potomac for the capture of Richmond, defeat of the Army of Northern Virginia and suppression of the Rebellion, in which we were to bear no ignoble part. Instead of lying idle, guarding the line of railroad, we were to take a more active and honorable position in the great movement of our comrades, to the eastward. Who could doubt of our success? Were we not commanded by the Little Napoleon, the most superb war- rior of our time ? And was not Seward still prophesying that the war would be of short duration? The Union i\rms had triumphed at j\Iill Springs ; Island No. 10 had fallen ; Donaldson had surrendered with 20,000 prisoners ; and Albert Sidney Johnston had fallen back from Bowling Green to Corinth and all Middle Tennessee lay open to the vic- torious arms of our comrades of the west. The great trouble with many of us was, that the war would close, withcrut our having any opportunity of being in it, or having a chance of distinguishing ourselves. Who could have foreseen that our military idol had feet of clay? In considering the situation in the early months of 1862, with the more complete knowl- edge the years have brought us, who will say that our expectations were unreasonable or fantastic ? For one_, I am still of the opinion, that had the Army of the Potomac been ably commanded the war would have been closed before the end of 1862. But one thing consoled us, as we trudged southward over the Valley Pike, singing "John Brown's body lies moldering in the grave." We were likely to have, at least, one afifair before the war ended, for Stonewall Jackson was at Winchester, barring the back door to Rich- mond, and he must be disposed of, before we could prosecute our journey to the rendezvous of the Grand Army of the Poton^ac, in front of Richmond, where the great battle was to be fought, in which we were to be participants. But when we arrived at Winchester Jackson was not there. Indeed it was found afterwards that that miHtary o^entlenian, had the habit of not being where he 7i'as expected, and being where he was not expected. On this occasion he disappointed us, for though he knew we were com- ing expressly to see him, yet when we got to Winchester, he was at Strasburg. We remained at Winchester a few days, awaiting the movements of our Commander to the eastward, when Jackson, being reinforced, took the aggressive and came back to interview us. I do not propose to bore yoii with a description of what I saw of the battle of Winchester, or Kearnstown, as our Confederate friends call it. fought on the 23rd day of March. 18(52. IMy own Company was doing guard duty in Win- chester, and. supposing that this might be my only opportunity to par- ticipate in a battle, I ran away, borrowed a gun and accouterments and spent the most enjoyable day of my army life, most of the time on the skirmish line with the 8th Ohio. It was a hard fight and we gave a good account of ourselves. Jackson, the only time in his life was de- feated, and retreated back up the V'alley, followed by our troops as far as Strasburg. But I was not among the pursuing forces, for just at the close of the battle. I was severely wounded, and carried the bullet I re- ceived for the next ten years. I have often wondered if other men, first going into battle, fortified their courage as I did mine. I had seen it stated, and I believed it, that it took six hundred pounds of lead to kill one man, and when the bullets were singing around me very indis- criminately, I had little fear. Since it took so maiiy bullets to hit one man, it was most improbable that one would hit me, and I was the most astonished man in the Army. when, contrary to the law of pro- babilities. I found that a bullet had struck me. I have distrusted that calculation ever since. I pass over my being transported at night, to the Valley Pike, in an army wagon, with some other wounded, through fields, lately for- ests, where stumps and rocks abounded. It was very painful, but not different from what tens of thousands of others experienced. On the next day but one, after the battle, I was taken to the Semin- ary Hospital, in Winchester, and my hospital life of fourteen weeks began. Upon looking over the foregoing, I am strongly reminded of an incident in the Widow Bedott papers. Some of you may remember that widow, she was telling her hearers what her late lamented companion had said to her and which had left ail indelihle impression on her mind ; and, after a great many circumlocu- tions and divergencies and windings around Robin Hood's barn, it came out at last. Her dear husband had once said to her, "We are all poor critters." As might have been expected at that early stage of the war, the wounded fared pretty badly for a few days after the battle of Win- chester, or Kearnstown, for it was before the days of State and Sanitary Commissions. Our beds were blankets laid on the floor. The Govern- ment, apparently, had not anticipated any such state of disorder and want of organization, as prevailed. Meals were very uncertain and illy adapted to the appetites of wounded and sick men. In this state of affairs, the women of Winchester, came to our relief, and for several days brought us supplies of cooked provisions in baskets and pails. They didn't hesitate, either, to tell us that they were our enemies, as we were theirs ; that we had come as invaders of their country, but all the same we were in distress, and they were disposed to return good for evil. A good many of us were in no condition to discuss the causes of the war with those fair enemies, even if we had been so disposed, and were willing to take the "goods the gods" had provided, without argument as to the rights of Secession. But all were not Secessionists. One morning a woman came into our room with a basket of food, whose dress and language at once proclaimed her a disciple of William Penn. She was a goodlooking woman, with grey hair, very neatly dressed, and middle aged. It so happened that another woman had been in our room with food, and our wants had already been supplied, and when she offered me food, I declined as gracefully as I could, and told her there were other men, who had had nothing, and were hungry and I begged her to take her food to them. She appeared displeased, and said, "Thee need not take it if thee don't want it." I again explained that I had already had something to eat, that there were others who had not, and were hungry, and would greatly appreciate her supplies, and she left the room, and I never expected to see her again. But I judged wrongly, for the next morning, earlier, she came in with some more provisions. Some years before, while a student at Oberlin, I had taught school one winter in Highland County, and I thought I was quite fam- iliar with the peculiarities of the Quaker dialect, and as soon as she canie in, I accosted her with "How does thee do?" and during the conversa- tion that ensued, I said my "thees" and "thous" with, as I thought, the grace of a native to the manor born ; but such was evidently not her opinion, for as she went away, with a humorous smile, she said, "Thee need not try to talk like a Friend ; Thee is no Friend." Thus began my friendship with Ann Humphrey Brown, a friend- ship which death only terminated. In a few days the hospital service got better organized, supplies of all kinds came pouring in, and all absolute needs were supplied by a generous Government, and the good women of Winchester had no longer occasion to regard us as an object of charity and ceased bringing us supplies of food. But Ann Humphrey Brown did not discontinue her visits to the Hospital. She shortly notified the hospital authorities that they need provide no food for me, that she would attend to that, and during my long stay in the hospital, a servant, three times a day, brought me the best the market at Winchester afiforded. I was forbidden to eat any food cooked in the hospital. She was a delicate woman, and announced that one soldier was all she could care for, and she gave me her undivided attention and care, so that I came to be known in the hospital, and among her friends, as "Ann Humphrey Brown's Soldier." No day passed without her coming to see me, and when I grew worse — for I was hurt much worse than was at first sup- posed — she daily spent hours by my bed, attending to every want with the tenderness of a sister. When I grew better, frequent visitors from among her Quaker ac- quaintances would come in to see me, and many a weary hour was thus whiled away. Gradually I learned her history from her Quaker friends. Her father, a well-to-do citizen of Winchester, had died many years before, leaving a respectable estate to his only son and daughter. Ann was a handsome girl, but early lost her lover, a Quaker like herself, and she fell into a settled melancholy, afifecting her spirits and her health, and which did not appear to have been dissipated by a second engagement, to an artist then in Europe. In this state of brooding melancholy, tak- ing little interest in life, the Battle of Winchester found her, and the sight of sufifering stirred her out of her legthargy, and awakened the dormant qualities of her womanly nature. Her brother's wife had no sympathy for the National cause, and I imagine she was not a little disgusted with her sister-in-law's devotion to a Yankee Soldier, and angered by the preparation of daily meals for him. ( For Ann lived with her brother and his wife.) She always called me "Cousin David" from a fancied resemblance to a cousin, then living in Indiana. So passed nine weeks of my hospital life, when suddenly Jackson returned to the X'allev and commenced the campaign that has elicited the admiration of both friends and foes. Banks, whose division had taken our place in the valley, was driven pellmell down the Valley and the most serious apprehensions were entertained for the safety of Washington. In the midst of this universal alarm, the Commandant at Winches- ter, was ordered to remove all sick and wounded, that could be removed over the strap railroad running from Harper's Ferry to W inchester. Ann Humphre\- Brown went to the Commandant, and protested against my removal, and secured an exception in my case, but the next morning a more imperative order came to Winchester with no excep- tions allowed, and I was taken out in my cot to a box car, and with many others, shipped to Frederick City. She accompanied me to the cars, shed copious tears at our parting, in which I am not ashamed to say, I joined. Peculiar coincidences occur, in perhaps the lives of all of us, and one occurred in mine, in connection with Ann Humphrey Brown, which it may not be amiss to relate. I have already stated that she invariably called me "Cousin David," but the rest of the name of this Indiana relation of hers I did not know. Shortly before the war I taught school one winter in Harrison, near Cincinnati, on the Ohio and Indiana line, and came across a volume of doggerel poetry of purely local character, dealing alone with local characters and incidents, written by a man by the name of Cotton, and which in some wa}- had found a publisher. I never could imagine how such a book could find its way out of the immediate neighborhood of its silly author, and I was surprised, one day. when a copy of this book was brought to me in the Hospital at Winchester. In the early seventies I was in Rockwood. Tennessee, taking din- ner with the Superintendent of the Rockwood Furnace. My host had formerly lived in Lawrenceburg, and we naturally got to talking about Harrison and the people in it, and the book of poems of Cotton, with which he was quite familiar, and he repeated several absurd passages. I said something to the etfect that it was wonderful how books got dis- tributed, and said that the book of Cotton's has gotten as far away as Winchester, and had been brought to me in the hospital. He pricked up his ears at once and asked if Ann Jackson brought it to me. I was much surprised to know of his knowledge of Ann Jackson, for she had been another Quaker \'oluntcer nurse in the hospital, and I knew her well. I told him no, and asked him how he came to know Ann Jackson. He did not reply, but at once asked if it was Ann Humphrey Brown. I v.'as amazed but finally asked how he knew Ann Humphrey Brown, but without answering, he asked if she used to call me "Cousin David." My astonishment can be imagined when he told me he was the "Cousin David" I was supposed to resemble. It then developed that my host had been born and brought up at Winchester, as a Quaker, was related to the Browns and acquainted with the Jacksons. It seems that Ann Jackson had become engaged to be married to a man in Illinois and he came in the summer of 18G4 as far as Martinsburg to get his bethrothed, where he was stopped, for Winchester was at that time in the hands of the Rebels one day and in ours the next. But Ann Jackson was well known to Sheridan, not only as a Union Woman, but as a woman very prominent in hospital work, and who, more than once, had sent valuable information through the lines of the Union Commanders ; and so he sent a troop of cavalry to Winchester to escort Ann to Martinsburg where she was married' in the presence of Sheridan and his staff. On the way to Illinois, the bride and groom visited in Indiana, and there, among the relatives, Ann Jackson had told of Ann Humphrey Brown's devotion to a wounded (Jhio soldier more than two years before. I never saw Ann after we parted, in tears, at Winchester, but when mv first-born came to me she was christened "Ann Brown Wheeler." The situation at Winchester was such, and my own subsequent ser- vice, that correspondence was difficult, and after an interval of several years, I learned that she had married her artist lover, and had removed to Iowa. I have reason to believe that the world did not deal kindly with Ann and her impractical husband, and at one time I had the privil- 8 ege of repaying, in some small degree, the great debt I owed. But she long since "passed over the River ;" I have become an old man, and the memory of those long, dreadful nights in the hospital at Winchester, many years ago, ceased to disturb my slumbers ; but I never recall without a rush of tenderness the devotion of the dear Quaker woman who was mindful of the words of the Master, "I was sick and in prison, and ye visited me." jjIBRARY OF CONGRESS 3 013 763 841 1 -» LIBRARY OF CONGRESS 013 763 841 1