Copyi i^ht N i^if^i^ COPYKIGIIT DEPOSIT. -^^^^ THE STORY \ OF ROBERT E. LEE y JUVENILE PUBLICATIONS OF L. H. NELSON CO., Portland, Me. POPULAR EDITION. 32 pp., 8x10, profusely illustrated. Little Stories op Great Pictures. The Story of Lontifellow. The Stoky of Washixgtox. The Stoky of Lincoln. The Courtship of Miles Staxdish. The Story of Frances Willard. The Story of Robert E. Lee. The Stoky of Whittier. The Story of Crant (in preparation i. The Story of CoLu.inus (in preparation). The Sti>ry of Paul Joxes (in preparation). Paul Revere's Ride. 32 pp., Cx9. A Little Book of Conundrums. Also publishers of Nelson's Interna- tional Series of Souvenir Books, em- bracing all prominent cities anil re^or ts of the United States and the Dominion o( Canada. THE STORY of ROBERT E. LEE BY EVERETT G. SCULLY 1905 L, H. NELSON COMPANY PORTLAND, MAINE IIBKARY oI CiONSBESS iwo GoiMes rteceivixi SEP. 8 1905 Oouyriiiiii aiirv /^ S7 5 3 COPY 8. Copyright, 1905 L. H.= Nelson Company THE STORY of ROBERT E. LEE BOr AND VOUNG MAN ^gkTRATFORD, the ancient manor-house of the Lee family, is yet standing '^^ in the historic county of Westmoreland, Virginia, near the hanks of the Potomac, and only separated by a few miles from the birthplace of the great "Father of his Country." It was in one of the rooms of this stately mansion that two signers of the immortal Declaration of Lidependence were born, Richard Henry and Francis Lighttoot Lee, and here, also, on the nineteenth of January, 1807, in the same chamber, Robert Edward Lee, the future commander of the heroic Army of Northern Virginia, first saw the light of day. The little new comer was the fourth son of (General Henry Lee, the dashing "Light-horse Harry" of the Revolution, and, as after events proved, was an heir to the military genius of his celebrated father united to the gentle and lovable nature ot a sweet and refined mother. This noble woman, who early inspired the young child with those ideas which are the basis of a lofty character, was a daughter of the Carters of Shirley, one of the oldest and most respected families of Virginia. Robert was about tour years old when General Lee removed to Alexandria, near Washington, tor the especial purpose of giving to his children the advan- tage of an education in the fine schools f)r which the town was noted. It was (5) THE STORY OF ROBERT E. LEE only two years later when the health of the father began to tail, and he regret- fully left his family and voyaged to the West Indies in the hope of staying the progress of a fatal disease. General Lee remained in the tropics tor several years, but at last, despairing of recovery, turned his face toward home. It was destined that he should never reach Virginia. On the return voyage he was taken seriously ill and was landed at Cumberland Island, Georgia, where he died and is buried. This sad event was a hard blow to the youngest son, now eleven years old, who had dearly loved his father and admired him as a hero. Robert was the only brother then permanently at home, and he manfully accepted respon- sibilities and duties far beyond his years. He devoted himselt to his mother, who had now become a patient invalid, and relieved her as much as he could from all domestic cares. A paragraph from a letter of the sick father, written in the somewhat stilted language of the time, reveals a glimpse ot the sterling character which the dying man had recognized as developing in the son : " Robert, who is always good, will be enjoined in his happy frame of mind by his ever watchful and affectionate mother." The schooling of the boy was obtained in old Alexandria Academy, and his first teacher was a Mr. Learv, an amiable and accomplished gentleman, who grounded him well in the essentials of a good education. After the Civil War, a meeting took place between the teacher and his famous pupil and the latter was not ashamed to display a genuine depth of feeling for his aged instructor. It is probable that the career of his next oldest brother, Sydney Smith Lee, who had entered the service of the United States Navy, as well as his own natural bent toward the military, strongly influenced the boy's choice ot a vocation in life, for it was soon decided that Robert should go in for the army. With that end in \ievv he was sent to Mr. Benjamin Hallowell's school in Alexandria, known to irreverent scholars as " Brimstone Castle," from its peculiar color, and in 182^, when eighteen years old, the name ot Robert E. Lee was on the list of appointees to the Lhiited States Military Academy at West Point, where he succcssfullv passed all examinations and was enrolled as a cadet. It is recorded that Cadet Lee paid strict attention to the duty required in this superb military institution. The study of tactics and strategy was particularly agreeable to him, and his excellent habits and efficiency soon made (6) THE STORY OF ROBERT E. L, E E Old Battery at West Point him a cadet officer in his class. During the last year in the Academ\' he attained the post of honor, the adjutancy ot the corps. There appears to be no stories of Cadet Lee " running the guard " or indulging in an\- (,t tiie forbidden amuse- ments not unknown to many a stern alumnus ot West Point, in ibi^v-. Robert E. Lee graduated second m a class ot tortv-six, and was imniediatciv com- missioned and became Lieutenant Lee ot the Engineer Corps of the L'nited States Army. It is interesting to recall that twenty years later, his eldest son, George Washington Custis Lee, who was also cadet adjutant, graduated first in his class and was assigned to the Engineer Corps. This famous Corps is compt)sed ot cadets who haye gained the highest honors in the Academy, and it has contained, trom time t(.> time, a remarkable number ot distinguished men and able soldiers. (7) THE STORY OF ROBERT E. LEE Lieutenant Lee, we are told, was " splendid-looking, as full of life, fun, and particularly of teasing, as any ot us." He was straight, and carried erect a finely-shaped head upon a pair of broad shoulders. He had been an occasional visitor at Arlington, the beautiful home of George Washington Parke Custis, the adopted son of George Washington, and while very young, had been attracted by the beauty and good sense of Mary Custis, a talented young woman, who was fitted by birth, education and family tradition to be his com- panion for life. At first Mr. Custis faintly opposed the prospect of a military son-in-law, but Lieutenant Lee was thoroughly in earnest and the great grand- daughter of Martha Washington became the promised bride of the young soldier. Grand Old Arlington House (8) THE S T O R ^- OF ROBERT E. LEE The marriage took place at grand old Arlington House on the thirtieth of June, 1851. It is doubtful if a happier or more brilliant assemblage ever gathered within those historic walls. An amusing episode added to the gayety of the occasion. The officiating clergyman was drenched by a brief but heavy shower which overtook him while coming to Arlington, and was obliged to borrow dry garments of Mr. Custis. The difference in the size of the two men was very noticeable, and but for the surplice which covered the good man's misfortune during the ceremony, it would have been hard for the well- bred company to conceal its smiles. Lieutenant Lee was assigned to work on the defenses at Hampton Roads for nearly four years, and his splendid performance of this duty soon obtained him an appointment as assistant to the chief engineer at Washington. This was an agreeable change as it brought him near his wife, and the figure of the tall officer riding in from Arlington every morning to the department, and back again in the evening, became a familiar one. It was probably a most happy period of his life. A story is told of one fine afternoon when he dared another lieutenant to mount behind him and ride to Arlington — a challenge which was promptly accepted, to the horror of a dignified Cabinet Secretary, who met the laughing young men as they paraded down Pennsylvania Avenue, bowing to everyone they knew. Seven years after leaving West Point he became Captain Lee, and was ordered to St. Louis to overcome a tendency of the Mississippi to abandon the Missouri shore and flow entirely through the State of Illinois. It was a hercu- lean task, and kept him away from his home in \'irginia for many years, but was finally accomplished in spite of much bitter and ignorant opposition, for hundreds of the citizens could not comprehend the engineering work — the driving of piles and the building of coffer-dams at selected points — which caused sediment to be deposited in the new angles and gradually forced the reluctant river back to its original channels. At the completion of this enduring work Captain Lee was ordered to New York City to perfect the system of harbor defence, and stationed at Fort Hamilton. Here for a time his family, now including Mrs. Lee, a little daucrh- ter, Mary, and two sturdy boys, formed a charming portion oi the garrison community — a peaceful picture soon disturbed by rumors of war. THE S I' () Pv Y OF ROB E R T ]■,. LEE IN JFAR AND PEACE '/Ij HE Republic of Texas, which had revolted from Mexico in 1836, was admitted to the American Union in 1845. ^^ '^'^^ Mexicans had never formally acknowledged the independence of the Texans, the annexation caused much ill-feelinc;. The western boundary ot the new State was yet unsettled. lA)th the Lhiitcd States and Mexico sent armies to enforce their authority in the disputed tcritory, and, as might have been expected, the proximity of the hostile bodies finally resulted in a collision in which blood was shed and the Mexican War precipitateci. Gen- eral Zachary Taylor ( Old Rough and Ready ) in command of the American army, immediately took the offensive, defeated a superior force of the enemy in two pitched battles, crossed the Rio Grande and invaded Mexico. The war, now an accomplished tact, was not popular in all sections of the country, but Captain Lee, being an army officer, did not stop to inquire into the right or wrong of a struggle with a foreign power. He took the field at once with General Wool, operating in northern Mexico General Zacharv Taylor but was soon drafted by General Winfield Scott, commanding an army which laid siege to the city ot Vera Cruz, and attached to his staf^. The siege of this Mexican seaport was conducted with great vigor. The placing of batteries and many other important details were left in charge of (10 THE STORY OK ROBERT E. E E E Captain Lee, and much of the credit for the speedy surrender of Vera Cruz, which took piace after a week's bombardment, was ascribed to his good judg- ment. Having now a secure base of operations, General Scott was ready to advance on the city of Mexico. The forward movement began early in April. Santa Anna, the Mexican commander, threw a strong force across the road at Cerro Gordo, but was utterly defeated and his army put to headlong flight. Santa Anna himself narrowly escaped capture and lost a cork leg in the chase. In an official report of the battle General Scott wrote: " I am obliged to make special mention of Captain R. E. Lee, Engineer. This officer was again inde- fatigable during these operations in reconnaissances as daring as laborious, and of the utmost value." The Americans had proven their fighting ability so well that no further serious opposition was encountered until the Valley of Mexico was reached. Here the Mexican forces gathered to defend their Capital, while Scott's army moved down the mountain side to within ten miles of the city. At this point the American troops became separated by the Pedregal, a vast, desolate expanse of volcanic rocks and scoria, full of dangerous fissures, only passable on foot and then by the most painful exertions. It was necessary that General Scott on one side of the barrier should communicate with the troops on the other side. Night came on and with it a torrent of cold, drenching rain. Seven officers attempted the task only to return exhausted, but Captain Lee, who was with the advanced force, traversed the Pedregal alone, informed his commander of the positions of the troops in front, and requested that a diversion be made in the morning against the enemy's center. General Scott afterward character- ized this service as "the greatest feat of physical and moral courage performed by any individual, to mv knowledge, pending the campaign." On the following morning, August 20, 1847, ^^^ ad\'ance was made, as asked for, and Contreras fell in seventeen minutes. The American forces won five distinct actions during the day, and at nightfall the bulk of the Mexican army was glad to gain the shelter of the city walls. A few weeks later with the fall of Molino del Rev and Chapultepec, the strongest defenses of the Capital, the American troops entered Mexico and raired the Stars and Stripes over the National Palace. I 1 THE STORY OF ROBERT E. LEE his children, " who,' The Mexican cam- paign was only six months long but it clearly demonstrated the won- derful ability of Robert E. Lee as a soldier. He was successively brevet- ted major, lieutenant- colonel and colonel for gallant conduct. It is doubtful, however, if all these honors satisfied him so much as to be home Chapultepec ^g^;^ ^^ Arlington with as he writes, " seem to devote themselves to staring at the white hairs in my head and the furrows in my face." Among the young captains and lieutenants who were in the victorious American army and niore or less known to Captain Lee may be named LTlysses S. Grant, George G. Meade, George B. McClellan, Winfield S. Hancock, Joseph Hooker, Ambrose E. Burnside, Irving McDowell, John Sedgwick, and also Albert Sidney and Joseph E. Johnston, Ambrose P. Hill, James Longstreet, Jubal Early, Richard S. Ewell, Braxton Bragg, Thomas J. (Stonewall) Jackson and Peter G. T. Beauregard. They were all young men, fighting side by side under one flag, little dreaming that in less than fifteen years they would draw their swords in hostile armies. Captain Lee went back cheerfully to his engineering work, but in 1852 received the appointment as superintendent of the United States Military Academy at West Point, from which he had graduated only twenty-three years before. The discipline of the institution was much improved while he admin- istered its aflairs, and the school attained a higher degree of efficiency than had been the rule. His son tells a story of this period which is typical of the gentle, kindly soul of Robert E. Lee. " It was against the rules that the cadets should go beyond certain limits without permission. Of course they did go sometimes, and when caught were given quite a number of 'demerits.' My father was riding out one afternoon with me, and, while rounding a tiu^n in the mountain road with a deep woody (l^) THE S T O R ^' O V R () 1^ K R T E. LEE 'They were all young men fighting side by side under one flag" ('3) THE STORY OF ROBERT E. LEE ravine on one side, we came suddenly upon three cadets tar beyond the limits. They immediately leaped over a low wall on the side of the road and disap- peared from our view. We rode on for a minute in silence; then my father said: ' Did you know those young men? But no; if you did, don't say so. I wish boys would do what is right, it would be so much easier for all parties.' " In 1S55 Captain Lee was promoted to be lieutenant-colonel of the Second Cavalry, a new regiment raised for service in the Southwest, and ceased to be superintendent ot the Academy. The theatre of the operations oi this regi- ment, which was commanded by Colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, was in the region embraced by the the Rio Grande on the south and the Arkansas River on the north, extending from the western boundary of the Indian Territory to the eastern line of New Mexico. This immense country was then almost entirely the home of wild animals and savage Indians, and it was the duty of the r (jm ' \ Engine House, Harper's Kerry — Seized by "John Brown Raiders' (14) THE S T (J R Y OF RUBE R T E. LEE Second Cavalry to stop the depredations ot the latter upon such settlements as were exposed to their attacks. For several years the regiment was employed in this dangerous work. Colonel Lee assumed full command hiniselt in 1S57 and accomplished much useful service in repressing the activity of the Indians. He was in Virginia in the tall ot iSt;^ just in tune to he simimoned by the Secretary of" War to capture the "John Brown Raiders" uho had seized the government arsenal at Harper's Ferry. All the raiders were killed, wounded or captured. The Vir- ginians were wild with excitement, but Colonel Lee protected the prisoners from mob violence, turned them over to the civil authorities as directed from Wash- ington, and rode home to Arlington. Shortly afterward, he returned to his post in the West. Here he remaine^l, profoundly agitated by the growing danger of a civil war, until ordered to report at Washington in March, iv \ ••