. ^^ L/BRARY OF CONGRESS oooofi3fi3aia pH8^ ^ Joseph K. F. Mansfield, BKir.ADIEU GENERAL OF THE U. S. ARMY. A NARRATIVi: OF EVENTS CONNECTED WITH MIS MORTAL WOUNDING ANTIETAM, Sharpsburg, Maryland, September 17, 18G2. JOHN MEAD GOULD, Late Actinc; Adjitant IOtii Maink Volunteers, AND Major 20th Maink Veteran Vols. PORTLAND : STEPHEN BEIIUY, PRINTER. Ib'Ju. e K 'J .U" ^ \^\ Joseph King Fenno Mansfield was born in New Haven, Conn., December 22, 1803. His early education was obtained in the common schools of his state. At the age of fourteen he entered the military academy at West Point, being the youngest of a class of forty. During the five years of his course, he was a careful and earnest student, especially distinguishing himself in the sciences, and graduating in 1822, second in his class. He was immediately promoted to the Corps of Engineers, in which department he served thoughout the Mexican war. In 1832 he was made 1st Lieutenant; three years later Captain. His gallantry and efficiency during the Mexican war were re- warded by successive brevets of Major, Lt.-Colonel and Colonel of Engineers. In 1853 Mansfield was appointed Inspector General of the army, and in the prosecution of his duties visited all parts of the country. At the outbreak of the War of the Rebellion he was in the Northwest, but in April, 1861, was summoned to Washington to take command of the forces there. On May 17, 1861, Mans- field was promoted to the rank of Brigadier General in the reg- ular army. He rendered valuable service at Fortress Monroe, Newport News, Suffolk, and finally at Antietam, where he was mortally wounded, September 17, 1862. • 61505 '05 J NARRATIVE. It was bad enough and sad enough that Gen. Mans- field should be mortally wounded once, but to be wounded six, seven or eight times in as many locali- ties is too much of a story to let stand unchallenged. These pages will tell what the members of the loth Maine Regiment know of the event, but first we will state what others have claimed. The following places have been pointed out as the spot where Mansfield was wounded and all sorts of particulars hav^e been given. Besides these a man with a magic-lantern is traveling through the country showing Burnside's bridge, and remarking, " Here Mansfield fell." The spot marked A on the map is said to have been vouched for by a " New York officer of Mans- field's staff." B is where the late David R. Miller understood the General was wounded by a sharpshooter stationed in Miller's barn, west of the pike. C is where Capt. Gardiner and Lieut. Dunegan, of Co. K, 1 25th Penn. Vols., assured me* that the General fell from his horse in front of their company. *Sept. 17, 1891. GE>f. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. D is where, in November, 1894, I found. a marker, that had been placed there the October previous, by some one unknown to me. These are the four prin- cipal placQS which have been pointed out to visitors. Still another spot was shown to our party when the i-io-29th Maine Regiment Association made its first visit to the field, Oct. 4, 18S9; it is south of A, but I did not note exactly where. E. There has also been published in the National Tribune, which has an immense circulation among the soldiers, the statement* of Col. John H. Keatley, now Commandant of the Soldier's Home, Marshall- town, Iowa, who locates the place near the Dunker Church. Col. Keatley\s letters show that he has been on the field several times since the war, which makes it harder to believe what would seem very plain otherwise, that his memory of locations has failed him. He appears to have got the recollection of the two woods mixed. Keatley was Sergeant of Co. A, the extreme left of the 125th Penn. *Tlie brigade [Crawford's] had reached a point close to the Ilagorstowu pike, with the left almost touching the Dunker Church. The brigade was within 50 yards of the turnpike, ready to cross over and into the woods lining the road on the opposite side. These woods were filled with Stone- wallJackson's troops; andtheinsharpshooters in the foliage were picking off officers. * * Notwithstanding the hazard, Gen. Mansfield, instead of send- ing a staff officer to direct the movement of the troops toward the point in- tended by him, rode forward himself and gave personal- directions, wholly in a matter of detail (the alignment of a single regiment that was making an effort to dress on its colors), and when engaged in that unimportant duty of detail for a corps commander, was shot from the woods and almost instantly killed. [National Tribune, Washington, D. C, Nov. 16, 1893. GEN. MANSKIKLI) AT AXTIKTAM. Mr. Alexander Davis, who resided and worked on the field before and after the battle, points out a place several rods northeast of the present residence of Millard F. Nicodemus (built since the war and not shown on the map). Some Indiana troops were the supposed original authority for this place, which is not far from B. It is only fair to Mr. Davis to add that he claims no personal knowledge. There are several other places that have been de- scribed to me in private letters, but these need no mention here. WHY 50 HANY ERRORS? Why has there been so much difficulty in identify- ing the right locality? There has been no difficulty, none whatever, among those who knew the facts. The errors have all come from the ignorant, the imaginative, and those who have poor memories. It will be easy, especially for one standing on the ground while reading these pages, to see that very few except the loth Maine would witness the event, as we were so nearly isolated and almost hidden. We made very little account at the time, of what is now considered an important event in the history of the battle. It then apjDcared to us as only one of the many tragedies in the great slaughter. Nothing was done at the time to mark the spot, and hardly a note of the event was recorded. b GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. REGIMENTAL EXCURSION. In 1889, the i-io-29th Maine Regiment* Associa- tion made an excursion to the various battle fields in Pennsylvania, Maryland and Virginia where the regi- ment had fought. Friday, October 4th, was the day of the visit to Antietam. Not one of the company had been there for twenty-five years, yet on arriving in East Woods we readily and surely identified the fighting position of the regiment, which was known as the " Tenth Maine," at the time of the battle. We found that the west face of the woods had been con- siderably cut away, and that many of the trees inside the woods had been felled, but there was no serious change in the neighborhood where we fought, except- ing that a road had been laid out exactly along the line of battle where we fired our first volley. We have since learned that in 1872, the County bought a fifteen feet strip of land, 961 feet long, bordering that part of the northeast edge of the woods, which lies between Samuel Poffenberger's lane and the Smoke- town road, and moved the " worm fence " fifteen feet into the field.! Excepting as these changes affected * These three organizations were virtually one. The 1st Kegiment, after serving three months in 18G1, re-organized as the 10th, to serve till May, 1863, when it was again recruited and re-organized as the 29th, to serve three years more. Tlie 10th Battalion was that portion of the 10th Regi- ment which was not discharged in ISG'-l. Excepting eiglit weeks in the fall of 1861, the regiment or battalion was in " the field " during the entire war, and for more than a year afterward. t The map does not show this new or " Keedysville road." It now runs directly past Michael Miller's gate to Sam Poffenberger's, thence up Sam's old lane to the woods, there turning west enters the Smoketown road, where the right of the 10th Maine fought — near M on the map. The lane from GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. 7 the view, all agreed that everything in our vicinity had a " natural look." The chief features were " the bushes," directly in rear of our right companies ; the Croasdale Knoll, further to the right and rear ; the Smoketown Road, which enters East Woods between the bushes and the Knoll, and runs past our front through the woods; the low land in our right front; the " open," easily disccrnable through the woods; the rising land with its ledges, big and little, in the front ; the denser woods in the left front ; the worm fence before noted, and the long ledge behind it, against which our left companies sheltered themselves by Captain Jordan's thoughtful guidance ; and the gully beginning in the rear of bur position and lead- ing down to the great stone barn and stone mansion,* with its immense spring of water. The large oak in rear of our right, to which Col. Beal crawled after he was wounded, was still standing a few paces up (northeast) the Smoketown road, and another good sized tree nearer the front was recog- nized by Capt. (then Sergt.) Goss as the one from which he first opened fire. Lt.-Col. Emerson (Capt. of H, the right Co.) stood where he stood in 1862 and pointed out to our guests place after place which he recognized. Many of " the bushes " of 1862 had grown into siz- able trees ; they, with Beal's and Goss's trees and the M. Miller's to Morrison's lias been closed, and also that part of Sam's lane which was in East Woods. * Samuel PofEenberger's. Erroneously marked Dunbar's Mills on the old maps. O GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. Smoketown road fence, had been a serious obstacle to the advance of our right companies. The scar, or depression in the ground, where we had buried a few of our dead (northeast of Beal's tree), was still visible, but repeated plowing since 1889 has entirely effaced it. Our excursion was entirely for pleasure ; we had no thought of controversy, nor even of the enlight- enment of the Sharpsburg people, who knew nothing of the true locality where Mansfield was wounded, but were showing two or three erroneous places to visitors. We defended the truth, photographed the position, but found it difficult for several reasons to decide by several feet upon the exact spot of the wounding. It is necessary now to go back to 1862 and tell the story of the battle as seen by the loth Maine; and as since the war a generation has grown up that knows nothing of the way soldiers are arranged for marching and fighting, it is best to give a great many explanations that may seem unnecessary to an old soldier. THE PART TAKEN BY THE lOTH MAINE. The 12th Army Corps, Mansfield commanding, marched on the Boonsboro pike, late at night of Sept. 1 6th, from "the center" through Keedysville to the farm of George Line (G. Lyons on the old maps) and there rested till daybreak. Gen. Mansfield slept on the west side of a fence which ran south from Line's GKX. ]\1AX.SI'MKM) AT AXTIKTAM. garden to woods. I lis bed was tlic grass and l^is roof a blanket. The lotli Maine was on tlie east side of the fence (see map), and some of onr boys who indulged in loud talk were ordered by the General to lower their tones to a whisj^er. The other regiments of our brigade were near us, while the other brigades of the corps apj^eared to be behind ours (or east). Our brigade* was the advance of the corp\s, and marched a little before s o'clock on the mornin^'- of the battle, first to the west across the Smokctown road, and nearly to John Poffenberger's, and then south to nearly abreast of Joseph Poffenberger's (marked 6.20 on the maj:)), and there h;dted for almost an hour, during all of which tin'ie, that is from before 5 A. M., Hooker's corps was fighting in and around " the great cornfield," the enemy being south and west of it. As well as could be judged, all of the 12th corps followed our movements, and halted to the right or left of the rear of our brigade. The 124th and 125th Penn. were detached from the brigade at some early hour, but at 7,20 by my watch, which may have been five to ten minutes fast, the other four regiments were started for the fight. The loth Maine w^as guided by Gen. Mansfield in person. We had all seen him for some time previ- ous sitting on his horse at the northwest corner of the East Wood, marked W on the map. He hurried * Crawford's brigade, 4(5threnn., Col. Kiiipe; 10th Maine, Col. Beal; 28th N.Y., fragment, Capt. Mapes; VIAVlx Penn., Col. Hawley; 12r)th Penn., Col. liiggins; 128th Penn., Col. Samuel Croasdale (killed.) 10 GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. US, first to the front, down hill through a field where several piles of stone lay, the Smoketown road still being on our left. We barely entered the *' ten acre cornfield " when Mansfield beckoned us to move to our left. We then marched a few steps by what the tactics call " Left oblique," but did not gain ground to the left sufficiently to suit the General, so Col. Beal commanded " Left flank," whereupon each man faced east, and we presently knocked over the two fences of the Smoketown road and marched into Sam Poffenberger's field. Wliile going across the Smoketown road Gen. Hooker rode from the woods (M) and told Col. Beal '' The enemy are breaking through my lines ; you must hold these woods," (meaning East Woods.) After crossing the road, bullets from the enemy began to whiz over and around us. WHien well into Sam Poffenberger's field the Colonel commanded " Right flank," then each man again faced south (or west of south to be more exact) and we all marched straight for the enemy, whom some of us could see in the woods, close to where our Mansfield marker is now standing, marked M on the map. The loth Maine was in " double column at half distance " (or "double column in mass," as some re- member.) , Colors. Left. v> =^===: =^^^^= K Iliffht. GKN. MANSFIKLI) AT ANTIETAM. 11 Each line in the diagram represents about 15 men all facing " front." In this order we had bivouacked and marched to Sam Poffenberger's field, only that while in the ten acre corn field every man turned on his left heel and marched toward what had been the " left," until arriving in Sam Poffenberger's field, where a turn of each man to his right, or the technical "front," brought us to our original position. Apparently fifty to a hundred Confederates were strung along the fence (M) firing at us. They had the immense advantage that they could rest their rifles on the fence and fire into us, massed ten ranks deep, while we could only march and "take it." It was high time to deploy,* and Col. Beal pro- posed to do so, but Gen. Mansfield said " No," and re- marked that a regiment can be easier handled " in mass " than " in line " ; which is very true in the abstract. Gen. Mansfield then rode away, and Col. Beal, hardly waiting for him to get out of sight, or- dered the regiment to deploy in double quick time. Everybody felt the need of haste. In the execution of this order Companies I and G, with the color guard, continued marching straight ahead at the ordinary step, just as if no order had *Tliat is, to bring the men "into line" — the position they sliould be in for finhting; since wliile in muss, only Companies I and G could fire their muskets, while a fairly well aimed bullet from tlu' enemy would be almost sure to hit cue or more of us. Front. Colors. Left. I K I c I 1) I i» I AT ANTIKTAM. Uo After a long and intensely cxcitinL;- hunt for the Georo^ia reiriment that this battalion belonired to — Major Robl)ins renienilx'rinL;- only that their number was "in the twenties" — I hax-e learned that it was the skirmisher battalion of (len. Cr)lquitt's brigade of D. H. Hill's division, eom[)osed of one company each (Co. A generally) from the five regiments of his brig- ade, viz: 6th, 23d, 27th and 28th Georgia and 13th Alabama, under Capt. Wm. M. Arnold, of the 6th Georgia. We therefore made a mistake in the num- ber only when we marked those head boards " 20 Georofia." This battalion Gfot into the fisfht an hour or more before their brigade and fought independently of it. The troops under Robbins, Turner and Arnold are the only Confederates, so far as I can learn, that did heavy fighting in East Woods.* There were no better troops in the Confederate army ; they suffered a loss in killed and wounded of nearly one-half, and probably inflicted a still larger numerical loss upon the Union troops. OFFICIAL REPORTS. We will next look at the Official Reports bearing on the subject. (See Vol. XIX, Part I, Official Record, War of the Rebellion, U. S. Gov't j^rinting office.) I. In Lt.-Col. Fillebrown'st report (loth Maine) * Garland's brigade was in tli(! wodds a sliort tinit', and a few men from some Confederate command were in the extreme northern edge when Tyn- dale approached it. t Dear old " Jim" has long since " passed over to the other side," and I cannot tell why he made such a strange report, nor why he didn't let me, Ms Adjutant, know about it and have a copy to tile away. 24 GEN. MANSFIKLD AT ANTIETAM. there is no mention of the event, nor is there any- thing else that has the merit of being both true and worth recording. (See page 489.) Ordinarily he was one of the most genial and accommodating of men ; but when sick and vexed, as plainly he was when he made that report, he could dash off just such a jumble, and send it in to head quarters before the ink was dry. It is due to him to say that he was run over and kicked in the bowels by Col. Beal's horse just at the moment Col. Beal himself was wounded ; and when, but for the untimely kick, " Jim " might have led us on to victory and covered himself with glory. II. In Col. Jacob Higgins' (125th Penn.) report we have — "Previous to this Gen. Mansfield fell, some of my men carry- " ing him off the field on their mnskets until a blanket was pro- « cured." (Page 492, Vol. XIX.) It cannot be determined from the report, exactly when or where " this " was ; but it was plainly early in the morning and before the 125th entered West Wood, where (and not in East Wood) they fought. This report annoyed me much when I first saw it in 1887, but Col. Higgins has written to me that he knows nothing personally of the event but reported it because officers whom he trusted assured him it was so. III. Col. Knipe, (46 Penn.) who made the brigade report, simply mentions that Mansfield was wounded. IV. In Gen. Crawford's report we read : GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. 25 « Gen. Mansfield, the eori)S coinniander, had been mortally "wounded, and was borne past my position to the rear." (l*age 485, Vol. XTX, Part I.) This " position " is not defined further than to state that it was " Miller's " woods, or " East woods," as we now call them. V. Gen. Williams, commanding; ist division and succeeding Mansfield in command of the corps, says: " While the deployment [of the 12th eorps] was going on and <' before tlie leading regiments were fairly engaged, it was re- " ported to me that the veteran and distinguished commander " of the corps was mortally wounded." (Page 475, Vol. XIX.) VI. Gen. Geo. H. Gordon, commanding 3d brig- ade, ist division, says : " Gen. ]Manstield liad been mortally wounded at th(' commence- "ment of tlie action, while making a bohl reconnoissance of the "woods through which we had just dashed." (Page 495, VoL XIX.) VII. We find the following in the report of Gen. Edwin V. Sumner, "commanding 2d and 12th corps." tie also cc^mmanded the ist corps upon his arrival in our part of the field, about 9 a. m. : " General ]\Ianslield, a wortliy and gallant veteran, was un- " fortunately mortally wounded while leading his corps into " action." (Page 275, Vol. XIX.) VIII. Gen. Hooker, commanding ist corps and having the 12th under his orders, makes no mention of the wounding. IX. Gen. McClellan, commanding the Union army, thus refers to the deployment of the 12th corps: 26 GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. <' During the deployment, that gallant veteran, Gen. Mansfield, "fell mortally wounded while examining the ground in front of "his troops." (Page 56, Vol. XIX.) It should be stated that Vol. XIX was not published until October, 1887 — twenty-five years after the battle. Besides these unsatisfactory official reports, we have the following authentic accounts, that have been made public from time to time, and should have furnished the world with the truth, I noticed that the newspapers of the day had little to say about the event; accordingly, a few weeks after the battle I wrote an account and forwarded it to my father, who sent it to the Hon. Benjamin Douglas, a prominent citizen of Middletown, Conn. — Mansfield's home. Mr. Douglas acknowledged the receipt, and showed his appreciation when we were publishing our regi- mental history,* by furnishing gratis the portraits of the general. This letter was published in the Port- land, Me., papers. The regimental history, published in 1S71, has a very minute account of the event. About 700 copies of it were sold. The report for 1862 of the Adjutant General of Maine also has a narrative of the battle, embraced in the report of Col. Beal, who returned to duty before the end of the year. (Page 74, main report.) * History lst-10th-29tli Maine regiment. May 3, 1861, to June 21, 1866. Stephen Berry, Publisher, Portland, Me. GEN. MANSFIKM> AT ANTIKTAM. 27 GENERALS AND STAFF DID NOT WITNESS. A singular phase in this case is the fact that none of Gen. Mansfield's suljordinate commanders except- ing Gen. Crawford, and none of Mansfield's staff, wit- nessed the wounding. In the three days he was our commander none of us saw a staff officer with him. It was only a vague memory of a lost and forgotten general order, and the reference to " Captain Dyer " in the General's memorial volume,* that suggested the possibility there was a staff. In 1890 to '94 I made a special and persistent effort to learn who his staff were ; also who was the orderly and who the colored servant that we saw with him. The orderly and servant we have not. found. After much writing I learned that Samuel M. Mansfield,! a s :)n of the General, had been appointed an Aide but had not been able to join his father. Maj. Clarence H. Dyer, at that time Captain and A. A. G., had accompanied the General from Washington and was on duty with him till his death. Furthermore, Gen. James W. Forsyth, then a Cap- tain, (familiarly known as " Toney") was temporarily assigned as aide-de-camp to Mansfield by Gen. McClellan, at whose head quarters Forsyth was then serving. These two were " present " ; but Gen. Mansfield kept them flying so constantly that none of us recoijnized them as his staff. * Memorial of Gen. Mansfield, United States Army, Boston, T. li. Marvin & Son, 18()2. t Now Lt.-Col. of Engineers, U. S. A. 28 GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. There are also shadowy hints from various sources that a Lieutenant of cavalry, name and regiment not stated, lost his opportunity for a day of glory by too frequent sips of what was known as " commissary." Gen. Forsyth writes (1891) that he was sent by Mansfield to " bring up the divisions of the corps " and that he " was not with Gen. Mansfield when he received his death wound." Maj. Dyer writes (1891): '' At the time the General was mortally wounded, I was not "near him, as he had given me an order to bring the command " of Gen. Crawford to the front. It was halted somewhat to " the rear and our left. When I returned I found that the " General was being removed to the rear, but by the men of "what regiment I do not know. I remained witli him until he "died, wliich must have been about 1 o'clock p. m., 17th. * * " Where the General fell was a little to our left of the woods — "a cornfield was direiitly in front. I am very sure that the " General was not killed by the men of the [Confederate] com- " mand in front of the 10th Maine. I am positive as to this." Here is another instance how impossible it is to see everything as it is in battle. Apparently Maj. Dyer did not see the General hurrying the loth Maine across the brigade front. GEN. HANSFIELD'S HISTAKE. The next question that arises is, why did Gen. Mans- field suppose the loth Maine was firing into Union troops ? While the corps was waiting in the vicinity of Joe Poffenberger's, (marked 6:20 on the map) from about GKN. MANSFIELn AT ANTIETAM. 29 6:20 to 7:20 A.M., Gen. Mansfield was seen frequentl}' by almost every soldier of the corps. In hundreds of letters, from the various regiments and batteries, there is a common agreement that the General was moving around the field continually, lie seemed to be everywhere. Although he appeared like a calm and dignified old gentleman when he took command of the corps two days before, on this fatal morning he was the personification of vigor, dash and enthusi- asm. As before stated, he remained some minutes at the northwest corner of East Woods (W on the map), observing the battle. One gets a fine view of the field from there and he must have orot a ofood in- sight into the way Hooker's corps was fighting. Pre- sumably the tide was turning against Hooker, and as likely Mansfield had been called upon by him for re- inforcements, but when Mansfield left the northwest corner to set his corps in motion, the East Woods, if I have rightly interpreted the reports and corre- spondence, was still in possession of Union troops. Probal^ly, almost at the same time that Mansfield quitted his lookout, the Confederate brigade of Eaw (Hood's division) came charging out of West Woods, the 4th Alabama on the right running uj) the Smoke- town road, as before stated, and entering the woods at the south-west corner where the Georgia battalion joined on its right. The movements of all of Hood's troops were exceedingly rapid. How much time elapsed from Mansfield's leaving his lookout to his being wounded, I can only roughly estimate at from fifteen to twenty minutes, but it 30 GEN. MANSFIELD AT ANTIETAM. was time enough to change the condition of affairs very materially, and I cannot help thinking the time passed very quickly to him, and that he did not real- ize the fact that the remnants of Rickett's division had been driven out of the woods and cornfield, nor even did he suppose it was possible. Wise or un- wise, it was entirely in keeping with everything else the General did during the three days he was with us, for him to come himself and see what we were doing; and like everything else, he did it with the utmost promptness. It was this habit of personal attention to details, and his other characteristic of rapid flying here and there, that make it so dif^ficult for many of the soldiers of the 12th corps to believe he was wounded when and where he was. A WORD IN CLOSING. In this narrative it has been impossible to avoid frequent reference to myself and to my regiment, but there is nothing in the Mansfield incident of special credit to any of us. We were there and saw it; we live and can prove it ; this is the whole story in a nut shell. I have always regretted that I left the regiment even on so important a mission. At the time, I supposed it was only to be for a moment, and that with three field officers on duty I could be spared. As for the regiment, we succeeded so very much better later in the war, that we have not been in the hal3it of mak- ing great claims for the part we took in Antietam. GKX. MANSPMKLI) AT AXTIKTAM. Many other Uni