Ov- '^^ Ji 1 ^^-;^, O M .^' 0' o « o ^ ll-- « o > 4 c- \^ ^• ° '.. o. >t, v^ "^ .'.^''^^^ ^ /?^' ^:,%^r: ■<^^r C, 0"' 0' 4 o. ^-..^* '^^ \/' S&/\^ 4- ^^-^^^ ^^' ■ o .^ 0- -,v- V .. -^ (Jj.'^ o « ^ %« t ^.,/':7:;-; ^^^v.^,^ ^^-^<^. ^^. ''^^f;'*^ ^^^^' .^ ^^ --- .^ > ^/''S^* ^N^ ^ *<5^\I)^^ w^. c -,\ '(7^ ^,. .<' ^ ^^-^^. ^ .^^ V -^ o> ' A O " o « o ' ^■^'- ^ A .f" .vV^' <^, ^^^^^, _ ^^,, .0 -"-'^ ) •^ '^^ o <^ ■^^ ,->' <<• ■•J^ ■r* ^7 ■ ' , A -^ c,^- o s^' o <^ '>* <^ o V ^^ '%^ ■ /) ^\ / °<- : ;^ ^ '■' ■■■•'/ ^ \ '■'■S. o U <^'•'' .9'^' V- ■'<; ' '■ ^ v/" ^p. ■^ty ^^^.^ -^o ■ " , <'. " ■ '^ * .- <^^' V J^ 9 ^ •<;^ ^ ^0 < -. ,^ -?, , ,...,. . 'S <* -^V^" G^ \:) % Copi/rioht 190U, Bi/ John D. BUliiif/s f' aut a careful reading of it led us to tlie unanimous conclusion tli.it thorough revision was necessary be- fore doing so. At the lirst reunion of the Company, held in Boston, in Jan- luu-y. 187!). a committee on history was appointcnl, consisting of William K. Endicott and myself, to be joined by such, others as we might designate. For obvious reasons most of the labor neces- sary in its i)reparation was devolved upon one individual; and that one liereby releases all others from responsibility for ils faults. In projier relation to the sinry of the Hattery it has seemed desirable to incorporate so much of tlie liistory of brigades, di- visions, corjis or the army as sli;ill serve to show members of llii" company ciuses and results of movements and campaigns wliicli. ;it tlic time of their occurrence, wei'e little understood. My infoniiation in relation to the detailed history of the I'.at tery not derived from the above manuscript was taken in large measure from my iH>rsonal diai-y. and an almost unbroken series of nearly llire;> hundred letters written home during our term of service. I am under obligations to MaJ. (ieii. Winheld S. Hancock for ready access to his duplicate copies of otlicial reports of oper- ations of the Second Corps, as well as for the likeness of him- self which adorns the volume; to Maj. (!en. A. A. Humphreys for du])licate copies of his official reports of operations of the SecOTid Corps: to the late Maj. (4en. William H. French for of- ficial rei'oris of camiiaigiis of tlu^ Third Corps during our <'on- 8 riJEFACE itfctiou with it; to the Hon. William C'latlin for a roniiilt'te set of goverumeut maps wliicii have enabled me to irace with ac- curacy our lines of march in nearly all the movements in which Ave participated; to Maj. J. Henry Sleeper for his many kind offices during- the progress of the work; to my associates of the committee, Messrs. William E. Endieolt. Charles E. Pierce. Wil- lard Y. Gross. George M. Townsend, and G. Fred. Gould, for the information and kindly criticism they have contributed; and to many more whose assistance has been less important only in degree. In the prosecution of my researches, I have examined a large ]uass of war material, and have sought information by corre- spondence from commanders or eye-witnesses on both sides. I am also indebted to the past officers who have contributed their portraits. With this introduction I now submit this volume to my sur- viving comrades and their friends, hoping that they will find e?iough of interest and value in its pages to make them lenient towards its defects. If they fail to do this no one will more sin- cerely regret it than their friend THE AUTHOR. Cambridge. Mass., .Inly 19, ISSl. CONTENTS CHAPTER I. August 23 to October 14, 1862. Origin of the Battery — Going into Camp — Incidents and Experiences of Camp Life, ...... 17 CHAPTER H. OCTOI'.ER 14-17, 1862. The Jonrney to Washington — Incidents by the Way — Phihidelphia UnicMi Refreshment Saloon, ... 30 CHAPTER III. October 17 to December 26, 1862. Wasliington — Camp l^irry — Organization — Drill — In- cidents 38 CH.VPTER IV. December 26. 1862, to June 24, 1863. On the March — Poolsvillc — Camp Life — Discontent — Drill — Incidents — Benson's Elill — Alarms — Retro- spect, .......... 50 CHAPTER V. June 24 to July 31, 1863. ]\Iarch to iMaryland Heights — Join French's Command — March to Frederick — Guarding the Monocacy Bridge at Frederick Junction — Rumblings of Gettysburg — Hanging of a Spy — We Join the Third Corps — March to South Mountain — W'illiamsport — Escape of Lee — Chagrin of the Army — .\ntietam Battlefield — Through Pleasant \"alley into Loudon Valley — Four Men Prisoners — Wappvng Heights — Warren- ton — Cam]:) at Sulphur Springs, 88 CHAPTER YI. July 31 to October 19, 1863. Sulphur Springs as it was — Camp Life — The /vdvance tu Culpepper —- Back to the Rappahannock — Auburn — Our Maiden Fight — Centreville — Fairfax Station — Ovation to Gen. Sickles — I-^hot for Desertion, . ;i8 10 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY CHAPTER VH. October 19 to November 8, 1863 The Advance — Bristow Battle-Ground — ( 'atlctf s Station — The Fight at Kelly's Ford — Advance to Brandy Station, . . . . . • ■ • • -153 CHAPTER VHI. THE MINE RUN CAMPAIGN. November 8 to December 3, 1863. A Mud March — Delays — Across the Rapidan — Robert- son's Tavern — In Line at Mine Run — A Cold Snap — Rumors — The Expected Assault — The Return to Brandy Station — A Brief Synopsis of the Campaign, 165 CHAPTER IX. December 3, 1863, to May 3, 1864. At Brandy Station — Winter-Quarters and Army Life in Them — Reorganization of the Army — Dissolution of the Third Corps — We Join the Second Corps — Corps Review — Hanging Scene, ..... 186 CHAPTER X. May 3-20, 1864. Our Anticipations- — Order of March — Grant's Plan — Almost a Stampede — General Hancock — Chancel- lorsville — Todd's Tavern — The Wilderness and its Terrific Battle — By the Left Flank — Battle of the Po — Spottsylvania — The Ghastly Salient — Moving About — The Tenth a Four-Gun Battery — News From Home, . . . . . . . . .211 CHAPTER XI. May 20 TO June i, 1864. By the Left Flank — "Fresh Fields and Pastures New" — Bowling Green — North Anna — Chesterfield Bridge and That Invincible Rebel Battery — By the Left I'lank — Across the Pamunkey — At Tolopotomoy Creek 243 CHAPTER XII. C O L, D HARBOR June 1-12, 1864. Bv the Left Flank to Cold Harbor — Three Positions — The Assault and Repulse — .A Xiglit Attack — Mor- tars and Romb-Proofs — The "Saucy Battery" — An Armistice 257 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 11 CHAPTER Xlir. June 12-20, 1864. By the Left Flank — Wilcox's Landing — Across the James — On Towards Petersburg — Why Petersburg was not Taken — What Hancock Says — To the Front — We Fire the First Shells into the Cockade City — The Fortieth Massachusetts Infantry — Again Forward — Two Moves Moie to the Front Line — Relieved by Colored Troops of the Ninth Corps, . . 273 CHAPTER XIV. June 20-23, 1864 To the Rear — "Boot and Saddle" — The Corps Badly Used on the Jerusalem Plank Road — A Dry Time — "Where We Dug the First Well'' — The Sanitary Conmiission — By the Right Flank — Deep Bottom — Rain at Last — The Weldon Railroad, .... 289 CHAPTER XV. REAMS STATION. AU(5U.ST 23-25, 1864. By the Left Flank — Reams vStation — Destroying the Weldon Railroad — The Earthworks — Portentous Omens — Rebel Guns Silenced — The Day Grows Darker — Sharpshooters — Heroic Horses — The First Charge and Repulse — The Second Charge Repulsed — A Storm of Rebel Shells — The Final Charge — All is Lost but Honor — The Retreat — Hancock's Brav- ery — Our Losses — What Hancock Says — The Losses of the Corps and the Enemy, .... 307 CHAPTER XVI. BATTERY X I \'. Aucusi 26 TO October 24, 1S64. Our Parrotts — To the Front Once More — Battery XIV — Artillery as Sharpshooters — Warlike Pyrotechnics — A Six-Gun Battery Again — Marching Orders. . 340 CHAPTER XVII. HATCHER'S RUN. October 25 to November i, 1S64. By the Left Flank — The Fight on Boydton Plank Road — The Tenth Sent In — At It Hot and Heavy — We are Flanked — On to Libby — "Give 'Em Canister" — Fall of Lieut. Smith and Private Atkinson — Running 12 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY the Gantlet — Fall of Lieut. Granger — Withdrawal of the Corps — Synopsis of General Hancock's Report, 353 CHAPTER XVni. November i, 1864, to March 25. 1865. Fort Stevenson — Fort Welch — Exit Hancock, Enter Humphreys — To the Left and Back — Forts Emory and Siebert — Shingling- a Stal:)le — By the Left Flank — The Battle of Armstrong's Far)n — The Fifth Corps Badly L'sed — The Second Corps Helps Them Out — "Battery E" — Resigriation and Departure of Major Sleeper — "At it on the Right" — Fort Sted- man — Advance and Captures of the Second Corps, . 376 CHAPTER XIX. LEE'S RETREAT AND SURRENDER. March 20 to April 9, 1865. The Last Left Flank — At Burgess' Tavern Again — Five Forks — Petersburg Is Taken — Atkinson's Grave — Marching in the Rebel Rear — What They Left Be- hind — Sailor's Creek — Graves That Did Not Hold Defunct Rebels — High Bridge — Farmville — Fall of General Smythe — Our Last .Stand and Last Shots — Rumors — Why Are We Going So Slowly? — Skep- tics—General Meade to the Front — Suspense — General Meade Returns — "Lee Has Surrendered" — How the Army Felt 410 CHAPTER XX. The Cruel War Over — "Limber to the Rear" — On Short Rations ^ — -How the Negroes Felt — Burkesville Junc- tion — "On to Richmond" — Richmond As We Saw It — To Fredericksburg and Bailey's Cross Roads — W^ashington — Homeward Bound — ■ Palace Cars — Boston — Cool Reception — Galloupe's Island — Mus- tered Out at Last — On to Brookline and Marblehead — Exit Tenth Massachusetts Battery 427 Appendix, .......... 442 S. Augustus Alden's Story of Prison Life, . . . 442 Wm. E. Endicott's Story of Prison Life, . . . 446 John D. Billings's Story of a Visit to Old Camps and Battlefields, ........ 463 Roster 470 The Tenth Massachusetts Battery Association, . . 479 Mortuary List to Date. iQog 482 PORTRAITS J. Henry Slekpek J. ilENKY Sleeper Alvan B. Fishek H. H. Granger . J. Webb Adams WiLLAKD Y. Gross Otis N. Harrington Philip T. Woodfin x\lonzo N. Merrill Hiram P. Ring W. S. Hancock Jonas W. Strout Jacob B. Siflham Hose A O. Barnes Charles E. Pierce Thomas Cusick John D. Billings G. Fred Gould . John P. Apthorp George H. Day Milbrey Green MiLBREY Green George M. Townsen Robert Crawford Joseph F. Sanderson Tohn D. Billings Frontispiece Page 25 ■' 41- 75- " 89 " 100- " 114- " 135^ " 169' " 169- " 191. " 229 " 229 " 252- " 281^ " 295- " 335 " 347- " 365- " 369^ " ?>77 " 3^3^ '■ 393- •' 411- " 411 ■' 423- SKETCHES "Soldiers' Rest" ...... Camp of Tenth Mass. Battery, Winter "62-3 Camp of Tenth Mass. Battery, Summer '63 . Corps Badges Where the Battery Stood in the Wilderness 1864 The Old Tavern at Cold Harijor. 1896 . The Second Position of the Battery at Cold Harbor, As Seen in 1896 .... The Battery's Third Position at Cold Harbor Map of Reams Station Battlefield Map of Boydton Plank-Road or Hatcher's Run Battlefield ...... Where the Battery Stood at Hatcher's Run As Seen in 1896 Inside \^tew of Battery K . . . . Page 36" " 53^ " 63 '/ " 123 V " 224- " 259- " 261- " 269 ' " 309^ " 355' " 366' " 389 " Governor's Island, New York Harbor. Feb. 25, 1880. I wish you success in your contemplated history ot Sleeper's gallant Battery, - the 'Tenth Massachusetts. . . . Very truly and respectfully yours, WiNFiELD S. Hancock. Angel Island, Cal., Jan. 21, iScSo. . . . T have the most vivid and pleasant remembrances of the services performed by your Battery. . . ■ \'ery sincerely your friend, Wm. H. French. Col 4th Artillerv, Brevet :\[ai. Gen., U. S. A. New Orleans. Feb. 12, 1880. I con-ralulate you upon your historical undertaking, and recol- lecting well the brilliant services of the Tentli Massachusetts Bat- tery, I shall take great pleasure in seeing them revived and perpetuated in your work. Very truly yours, R. DE Trobrl\nd, Brevet Maj. Gen., U. S. A. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY CHAPTER I. All (just 12 to October U,, 1862. ORIGIN OF THE BATTI^RY — GOING INTO CAMP — IN- CIDENTS AND EXPERIENCES OF LIFE IN HOME CAMP. It was mid summer of 1862. The disastrous failure of the Peninsular Cam- paign had slirouded tiie country in gloom. Thou- sands of the flower of the nation's youth who, burn- ing with the most ardent and unselfish patriotism had been marshalled in the ranks of the magnificent Army of the Potomac, had crossed another river never to return. It was one of the darkest periods in the history of the Civil War. A triumphant enemy was likely to be an aggressive one. The disaster must be repaired and that right speedily. Then it was that President Lincoln, cast down but not destroyed, issued his call for 30(),()()0 more volunteers and un- der this call the following special order was issued from the State House in Boston: Common ircaUJi of Massaehmetts, Headiinartirs, Boston, Aug. 12, 1862. Speekil Order No. 61 'f. Henry H. Granger is hereby authorized to raise a Battery of Light Artillery under U. S. Order No. 75, Battery to be full by 10th inst. The Captain will be designated hereafter. By command of His Excellency John A. Andrew. Governor and Commander-in-Chief. (Signed) WM. BROWN. Asst. Adjt. Gen'l. 18 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY The foregoing is a correct copy of tlie original or- der by which authority was given to recruit tlie Com- pany afterwards known as the Tentli Massachusetts Battery. In the "Boston Journal" of August 13, 1862, ap- peared the following notice: — "Henry H. Granger has been authorized to raise a battery of light artillery to be filled by the IGth inst. As this is a popular arm of the service, there is uo doubt of his ability to raise a company by the time specified." So far as can be ascertained this is the first public notice of the company. In subsequent issues of the same paper occurred these notices: — [Aug. 1',, 1S62.] TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY. 50 more men wanted for the Tenth Massachusetts Batteri/. Ap- ply immediately to 17 Old State House or 16 Howard Street. H. H. GRANGER, Recruiting Officer. [Aiif/. IS, 1S(!2.] The 10th Massachusetts Battery recruiting by Lieut. H. H. Gi'anger, is rapidly filling up, over 125 men having already en- listed. A splendid opportunity is here offered to those who wish to enlist in this popular arm of the service for three years. [Aiiff. 23, 1862.] TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY. The 10th Battery, H. H. Granger commanding, is full, and has been ordered into camp at Lynnfield to-day. They will leave Bos- ton at 12 o'clock on the Boston and Maine R. R. J. Webb Adams of this city has be(?n appointed Junior 1st Lieutenant. [Auff. 23, 1S62.] The 10th Battery for three yeafs service, recruited by Capt. Granger, left Boston for Camp Stanton at Lynnfield via Boston and Maine R. R., in the noom train to-day. As the above notices show, a recruiting office was opened at the Old State House, and also at 16 How- THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 19 ard street, and but few days elapsed before the Company was recruited to the required standard of one hundred and fifty-six men. The readiness witli which men rallied was undoubtedly due in large measure to the gentlemanly bearing and personal magnetism of the recruiting officer, Mr. ass, there was the same tendency displayed to stand by one another. Affairs finally came to such a pass that "Battei*y Boys" were allowed to go and come at will, with none to molest or make afraid. Passes to leave camp soon became an obsolete for- mality. It is true that trains could not always be taken with safety at the camp-ground Avithout them, owing to the presence of provost guards; but there was another station about two miles away, and some of the more wary walked as far as Topsfield, a distance of six miles, in order not to be summarily cut off from their semi-weekly or tri-weekly visits to home and loved ones. Daily drill was inaugurated and carried on, all things considered, with a fair measure of success. One day we received the compliments of the officer J. HENRY SLEEPER THE TENTH INIASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 27 of the day for proficiency, and the next, drew down upon onr defenceless heads the wrath of Col. Jones, the nn^jopular post commander, for setting his au- thority at defiance. Oct. 1, J. Henry Sleeper, the newly ai)p<)inted Cap- tain of the Company, arrived. He had been pro- moted to this position from a first lieutenancy in the First Massachusetts Battery. By his interference we were relieved fr(»m cam]) guard, — a change which we heartily appieciatiMl, having never taken kindly to it. Capt. Jacob Henry Sleeper was a Bostonian by birth, son of the Hon. Jacob Sleeper of the ( Govern- or's Council. He was twenty-three years of age and entered the army at the beginning of the war as 1st Lieutenant in the P^ifth Massachusetts Infantry, where he won praise from his superiors for coolness and bravery in the first battle of Bull Bun. Almost immediately after his time was out he joined Cap- tain Porter's First Massachusetts Light Battery as Lieutenant and gained much credit for dashing bravery, coolness under fire and skill as an artiller- ist. Thus highly recommended he was appointed commander of the Tenth. The following letters are self-explanatory: H((i(hiiiartcrs ArtiUcri/ BrUjade, lat Div. 6th Anny Corps, CdiKi) iii'iir Harrison's Landing, Aug. 4, 1862. Lieut. J. H. Sleeper of Portei-'s Battery "A," Mass. Vol. Arfy has been under my eomniand some months. During that time I have observed him in the eamji. on the march and on the battle- field, and it gives me pleasure to state that on all occasions and in all situations he has acquitted himself as a soldier should. He is an excellent officer and a good artillerist. (Signed) E. R. PLu\TT. Captain 2d Artillery, Corn d'g Artillery Brigade. 28 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY COMMONWEALTH OP MASSACHUSETTS. Adjutant Geuernl's Otfiee. Boston, .Sept. 9, 1862. Lieut. J. Henry Sleeper, Poa-ter's Battery, Mass. Vols. Lieut., — I am directed by His Excellency the Governor to inform you that you have been appointed and commissioned as Capt. of a new Battery now organized in this Commonwealth known and designated as the 10th Battery of Mass. Volunteers, and you are requested to get leave from your superior Officers and to report at once to these Head Quarters, where you will be ordered to take command of the new Battery. R espec tf u 1 1 y Yours , (Signed) WM. SCHOULER, Adjt. Ocneral of Mass. The non-commissioned officers, with the excep- tion of the second corporals, were now appointed; and onr daily drill was carried on with two six- ponnders, Avlth which we waked the echoes of the camp and neighborhood at sunrise every day. But this peaceful state of affairs could not be expected to last forever, and, with the early days of October, there came rumors of orders to leave for the Houth. MORNING REPORTS. 1862. Sept. 11. Charles li. Bisbee, Henry B. Winslow, Moses K. Davis, William Buckman, George H. Strickland, John A. Stearns, Peter Savory, Jr., Henry L. Wheelock, eight recruits over maximum, transferred to Col. Jones, Com — by order of Lieut. M. Elder, Mustering Officer. Sept. 14. The above eight recruits return to the care of the commander of the Tenth Massachusetts Battery. Sept. 23. George H. Strickland, one of the re- cruits, discharged on account of disability. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 29 Oct. 1. Capt. J. Henry Sleeper came into camp and took command. Oct. 3. Charles H. Bisbee, Henry B. Winslow, John A. Stearns, Moses K. Davis, Peter Savory, Jr., William Bnckman and Henry L. Wheelock, seven recruits, transferred to Fifth Massachusetts Battery. Oct. 4. Samuel Abell received a surgeon's fur- lough Sept. 27, and it was extended to Oct. 4. Not being- able he did not return to camp. 80 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY CHAPTER II. October l-'t to 11, 18G2. THE JOURNEY TO WASHINGTON — INCIDENTS BY THE WAY — PHILADELPHIA UNION REFRESHMENT SA- LOON. The time spent in our own State may be regarded as the infancy of our organization, 8ong and sport prevailed, and from the appearance of the camp one would hardly have supposed it occupied by a body of men assembled with the serious pur])ose of devot- ing themselves to the deadly earnestness of battle. But when, at last, x>()sitive orders to depart for the seat of war came, the spirit of the scene changed. Men had run guard and taken furloughs for the last time, and all felt that the play of the past few weeks must now give place to the stern work and disci- pline of active service. Several false alarms were at last followed by positive marching orders; and October 14, 1862, saw us with well-stuffed knapsacks fairly under way. Our march through Boston called forth quite enthusiastic demonstrations from the citizens, which were continued until our arrival at the Old Colony Ilailway station, where we were to take the cars. These notices api)eared successively in the Boston Journal: — [Satiirda!/, Oct. J,, 1862.] MARCHING ORDERS. The 10th Massachusetts Battery in camp at Boxford have re- ceived marching orders for Monday, Oct. G, and will probably reach this city about 1 o'clock. The following is a list of the THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 31 officers: — Capt.. J. Henry Sleeper; Senior Ist IJeut.. Henry H. Granger; Junior 1st Lieut.. J. Welib Adams; Senior 2n(l Lieut., Asa Smith; Junior 2nd Lieut. Ttiomas R. Armitage; First Ser- geant, Otis N. Harrington; Quartermaster Sergeant, S. Augustus Alden; cliiefs of Pieces with rank of sergeants, George H. Put- nam; Philij) T. Woodfin; Cliarles E. Pierce; Samuel J. Bradlee; Chandler Gould; George F. Gould. Gunners with the rank of Corporals; Andrew B. Shattuck. Charles W. Doe, John H. Stev- ens. George M. Townsend. Joseph H. Currant, Benjamin F. Parker; (iuidon, William H. Fitzpatrick; Artificer. Amasa I>. Bacon; Buglers. Josihua T. Reed, John E. Mugford; Company Clerk, Benjamin E. Corlew. [Mondaij Oct. U, 1862.] THE DEPARTURE OF SLEEPER'S BATTEPiY. The 10th Mass. Battery, Captain Sleeper, now at Boxford will certainly leave for the seat of war at 10 o'clock tomorrow fore- noon. The horses for the battery have all been inspected and placed on board the car. The field pieces will be supplied the company on their ai'rival at Washington. [Oct. 1',, 1S62.] DEPARTURE OF THE lOTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY. The Tenth Massachusetts Battery, Captain J. Henry Sleeper, arrived in the city at 1 o'clock this afternoon from Camp Stan- ton, Boxford, and marched up State and Washington Street en route for the Old Colony and Fall River Railroad Depot. The company is composed of fine looking men who are thoroughly uniformed and provided with all the eiiuipments necessary until they arrive in Washington. The Company received a cheering reception and hearty Godspeed from the citizens along the route. [Wednesilai/. Oct. lo. 1862.] THE TENTH BATTERY. (Special despatch to the Boston Journal.) Jersei/ Citij. X. J. Oct. l-j, 1862. The Tenth Mass. Battery arrived here safely at 8 o'clock this morning and left on the New Jersey R. R. at 9.45. At the Old Colony station occnrred the final leave- takings from a few of the wives, parents, and 32 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY friends who had succeeded in eluding the vigilance which would have denied them this last privilege. There were brave struggles made to appear calm, but the tears would come, and as the train moved away, the last view of a wife or mother to some, was a frantic gesture of the hand and streaming eyes that told how great the sacrifice to those who must stay at home and wait. We arrived at Fall River about dark, and found the steamer "State of Maine" in readiness to receivie us. After unloading our one hundred and ten horses from the forward cars, in which they had been shipped at Boston, and getting them unwill- ingly aboard and safely stored on deck, we took pos- session of the ample accommodations of the boat and made ourselves as comfoitable as circumstances would permit. There was little sleep to be had that night, and many of us, though ordered to re- main below, spent much time on deck, enjoying the brilliant starlight and Aveird phosphorescence of the dark waters until morning broke, and the attrac- tions of New York harbor, which we were then en- tering, charmed our gaze. It has been remembered of this voyage, by some of the comrades, that we drank water from a large ice- tank, in which, some, who professed to know whereof they spoke, declared that deceased soldiers had been packed and brought from Fortress Monroe early in the war. It is so much easier, removed from the event by a lapse of seventeen years, to vouch for the truthfulness of this statement than to prove its falsity that we shall pass it by unques- tioned, leaving each comrade of the Battery whose eye meets tlie above to supplement the statement for himself with any facts in his possession. In passing up New York harbor we sailed near THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 33 the steamer "Great Eastern," then anchored there, and obtained a very good view of her gigantic pro- portions. We were not destined, liowever, to land at New Yorlv, but were headed directly for the opposite shore, and disembarked at Jersey City, amidst a per- fect Babel of apple, peach, and pie women. Here, af- ter stowing away the horses so closely that they could do but little at kicking and biting, we again took cars, bound for Philadelphia. All day long we rolled on through New Jersey, with its brick-red soil, its extensive level fields now mostly harvested, its fruited orchards ripening in the October sun, and its patriotic inhabitants greeting us as we rode along Avitli hearty tokens of good-will. Tired, hun- gry and thirsty, we reached Camden late in the af- ternoon, and, crossing the ferry, entered Philadel- phia, fittingly named the City of Brotherly Love. Nowhere else on the route were such ample prepara- tions made for our comfort as here. Ushered first to a long row of basins with an abundance of water to wash off the grime of travel, we were then shown into a hall filled with tables laden, not with luxuries, but what was far more to our taste, plenty of plain, wholesome food, and overfiowing dippers of hot tea and coffee. Waiters were on every hand as obliging and as- siduous in their attentions as at a hotel; and all this the Volunteer Relief Association, composed of citi- zens of Philadelphia, furnished from their oAvn pock- ets to every regiment and battery that passed through their city during the entire war, whether they came at morning, evening, or the midnight hours. Warm were the praises on the tongue of many an old veteran at the front for the noble- souled people of Philadelphia, as he called to mind M THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY the cheering spot in his experience at the Philadel- phia Union Eefreshment Saloon.* When supper was ended, we began our march across the city, with such a hand-shaking with old and young of both sexes, and such a God-speed from, all the population, as came from no other city or town through which we passed, and this was con- tinued until our arrival at the Baltimore depot. Could the wives and sweethearts left behind have seen the affectionate leave-takings at this place, it might have aroused other than patriotic emotions in their breasts. We recall at this moment the slight figure of Company Tailor Barker as it ap- peared extended on the pavement full-length, the result of a misstep while making an ambitious at- tempt to salute a young lady standing near the pro- cession; and the sad picture that he presented in camp for some weeks afterAvards as he tenderly dressed his nose, which had been wounded by con- tact with an unfriendly paving-stone at the "Fall of Man," rendered him the mark for frequent jests from those conversant with the facts. By midnight we were under way, the cars con- taining the horses having been drawn across the "■' The above institution was organized shortly after the "Cooper Shop" was opened. Tliis movement of relieving the hunger and hard- ship of the soldiers originated with the women of Philadelphia, who, as early as the latter part of April, ISOl, when the troops began to pass through that city, formed themselves tnto a committee and col- lected and distributed refreshments among them. They were aided in the work by the gentlemen, and as the troops increased in numbers the necessity of better accommodations was felt. It was then that William M. Cooper (firm of Cooper and Pearce), whose wife was one of the pioneers in the movement, gave up first a part, then nearly all of his establishment, for four years to the purpose of assisting the soldiers. The "Union Saloon" was established later, but the two worked in perfect harmony to the end of the war. They were located near each other, and a committee from each worked without friction in arrang- ing for the reception of troops. See History of the Cooper Shop Volunteer Refreshment Saloon, by .lames Moore, Ml). THE TENTH INIASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 35 city without change. The dim gray of morning fonnd us at Havre-de-Grace, where, in the black remnants of the old bridge burned while the mob held sway in Baltimore, and in the fires of the picket guards stationed along the road, we began to recog- nize the first indications of war. Near this place we saw our first persimmon tree loaded with its golden fruit, so beautiful to the eye, but so exe- crable to the taste at this season of the year. Later when the fruit had become fully ripened by the frosts, we formed better opinions of it. Having arrived at Baltimore, we were greeted by weaving handkerchiefs and other tokens of welcome, and could but contrast the peaceful and apparently loyal attitude of the city at this time with its state of wild tumult when the Sixth Massachusetts Regi- ment passed through a year and a half before. The elements of rebellion here reduced to such thorough subjection, we accepted as an augury of what would ultimately be accomplished throughout the entire South. Each car containing a portion of the com- pany was drawn across the city by eleven horses in tandem, the driver, from the front platform, with blast of horn and crack of whip urging his ponder- ous team to livelier gait. Having breakfasted at a saloon something like that at Philadelphia, we waited till long past noon for the Washington train. When at last it was provided, we no longer found luxurious passenger-cars, but common box-cars, ven- tilated by knocking out alternate boards in the sides, and furnished with rude plank seats. An en- gine drew us a mile or two out of the city, and then left us to our fate. Three or four hours afterwards just as the sun was setting, a nondescript object came puffing and wheezing along the track and at- tached itself to our train. It was apparently a ma- 36 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY chine of three stories. The first of these consisted of four driving-wheels, about three feet in diameter, upon which tlie whole rested. The second contained the boiler; and the third, directly over this, com- prised the pilot-house and tender. The driving- wheels were moved by pistons which worked verti- cally, and the whole structure rattled as if in mo- mentary danger of flying apart into its original atoms. It maintained its cohesion, however, and we began to move along. Dodging his way as best he might, and waiting at nearly every station for any trains likely to arrive within an hour, our en- gineer finally succeeded in rolling us into Washing- "SOLDIERS REST." Picture Taken About i8g THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 37 ton about two o'clock Friday moruiug'. Having dis- embarked in pitchy darkness and a ponring rain, we were usliered into a commodious barn-like building, known as the "Soldiers' Rest," and throwing our- selves on the floor, were soon sound asleep. MORNING REPORTS. 18G2. Oct. 14. Started from Boxford at 11.30 o'clock en route for Washington, D. C, with orders to re- port to the Adjutant General. At Boston we took a special train in which there were 111 horses turned over to us by Capt. McKim. Oct. 17. Arrived in Washington and encamped near Bladensburg Tollgate about (5 o'clock P.M. 38 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY CHAPTER III. October 11 to December 26, 1862. WASHINGTON — CAMP BARRY — ORGANIZATION — DRILL — INCIDENTS. "Everything is a hundred years behind the age here," was the general exclamation the next morn- ing, as daylight gave us our first view of the sur- roundings. The Capitol loomed up grandly with its massive proportions, a few hundred yards distant, but was so surrounded by wretched Southern hovels and dirty beer-shops, instead of the costly dwellings and clean streets which would have distinguished the locality in a Northern city, that it seemed like a precious jewel cast into a basket of rubbish. The noble stmctures reared by the government, which in a city otherwise beautiful would be its highest adornment, now seemed by contrast like the orna- ments of a belle dangling from the unsightly rags of a beggar. After getting fairly waked up, we made it our first business to look after the interests of the poor horses that had been boxed up in the cars for two days and nights without a mouthful to eat or drink during that time. They were sorry-looking creatures in- deed, gaunt with hunger, bruised and bitten in their quarrels, and evidently pretty well used up. A few days of feeding and fresh air, however, brought them back to good condition again. About nightfall we were ordered to our future quarters at Camp Barry, named for Gen. Barry, an artillery officer.* The camp was situated a mile or * Died July 18, 1879. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 39 SO from the Capitol at the toll-gate of the Bladeus- burg pike. The Eleventh Massachusetts Battery, already here, greeted us with a cup of coffee all around, and furnished shelter for many of us, while the rest passed the night on the ground. Many of the Battery men will recall an incident which hap- pened the next morning while a few were still sleep- ing on the ground; but we will refer the general reader, for particulars concerning the warm bath innocently administered to the ear of our late com- rade George L. Clark, to any one of the original mem- bers, who made the camp resound with laughter for days after, whenever the matter was mentioned. On the 17th of October we established our camp on an eminence of the field in which we had passed the night, having been provided with "A" tents (so called from their shape), which accommodated four men each. Having got fairly established in camp, the work of organization, begun in Boxford, was carried on to completion. The non-commissioned officers, already alluded to as appointed at Camp Stanton, have been given in the roster. Six other corporals, called chiefs of caissons, were appointed on our arrival at Camp Barry. They were as fol- lows: Lewis R. Allard, James S. Bailey, Jr., William B. Lemon, William H. Starkweather, Tobias Beck, George A. Pease. The duties of the first sergeant were mainly ex- ecutive, consisting in taking charge of all general or special roll-calls, in exercising an oversight of stable duties, and in calling for details of men un- der tJie direction of the Officer of the Day or Com- 40 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY mander of the Battery. The duties of the quarter- master sergeant consisted chiefly in supplying ra- tions for tlie Company and subsistence for the horses, upon requisitions signed by the commander of the Battery. To each chief of piece was commit- ted a body of men called a Detachment, in which were a first and second corporal, the former, known as gunner, sighting the gun in action and issuing the immediate orders to the gun's crew. The sec- ond corporal had charge of the caisson and its am- munition. These detachments were a distribution of the Company into six divisions as nearly equal as Ijossible, and to each was assigned a gun and cais- son. Two detachments with their pieces and caissons constituted a Section, which was commanded by a lieutenant. The men composing the detachments were classified as Cannoneers, Drivers and Spare Men. To each driver was committed a pair of horses that it was his duty to care for and drive. There were three drivers to a piece and three to a caisson. A gun's crew included a sergeant, two cor- porals, and seven cannoneers. The duties of the corporals have already been stated. The duties of the cannoneers, who were designated b}- numbers, were as follows: number One sponged the gun and rammed home the charge; number Tiro inserted the charge; number Thnv tliumbed vent, changed the direction of the piece by the trail handspike at the beck of the gunner, and pricked the cartridge; num- ber Four inserted the friction primer with the lan- yard attached into the vent, and at the command fired the gun; number Five assisted the gunner at the trail in limbering and unlimbering, and carried ammunition to number Two; number ^even fur- nished ammunition to number Five, and number Six THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 41 had charge of the limber, cutting fuses, fitting them to shells and delivering the ammunition, one round at a time, to number Seven. The spare men were to take the place of any who might become disabled in battle or by disease, and also had the care of spare horses. Besides the six guns and caissons there were a portable Forge and Battery Wagon, wliicli constituted a part of the regular outfit of the Bat- tery. Each was drawn by six horses. The forge was in charge of a black- smith called an .1/-^/- ficrr,* who had on(^ as- sistant. Their duties consisted in doing all the shoeing and any other repairs that came witliin their province. The battery wagon was in charge of a mechanic also staled an artificer. It was hlled with carpen- ter's tools and extra equii)ments of various kinds likely to be needed in the ordinary wear and tear of service. In addition to the foregoing, three Army Wagons, each drawn by four horses, were supplied to carry the forage, rations and camp equipage. Later in our experience, when horse-flesh became scarcer, each of these was drawn by six mules, and Messrs. ALVAX B. FISHER Assistant Artificer * Aniasa D. Bacon held this position throughout our term of serv- ice. 42 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY Slack, Johnson, and Abbott learned a new tongue, which, although mastered with some difficulty, eventually became, with the aid of a little of the "black snake," a powerful agent in toning down or spurring on the recalcitrant mule. An Ambulance, drawn by two horses, designed to carry the sick and wounded, completed the materiel of the Battery. Two Buglers, Joshua T. Reed and John E. Mugford, had been appointed to sound the calls for the various camp duties and for movements in drill, and William H. Fitzpatrick was selected as Guidon, or standard bearer. All other preliminaries having been properly ar- ranged, the horses were distributed to the drivers, and taken to the Washington Arsenal to be fitted with harnesses and to draw back guns and caissons. The former having been accomplished, with no trifling amount of opposition on the part of some of the animals, they were hitched to an old worn-out battery of small brass guns furnished us for drill. It may be added that two or three of the horses, acting as if conscripted, obstinately refused duty, and only yielded the contest with their lives, giving w^ay in a few days to the rigors of a discipline to which they would not submit. The following Monday regular drills began. At first the movements were slow and executed at a walk; but as they became familiar, we manoeuvred with a promptness and precision that would have re- flected credit on older batteries. These drills, with one or two exceptions, always took place either on Capitol Hill or near the Toll-house at Camp Barry. As time wore on, other batteries came and joined us, until a large brigade of artillery was assembled here. Among them was the Twelfth New York Bat- tery, of which Lieut. Adams afterwards had tempo- THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 43 rary command. The mild, clear aiitumu days, which we had improved by four or five hours drill a day, were be. Iveceived 12 horses from (^uartei-master Dana. Six horses condemned and turned over to Quartermaster Dana. Started fdv Poolsville, Md., about 10.30 o'clock. H. B. Winslow and 11. B. Wen- dall left in hospital at Camp Barry. 50 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY CHAPTER IV. December 26, 1862, to June 24, 1863. ON THE MARCH — POOLSVILLE — CAMP LIFE — DIS- CONTENT — DRILL — INCIDENTS — BENSON'S HILT. — ALARMS — RETROSPECT. Friday iiiorniug, Dec. 2(5, about 10.30 o'clock, we turned our backs on Camp Barr> with little reluc- tance, and moving up Maryland Avenue past the Capitol into Pennsylvania Avenue, thence on through Georgetow^n, we entered the main road leading to the upper Potomac. The weather had been mild for several days, and the roads being dry and hard enabled us to move along easily. Tlie tempting persimmon trees near the roadside, bending with their luscious fruit, now fully ripened by the frost, allured the cannoneers to frequent excursions from the main body. At noon we halted in a grove near a running stream and prepared and ate dinner. Thus far the journey seemed more like a holiday trip than the advance of a military detachment. At 3 P.M. we halted for tlie day and ])ut our guns "In Battery.'' A stack of unthreshed oats near by, for which certificates of indebtedness were given to the owner, furnished supper for the horses and ex- cellent beds for many of us, while others slept be- tween the folds of the tarpaulins. These latter were large squares of canvas used to cover the guns and caissons. They were frequently employed af- terwards for a night's shelter when on the march, as they afforded protection from storms, and could be THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 51 folded and strapped upon the limbers at short no- tice. Passinj; on through Darnestown, Tenallytown, and Rockville, we bivouacked one more night, and the next day, Sunday, Dec. 28, about 11 o'clock A.M., arrived at Poolsville. This was a little settlement, of strong secession proclivities, on the upper Poto- mac, near Edwards Ferry, interesting as the scene of frequent guerrilla raids. In the most recent of these Maj. White and a party of his followers, who belonged in this neighborhood, liad surprised and < ai)tured a body of tifty or seventy-live TTnion cav- alry one evening while they were at church in the town, the officer in command having neglected to leave any one on guard. One of the assailing party fell. His grave is still to be seen (1871)) in the little cemetery near the church. Partly through the iutlueuce of a Mr. Metzger, the l)ostmaster, who, except one Dr. Prace, was the only Union man in the town, more ti'ooi)s were at once sent, and we found already encamped here the Four- teenth New Hampshire and Thirty-ninth Massachu- setts regiments, commanded by Colonels Wilson and Davis, respectively. "How^ are you, Boxford?'' w^as the greeting from the latter regiment as soon as we were recognized, and it seemed like meeting old friends to fall in with those wdio had been encamped with us on the soil of Massachusetts. W^e were now considered to be in the enemy's country, and great vigilance was thought necessary. On the second morning we were aroused at 1 o'clock, and turning out in the darkness, hastily harnessed, (Uily to hud when everything was ready, that it was a hoax to see how quickly we could be on hand in an emergency. Such artifices are frequently resorted to by officers when either they or their commands, or both, are "green." 52 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY At first we pitched our tents ou a level tract of land outside and near the town, but it being consid- ered bv Dr. Brace too flat to be healthy, we moved soon afterwards to a rise of ground a few rods dis- tant. Here we laid out a plan for a permanent canii). From the quarters occupied by Gen. Stone's troo])s prior to Ball's Bluff disaster, and from the barn-yards and rail fences of the neighboring farm- ers, we obtained materials for building a stable; this was erected around three sides of a square and thatched with straw. The walls were constructed by setting up rails a foot apart and AveaA ing among tliem huge ropes of straw twisted by hand. Thus comfortable quarters were made for the horses. This strticture was finished towards the last of Jan- uary, and occupied the centre of the canii). The tents were arranged as at Boxford, six on either side, removed from the wings of the stable by a street about two rods wide. Within the square stood the harness racks, while in front the Battery was "parked.'' The weather being pleasant for some days after our arrival, otir drills were resumed with the ctis- tomary vigor. In one of these a sham fight was had between the Battery and a body of "Scott's Nine Htmdred" cavalry that had recently encamped near by. As the contest waxed warm and men became excited, Frank Loham, No. Two man on the second piece, was qtiite seriously wotmded in the face and breast by a i)remattire discharge. Once in a while the \^'hole or a part of the Bat- tery A\as taken out for target practice. On one of these occasions a distant pig-pen was the object aimed at, and immediately after a well-directed shot, the occupant, who, it seemed, was at home, is- sued forth very jDromptly, attended by her family, THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 5o unharmed, but aiuaziuyly astonished. On another occasion the ooh)rs were set up as a target, and the staff was cut in lialves by a ball from a spherical case shot. The stormy season came at last, with its accom- paniment of mud, an2 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY he did not appear to think so, and everything re- mained quiet until the 18th of April, when we struck our tents, packed up, bade adieu to Camp Davis, as it was called in honor of the Colonel of the Thirty- ninth Massachusetts, and moved out of town nearly a mile to spend an indefinite season. Our new camp (called Heintzelman, in honor of the commander of the defences of Washington under whom we then were) was located on the premises of one Henry Young. An airy awning was built over the picket to shelter the horses; trees, both pine and cedar, were cut and set about our tents; arbors were built in front of some; and, on the whole, Ave seemed likely to have quite a desirable summer residence. Having got fully established once more, the usual routine camp duties were resumed. These were the halcyon days of the Battery, when it had reached its highest state of proficiency in drill. As j)r()of of our expertness an observer might have seen the Battery drawn up on the drill-ground on Benson's farm, adjoining the camp, some morning, unlimbered for action, the cannoneers standing about the guns. At a given command they spring at them. Each man has his own special part to per- form, and this he strictly attends to or confusion would ensue. The handspikes, sponge buckets, and other implements are stripped off with the utmost dispatch; the trail is raised in air, the gun at once tipped and poised on its muzzle, freed from the car- riage, and dropped on the ground. The wheels are next removed and laid beside the axle, and the bat- tery lies in pieces on the turf. The cannoneers then resume their stations. Again, at the command, they spring to the work; the w^heels instantly slip to their places; by a strong pull altogether four men raise the gun with handspikes till it is again poised n O H H r-iW w > o o o THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 65 on the muzzle; meauwhile, the caiTiage has been pushed up with elevated trail, and the heavy piece falls back promptly with its trunnions in their ap- pointed sockets. A few nimble leaps restore the implements to their respective places, and the Bat- tery is ready for action. When all is completed, if the observer has noted the time, he Avill find that the carriages have been taken to pieces, put together again, and the motions of loading and firing gone through with, in less than a minute. This manoeu- vre was once accomplished by the Fourth Detach- ment in fortii-nine .srcoiid.s. In this camp, as in Camp Davis, occasional inci- dents occurred to enliven the monotony of drill. At one time we were inspected by a lieutenant from the Tenth Vermont Infantry, who evidently knew but little of artillery matters, and being under the influ- ence of too much "commissary" ventured criticisms on no point except our dishes, taking the opportu- nity to recommend to us a new improvement, sold by a Capt. Dillingham of his regiment, consisting of a dipper furnished with a wire bail. He returned in transports at our appearance, and, having seen double, reported Capt. Sleeper's Battery of twelve guns and three hundred men as in splendid condi- tion. We, on the other hand, took the hint about tlie dippers, and from tiiat day forward a tin vessel fitteted. Whether this Avas or was not true still remains a mooted (juestion, but, true or false, the author has thought it too good a story to be lost to the Company, and therefore has repro- duced it in brief. One incident more and we leave the Ferry. One day, in the absence of Lieut. Smith at the main camp, a cavalry picket came galloi)iug at full speed to Oapt. Olossou's tent, informing him that a ccdumn of Kebel cavalry was api)roa('hing. He at once went to Serg. Fred Gould, in command of the guns, and ordered him to fire ui)on the advancing column. This the sergeant declined to do, not feeling quite so sure that it was a hostile party. Thereat the val- iant Captain waxed quite irate, and, laying his hand on his sabre, contemplated some deed of violence; l)ut the sergeant's delay had warded off disaster, for just then the advance of the so-called enemy, which was no other than the Second Massachusetts Cav- alry, appeared above the banks of the road which Avound around up the hill int(> camp. How much "life was wasted during the Avar on both sides by just such blundering as this might have been, Avill ncA^er be knoAvn. " Major Cliaiidler. OS THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATT1<]RY One day a long, lank negro, full six feet six inches in height, whom we had seen a few times before, made his appearance in camp. He was one of those individnals whose legs and arms are of such uncon- scionable extent, that it is impossible to find panta- loons and sleeves long enough to cover more than lAVO-thirds their lengtli. As he took a seat on a camp-stool, his legs, coming up grasshopper-like to a level with his ebony face, recalled to one's mind, in all except color, the quaint portraiture of Ichabod Crane, the schoolmaster of Sleepy Hollow. He passed by the name of William Walker. He pro- fessed to be a si)y, employed by (}en. Hooker on very secret service, frequenting the llebel camps to pick up information, and claimed to have saved our camp from a surprise, early in the spring, by giving timely notice at headquarters. We enter into conversa- tion with him, and derive the usual slight amount of satisfaction from his answers to our inquiries. Every sentence is mysterious and indefinite, and winds up with a round guffaw. He talks with great volubility, telling us he has just come from the en- emy's camp, and that we must get out of here, as i\w "llebs" are coming with men enough to eat us all up. After this exhibition of wit, he rolls up his eyes with intense delight, and watches the effect of his remark on his auditors. He was a good-natured genius, and was never permitted to leave camp until he had danced and patted ''Juba," which he did in true plantation style, himself furnishing the music with his voice. The picture his ungainly figure fjre- sented on these occasions was ludicrous in the ex- treme. We could learn nothing definite from the man this time, which was the last we ever saw of him. Whether he really was a Union sp3% or, on the other hand, a Kebel or an impostor, we never THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 69 could detei-iuiue. But whatever his testimouy was worth, it teuded, witli other vague rumors wliich came to our ears, to show tliat souie important movement was at hand. No papers liad come from Washington for some days, and we were left to the mercy of Dame Humor for all the news we obtained, which Avas usually scarce worth repeating. ^Vt last there came something definite. On the morning of June 11, before sunrise, three or four cavalrymen, hatless, coatless, and covered with dust, came galloping into cam}) with their horses in a reeking sweat. It seems that a band of Mosby's cavalry surprised their little camp of forty men — located at Seneca, some six miles down the river — before they were up, killed four, took seviMi- teen i)risoners, and fell to plundcn-ing the tents. The renminder of the detachment fought desper- ately a few moments, but being overpowered, took to flight, having killed one and wounded several of their assailants. They Ixdonged to the Sixth Michi- gan. As soon as the story of the ti^rrified fugitives could be learned, "Boot and Saddle" was sounded, everything was hastily packed up, and our little force marched breakfastless to higher groinul in rear of the camp, towards Poolsville, and took i»osi- tion in line of battle, our guns being in front, the Tenth Vermont and Twenty-third Maine infantry supporting us, and the cavalry on both flanks. In rear of all was a stone wall, which was to serve as a "last ditch" if worst came to worst. In the excite- ment of the scene how we strained our eyes up the road and longed for the enemy's line to appear! Ever and anon the dust rose in clouds, but revealed only galloping orderlies, and excited officers riding to and fro with no inconsiderable amount of the pomp 70 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY aud circumstance of war. Col. Jewett, of the Tenth Vermont, was in command of this formidable array. While Ave were thus boldly awaiting the onset of the Kebels, their band was doubtless trotting leisurely back across the river with their booty, chuckling over the success of their morning's adventure. Could they have seen our martial array, six miles in their rear, their enjoyment would have been sensibly increased. Some of our force, with vision preter- naturally acute, saw an enemy in every bush, and one or two averred that a wJiole troop had passed through the woods a quarter of a mile distant aud turned our Hank. Others there were thirsting for glory. One lieutenant of infantry saw a stirring jimong the bushes in a ravine in front. At once his ]M]rpose was formed. With a look of pale determin- ation aud lofty couiage, he unsheathed his sword, and al<»ne charged fiercely down the glen. "I'.ri.niit jiioanied his blade And tcrrilily ttaslicd his eye." Tearing apart the shrubbery that ludd the foe in concealment, he dragged him to the light, aud be- held — an astonished hosi)ital nurse in quest of water. Thus ended the ever memorable event known in our company as the battle of Benson's Hill, so called, from the name of the mau ou whose farm it might have occurred; on which occasion we seemed in all but numbers like the King of France, as sung by Mother Goose, who with forty thousand men marched up a hill and then marched down again. We returned to camp at noon; but our troubkvs did not end here. Gen. Lee was now fairly launched on his great invasion of the North, and our isolated THE TENTH :\rASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 71 position seemed oue fraiiy,lit witli inucli dauger. Now and then tlie sound of distant cannonading told of cavalry contests between opposing armies as botli were pressing ncjrtliward, but we could hear noth- ing definite about what was actually taking place. Four days after the raid at Muddy Branch, or Sen- eca, the centre section was summoned from the Ferry. We threw up rifle-pits on Benson's Hill (our first experience in this kind of engineering, which paled before our later efforts), and kept every- thing packed ready to move at a moment's notice. Some of us packed up superfluous clothing and con- veniences, and expressed them home by way of Adamstown. Night after night the harnesses were placed on the horses, and at 3 o'clock in the morn- ing we were turned out, sleepy and cross, to hitch them to the pieces in anticipation of an early attack. At daybreak the harnesses were taken off. One night, about one o'clock, an officer rode into camp with the tidings that Kebel pickets were in posses- sion of our rifle-pits. "Ah! then and there was hurrying to and fro" in the darkness, and silent mustering and mutterings of warriors. "All communication with Washing- ton is cut off!" was whispered round. "We are to fight desperately if attacked, and fall back on Har- I)er's Ferry." A truly agreeable prospect, that his- toric place being more than thirty miles distant! One section of the Battery was sent out Avith a reconnoi- tering party, which returned in a half hour report- ing a false alarm. It arose, as we ascertained in the morning, from three or four cavalrymen who had strayed from a detachment of Hooker's army and lain down by the wall to sleep. We treated them to a good breakfast, and from them received our first reliable news of the great invasion. Soon 72 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY after, men from Edwards Ferry reported the Army of the Potomac as crossing there. An army tele- graph was being stretched past our camp, said to connect with Gen. Hooker's headquarters and we now felt safe from attack, but seemed likely to be swept into the current and borne on to the great bat- tle which all felt must soon be fought. The scat- tered companies of the infantry regiments that had been out at various points on picket were called in, and our brigade received orders to be ready to march. All our tents and superfluous camp equip- age were turned over to the quartermaster to be sent to the rear, our jjersonal baggage reduced to the smallest possible limit, then stowed in our knap- sacks, now not quite as distended as when we left Massachusetts. These were then strapped upon the pieces and caissons, and having at last received marching orders, at 6 o'clock in the afternoon of June 24, 1863, we bade adieu, most of us forever, to our old camp and the village of Poolsville. As we turn in retrospect upon our sojourn here, removed from the occurrence by a lapse of so many years, there are thoughts which present themselves perhaps not unworthy of noting down in passing. And first, with regard to our bodily comfort. Those of us who were fortunate enough to keep off the sick- list underwent no privations worthy of mention save absence from our families, which was of course inseparable from the nature of the case; and those who were seriously sick were at once removed to Washington, where good nursing and medical at tendance were always to be had. Dr. Child, of the Tenth Vermont, was the brigade surgeon, and, s(» far as we know, was competent in his calling. Our living was, in the main, good enough. It was not what we were accustomed to at home, and very THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 73 properly should uot have been. On the other hand, many of the men who grumbled loudest and were the daintiest, in all probability lived no better be- fore their enlistment, and perhaps have not since their discharge, than they lived during their six months' stay here. We are making no apology for the animated hard-tack, or stale beef that was too frequently served out to us; but taking a broad and dispassionate survey of the whole field, it is our can- did conviction that the Company was not badly served in the matter of rations, on the whole. We did believe, however, and with good reason as we still think, that inasmuch as the Battery did not use all its allowances, a large surplus had or ought to have accumulated in the Company Fund, already men- tioned; and this should h.ave been properly ac- counted for, and ultimateh" inured in some manner to the benefit of the Company. This being the case, we do not know how much better we might have been served under proper management, and hence a foothold is made for the complaint of unjust admin- istration in the department of subsistence. The disi)osition to improve our bill of fare at the expense of neighboring farm-yards seemed to have died out with our departure from Camp Davis. A more extended familiarity with the adjacent terri- tory, and, as a consequence, a better acquaintance with the people, who, although secessionists, ap- peared more like human beings than we had be- lieved it possible for Rebels to do, had made us somewhat more merciful to their effects. And again, whether we condemn or approve the charac- ter of the government rations furnished us, there was certainly a very perceptible increase in the pounds avoirdupois of a large portion of the Com- pany, whose daily routine may be fairly stated as 74 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY follows: breakfast, sleep, drill; dinner, sleep, drill; supper, sleep; — ^tlie result of which was a condi- tion of body and mind positively antagonistic to tiresome raids over fences, fields, and ditches in the darkness, and in the uncertain and sometimes dan- gerous pursuit of special rations. Our living Avas at times obtained quite indepen- dently of the government, by means of the boxes j'rom home, that were received with greater or less frequency. These were always inspected at head- quarters before they came into our possession, and all contraband articles, in the line of liquors, con- fiscated. This seemed one of the singular anomalies of the war, that intoxicants were regarded a dangerous indulgence for the private soldier, who, in compai-ison had no responsibility, but the correct thing for the commissioned officer, upon whom de- volved evcri/ responsibility. Could this state of af- fairs have been exactly reversed, or, better still, could all liquors, save for hospital uses, have been proscribed in the army, we believe the Avar would have been ended long before it was, and many a hearthstone, noAV desolate, would be gladdened by the presence of the unfortunate ones who, in various ways, fell innocent victims to this great curse. To see the eager croAvd gather round the recii^ient of a box and watch the unpacking and unwrapping of every article, and each commend as approvingly as if the contents Avere his oavu, Avould have rejoiced the hearts of the kind friends at home. It was downright enjoyment to them. If they belonged to the same tent's creAV Avith the oAvner of the treasure they were sure of a closer interview than a simple observation gave them; for the Avar, Avith its com- munity of interest, developed sympathy and large- hearted generosity among the rank and file, and BREVET LIEUT. COLONEL THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 77 tliey shared liberally, especially with those who had no one at home to remember them in this pleasant manner. With onr departnre from Poolsville more tliau nine months of our term of service had expired. If we had not made our mark in active service the fault Avas not our own. We obeyed orders, we did not originate them. It was not unusual for troops to be inactive several months after their muster. It will be remembered, too, that there was little activ- ity in the main army after our arrival at Washing- ton. The Army of the Potomac lay inactive nearly live months subse(]uent to the disastrous battle of Fredericksbui'g'. I>ut there is no doubt whatever about our haviug been serviceable here, and that the presence of our brigade at the ujjper fords of the Potomac did prevent frequent incursions of Rebel raiders into this section. But there are other reasons for claiming that these were valuable mouths for the Company and the government. First, then, there is of necessity a broad chasm to be spanned between the citizen and the full-Hedged soldier. The citizen possesses certain rights in whose exercise he is restricted when he becomes a soldier. As a citizen he has a voice in deciding who shall be his rulers; as a soldier, usually none: as a citizen he is justly bound to obey all laws intended to promote the general welfare, since he had a voice in making them; as a soldier he is held rigidly accountable for the infringement of all military laws, in whose making he had no voice. It matters not if they are the mandates of the veri- est tyrant in the army, or if they violate every princi- }>le of reason, common-sense, or justice; the laws of the service are inexorable, and its exigencies require an unflinching and exact obedience. The existence 78 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY of a conscience in the person of the offender is not for a moment to be considered. As a citizen his time is wholly his own; as a soldier there is not a second to which he can surely lay claim. The citi- zen calls no man master; the soldier may be com- pelled to bow before a man infinitely his inferior in every respect, — illustrations of which were v^ery frequent during the war. In view of these and other considerations that might be cited, time was a very desirable and potent agency in bringing about the adaptation of the citizen to the new order of things. Again, the fact of our proficiency in light artillery tactics has already been alluded to, and we onlj'^ re- fer to it here as a second advantage derived in these early months. Instances were not wanting, during the Rebellion, of batteries being sent to the front, under a pressing demand for troops, as soon as they received their guns, without this thorough prepara- tion. They had the implements of Avarfare, it is true, but w^ere the merest apprentices with them, and consequeutly, when involved in an action, had no confidence in themselves and felt comparatively helpless. There can be but one result under such circumstances, — that of confusion and disaster to this particular organization, and, perhaps, through it to others. Hence, whenever we reflect upon our record at Camp Barry and at Poolsville in this re- spect, it arouses our pride, and we feel that these were valuable months in the school of the soldier. If the Tenth Massachusetts Battery was a unit during its nearly three years of service, — and it certainly was; if the men were subordinate to their superiors, — and the residents of Poolsville say they left a good impression there in this respect; if the Battery did its full dutv whenever its services were called THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 79 for, — and the official reports do it ample justice on tins head; if its members ever stood np manfnlly to their work, confident in their own strength, fear- lessly dealing out death and destruction among the enemy, silencing battery after battery, under adver- sity defiantly contesting every inch of ground, — anruce is de- tailed in his place as Farrier. 82 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY Feb. 10. John P. Brown and Jos. Cross reported sick in quarters. Feb. 11. John P. Brown and Jos. Cross reported for duty. Feb. 12. E. T. Atwood reported sick. J. W. French having his discharge dated Feb. 5th, started for Washington and home. Feb, 18. One bay horse died of congestion of the lungs. Feb. 14. Joseph Brooks reported for light duty. Feb. 15. E. T. Atwood sent to General Hospital, Washington. Feb. 18. Waldo Pierce sick in quarters. Capt. Sleeper returned from furlough. Feb. 19. Harrison Chase reported for duty. Feb. 21. Waldo Pierce returned to duty. Feb. 22. Washington's Birthday. We are hav- ing the severest snow storm of the season. Fired a salute of 34 guns at 12 o'clock M. Feb. 26. William H. Martin placed under arrest for disobedience of orders. Frederick F. (?) Brown not having returned we have dropped him from the Report, as a deserter. Feb. 27. Norman H. Butterfield and O. N. Barker reported sick in quarters. Lieut. Smith went on furlough of 7 days. Feb. 28. Jos. Brooks reported sick in quarters. Battery mustered (for pay) by Capt. Sleeper. March 1. N. H. Butterfield returned to duty. Lieut. Adams leave of absence till Wednesday morning. March 2. Chas. E. Prince and John C. Frost re- ported sick in quarters. March 3. Sergt. Chandler Gould reduced to the ranks and Corporal L. B. Allard promoted to Sergt. vice Gould removed. One horse shot per order Capt. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 83 Sleeper, disease glanders. J. P. Brown reported sick in quarters. March 4. John Norton reported for light duty. J. L. W. Thayer reported sick in quarters. Lieut. Adams returned. March 5. Nine horses condemned (5 turned in and 4 shot), 50 nose bags and 1 linen wall tent also condemned per Col. A. B. Nowell (?) (Jewett) com- manding brigade. March G. Chas. E. Prince reported for duty. John H. Knowland reported sick in quarters. March 7. Lieut. Asa Smith returnc^d from fur- lough and reported for duty yesterday aficrnoon. J. 11. Knowhmd reported for duty. March 9. S. A. Hanson reported for light ot will be remem- bered by comrades of the Company for the sicken- ing stench, filling the night air, from some animal carcasses rotting near by. We unharnessed and stretched the picket-rope across the caissons, a plan usually adopted in temporary camps. To this the horses were hitched, between caissons, soon to be fed and groomed; then, spreading the tarpaulins on the ground, and arranging our blankets u})on them, we ''turned in," and slept soundly till the shrill bugle notes broke our slumbers at half-past two in the morning. About 4 o'clock the infantry filed off into the road. We soon followed, and wlien the sun rose liot and scorching, and we saw them toiling along under their load of musket, knapsack, cartridge-box, THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 01 haversack, and tauteeii, we considered onrselves — required to bear only the two hitter articles — espe- cially fortunate in belon^in<»' to artillery. At 8 o'clock we stopped for breakfast, munching- our hard-tack and drinking our coffee with the relish ^\hich a march is wont to confer. During the day we crossed the Monocacy liiver, ])assiug through Licksville, a small settlement on its left bank. In the afternoon some one blundered and sent the brig- ade off' two miles on the wrong rojid. In attempting to make up for this loss the troops became scattered for miles along the road, and two or three of our horses dropped in their traces. At night, however, all came together again, and, thoroughly weary, we went into camp at a place called Petersville. As a drizzling rain had set in we pitched our tarpaulins for the first time with the aid of rails. This day we marched littl(% if any, less than twenty miles. We recall the fact that our spirits were not a little cheered by the abundance of cherries along the line of march, to wdiich we helped ourselves with our ac- customed liberality, and this, too, with little com- punction, as they generally grew by the roadside and seemed to be county property. Morning of Friday, June 2(), brcd^e wet and drip- ping, but we early resumed our inarch, and toiling on over a rocky road traversed by gullies rushing with water, at 9 o'clock entered the mountain region and the magnilicent scenery of Hari)er's Ferry. Passing on through the dirty, desolate little settle- ments of Knoxville, Weverton and Sandy Hook, and following the narrow road in its winding, with tln^ Chesapeake and Ohio Oanal on one side and the per- pendicular rocks of Maryland Heights on the other, we came at last opposite the historic town of Har- per's Ferry. Set as it is in one of the angles formed 92 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY by tlie coiiflueiu-e of the Potomac and Slieiiandoali rivers, and nestling- at tlie foot of grand old moun- tains, its houses rising one above another on the bank of the former river, in time of peace it must have seemed a gem of beauty; but now, with the once splendid bridge of the Baltimore and Ohio Road, which crosses the river at this i)lace, half de- stroyed, the long armory buildings a row of black- ened ruins by the river side, and the whole i)lace de- serted and desolate, it seemelet(dy soaked the clothing Ave Avore, but had also pen(^- "There is yet evidence that he purposed making at least a strong demonstration on Lee's lin(> of communications. AA'^itli this view he threw out his left well westward to Middletown. and ordered the Twelfth Corps, under General Slooum, to march to Harper's Ferry. Here Slocum was to be joineil by the garrison of that post, eleven lliousand strong, under General French, and the united force was to menace the Confederate rear by a movement towards Chambers- burg." 98 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY trated the contents of our shoddy knapsacks, so that shirts, blouses, jackets, and blankets were to be seen stretched upon every available fence or car- riage to dry. We learned here that the Army of the Potomac had been passing through Frederick for two days, but instead of pressing on to overtake it, we were sent at 3 o'clock P.M., with the Tenth Ver- mont Eegiment and a company of cavalry, three miles from the city to Frederick Junction, a station on the Baltimore and Ohio Eailroad, from which a short branch extended to the city. Our business here was to guard the railroad bridge across the Monocacy.* A block house erected for the same purpose stood near by. The spot was rather attractive as a whole, and the pros- pect of ample opportunity to wash and bathe in the river was quite gratifying. On the morning of July 3d, before we had turned out, a faint rumbling of cannon was perceptible to the ear. It was the incipient muttering of the third day's battle at Gettysburg. Often during the day did we kneel to the ground, and the quick throbbing sounds heard at irregular intervals told us the two great armies had indeed met, forty miles away, and were engaged in deadly struggle for the mastery. '■ "JS'or is Meude justly blamable for not pushing forward at ouoe oil the heels of his beaten foes His real and grave error dated several days back of this. He had, on assuming command, been au- thorized to do as he judged best with French's force on Maryland Heights, and Couch's in Central Pennsylvania. Had he. on deciding to fight Lee as soon as circumstances favored, ordered both these to join him at the earliest moment, he would now have been consciously master of the situation, and might have blocked Lee's return to Vir- ginia. But he gave no such order to Couch; and having at Butter- faeld's urgent suggestion withdrawn French's 11,000 men from Mary- land Heights, he left 7.000 of tliem standing idle at Fredei-ick, send- ing the residue as train guards to Washington, and actually apolo- gized to Halleck, on meeting him, for having moved them at all! Had Gettysburg been lost for want of these 11,000 men, his would have been a fearful responsibility." — American Conflict, Vol. II. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 1)9 This day the rest of Gen. Morris's brigade, to which we were attached, came to the Junctiou and camped near ns. The morning of the Fourth dawned, with the contest still undecided. Onr anxiety for the re- sult, however, as the day wore on, was in part over- come by an intense desire for food. Our hard-tack was crawling with weevils, and the meat cooked some days before had become equally animated with maggots. Our next resort was to the pork-barrel, and a slice of raw pork, sandwiched between hard- tack from which the tenants had been expelled by fire, formed our Fourth of July dinner. This day news came that Lee was retreating, and at o'clock in the afternoon we received orders to march; but before we had gone over half the distance to Fred- erick, the order was countermanded, and we re- turned to the Junction about 9 o'clock. The next day was the Sabbath, and the wildest of reports were brought by engineers on passing trains. We believed only what we pleased of these, but the great fact that the Kebel army had been defeated and was in full retreat could no longer be doubted. Numerous trains came along from AVashiugton, laden with fresh troops, and with horses, forage, and rations for the army, and we felt that the most en- ergetic efforts wer(^ being made to crush the enemy before he could recross the I'otuildings belonging to large estates. In the midst stood the modest little hamlet of Middletown and the glittering city of Frederick; while over all was poured a flood of mellow light from the sun just sinking behind the mountains. Among many of the older troops we found the love of McClellan still strong and deep. How was it that, after successive failure and defeat, after hav- ing lost the confidence both of the government and the people, this man succeeded in implanting such imperishable sentiments of love and devotion in his soldiers? Tliey declared he had never been whipped, that they had driven the Rebels in every fight on the Peninsula, and if the General could have had his own way, Ricbmond would have been ours long since. Nor could we make tlie absurdity of their views, as they appeared to us, at all plain to them by any argument or appeal to facts. Their de- votion seemed something inexplicable, and we at- THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 103 tribiited it to the tact of the mau and the favoring circumstances attaching to him as their first com- mander. AVe camped for the night on the slope of the moun- tain, near a brick house occupied as headquarters by Brig. Gen. Morris, on a portion of South Moun- tain battlefield. Here we lay quietly until 9 P.M. of the next day (Thursday, July 9), while the Sixth Corps and a numerous body of cavalry filed past. Having freighted our haversacks with three days' rations, w^e, too, moved on as part and parcel of the Army of the I'otomac, considering ourselves now fully identified with it, and justly proud, too, of our connection. The fear of being sent into the Depart- ment of the Gulf was no longer a bugbear to us. Our fondest hopes were realized. The future was yet to show whether w^e should reflect credit or dis- grace upon our distinguished associates. It was quite dark when we entered Turner's Gap. The road was terribly rough and rugged, which made our night march toilsome in the extreme; but w^e labored on until after midnight, when, having got through the Gap, we turned into a field on the right of the road, and bivouacked for the rest of the night. With the first streak of dawn the shrill bu- gle summoned us again into readiness for moving. Shortly after there came sounds of cannonading in our front, wiiich made our pulses beat quick with expectation of battle, but we remained quiet; and when, about 10 o'clock, the column finally moved on, the firing had died aw^ay. The road was encum- bered with wagon trains belonging to troops in the advance, and the weather was quite warm, so that we marched no more than five or six miles during the day. We passed through the little village of Kediesville about 6 o'clock, and camped just beyond, 104: THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY on a portion of the Antietam battlefield. But the harnesses were hardly off the horses before orders were received to be ready to niareli at once. Hungry and tired as we were, it was hard to think of moving on before taking the expected rest and refreshment on the fresh green knoll where we were in position. Nevertheless Ave were soon ready and awaiting or- ders, which did not come, as so often happened. About midnight, as Ave lay scattered upon the ground asleep, orders came to unharness, and Ave passed the rest of the night in comparative quiet, disturbed only by the columns of passing infantry that Avent on and camped near Boonesboro', Avhere we joined them the next morning (July 11). Boones- boro' bore marks of a cavalry brush that occurred there the day before. Here we fell in Avith the Ninth Massachusetts Battery, — our first intervicAV with it since it left Camp Barry. It had been se- Aerely handled at Gettysburg, its first fight, losing twenty-nine men in killed, Avounded, and prisoners. This day we remember as the one on Avliich Ave were Axeaned from the Company cooks, and received our rations uncooked, for each man to prepare to his own taste. Continuing our march leisurely from Boouesboro', crossing Beaver and Antietam creeks, Ave arrived, at midnight, at Sampsonville, or Roxbury Mills, in or near Williamsport. The next day was the Sabbath, but all Avas bustle and excitement. A great battle seemed imminent. Orderlies were galloping rapidly from point to point, and everything Avas in readiness to move at a moment's notice. The army Avas in excellent spir- its, and the greatest enthusiatJim prevailed. The sol- diers felt that they had Lee Avliere he could not es- cape. His army Avas beaten, demoralized, panic- THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 105 stricken. "Our forces," it Avas said, "bad it siir- roiiuded iu a liorse-slioe, and across the opening stretched the swollen, impassable rotoniac." We never afterwards saw men so eager to be led to bat- tle,* They would have fought with the utmost zeal, for they felt that one more decisive blow would end the war, at least in Virginia; but matters lingered- mysteriously. About noon, we, wutli other batteries, were or- dered into position a mile beyond Antietam Bridge, liumors of lighting at Hagerstown reached us, but still no sound of battle. The aftei'noon passewn beside them and slept soundly. At sundown we began to * "Gen. Meade erossed the Potomao . . . on the 18th, . . . moving to Warrenton. This movement being in advance of Lee, who halted for some days near Bnnker Hill and made a feint of recrossing the Potomac, Meade was enabled to seize all the passes through the Blue Uidge north of the liappahannock, barring the enemy's egress from the Shenandoah save by a tedious flank march. "Meade, misled by his scouts, had expected to fight a battle in Manassas Gap — or rather on the west side of it — where our cav- alry under Buford found the enemy in force; when the od Corps was sent in haste from Ashby's Gap to Buford's support, and its 1st di- vision. Gen. Ilobart W'ard. pushed through the Gap, and the Excel- sior brigade, CtOu. F. B. Spinola, made three heroic charges up as many steep and ditticult ridges dislodging and driving the enemy with mutual loss, — (ien. Spinola being twice wounded. . . . "Next morning, our soldiers pushed forward to Front Royal, but encountered no enemy. Unknown to us, the Excelsiors had been THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 111 cast about for souiethmg to eat, rations beiug in ar- rears as well as forage. A neighboring cornfield fur- nished a meal of green stalks for the liorses, and from the remains of a cow that had been slaughtered by some of the infantry who had preceded us, several of the Company gleaned meat enough for supper. Others, making a raid on a neighboring barn-yard, secured a calf and a sheep, which were promptly of- fered up as victims to the needs of the present hour. In the morning several rapid volleys of musketry were heard, and we expected soon to be engaged, but the sounds at length died away. The dark masses of infantry that were encamped on the hills around began to file down into the road and retrace their steps. Then we knew that the Rebels had gone. Of course the sanguine circulated rumors that there was but one gap left by which they could escape to Kichmond, and that, our forces could reach first; but we put little confidence in them, and, as it proved, these were the last sounds of battle heard in this campaign. We soon followed the infantry, and hav- ing aiTived at Piedmont, where we encanix)ed for the night, found the welcome supply trains awaiting us. Another day's nmrch took us through the settle- ments of Oak Hill and Salem. The latter stood on the fiattest piece of territory we had yet seen in Vir- ginia. It had been quite a flourishing village in its day, but now, left in charge of its old men and a few faithful blacks, it was fast going to decay. We bivouacked for the night neai-ly three miles beyond the town, and on the morrow (Sunday) completed tighting a brigade of Ewell's iiicii who were holding the Gap, while Rhodes' division, forming the rear guard of Lee's army, marched past up the valley, and hid, of course, followed on its footsteps dur- ing the night. No enemy remained to fight; but two days were lost by Meade getting into and out of the Gap; during which Lee moved rapidly southward, passing around our right flank, and appearing in our front when our army again looked across the Rappahannock." — American Vonflict, Vol. IL 112 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY the remaiuing distance of six miles to Warrentoii, arriving there about 11 o'eh^ek A.M., parking just outside the town. Our lialt here was brief, how^ever, for soon an order came for us to go on picl\;et at a l)ost tliree miles beyond tlie town, Aviiicli Ave did, having a support of four or five thousand infantry accompany us. Warrenton is the capital town of Fauquier County, and in 1860 Avas recorded as liaving a fre(^ population of (105. As Ave Avere marched around in- stead of through the toAvn, much to the disgust of our Yankee curiosity, Ave could take no note of its in- terior. What Ave could see of its suburbs, hoAvever, Avas in its favor. A visit to the place in 1879, under more favorable circumstances, enables us to give some description of it. It is a ''city set on a hill," and, therefore, can be seen for a long distance. Its present population is said to number 2,000. It has but one business street, perhaps one-fourth of a mile in length, Avliich Avas innocent of all attempts at grading, being loAvest in the centre and the recepta- ( le of more or less rubbish. There are Avretched at- tempts at sidcAvalks in spots, and horse-blocks, or their equivalent, are found in front of many of the stores and dwellings. Most of tlie buildings on this main street are unpretentious structures, many of them the typical Southern store, one story high, Avith pitched roof, and a piazza in front seemingly for the shelter of the loungers that are ahvays to be found under it. Three or four churches, a court- house, and a small jail behind the latter, of a some- what rickety appearanct^, seeming hardly strong enough to hold securely the highly civilized type of criminal found in the Middle and Eastern States, comprise the public buildings. The court-house has been called "handsome" in its day, but on Avhat THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 113 ground it would be somewhat difficult, at present, to tell. Although a two-storied building, it is quite low-studded, and a part of its outer wall finished in plaster presents evidence that the "scaling down" process, of late so popular in some parts of the quon- dam Confederac}', is becoming general in its appli- cation. The Circuit Court was in session while we were here, engaged in trying a negro for the murder (»f a white man at Manassas Junction some weeks before. A large crowd, composed of both colors, was assembled in and about the court-house, but as good-natured and free from excitement as could be found anywhere in the North under similar condi- tions. The prisoner certainly seemed to be having a fair trial. The suburbs are by far the most attractive and ci'editable part of the town. There are a number of very line residences on the four or five roads that centre in this place. Many of them have been built since the war. Spacious and ornamental grounds surround them, showing the existence of a refined taste and the means of gratifying it, and proving rather conclusively that not every Rebel exhausted his resources in the interests of the Confederacy, — • for Warreutou was a stanch Kebel stronghold dur- ing the war, and, as we were informed, still deserves that reputation. A private conversation with some of the colored men, however, assured us that they exercise their suffrages entirely untrammelled. As we jour- neyed on beyond the town we met horsemen at short intervals, isolated or in pairs, Virginia gentlemen of the old school going to "Circuit." This is one of the "field days" of the county, when almost every man within a radius of twenty miles may be found at county headquarters; and from the number of sad- 114 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY died liorses picketed aloug the streets and in vacant lots, one might easily imagine either Kilpatrick's or Stuart's troopers in possession, were it a time of war. Approaching the toAvn later in the day, on our homeward journey, we met several of these same gentry, also wending their way homeward, many of whom maintained a ver^^ unstable equilibrium in the saddle. In brief, during Circuit, liquors flow with the utmost freedom, each gentleman of the F. F. V.'s drinking with every one of his acquaintances whom he meets, if his capacity is equal to it. But we must not linger longei' in this representative and interest- ing town of the Old Dominion. One feature of our march through Virginia thus far was the untold abundance of blackberries with which we were almost constantly regaled. In some sections they liter- ally lined the roads and overran the fields. It was possible for a soldier to seat himself in their midst, and without once changing his location, to fill his stomach, or his coffee dipper, or both. It is to be further noted that the fruit was un- usually sweet and deli- cious, putting our north- ern products into the shade in this particular. To what extent it was in- strumental in toning up the health and spirits of OTIS N. HARRINGTON ^^^^ '^1*^^ ^'a^^^^t be esti- Orderly Sergeant mated, but that it WaS eminently beneficial, and warded off a vast amount of summer disease, is beyond all question. THE TENTH ]MASSACFIUSETTS BATTERY 115 We remained at our i)ost ou picket for five days. From this camp, First Sergeant Otis X. Harrington, who had been ailing for some time with chronic diarrhoea, was sent to Washington, tlie 29th, but did not live to reach there, dying on the journey July 30th. He left his saddle when the army crossed into Virginia, saying at the tinie that the last hope of re- covery had left him. The rigors of the campaign to this point had so aggravated his disease that his courage had deserted him, and his strength nearly so, when we crossed at Harper's Ferry. From this time the hardships he underwent multiplied, so that when at last it was permitted to send him to the hospital he had not sufficient vitality left to reach there. He was an efficient officer and a good sol- dier, and was jiiuch respected by the entire Com- pany, which deeply lamented his death. Sergt. George H. Putnam was promoted to fill the vacancy on the 8th of August. John C. Frost also left us the same date, and was discharged from the service for disability the follow- ing September. Before we left this camp, a large mail, which had been accumulating at Washington for three weeks, arrived, and opened to us once more the outer world from which we had been so completely excluded. July 31, we moved forward and took post at Sul- phur Springs. MOPvNING REPORTS. 1863. June 2(>. Battery arrived at Maryland Heights at 10 o'clock A.M. June 27. Gen. French took command of this post to-day. 116 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY June 28. Private Charles Slack reported to quar- ters. June 29. Private Charles Slack reported for duty. Privates Frank M, Estee and Warburton re- ported to quarters. June 30. Privates Estee and Warburton reported for duty. Started from Maryland Heights for Fred- erick Citj. July 1. Arrived at Frederick City at 6 o'clock P.M. July 2. Started from Frederick City at 4 P.M. and arrived at Monocacy Junction 6 P.M. July 3. Private John T. Goodwin reported for duty. July 4. Privates Clark (?) and Orcutt (?) reported to quarters. July 5. Privates (Jrcutt (?) and Nowell reported to quarters. July 7. Privates Clark (?), Orcutt (?) and Nowell returned to dut3\ Two sections of this Battery re- turned to Frederick Cit3^ July 8. The sections at Frederick Junction Joined the Battery. The Battery started for South Mountain to join the Third Army Corps at 2 o'clock. July 9. On the march Alvah F. Southworth and S. G. Tlichardson appointed teamsters vice Abbott and Chase reduced. July 10. Camped on Antietam battleground. July 12. Quartermaster Serg't S. A. Alden and Corp'l W. W. Starkweather reduced to the ranks. Private W. G. Kollins appointed Q. M. Sergt. in placp of Alden reduced to the ranks. Private B. C. Clark appointed corporal in place of Starkweather. July 13. Two horses shot. Disease glanders. Three horses abandoned as worthless and worn out. July 18. Crossed the Potomac river from Mary- land to Virginia. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY 117 July 19. Serg't Allard and pri^ ates Alden, Chase and Abbott sent to Berlin for liorses and mules with four horses mounted. July 25. Three horses abandoned as worthless and worn out. July 27. I'^irst Sergeant Otis N. Harrington and priyate John C. Frost reported sick to quarters. Captain J. Henry Sleeper absent sick at Warrenton on surgeon's certiticate. July 28. One horse abandoned as worthless anht enj^ine of about five horse power, evidently used for pumping- water and for carrying' the shafting to what ai)peared to have been a. small wheelwright's shop, was still standing. In rear of this hotel was a beautiful grove of large trees, which formed wdiat must have been a most charming auxiliary to the other natural and artificial attractions of the spot. In the early history of the watering-i)lace this was a deer park. We were informed by a most veracious gentU'iiiaTi who at one time lived there, that he himself has counted forty-two deer in this enclosure at a time, besides monkeys, numerous beautiful birds, and other imported objects of animated nature. This feature, however, had disappeared before the war broke out. From the rear of the hotel the ground! fell away in an easy descent to the springs, a dis- tance of perhaps twenty or twenty-five rods. Over one of these springs stood, with uncertain stability, a w^ooden canopy, while encircling it, at a distance of eight or ten feet, was erected a wooden bulwark three or four feet high, banked outside with earth to keep out all surface water. On the seat which surrounded this enclosure hundreds of well-to-do Southern planters and farmers had sat and sipped sulphur water, to many a healing beverage, but to our unschooled taste a very unpalatable one. Be- yond the springs the ground rises again, and again 120 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY falls away to the Eappahannock. A few rods below stood the piers to a bridge then destroyed. The road crossing- the river at this point leads to Cnlpep- per Court House. It seemed a truly j^icturesque and favored spot, and we looked forward to our stay near it with pleasurable anticipations. The grounds in the immediate vicinity of the ho- tels were appropriated for the headquarters of Maj. Gen. Birney, he having command of the First Divi- sion, to which we were then attached. Going on past the hotels up the road which leads to Freder- icksburg, some four hundred yards, we turn into an apijle orchard on our left, overrun with blackberry vines, and on this rise of land locate our camp. There was no fruit on the trees, but an abundance on the vines, and we almost literally rolled in ber- ries for some time. Having cleared up the ground, pitched the officers' quarters and the tarpaulins, and put up a brush shelter over the horses, but little re- mained for us to do, and a reaction set in. Scarcely a man in the Company felt strong and vigorous, al- though there were but few cases of serious and pro- tracted illness. Lying and sitting on the ground to the extent we had done were not conducive to a healthful bodily condition, and the systems of many became so relaxed that the slightest exertion was most distasteful. On the ITtli of August shelter tents were furnished us, and just one week after- wards we pitched them, each man selecting a chum (or "chicken," as the Marbleheadmen called them), to share his quarters. Six streets were laid out, one to a detachment, and the camp presented a neat and orderly appearance. The tents were supported in most cases on ridge-poles averaging five feet from the ground, which gave opportunity to build rough cots within. This change produced an improved THE TENTH MASSACHT'SETTS BATTERY 121 liealtlif Illness throughout the Company. Then there were bowers of branches built over the tents and some of the streets, thus adding very materiallv to our bodily comfort; so that we have always looked back upon our camp life at Sulpliuv Springs as be- ing, on the whole, rather delightful. The eminence now occupied by us had at some pe- riod or periods in 1802 been the theatre of active operations, as numerous unexploded shells and frag- ments of shells that lay scattered about bore ample testimony. One of these was accidentally the cause of quite a comuKttion in camp for a few moments. It seemed that the brigade on our right had ''po- liced" their canii), and swept the rubbish, comj^osed riiostly of dry grass and twigs, into a hole, excavated for the pur]>ose of getting at the red claycw loam for chimney-building. Amongst this rubbish was a loaded shell. Some time after, the mass was inno- cently fired, when tlu' shell ex])loded, startling the whole camp, but injuring no one. Several times in tlie previous year, during the movements prior and iuimediately subsecjuent to th<' Second Bull Kun battle, the river below us had been crossed and recrossed by divisions of (^ither army, and on some of these occasions, perhai)s the one al- ready alluded to, our present position, being occu- pied by one party, had been subjected to a heavy ar- tillery fire from the other. The position was also a good one from which to deal blows, and some quar- ter, perhaps the high land across the river, may have received an equivalent number of iron compliments from it. During our stay here we were oi'dered to adopt the badge of the Artillery Brigade, Third Corps. It Avas the lozenge worn b}' the corps, but subdivided into four smaller lozenges, two of Avliich were blue, one 122 THE TENTH MxVSSACHUSETTS BATTERY red, and one wliite, to be worn on the side of the cap. So little is known in rehition to the origin of the corps bad.i];es, that the antlior has thouiiiht a para- graph on that subject would be of value introduced in this connection. The idea of a corps badge originated, as far as can be ascertained, with Gen. Kearny. During the seven days' battle on the Peninsula he saw the ne- cessity of having some distinctive mark by which the officers and men of his division could be recog- nized. He therefore directed his officers to wear a red patch of diamond shape as a distinguishing mark, for the making of which he gave up his own red blanket. Not long afterguards the men, of their own accord, cut pieces out of their overcoat linings to make patches for themselves. At the same time Kearny adopted a plain red flag to denote his divi- sion headquarters, and Hooker adopted a blue one for his headquarters.* At Harrison's Landing, July 4, 18G2, Kearny issued a general order, directing of- ficers to wear a red patch of the diamond or lozenge shape either on the crown or left side of their cap, while the men were to Avear theirs in front. From this apparently insignificant beginning the idea of division and corps badges was developed by Maj. Oeu. Butterfield when he was made Chief-of-Staff of the Army of the Potomac in 1863. Hooker then took up the matter, and, having done away with the Grand Divisions, divided the army into seven corps, and designated a badge to be worn by each. To the First Corps he gave the circle; Second Corps, trefoil; Third Corps, diamond; Fifth Corps, Maltese cross; Sixth Corps, Greek cross; Eleventh Corps, crescent; Twelfth Corps, star. Each corps was constituted of * Sec De Peystcr's "rersoiijil and Military History of Philip Kearny," from which many of these facts were taken. FIRST CORPS. 1ST DIV. 2 N9 DIV. SECOND CORPS. 3Re DIV. /SiDIV. 2N?DIV. 3R9DIV. THIRD CORPS ARTILLERY BRIGADE. (§863) ISTDIV. 2N9DIV. 3R9DIV. FOURTH CORPS. I5T DIV. 2 N e D I V. 3R?DIV. THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTvS BATTERY 125 three divisions. The patch worn by the first divi- sion was red, the second wliite, and the tliird blue. General Orders No. 53, issued by Hooker in May, 1868, and before me as I write, order provost mar- shals to arrest as stragglers all troops (except cer- tain specified bodies) found without badges, and re- turn them to their commands under guard. This scheme of badges, originated by Kearny and perfected by Hooker, continued, substantially unal- tered, to the close of the war. The system of head- quarters' flags, inaugurated by McClellan, was also much simplified and improved by Hooker. The ac- companying plate sliows the badges of the first four corps and the artillery brigade of the Third Corps. Our camp duties at Sulphur Springs were by no means onovfuis, especially during August. Once es- tablished, there was very little drill or fatigue duty required of us. On the (It h a national Thanksgiving was proclaimed by President Lincoln, in recognition of the victories at Oettysburg and A'icksburg, and our gratitude took on a deeper tinge on account of the appearance of the paymaster with two months' l>ay. On the 15th, the gentlemanly soldier, ("apt. Geo. E. Randolph, Chief of Artillery of the Third Corps, and commander of Battery E, First Regiment RIkhK' Island Artillery, inspected the Company. His bear- ing on this occasion, and afterwards whenever we came in contact witli him, made a favorable impres- sion upon us that only strengthened with time, for he certainly seemed to us a thorough gentleman and soldier. While in the latter capacity he may not have excelled either his predecessor in command over us, or his successor, as a gentleman in the ad- ministration of his functions as Chief of Artillery he was unquestionably their superior, and we t. Sleeper. Five liorses I'eceived from Qr. Master Artillery Brigade, Lt. Case. August 4. Eight liorses received from Lieut. Case, Artillery Brigade. Privates Pierce (?), Innis and Baxter reported to (juarters. August 5. Privates Peach, Newton, Innis re- ported for duty. Private S. J. Brad lee on detached service at Headquarters Artillery Brigade. August 7. I'rivates Colbath, Peach and Pierce (?) reported to (juarters. One black horse died, disease, w orn out. August 8. Iveceived notice of the death of First Serg't Otis N. Harrington. He died of Chronic Diar- rhea on his way to Mt. Pleasant Hospital, Washing- ton, D. C. Serg't G. IT. Putnam promoted Ilrst Ser- geant, vice Harrington deceased. * The Fortietli lufaiitrv. 148 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY August 9. Private Butterfield reported to quar- ters. B. H. Phillips reported for duty. August 10. Privates Nortliey, Chase, Pierce (?), Thayer and Peach reported for duty. Private N. H. Butterfield reported to quarters. August 11. Private A. F. Southworth reported to quarters. (Jr. L. Clark reported for light duty. August 12. Privates Southworth, Colbath, Bax- ter aud Iviug reported for duty; Stowell reported to (juarters. Three horses unserviceable. August 13. Private C. Could promoted Sergeant. Sergeant Woodfin reported to quarters. August 14. Private Norman H. Butterfield re- ported for duty. August 15. One horse died, glanders. Five horses unserviceable. August IG. Private J. W. Thayer reported to quarters; N. H. Butterfield reported for duty. August 17. One horse, bay, died, disease, glan- ickf()rd, Charles N. Pack- ard and Harrison Chase r('])orted for duty. Sept. 3. Private James L. W. Thayer reported for duty. One horse unserviceable. Sept. 1. l*rivate Isaac N. Burroughs and Gl id- den reported to quarters. Sept. 5. AA'm. A. Trefry reported to quarters. Sept. 8. Charles E. Osborn reported to quarters. Sept. 9. Privates Asa L. Gowell and H. Winslow, Jr., reported t(^ quarters. Serg't Woodtin reported for duty. Sept. 10. Wni. A. Trefry reported for duty. Sept. 11. Ellis A. Friend, D. W. Atkinson, re- ported to quarters. II. B. Winslow reported for duty. Sept. 13. Wm. A. Trefry, Elias Ashcroft, Benj. G. Pedrick, H. B. Winslow reported for quarters. Sept. 14. Private Wm. A. Trefry reported for duty. 150 THE TENTH rdASSACHUSETTS BATTERY Sept. 15. Private Hiram P. Ring aud Corp'l James S. Bailey, Jr., reported to quarters. Left Sul- phur Springs for the field. Sept. 16. Privates J. I). Smith, O. E. Osborn sent to Hospital, Washingtou, per order surgeon. Pri- vates (xowell, (Hidden and Corp'l James S. Bailey, Jr., left behind siek at Sulphur Springs. Sept. 17. Privates Burroughs, Winslow, Atkin- son, Pedriek, Friend, Ashcroft, Bing, reported for duty. Four horses shot, disease glanders; by order of Surgeon Benson, Third Army Corps Headquar- ters. Sept. 18. Three horses unserviceable. Privates Gowell and Glidden and Corporal Bailey arrived in camp from Sulphur Springs. Sept. 19. Corp'l Bailey, ])rivates Gowell, Bur- roughs, Friend, Ashcroft and Corp'l Smith reporteull IJun im- passable without ])(»ntoons, which W(M-e not then at '' "Loe chiinis to havt' tnken li.OOO prisoners duriii;;- his diish across tlie Rai)i)ahaiiiiook: while our captures were hardly half as many. In killed and wounded the losses were nearly equal — not far from .")(_)(> on either side. But the prestige of skill and daring, of audacity and .success, inured entu'ely to the Rebel commander, who with an inferior force had chased our army almost up to Washington, utterly destroyed its main artery of supplj% captured the larger number of l)risoners, deslroyetl, or caused us to destroy, valuable stores, and then returned to his own side of the R^ippahannock essentially un- harmed; having decidedly the advantage in the only collision that marked his retreat." — American Von fiict, Vol. II. The collision referred to in the above extract was a cavalry tight al Buckland's Mills, between Stuart and Kilpatrick. 154 THE TENTH MASSACHUSETTS BATTERY liaud. He then determined to jnake a rajjid move- ment to the left, and before the Rebel commander oould aaiii knowledge of his intentions, seize Freder- icksburg and the heights in its rear, with the design of pushing operations against Richmond, from that point as a base. In this project, however, he Avas negatived by General-in-Chief Halleck, and com- pelled to go forward in his recent line of retreat, if at all. Accordingly, at 6 o'clock on the morning of Monday, October 19th, we left our camp at Fairfax Station, and again took up our nmrch toAvards the foe, proceeding along the line of railroad, thus hav- ing an excellent opportunity to observe how faith- fully the enemy had executed the work of destruc- tion on their return. That night we camped at Bristow Station, and the next morning crossed the battlefield where AVarren had had his hardest fight- ing. We counted, in passing, fifteen rude head boards OA^er the graves of soldiers belonging to the Seventh, Fifteenth, and Twenty-sixth North Caro- lina regiments. Then there Avere other graves un- marked, and the stench from the carcasses of dead horses that lay putrefying was sickening. Our march this day ended at Greenwich, which Ave had occupied just one week before. Wednesday morning, at 7, we Avere again under Avay, but at 11 A.M. Avent into camp at Catlett Sta- tion. While here Ave moved camp twice, and were inspected bA^ Capt. Randolph on the 23d, and Capt. Sleeper on the 25tli. The Aveather being quite cool, Ave made ourselves as comfortable as possible by stockading our tents and building fire])laces. At this station (October 27tii), Lieut. Thos. R. Armitage was detached for duty in Battery K, Fourth Ixegiment, V. S. Regulars. On the oOth, line of march was again resumed THE TENTH MASSACHT^SETT8 BATTERY 155 and coiitiiiiUMl a distance of abont eii^lit niilen, when a halt was made one niiU^ and a lialf from Warren- ton Junction. November 1st tlie Battery Avas a<>;ain inspected by ('apt. Sleeper, and the h)catiou of onr camp slightly changed. Our stay here w^as other- wise uneventful, and continued until the Hth, when, at evening, orders came to strap sacks of grain upon the caissons. This, in our experience, plainly por- tended a move, although some had tliought no fur- ther movement probable, owing to the lateness of the season. But all surmises were now at an end on this head, and at 3..'^0 A.M. of the 7th we were aroused by the familiar notes of the reveille, and a more ill-nature