Glass. Book. • Ks^A-^^ Tivoli, Duchess Co,, If. ¥. iOth November, 1869. Thb Author, in distributing among friends the few copies of tliis biography which fell to his share as the sole reward of his labors and expcndituie, desires to inform his readers that no literary task was ever performed under more aggravat- ing circumstances, over which the concession of the copyright deprived the author (it would appear) of every control. Not to enumerate the obstacles or enter into the unpleasant details, it is sufficient to state that no stipulation was adhered to by the parties with whom he made the arrangement, and the boolc waa only completed in order that the views of no other individual might mar the author's comprehension of the character of the hero of whom he undertook to present a true picture to his countrymen. Very many of the pages were stereo- typed (as was admitted by the publishers) without attention to the corrections made in the proofs. The author's secretary heard this admitted. What is more, the note at the foot of page 484 was substituted by the publishers without the knowledge of the author, who was astonished on finding it presented as his own. The first intimation that he had of the unauthorised publication ot the note, as it Btands, was reading this note in the copies furnished to subscribers. The original note is hereto subjoined, that friends may be enabled to draw their own conclu- sions from this act of bad faith, and therefrom learn to appreciate the justice he experienced from those for whose profit he expended health, means and time, or labor. As he received no remuneration for either, he could scarcely have con- ceived that the publishers would have dared to obliterate his explanations, and insert instead a mosaic, which, while it embodies a portion of his language, is made up in the whole of their own assertions, of whose effect he never dreamed until the book was already in the hands of subscribers, and which he would never (if consulted) have permitted to appear as his own. Original Note. — Reader, pardon any repetitions, if you discover them in this chapter, or in the book If it seems fragmentary, " a thing of shreds and patches," even if the material is rich and beautiful, it is no wonder that it Is so, since this work has been published in fragments, with intervals of many months between them. Indeed, the writer never felt sure, when ft.inishing a chapter, that the suc- ceeding would ever be called for, or even that the one handed over would ever be set up in type. The text was written, with the exception of chapters XXVI and XXVII, in the summer of lS(iS, and one-half the whole \vas in type by October, the greater part stereotyped. Had there been any assurance of its being printed, the work wjuld have been re-written, and have assumed an entirely different form or expression. Still, as it i-i, receive it as a memento of almost fraternal regard, and respect it (as set up and allowed to ^o forth) as a rough but honest monument of the worth, patriotism and ability ot a relation deeply regretted, who was as a father to the writer's son, serving at one time with him in the field. J. WATTS DE PEYSTER, >/. / ^[I^gOraaiL J^^WiilPEYiTE^, o-^/, I v. (tin |. Wattss At f (HSter : L,. I.. D. Rose Hill, Tivoli P. O., Duchess Co., N. Y. ir^th July, 1870. Judge Advocatk. with the rank of Major. IS45. CoioNEl N Y S I 1846 ; assiRPed for " J/tr/torioKS O-mdMcf," lb49; UK RKKRRAi for " Imvrtant Service" [tint appointment— in N. Y. State— to that rank, hitherto elective] 1851. M.F. S. N. Y. ADJOTANT-tiENKRAL. S. N. Y. 1855. Rrevet MAJ«R-(iENEUAL, S. N. Y.. for " Meptonoua &.;>..«». ,t and onlv general officer receiving such an honor (the highest) troni S. N. Y.,] ecia! Ac: " or" Cuncumnt Remlution," New York State Legislature, April, 186b. LAWS OF NEW YORK, Vol. 2.-89th Session, 1866, Page '-'142. ncnrrriit Fexilu!i<'n reijueHting the Governor to confer upon Brigadier-General J. WATTS lib: PlIYSTER [de Pewter^ the brevet rank of Major* of New York. Re'solvkd, (if the Senate concur. ' That it being a grateful duty to of K distiniiuished citizen of thi \_General\ in the National Guard :iwledge in a suitable manner the services of a dislinuuished citizen of this ^^t^te. reniiered to the National Guard -nd to the United States prior to and during the Rebellion, the tJovernor be and he islieieby aulhor- ieed and requested to confer npon Krieadier-fieneral J. VVATIS DE PUY.SThR [de Peyster] the />"«■*< rmk of major-lifneml in the National Guard of New York, for meritorious services, which mark of honor shall be slated in the Commisson conferred. State at New York, in AmmhUj, April 9lh, 1866. The foregoing Resoluti.m was duly piisaed. By order of th, The to .State of New York ng Resolution was duly passed. ISij order of J. H CusHMAN. Clerk. ■n Senate, April SOth, 1866. ; Senate.. Jas. Tk .Clerk. i,,i„al. i:v Me MILITARY AGENT, S. N. BKR. Thirp Class, .if the Milita MEMBER OF THE Netheriandi [ifaaticliaj'pij der Nederla y.,(in Europe. )lS5l-'.3. KV Order of the Loval Legion of the U. S. SH Literary Assi-ciation ndsche Letterkunde] "at Leyden Holland. RErlPlENT, 1856,of ThreeSilver iVerfo/s from H. R. M. Oscar, King of Sweden and Norway, &c for a Military Biography of Leonard Torste.nson. Field Marshal, Generalissimo: of a Gold Medal m 185-i. from Washington Hunt. Governor S. N. Y., for " Efforts to Improve the .Military System of New York." &c. &c. and Suggestions for a Paid Fire Pepartmeut with Steam Fire Engines, Ac. &c. : of a Gold Medal in 1852. from the Fielu and .Staff Officers of his Couimand, ilth liri" »d Div , N. Y. S. Troops, " In testimonv of their Esteem and Appreciation of " kflforts towards the Establishment of an elHcient Militia," &c. : in 187U, of a Magnificient Badge. Mkdal and Clasps voted at Ihe Annual Meeting of the Third Corps (Army of the Potomac), Union, held at Boston. Mass.. Thursday, May 5th. ISIO, when ■1 RtHoiiition wns adopted to present a Gold Medal.of the value of $5U0, to Gen. .1. Watts de Pkvsthk. of New York, as a testimonial of the appreciation by the Corps of his eminent servic'ii\n placing upon record the true history of its achievements, and in defending its commanders and their men from written abuse and misrepresentation:" iiud of several other Badges, Medals &c.. for services in connection with the militaiy service of the State of New York. HONORARY MEMBER of the New .Ikrsev and of the Minmispta Historical SocihTits, and of the Phrknokosmian Socibtv of Pennsylvania College, Gettimhurg ; of the Philosophian Society. Miaaionary Institute, Selin's Grove. and of the Euterpean Society. Muhlenhery College. Allentown. Pennsylvania. and of the Gas.\ian Literary Society, of Nctiraska College, Nebraska City. HONORARY MEMBER of the N. Y. Burns Club. (Burns was a member of the Dumfries Volunteers, oi which Col. Arent Schuyler de Peyster, 8th or King's Foot B. A., was' Colonel, to whom the "National Bard of Scotland" addressed, just before his death, in 1796. his •• POE.M ON LIFE,") and Life Member of the St. Nicholas Society of New York, (of which city Johannes dk Peyster. Urst of the name in the New World, was Schej'en. 1655, Alderhian, 1666, llurgomaater, 1673, Deputy Mayor, 1677. Mayorality offered and refused.) MEMBER of the New York, the Rhode Island (Newport). :md of the Pennsylvania Historical Societies, and of the Military Association of the State of New York. LIFE MEMBER of the Historical Society of Michigan, anil of the Numismatic and Arch.eological Society of New York. CORRESPONDING MEMBER of the State Hlstorical Societies of Maine, ot Vermont, of Rhode Island. (Providence), ot Connecticut, and of Wisconsin ; of the Long Island and of the Buffalo Historical Societies ; of the New England Histoiuo-Gknealogical Society ; of the Quebec Literary & Historical Society ; ot the Numismatic and Antiquarian Society of Philadelphia. Pernsylvania ; PERSONAL MILITARY HISTORY PHILIP KEARl^T, MAJOR-GEXEIIAL UNITED STATES YOLUXTEERS. " Dulce et decorum est pro pafrii m&ri." KKARNT BADGE MOTTO. ■ The Bravest Man I eveu knew and the most Perfect Soldier." LIBUTENANT-GENERAL WINPIELD SCOTT. M<£tn 5Kann cdH ftiUex Orogc," By JOHN WATTS De PEYSTER, ;)j NEW YORK: RICE AND GAGE, PUBLISHERS. BLISS & CO., NEWARK, N. J. 1869. New York City, July 7, 18G9. As my friend, General J. Watts de Peyster, of New York City, is about to visit Europe, I desire to state tliat his great acquaintance "with military matters, his long and faithful research into the military histories of modern nation*, his correct comprehension of our own late war, and his intimacy with many of our leading Generals and Statesmen during the period of its continuance, with his tried and devoted loyalty and patriot- ism, recommend him as an eminently suitable person to visit foreign countries, to impart as well as receive proper views upon all such subjects as are connected with his position as a military writer. Such high qualifi- cations, apart from his being a gentleman of family, of fortune, and of re- fined cultivation, are entitled to the most favorable consideration from all those who esteem and admire them. With "reat respect A. PLEASANTON, • Bvt. Major-Gcn'l, U. S. A. Executive Mansion, ) Wash., D. C, July 13, 1869. ) I heartily concur with Gen'l Pleasanton in his high appreciation of the services rendered by Gen'l de Pisvster, upon whom the State of New York has conferred therank of Brevet Major-General. I commend him to the favorable cousideration of those whom he may meet in his present visit to Europe. u. S. GRANT Executive Mansion, ) Dear Sir ■ Washington, D.C., July 13th, 18G9. f I take pleasure in forwarding to you the enclosed endorsement of the President. yours Very Truly, Gen. J. Watts DE Peysteb. HORACE PORTER.* *.Vajor of Ordnance, U.S.A.; Brevet Briijadier-General U.S.A.; A.-de-C.tothe General-in-Chief; and Private Secretary to the President of the U\ S. Law Offices of Sewell h Pierce, 178 Broadway, ) (P. O. Address, Bo.x 412.) New York, June 9tli, 1S69. f General J. J. Bartlett, U. S. Minister Resident at Stockholm. Dear Gen. : General J. Watts db Peyster, of New York, goes to Europe this season, and may call on you. He is a gentleman highly connected in our State, and is in every respect worthy of your confidence and esteem. He is (as you will discover) thoroughly conversant with all the military operations of both armies during the iate war. He has written considera- bly on this subject, and his writings have attracted much attention. Any kindness you may be able to do him will be esteemed by me as a personal favor. Yrs. Truly, H. W. SLOCUM.* * Maj. Gen. U. S. V., CommW.} Right Winq (o!h, 1 ]lh and lilh Army-Corps) of Union Army at Getlyshurg ; C'jinm'J'g (,\SiH) Army of Georgia ; a-c' tt-c lOc. ' My Dear Gen. : Enclosed please find note to my old friend Geu. Bartlett, now at Stockholm. You will not see him, but the letter is what you want, and of course it will be good with any one as with B. Gen. Sherman will endorse it I think. Yrs. in haste, H. W. S. [EtlClor.ied .•'I Head-Quarters of the Army,) Washington, ia^i^n. Km. ) I cordially endorse the within letter of General Slocu.-'i, and ask the Representatives of the U. S. abroad to extend to Gen'l de Peyster the courtesy due a gentleman of his character and high position at home. W. T. SHERMAN, General. TO THE 70LUNTEER ARMY OF THE UNITED STATES, AS INDIVIDUALS AND AS A WHOLE, THE NOBLEST EXAMPLE OF PATRIOTISM ' PRESENTED IN ANCIENT OR MODERN filSTORT, WHOSE MORAL COURAGE AND INTELLIGENT DISCIPLINE, WHOSE DEVOTION, PATIENCE AND PERSEVERANCE CONQUERED AND CRUSHED THE GREATEST REBELLION EVER RECORDED IN HISTORY, OR EVER UNDERTAKEN AGAINST THE RIGHTS OF A PEOPLE AND HUMANITY; TO OUR VOLUNTEER SOLDIERS AND SOLDIER-CITIZENS, WHO OVERCAME, NOT ONLY THE ENEMY IN ARMS IN THE FIELD, BUT FOES AS DANGEROUS. BECAUSE INSIDIOUS AT HOME. THIS BIOGRAPHICAD SKETCH OF A VOLUNTEER GENERAL, A GLORIOUS TYPE OF THE AMERICAN SOLDIER, IS DEDICATED WITH THE RESPECT, ADMIRATION AND GRATITUDE DUE FOR HIS COUNTRY SAVED AND ITS CONSTITUTION PRESERVED, BY THE AUTHOR. / Translation of Letter of Lieutenant-General MORRIS, (French Army,) recommending Major PHILIP KEARNY for the Cross of the Legion of Honor. (Read in connection with Chapters V to XV.) M. the Major Philip Kearny was decorated with the Order of the Legion of Honor by Imperial Decree, as of date the 17th February, 1860, on the proposition of the Minister of Foreign Atfairs, and at the request of M. the General MoKRis, commanding the Cavalry Division of the Imperial Guard. The following is an extract of the letter written by that General in favor of M. the Major Philip Kearny : M. THE Minister: Permit me to call the favorable attention of your Excellency to the services in France of M. Philip Kearny, Major in the American Army. This officer, after having fnlfilled the course of studies at the Military School of Saumur, obtained from the [French] Government the proper authorization to [enable him to] make the (^~ Campaign of 1840 in Africa. '•■ *' -^ .u.. _ . ■ .... . . •_ . of 1 which occurred on the Oued-Jur and the Bou-Kouml~n,iX\ui Capture of ChercheLl, of Medtah, and of Milianah, and in all the o fairs which took 2)lace in connection with the jirovisioning ot these places. [Chapter VIII pages 87 to 110.] ' On his return to America, with the rank of Captain, he made all the Campaigns in Mexico, [1810 and 1847,] and l;ad his arm shot ofl' before [the city of] Mexico. In the last Campaign of Italy, [18.59,] after having obtained the per- mission of his Majesty the Emperor, he was attached to my staff durino- the marches, and was present at Magenta with Gen. Casbaignolles an3 at my side in the battle of Solferino. Everywhere, whether in Africa or in Italy, Major Kearny exhibited a bravery of the highest order, [eprouve,] and a great coolness, [sana- froid ] ^ ^ I should esteem myself happy if by thus contributing my testimony ot the brilliant conduct of Major Kearny, I should decide your Excel- lency to propose him to his Majesty for the decoration of the Legion of ^**'^°'"- I beg you to receive, &c., General MORRIS, Commanding the Cavalry Division of the Imperial Guard. [In the margin, in the hand-writing of the Emperor :] Cross accorded, [or conferred.] N. CONTENTS Preface v to vli Introductory Remarks Ix to xii CHAPTER I 13 to 26 A glorious Retrospect ; Origin of the Keaent Family ; Their Relations and Connections in this Country, and their Military Affiliations. CHAPTER n 27to35 The Kearny and Watts Families and their Connections ; their Civil and Military services. CHAPTER m 36 to 46 The Springtide of Youth; Childhood, boyhood, youth and education of Philip Kearny. The child Father to the Man. CHAPTER IV 47to51 In the Saddle at last — Lieutenant Philip Keap.ny's first military service at the Far West in 1837—1839, with Notices of the frontier Settlements about that period. CHAPTER V ,. 53to92 A representative American — Lieutenant Kearny at the French Military School of Saumur. The Feast of Kings ; Twelfth Night Festivities — A Ball given by an American Officer in France worthy of commemoration. CHAPTER VI 63 to 74 El Tell and El Sersous ; France in Africa— A description of the theatre of hos- tilities between the French and Natives in Algiers; its climate, physi- cal appearance, and a consideration of the principal historical events which preceded Lieutenant Kearny's service in that region. CHAPTER VII 75 to 86 Through El Bibau — The passage of the Atlas Mountains, through the Gates of Iron, by Marshal Valee and the Duke of Orleans, one of the most remarkable military excursions on record. CHAPTER Vin 87toll0 Over the Mousaia to Medeah and Milianah — The African Battle above the Clouds ; Campaign of 1839, and Campaign of 1840 ; Lieutenant Philip Kearny's " Baptism of Fire " on the Plains of Metidjah and of the Cheliff, at the Siege of Milianah and Passage of the Mousaia. CHAPTER IX Ill to 122 From the Mississippi to the Rocky Mountains — The Expedition of 1845, from Fort Leavenworth, along the " Oregon Trace," to the South-Pass, thence to Bent's Fort, and homewards along the " Santa Fe Trace " to the starting place ; with beautiful notices of remarkable natural objects from the Correspondence of a distinguished Army Officer. 11 • CONTENTS. CHAPTER X 123 to 135 The Mexican War — Captain Philip Keajint in Mexico and his famous com- pany, mounted .on Iron Greys ; his service along the Rio Grande in 1846; selection of his company as the body-guard of Major-General Scott at Vera-Cruz ; the Dinner at Puebla ; " An arm for a brevet ; " the pursuit to Rio Frio ; the first Americans in arms on the Rim of the Basin of Mexi- co ; the Crossing of the Pedregal. CHAPTER XI 136 to 151 he Garita San Antonio: Charge of the One Hundred — The battle of Churnbusco ; Kbabnt's famous charge of two miles with 100 American dragoons, through 5,000 Mexican Infantry and Cavalry — Captain Philip Keabnt the first man, sword in hand, to enter Mexico — one of the most audacious feats recorded in military history, which " has no parallel in modem warfare." CHAPTER Xn 152 to 153 Home, sweet home — Sword presentation to Brevet-Major Philip Kbaent. CHAPTER XIII 154 to 157 The Golden Gate and Victory of the Rogue River — One of the most brilliant feats of Indian fighting performed by our old Army. CHAPTER XIV 158 to 166 Keajsnt a Wanderer: "Round the world" — "Keaent, in Paris, rendered important service to the Loyal North, in 1859— '60." CHAPTER XV 167 to 183 The Italian Campaign of 1859 ; Keabnt, a Volunteer at Solferino ; decorated with the Cross of the Legion of Honor. CHAPTER XVI 184 to 200 '•The Type Volunteer General of the War: ' Keaknt's return to America in search of a military command ; Bull Run ; a Sufliciency of Parallels from European History. CHAPTER XVn 201 to 218 A Model Brigadier and Pattern Brigade Commander, Philip Keabkt, " the 12th Brigadier U. S. V., on the Original List of Generals of that Rank," at .,-work, making his famous Ist New Jersey Brigade ; Keabkt's Views in regard to carrying on War. CHAPTER XVIII 219 to 227 Plans and Correspondence ; Keabnt foretells the Greatness of Grant. CHAPTER XIX 228 to 251 The Second Advance to Manasses, occupation of the Rebel camps and works ; Hiddbn's glorious charge and death ; Kearnt's brilliant initia- tive of active operations ; Reports with Lists of those who distinguished themselves. CHAPTER XX 252 to 256 Irritants and Assnasives ; Poison and Antidote ; Kearnt thanked by the New Jersey Legislature. CHAPTER XXI 257 to 262 From Alexandria through Yorktown to Williamsburg ; Kearnt in command of the 3d (afterwards 1st) Division, 3d Corps, Army of the Potomac, Com- position of Kearnt's Fighting Division. CONTENTS. Ill CHAPTER XXII 263 to 298 The Battle of Williamsiburg, Monday, May5, 1862; " Kearnt, the last to leave Yorktown, the first up to save Hooker;'' Keaunt's first magnificent appearance on the battle field; Repulse converted into victory; His glorious aspect and influence in a fight; Anecdotes, Incidents, Corres- pondence and Reports. CHAPTER XXIII 299 to 307 Exempli Gratia, Exemplary Volunteer Generals. CHAPTER XXIV 308 to 329 The Peninsula Campaign No. 1 ; Seven Pines and Fair Oaks ; Kearnt a prophet as well as a General and a Soldier ; Letters, Anecdotes, Inci- dents, and Reports. CHAPTER XXV 330 to 359 Peninsula Campaign No. 2 ; Fair Oaks to Oak Grove to Malvern HUl ; The Seven Days' Battles : Oak Grove, Mechanicsville, Gaines' Mills, Savage Station, White Oak Swamp, Glendale, Malvern Hill ; Correspondence, Parallels, Remarkable Occurrences and Reports. CHAPTER XXVI 360 to 371 Companion and Supplementary, a partial review of the Peninsula Operations on the Left : Popular pronencss to exaggeration ; Kearny's practical fore- sight and ability ; The Kjiarnt Patch, Diamond and Cross, and Badge or Medal. CHAPTER XXVII 372 to 385 Harrison's Landing, Chafing on the Bit — Interesting Correspondence and Revelations of the Truth. CHAPTER XXVni 386 to 403 Pope and the "Army of Virginia ;" From the Rapidan to Warrenton ; Kearnt again in the field ; Kearnt's division the first, of the Army of the Poto- mac, up, in line, for the relief of Pope ; Pope vindicated. CHAPTER XXIX 404 to 406 Pope and the "Army of Virginia ;" Something on the ever ready, fighting, 3d Corps ; Kearnt's final Correspondence and last Report ; Kearnt's little Bugler. CHAPTER XXX 407 to 433 Ohantilly — A striking example of a second-class decisive battle ; Stonewall Jaokson defeated ; The Army of Virginia saved ; Redeeming Victory of the Union Troops, and startling Death of Kearnt. CHAPTER XXXI 434 to 481 Death and Burial of " the bravest man I (Scott) ever knew, and the most perfect soldier;" Charming Reminiscences from Kearnt's Comrades in arms. CHAPTER XXXII 482 to 512 The Epilogue — A summing up of the characteristics of Major-General Phiijp Keabnt, with interesting anecdotes throughout his career. PREFACE. "That elegant force in history, which characterized Tacitus and Plutaech, seems to have disappeared in our time; certainly in biographies. * * ♦ When I com- pare the present Sketch with the Ideal which I had conceived, it is with actual timidity that I venture to publish it. A perfect biography I cannot indeed prepare, since the Count (Schaumbubg-Lippb) carefully kept secret the majority of his greatest deeds. * ♦ * It was my simple intention to portray even his character as a commander and a ruler (organizer) from the stand-point of his magnanimity, and establish every trait of this picture with anecdotes. Yet even such a sketch, at least with my powers, can be nothing more than a fragment. Perhaps I may claim that no one at a previous time could have produced comparatively as complete a history of the Count's career as this one. Lest any one should find fault, or occasion for it should appear, I did not embody much information which I actually possessed. I do not urge this as a satisfactory ex- cuse for the faults of my work, but simply as a reason why they merit pardon, and on that account I pray the indulgence of the public," Theodob Schmai.z'8 " Denkwiirdigkeiten de^ Graf en. WrLHKLMS ZU ScHAUaiBUBQ-LlPPB." 1783- The preparation of this Biography, or rather Biographical Sketch of the Military Career of Major-General Philip Keakny has been looked forward to for six years, not only as a sincere pleasure, but as a solemn duty. Almost aU the notices of this distinguished General, which have appeai'ed in the different papers and periodi- cals, were Uttle more than the ampUfications of the sketch of him pre- pared by the wi'iter for the New York Times in 1861. This sketch grew into one more worthy of the subject in the columns of the New York Citizen of January 25th, 1867, and Februaiy l8tand8th, 1868. On the 17th of Januaiy, 1868, Cortlandt Pakkek, Esq., counsel, and intimate friend of the deceased General, deUvered an Addi-ess before the New Jersey Historical Society. This noble tri- bute of friendship was afterwards furnished to the editors of the JVorthern 3Ionthly Magazine, and appeared in the three numbers of that periodical for November and December, 1867, and February, 1868. It was subsequently pubhshed, by request, as a pamphlet of forty-nine pages. Mi*. Parker had free access to all the papers in the possession of the immediate family of the General, and the results VI PREFACE. of his labors are equally interesting as a charming composition and as a valuable contribution to history. To it the writer of the present work is indebted for much connected with the last year of the hero's life, especially extracts from letters, etc. Otherwise the lacts herein presented are altogether new, and the views of General Ke/jrny are derived from personal and confidential intercourse fi'om boyhood to middle-age. The Avriter hesitated for a long time before resuming the pen, feel- ing that nothing could be done which deserved the name of a biog- raphy until certain letters, documents, and books could be obtained and examined. Manuscripts, etc., etc., are known to have existed which have eluded the anxious search of the historian. The kind- ness of friends, and aa examination of correspondence, has filled some of the minor gaps, but others stUl exist, one of which is General Kearnt's Algerian experience, as glorious to himself as interesting to the pubUc. On his return to the United States he wi'ote an ac- count of his African campaign, which was "privately printed." Not a copy of this, however, is to be found, although diligent search has been made in every quarter, where an exemplai' ought to have been preserved. Most of his correspondence was, doubtless, among the papers of an aged relative, liis mother's sister, one of the most loyal, noble, and generous of women, deceased in June, 1866. This was either committed to the flames by her, or burned after her decease as a sacred trust not to be violated when the grave had closed over both, the one who wi'ote as a son to a mother, and the other to whom the confidential letters were addi-essed. A valuable lettei', which was in hand last fall, has likewise disappeared, whether destroyed or stolen for the autogi*aph, since it possessed a signatm-e in full, a very rare thing with Kearny's letters, who generally signed "Phil," or "K." The author of these pages was the only cousin of General Kearxt, on his mother's side, brought up with Mm in the house of then- ma- ternal grandfather, Hon. John Watts. This excellent man. General Kearny's grandfather, was ennobled by his benevolence. His best memorial is a gi-and charitable mstitution which he endowed in the city of New York. Mr. Watts was a monument of aflliction, in that he had seen his wife, six handsome, gifted, and gallant sons, and four daughters precede him to the grave. One chUdless daughter sm-vived hun and thi-ee grandchildi-en. General Kearny, his sister, Mrs. Macomb, who died in Em-ope 30th April, 1852, and the wi'iter. PREFACE. Tli Peculiar associations intensified the ties which united the sui-vivors, sole representatives of a race which had occupied so prominent a position in the annals of their native State for nearly a century " in troublous, times." In youth the pm'suits of General Kearny and the writer of these pages were identical, and it was to the house of the latter that the former returned from time to time to talk over the strange adventures experienced in a remarkably checkered career. Together in 1834 they visited Europe, and the majority of the opin- ions expressed herein are founded on personal recollections. If affection, admiration, studies, in common, interchange of thoiights, intercom'se without reserve, and a memory remarkable for its te- nacity can enable any one to produce a reliable biogi-aphy, the follow- ing may be considered authentic. As a patriot, as a pubUc ofiicer, and as a soldier, Philip Kearisty was a grand example, worthy of study, imitation, and commemoration. As an officer in the service of om- coimtry, his glory belongs, particularly, to his native State, from which he was appointed to the United States Ai-my. As a General, unsm-passed, wherever and whenever he was tried for coiu-- age, fidehty, self-sacrificing, energy, and ability, his glory is equally the property of the whole country. As West Point had nothing to do with his achievements, as he owed nothing to its training, to its cast influence, to its academic fine of thought, or to its terrible pre- judices, he may be considered a magnificent tj^jje of a Volunteer sol- dier, for from private life was he appointed to lus first commission ; from private life it might be said he again sprang into the saddle in 1846 — since he recalled his resignation to pai'take in the glories of the Mexican war — and from private life abroad he retm-ned home to reassume his uniform and assist in saving his country. As a Volun- teer, he participated in the dangers and fatigues of a campaign in Africa wliich carried the tricolor thi-ough the "Gates of Ii-on " and over the Atlas into the strongholds of Abd-el-Kader. He partook in the operations of that campaign which laid the basis of the pre- sent Kingdom of Italy, and a Major-General of American volunteers, he died on the field of battle. Therefore to the Volunteer Armies of the United States, and more pai-ticularly to the officers and sol- diers of his immediate commands — especially that nonpareil New Jersey Brigade which he created, and that glorious First Division of theThh'd Corps of the Ai-my of the Potomac at whose head he fell — are these pages dedicated, with the deepest and warmest gratitude of the author. li INTRODTJCTORY REMARKS. " Truth i3 to History what Eyes are to animals ; if their eyes are torn out, they become useless. Just so deprive History of Truth, and it is no longer of any value or utility." — POLYBIUS. "STA VIATOR, HEROEM CALCAS !" Field-Marshal Mebct's epitaph on the battle-field of Nordlingen, where he fell, 1645. A -WONDERFUL epoch has closed. This generation stands Hke spectators around the upheaved ruins — not yet settled— -of an un- pai'alleled moral as well as physical earthquake. Even as at the period of the great French Revolution of 1789 (1793), humanity has made one of its gigantic strides, in advance, which compensate for the inaction of ages. Not that human progi'ess ever stands still, but at times it almost seems to do so, groping its way along like one stiU half asleep, or like one just awakened fi-om a lethargic or di'ugged slumber. Happy he who has enjoyed the advantages of occupying a stand-point whence to observe, with a philosophic view, the phases and the marvels of the convulsions ; more fortunate he who has associated with the heroes, the martyrs, or the victims of the catastrophe, and has the ability and leism-e to collect and pre- pare for gi-ander histories the details of the tempest he has wit- nessed, and the words, the gestm-es, the deeds of those who towered, like peaks u-radiated with the sun of gloiy, amid the colliding storm- clouds, freighted with thunder and devastation. In a retked quarter of the metropoUs of the " Babylonish Cap- tivity of the Papacy" stood an old building, once the convent of St. Marcel, since the first Empu-e transmuted into a " Succm'sale " of the " Grand Hotel" at Paris, devoted to the reception of the inva- lids of that ai'my which had borne the tricolor, the emblem of popu- X INTRODUCTION. lar triumjjh, thi'Oiigli conquered capitals, east and south, to the re- motest bounds of civilization. In its cool garden and along its cor- ridors had gi-ouped and walked, fighting then- battles over again in interchange of recollections, heroes who had inarched and combatted over the fiery sands of Egj^t, the classic soil of Italy, the castle- crowned mountains of Germany, the di-eary bogs reclauned by Teutonic feudalism, the rugged ranges of the Iberian sierras, and the snowy steppes of Russia. Around this garden, shutting them in from the industry of social life, whose blessings and comforts they had renounced for the fascinating career of arms, rose high walls, which formerly closed in the members of the church militant, the monkdom of the cloister, scarcely gi-eater strangers than the monkdom of the flag to the busy and comparatively happier world of every-day life. But unlike the disi^ossessed fi-iars, the vision of these invahds was not bounded by bare walls, suggestive of no thoughts save those connected vnth the dull monotony of monastic life. Thickly strung together, like a zone of jewels, from the rich mine of the military annals of France, close side by side, a series of ivrDBAX TABLETS extended around the garden, devoted to the immor- talization of glorious deeds and of heroic souls, that recalled the triumphs in which the veterans had jjarticipated — triumphs whose narration had made their watch-fires the centres of epopees as gi-and as the strophes of Ossian. Wliat a glorious seclusion, redolent with the perfume of patriotic devotion, brilliant "vvith the lustre of mihtary achievements, musical Avith the eulogies of the heroic dead ! What a contrast to these tablets, those tablets set in the walls of the old ducal palace which commemorate the Arnolds, the Da\'tses, the Stephenses of that Republic which once contested the empire of the Mediterranean with the twin sister of the Adriatic, and left me- morials of its commercial daring in lands which are scarcely now accessible to European enterprise. Yet both these classes of monuments should be preserved with equal care, for they establish the truths of History, and maintain them agamst the flattery of sycophants, the changes of political opinion, or the venial pens of prejudiced or political writers, changing, as one we have seen, with the horn* and with personal interest. This little book seeks to erect a memorial to one of the most striking figm'es in the gi'eat Ajieeicajn' Conflict to crush the " Slaveholders' Rebellion." Its pages present a sketch of the INTRODUCTION. xi career of one of the men most prominent for their ability, then- in- fluence, their prowess, and then- genius for war. The student of American History, in his quiet hbrary, sm*rounded by such works, whether rude or pohshed in theii- language, still careful in then* presentation of truths, is like the visitor in the gar- den of the "Succursale" (at A\^gnon), of the "Hotel des Invalides" at Paris. He can abandon himself to the reflections engendered by the stories of the RebelUon, and as he tm^ns from shelf to shelf, and saunters thi-ough the historic pages, the eyes of his mind can con- temi^late cOjmhejiorative t.\blets, set up on the walls of his im- agmation, some, like those of Keauny and of Lyon, presentmg exam- ples of patriotism and self-sacrifice ; others, such as those of Lee and Davis, recalling evil men, prominent in the leadership of treason and of sin, but none the less remarkable or worthy of consideration as beacons on that reef of crime on which a confiding section went to wi'eck and ruin. Contemplating and reflecting, before him will pass a panoramic series of the actions of the Rebellion. Each Biogi'apliical Sketch will serve as a portrait in the gallery of word-pictm-es, and ever and anon a prominent figure will start into life, if the pen of the biogra- pher is equal in its power to the part played by his hero in the mag- nificent "procession of the war pageant. To futui-e students of history such biographies, however imj^er- fectly ^vlitten or faulty in then- style, will prove of incalculable interest; to futm-e ^vriter8 of history, of inestimable value. To every one who contemplates, like a philosopher, the changes which cm* national organization underwent in five years (1860-'65), every work connected with the cataclysm will be of value, as a record and a memento of what human will, single or combined, erring but ener- getic, can accompHsh to injm*e or to preserve ; while the general story and its results will serve and operate as a warning against the misdu-ection of human efibrts in the futm'e to deface or destroy a national structure, faulty in some of its details, but sublime in its general conception ; an edifice pmified fii*om the stains of slavery, and renovated through the patriotism of the loyal men of all sec- tions, destined to stand, with open doors, a refuge and an asylum to the oppressed and suffering throughout the world. The history of the " Slaveholders' Rebellion " is the record of a treason without a parallel in its criminaUty ; a treason against God's best gifts, against Free thought, Free action, a Free land — ■ Xll INTRODUCTION. a treason against the People — whose voice, when it utters its will with determination, but lolthout violence, is the voice of God. Those who, like Kearny, led the van for the People ; who, with- out ambitious piu'pc^es, laid down then- lives for the People ; who bore the bm*den and heat of the day, and " paid the last full mea- fim*e of devotion " that then- country might live ; soldiers, patriots, mai'tyrs — such indeed were champions of Liberty. One of the gi-andest of these was Kearny, and tliis book is a memorial of him. He deserves the best monument of which the pen, pencil, or chisel is susceptible. But the hero will not despise any memento, how. ever humble, which is the result of the best efforts of the author and a tribute of his affection. MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY, U. S. V. From the original grand equestrian portrait in tiie possession of tlie Autlior. Indorsed as the best lilceness by the General's family. PERSOML AND MILITARY HISTORY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. CHAPTER I. A GLORIOUS RETROSPBCT. " ThrouEh the shadowy past, Llfee a tomb-searcher, memory ran, Lifting each fihroud." MooBS. " The hand of the reaper Takes tlie years that are hoary, But the voice of the weeper Walls manhood in glory." " This chivakic figure looks as though it had just leaped from the centre of a medieval battle-piece." Though hving in these modern and prosaic days, his bearing is essentially romantic ; he looks the knight-errant. Such a rider on such a steed takes the mind back to the days when the badge of nobiUty Avas skill with the sword and grace in horsemanship ; when to be a gentleman was to follow the profession of arms ; when the joust and the tom-nament assembled all the beauty and aU the valor of feudal monarchies ; when " Nine and twenty loiights of fame Hung- their shields in Branksome Hall, And quitted not their harness bright, Neither by day, nor yet by night ; But carved at the meal "With gloves of steel. And drank the red mne through the helmet barred." These words are full of truth, suggestive. There is scarcely an individual endowed Avith the power of obser- vation, who, while examining a collection of modern or recent por- traits, has not been struck Avith the peculiar face and bearing of some one or other of the individuals presented, who, notwithstanding the costumes and accessories, seems out of place among the pictures of cotemporaries. Certain striking peculiarities of feature or expression, suggest the idea that a mistake has occurred ; that the likeness of 14 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. one distinguished in the days of chivahy has fallen into the hands of a Vandal, to whose piu'se or whim the painter has sacrificed his art as well as the truth, and concealed the armor, dinted by cimeter or falchion, beneath the strff and ungTaceful costume of this century. No one who has has ever studied the lineaments and expression of Prittip Keaknt, his carriage, his bearing on foot or seat in the sad. die, but must appreciate this, and acknowledge in then- hearts that his soldierly face and knightly person would look more appropriate under the morion and the mail of Fra Mokeale, of du Guesclix, or of Bayard, or in the plumed hat lined with steel, and polished breastplate of a Rupert, a Montrose, or a Dundee ; nor deem him in the saddle unworthy of Su" Richard Vernon's glowing description of that "Imp of Fame," who, on the field of Agincourt, so glorious to his manhood, declared : " And be it death proclaimed tliroughont our host To boast of this, or take that praise from God Which is His only " Thus spake Sir Richaed : " I saw young Harry — with his beaver on, His cuisses on his thighs, gallantly arm'd, — Rise fi'om the ground like feathered Mercury, And vaulted -with such ease into his seat As if an angel dropp'd do^vn from the clouds, To turn and wind, a fiery Pegasus, And witch the world with noble horsemanship." Wandering through the galleries of Em'ope, the wi'iter has more than once been startled at recognizing in a gi-and equestrian picture, or an exquisite mihtary portrait, something which recalled a friend or relative distinguished for those quahties which indicate the natural soldier. Any one who was intimately acquainted with Major-General PinLip Kearny, and the race from which he sprang, or -with which he was connected, can understand this feehng. In the Palazzo Spinola, in Genoa, there is a magnificent painting by Van Dyke, hung on hinges, which, when swung out from the wall in order to present its beauties in the most advantageous light, both horse and rider, nearly natm-al size, seem to stand out from the canvass and become instinct with life. It is one of those incompara- ble equestrian portraits, regarded as almost priceless gems of art, in which the rival of Rubens and of Titian pecuharly excelled. Such BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 15 a portrait, in fact, to one who knew him well, would at once recall General Keakxy. In him, mounted on his favorite gray charger, Moscow, the great painter would have welcomed a subject worthy of his genius, and have handed him down to posterity in all the brilliancy of his design and coloring ; and fiction would have seized upon him as its hero, and have commemorated his career in verse like the " Max Piccolomini " of Schillek, or in romance like the Ciaverhouse of "OldMortahty." This is no over-di'awn picture. On some pubhc occasion, at a ball in the Grand-Ducal (Pitti) Palace, in Florence, Keaeny appeared as a Knight Templar, clothed from head to foot in chain armor. To dance gi-acefiilly — and gracefully he did dance — under such a weight of steel, proved what immense physical power he possessed. The wi'iter has a sleeve of chain mail, taken fii-om one of the catacombs of Egj-pt, which belonged to a Crusader. Each link is rivetted separately, and the whole suit was worth a prince's ransom. This sleeve weighs four and a half pounds. The whole tunic must have weighed over eighteen pounds ; the entne suit over four times that number. Under this weight Kearny waltzed as lightly as if clad in sUk, and wore it so aptly that the illusion was perfect. To the com- pany it seemed as if one of those haughty chevaUers had risen from his tomb to grace the festival, or as if one of thek efiigies had started into life. Again, at a fancy ball — unequalled ever in the city of New York — given by Commodore John C. Stevens, Keakny was conspicuous as a Kabyle chieftain, in a perfect costume, which he had probably captm-ed in Algiers. So correct was it in every detail, that fi'om his belt swung a severed head imitated to the life, or rather death, in sugar, but nevertheless so corpse-like that he was compelled to lay it aside from the horror it excited. On this occasion likewise, had one of Abd-el-Kader's kalifas or beys appeared in the ball-room, he could not have looked and played his part with greater grace and tact than did the American Volunteer, who may have crossed steel with the original under the shadow of the Atlas. " Though an American by bhth, and intensely American in his sympathies. General Philip Kearny carried in his veins blood that distinguishes the leading nations of Em-ope. " On his father's side he was L'ish, and thence he derived his im- pulsive, roving, danger-coui'ting blood, the temper that never stops to count odds nor calculate chances. 16 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARIJY. " On his mother's side there were two diverse elements not often combined in one person — the strong native sense, and the shrewd common sense of the canny Scot, and the fiery nature, the love of pomp, splendoi: and beauty, the ardent soul and the chivahic bear- ing of the Gaul." Close investigation, however, would lead to the conviction that the Kearnys are Scotch-Irish, for the name is certainly Gaelic. The cousin and executor of our hero has a family tree, showing all the marriages as far back as 1506, and traces back the family long an- terior to that date, to two brothere who first settled in Ireland. The name was originally O'Clearman, which, he says, meant "soldier." Kearny, in its original spelling, Cearnach, in Gaelic or Celtic, does signify " soldier."* The name must have been derived from some deed of note in war, for all private names are in one sense derivatives. Kearny was thus not only a soldier by name but by natm*e, and a true inheritor not only of the designation but of the spu-it of his race. It is seldom that a man born to command, and imbued with all the peculiar characteristics of a military leader — that is, one who would be selected from the crowd as a soldier-born — who has not sprung from a race of soldiers, or been brought up amid military associations, or who has not in his veins the blood of those races which instinctively produce soldiers, lor such races do undeniably exist. Prominent among them is the Celtic race, which has been tempered by the Frank (pm-e Saxon), or Gothic blood in France, and by the Gothic in Spain. This is peculiarly the case with the French Huguenots, whose strongholds and recruiting grounds were in those parts of France which were originally the seats of Norman, Burgundian, or Viso- gothic power. From the former stock came the de Lanceys. If any family of this State ever shone in arms, m times which tried men's souls, and proved then* loyalty in every way it was possible to do so, it was these same de Lanceys, who, either thi'ough its own scions or connections, saw almost every male in the field from Brigadier-General down to Cornet; a fiimily, whose descendant * "Keabns is a term signifying soldiers in Irish History. As f or tlie term 0"Cleaeman Keauny. the inquisitive reader is referred to Dr. Keating's History of Ireland, where the genealogy of the OKeabnts is to be found " In Gielic "Cliar" means -'gallant'' or "brave,'' and " man," " hand." Consequently Kearny O'Cliar-man doubtless signified "the soldier of, or with, the brave hand." "Cbabnach" is likewise translated ''vic- torious.'''' BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 17 died upon the field of Waterloo, Colonel and Quartermaster-Gen- eral on Wellington's stafi^, evincing with his dying breath an un- selfish solicitude for the life of his commander, more precious to liis country and the world than his own, dying a death which was worthy of the pm'est days of chivahy — ^that is, of that chivaby which romance has invested with such a glorious halo, and which did actually exist in certain individuals, of whom, perhaps, the most genuine, or rather the best known examples, were Bataud and Montrose. Philip Keakny was indeed a Huguenot* — not a Pmitan, Glory was the breath of his nostrils. Although no one wiU deny that the L'ish blood has fight enough in it, it is very questionable if the Watts' blood and aU its afiilia- tions and connections — among these the Kearnys — did not get the greater part of then* mUitary instincts, their war-motor power, from the DE Lanceys. The spirit of these latter was the yeast to make everything tending to soldiership ferment in the different families into which it was infused. Tliis de Lancet blood was a gTand one. From the moment the first of the name arrived in New York it made itself felt. As statesmen, as they would justly be termed in the Old World, or as politicians in this country — before the term "politician" unplied something derogatory — or as soldiers, they exerted the most astonishing influence in the Province or Colony of New York. No one who has examined into its records will pretend to deny this. Exiled for opinion's sake, the English gov- ernment acknowledged their worth by giving them high employ- ment, which then* services, then- zeal, corn-age and fidelity, even to the death, proved that they deserved. * " There was a great difference, however, to be remarked between them (the Huguenot Boldier) and the religious insurgents of more northern countries ; for though both the Bteruer fanaticism which characterized Scotland and England not long before, and the wilder imaginations and fanciful enthusiasms of the far south, were occasionally to be found iu individuals, the great mass were entirely and decidedly French, possessing the character of light and somewhat thoughtless gaycty, so peculiar to that indifferent and laughter-loving nation. " Thus, though they had prayed earnestly, after having fought with determination in the cause which to them was the cause of conscience, they were now quite ready to forget both prayer and strife, till some other cause should reproduce the enthusiasm which gave vigor to either. " They sat in groups, then, round fires of an old apple-tree or two which they had pulled down, and drank the wine, procured, it must be acknowledged, by various differerit means ; but though they sang not, as perhaps they might have done under other circurn- Btances, nothing else distinguished them from any other party of gay French Soklitrs carousing after a laborious day."— James' " IItjguenot." 18 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. John Watts, the second of that name — for his father, by the addition of an " s," changed his name Watt to Watts ; while his mother's family simultaneously by di-opping an "s" from Nicolls became Nicolt. — was the first of the family born in this country. By position, property, marriage, and ability, he became one of the most influential citizens of his native city and of the colony pre- vious to the Revolution, and occupied a place in the first rank of the provincial leaders. He was a prominent member of the General Colonial Assembly, Chahman of several of the most important Committees, Member of the King's Council from 1756 until 1782, when the comiections between the Thhteen Colonies and the mother country was dissolved. Had the party with which he linked his fortunes been successful, he was destined to fill the gubernatorial chair, which had been occupied by his brother-in-law, the eminent Jasies de Lancet, and by the no less extraordinary Cadwall.'VDEr Golden (gTandfather of the wife of his son, John Watts, Junior), one of the " celebrities " of this State, especially notable as a physician, philosopher, inventor, historian, and magis- trate. Although a consistent Loyalist — ^for which he sufiered the confis- cation of his property and died in exUe in Wales — ^he distinguished himself while in office , by upholding the poj^ular rights, and when neither Governor, Lieutenant-Governor, nor any other Member of the Council dared, or would do so, he withstood the arbitrary de- mands of the Earl of Loudon, in regard to billeting troops upon the citizens of New York, and "spoke his mind in fiivor of the people." He was one of the original Founders and Trustees, in 1754, of the New York Society Library ; in 1760 he presented its first clock to the public Exchange of his native city; and in 1770 he iDccame the first President of the New York City Hospital. He was a coadjutor in all the political tiiumphs of his brother-in- lav,^, Lieutenant-Governor James de L.vncet, " an ornament to his country," one of the most remarkable men the State has ever pro- duced, "whose biogi-aphy is the history of om- Colony, from the period he reached man's estate to the day of his death." Through- out his long career, John Watts afforded him the cordial and active support of his energy and influence, and when a sudden death deprived the Colony of de Lancey's capacity for government, he continued for thu-teen years to act in accordance with his prin- ciples and cany out his sagacious views. BIOGKAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 19 Hon. John Watts, Senior, married Akne, the second danghter of Stephen de L.vncey, who immigrated to New York in 1686. They were the grandparents of Brevet Major-General Stephen Watts Kearny, U. S. Army, and great-grandparents of Major- General Philip Kearnt, U. S. Vohmteers. Robert Watts, the eldest son of the preceding, mamed Lady Mary, daughter of William Alexander, Earl of Sterling, Major- General in oiu* Revolutionary Army. Their daughter, again, married her cousin-german, John Watts Kearny. The son of tliis latter, Philip John Kearny, born and bred in the State of New York, was mortally wounded at Gettysburg, Major of the 11th New Jersey Volunteers, having proved himself a brave and able officer. His commission of Lieutenant-Colonel had been made out and was ready for the signature of the Governor of New Jersey, to be issued to him in case he survived. Unhapj^ily, he could not rally from the amputation of his leg, and died in New York city, aged twenty-one years, 9th August, 1863. His career proved that he was a worthy scion of that race and name which had already given two Major-Generals to theii' country, Stephen, the second son of the John Watts, first named, was a brilliant officer in the Anglo-American Army. Already at the age of twenty-two he was. the Major of the intrepid bataliion of Loyal- ists, known as the " Royal New Yorkers," or " Johnson Greens," raised by his brother-in-law, Su" John Johnson, son of the femed Su- WiLLTAJi Johnson, who was knighted and created Major-Gen- eral for resplendent service, more particularly for his victory over DiESKAU, at the head of Lake George, in 1755. He afterwards captured Fort Niagara in 1759. Su* John Johnson by his con- scientious loyalty probably hazarded more in the cause of the Crown than any other American. His domains, which were con- fiscated, were the fairest and most extensive of any colonist, except the estate of Lord Fairfax, in Vu-ginia. After the Revolution he held the position of Superintendent General and Inspector General of Indian Afiau-s in British North America, like-wise other high trusts. His wife, Mary Watts, daughter of the first John Watts, of the city of New York, was made a prisoner and confined at Albany as a hostage for the good conduct of her husband. She was one of the most re- markable women of her day, as conspicuous for the power of her mind as for those other quahties which most adorn her sex, and to 20 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. sucL an extent had she won the affection and respect of her hus- band's " faithful Mohawks," that they threatened the most terriWe re- prisals in case that she suffered the least injury. Her daughter, Catherine Maeia, married Major-General Bowes, who was killed at the storming of Salamanca. Before the breach was rendered practicable. Lord Wellington determined on an attempt at escalade. "In this unfortunate attack Major-General Bowes and one hundi-ed and twenty men fell. The conduct of this gallant officer had been on all occasion conspicuous. In leadhig on the storming party he received a Avound, which was no sooner dressed than he returned to the post of honor, and died gloriously in the service of his country. The monument of a soldier can bear no prouder epitaph than the re- cord of such facts." Her eldest son, William Johnson, was Lieutenant-Colonel of the 28th Regiment of Foot, B. A. Another soij, James, fell on the same occasion with his brother-in-law, Major-General Bowes, and gal lantly supporting him, by his side. In 1777, when St. Ledger entered the Mohawk Valley to co-oper- ate with BuRGOYNE, Stephen Watts commanded the sixty picked marksmen who constituted the British advance-guard, and cleared the way for the invading column. He was second in command at the battle of Oriskany, fought 6th August, 1777, near the mouth of the creek bearing that name, between Rome and Utica, in this State. It is a mooted question, even not yet determined, whether Sh John Johnson was General-in-Chief in this action; but if he had been so, and if his conduct had equalled the terrible resoluteness of his young brother-in-law, the result of the conflict would have been still. more disastrous to the colonists, who lost then- General and half their troops engaged. The two most distinguished officers on the field, Major-General Harkeimer and Major Watts, were both shot through the leg. The wound of the former terminated fatally. The latter, left for -dead upon the field, recovered from his faintness, crawled to a brook or creek to slake the thirst occasioned by his daagerous wound, and was actually found two or three days after- ward with his leg in a shocking condition by some Indian scouts, and conveyed to the British camp. He lost his limb, but long sm- vived the operation and his exile in England. This battle of Oriskany, celebrated in history and romance, in prose and poetry, was the most bloody, for the numbers engaged, and the most obstinately contested at the North during the Revolu- BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 21 'tion. It was as momentous in its effects as a side issue can be, and with its t^vin-combat styled, in error, Bennington, on the Wal- loomscoick, an affluent of the Hudson, in the State of New York, decided the fate of Burgoyne. Anne, the eldest daughter of this Major Stephen Watts, married Major Johnson, of the British Army, cousin of Lord Paoierston, late Premier of England, and his eldest son, John, was a Captain in the same service. This Captain John Watts was present at the battle of Bladensburg, at the capture of Washington, and at New Orleans. He was also Vice-Governor, or Deputy Warden of Wal- mer Castle, one of the Cinque Ports, of which the Duke of Welling- ton was Warden. The " Iron Duke " having died at Walmer Castle, Captain John Watts had charge of the remains of the "world's conqueror's conqueror," and accompanied the body to its last resting-place, in St. Paul's Cathedi'al, London. These facts, as well as those similar ones which foUow, are interesting to show how the Watts and de Lancey blood had an affinity Avith the army. Many more cm*ious connections of the family of Watts could be noted, but for fear of thing the reader's patience we will retm-n to the consideration of the de Lancey line, proper, which, in itself, is almost sufficient to occupy the space which was originally assigned to this branch of the subject. In France there were two distinct species of nobility, the nobility of the Sword and the nobility of the Robe. The former occujjied a much higher rank in society than the latter. The events of the last century have corrected this prejudice, and except in times of a great war, like our civil war, the sword yields to the robe or toga. In Europe it is not even yet so. The de Lanceys belonged to the ancient nobility of France. They were hereditary soldiers, and theu* proj)erty " fief was probably holden by the feu • dal service of the banner or lance, hence their sm-name de Lancey." A cion in this gallant race died as a Mestre de Camp (^. e. Colonel, according to the old French title, of a cavalry regiment) of the Life Guards or Household troops of Louis XIV, at the battle of Mal- plaquet, so glorious to the French army, although comj)elled to abandon the field to Marlborough. From this race sprang Stephen de Lancey, father of Anne, Avife of Hon. John Watts, Senior, hereinbefore referred to. Her sister man-ied Admiral Sir Peter Warren, K. B., who commanded the expedition that took Louisbm-g, the key of the French insular possessions in North 22 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOB-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. America, Her brother, Jajies de Lancet, was a Captain, B. A., and her nephew was James de Laxcey, Lieutenant-Colonel of the 1st Dragoon Guards, B. A, Her brother, the gi-eat-uncle of Major-General Stephen Watts Keaeny, was Brigadier-General Oliver de Lancev, of the British Army, who, fi-om his entrance into military life, Avas pre-eminent for gallantly. He commanded the New York Colonial troops almost throughout his life. In the French war of 1756 he was a Colonel, and led the New York Provincials in Aberckombie's campaign, and received for his ser- vices in this war the thanks of the Colonial Assembly, equivalent to our Legislature. His daughter, Susan, married Lieutenant-General Su* Witxiam Draper, K. B., Knight of the Bath, of the British Army. Another daughter, Charlotte, married Field-Marshal Six David Dlndas, K. B., Commander-in-Chief of the British Ai-my. Another daugh- ter, Anna, married Colonel John Harris Cruger, commandant of his father's-in-law. General de Lancet's, 1st Battalion. He was the gallant defender of Fort 96 in South Carolina. No Loyalist officer performed more responsible or arduous duty with greater credit. The General's son and namesake, Oliver de Lancet, Jr., rose to be Lieutenant-General in the British Ai*my. The famous Prune-Minister, Pitt, the younger, appointed him Barrack-Master General of the British Emjm-e. Be was also Colonel of the 1 7th Light Dragoons, a veiy high honor in England, and in 1796 Member of Parliament. With him ended one branch of this glorious family. Stephen, the youngest son of General de Lastcet, Senior, com- manded the 1st Battalion of New York Volunteers during the Kevolution, held that rank in the British Army, and in 1797 was Governor of the British Island of Tobago and its dependencies. The two daughters of the latter married: Susan, first. Colonel William Johnson ; second, Lieutenant-General Sir Hudson Loave, Knight Commander of the Bath, the Governor of St. Helena during Bonaparte's captivity there — the faithful servitor of his country, calumniated by prejudiced wi'iters, who would not sift out the truth, so nobly vmdicated in William Forstth's History of ^ the Captivity of Napoleon at St. Helena. (Ncav York : Harper Bros., 1863) ; — Charlotte, Colonel Child, British Army. Then* brother was Colonel Sir William Hoave de Lancet, "the excellent Quarter-Master-General," on the stafi* of Weijjngton at the battle BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 23 of Waterloo, in which he was mortally wounded " in the middle of the action." He died the death of a hero. The following is too in- teresting to be omitted'in the life of Major-General Philip Ke.\j:xt, as it regards a near kinsman whom he greatly resembled in mag- nanimous characteristics. " The Duke's personal staff, who had shared so many glories and dangers by the side of their com- mander, fell around him in rapid succession. The Prince of Nas- sau, one of his aids-de-camp, received two balls. The gallant General de Lancet was struck with a spent cannon-ball while ani- mating and leading back to the charge a battalion of Hanoverians who had got into confusion." Here permit the wiiter — who is of Hollandish or Dutch descent, and right j)roud of a race which has produced the best soldiers and sailors on record, from the days of Julius C^sar and Phah- SALiN, through nineteen centm-ies of unsm-passed patriotism and reno^vn, down to Hasselt and Antwerp in 1831-2 — to make a re- mark in justice to his people, and put the saddle on the right horse. Prejudiced authors have stated that the Dutch and Belgian troops (then united under one crown, that of Holland) behaved the worst at Waterloo. The exact contrary was the fact. As a general thing they displayed remarkable tenacity. It was some of the German contingents who behaved so badly in this campaign, and none so shamefully as a regiment of Hanoverian cavalry, the " Cumber- land Hussars," whose " dastardly conduct" caused them to be subsequently disbanded and then- Colonel cashiered. The Dutch, under Chassee, " the bayonet General, ' who won immortal honor in 1832 for his defence of Antwerp against overwhelming numbers of French and Belgians, faced the music, like the Dutch infantry at Fleurus, 1700, and at Almanza, 1707, and did as well as any English, not only at Quatre-Bras — a fight in its relation to om- Gettysburg, equivalent to Buford's magnificent stand on Oak Ridge, 1st July, 1863, but in that — " first and last of fields ! king-making victory !" "Immortal Waterloo !" But to return to General de Lancey " He exclaimed as he fell, * Leave me to die ; my wound is mortal ; attend (or look) to the Duke, and do not waste that time on me which may be usefully employed in assisting others.' These orders were too promptly obeyed, and, when on the folloAving morning, the bloody field was traversed, he was found yet living, and to the satisfaction and joy 24 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GE^'ERAL PHILIP KEARNT. of ids fi'iends, hopes — fallacious ones, alas! — ^were entertained of his recovery. He was removed to the village of Waterloo, and Lady DE Lancet, who had anived at Brussels a week before the battle, had the sad consolation to attend her dying husband, who expired sLy days after the battle — a martyr probably to his generous dis- interestedness." His fate is enshi-ined in the verse of Sk Walter Scott, ^ xxi. of his poem, " The Field of Waterloo :" " Period of honor as of woes, What bright cai'eers 'twas thine to close I — Marked on thy roll of blood what names To Britain's memor}'', and to Fame's, Laid there, their last immortal claims I Thou sav/st in seas of gore expire Redoubted Picton's soul of fire — « • « * * De Lancet change Lov^s bridal wreath For laurds from the hand of death — ***** Ah ! though her guardian angel's shield Fenced Britain's hero tlirough the field. Fate not the less her power matle known Through his friend's hearts to pierce his own !" The second son of Stephen de L^vncet, Peter of the Mills, like- wise filled a conspicuous place in the early annals of New York. He man-ie'd Elizabeth, daughter of the distinguished Colonial Governor, Cadwallader Golden, and settled upon a large estate kno^vn as the "Mills," on the Bronx River, at West Farms, West- chester County, State of New York. He became the ancestor of that branch of the family knoAvn as the " Westchester de L.\ncets." Peter de Lancet of the Mills, like all the rest of his Loyal family, suffered thi'ough his fidelity to principle. The following beautiful lines were wi'itten by a' stranger, an Englishman, who visited the old de Lancet Manor, in Westchester Coimty, State of New York, about fourteen miles from the city of New York, expecting to find some memorials of that gaUant, comi;ly, and eminent race still existing. But alas ! in the same manner that war, exile, confiscation and death, had smitten and scattered the proud owners, so had flood fire, and improvement (?) laid waste or altered their once ornate possessions. A j)ine, tow- ering in its native majesty, alone sm*vived to mai-k the spot where BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOK-GESERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 25 once a flom-isliing Loyal fomily exhibited its stately hospitalities or enjoyed the sweets of a home, the abode of prosperity and ability. A contrast so marked, between the past and present, moved even an alien, and in poetic numbers he recorded his sym- pathy and chronicled the desolation :" *' Wlierc gentle Bronx, clear winding, flows His shadowing banks between ; Whei-e blossom'd bell and wilding rose Adorn the brightest green ; Memorial of the fallen great, The rich and honor'd line. Stands high in solitary state De Lajs'CEY'S ancient pine. " There, once at early da^vn arrayed. The rural sports to lead. The gallant master of the glade Bedeck'd his eager steed ; And once the light-foot maiden came, In loveUness divine, To sculpture with the dearest name De LAlfCET's ancient pine. ** And now the stranger's foot explorea De Laxcey's vfide domain, And scarce one kindred heart restores His memory to the plain ; And just like one in age alone, The last of all his line Bends sadly where the waters moan— De Lancet's ancient pine. " Oh greatness ! o'er thy final fall. The feeling heart should mourn, Nor from De Lancey's ancient Hall With cold rejoicing turn : No ! no ! the gen'rous stranger stays When eve's calm glories shine, To weep — as tells of other days De Lancey's ancient pine." Peter de Lancet's eldest daughter, Alice, married Raij^h Izaiid, of South Carolina, who shone as a patriot and a statesman in our Revolutionary struggle. Their son, George, (set down as Ralph, Junior, in the family tree) Izard, rose in 1814 to the rank of Major- General in the United States Army, which he entered as Lieuten- ant of the regiment of Ai'tillerists and Engineers in 1794. This gallant officer experienced the same fate in 1814, which was in- 26 BIOGEAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. tended for Taylor in 1846-7, and was experienced by Hooker before Gettysbui-gh in 1863. He had just completed all the pre- parations to which is due the defeat of the British at Plattsburg, in 1814, when he was superseded by Macomb, just as Hooker was superseded by Meade, Peter's daughter, Susanna, married Colonel Thomas B.irclat, B. A. His son, James, was colonel of a regiment of Loyalists, and died in exile. Another son, Warren, displayed such gallantry when only fifteen years old, in the battle of White Plains, 1776, that he was made a Cornet of the 17th British Light Dragoons at that early age, Jane, fourth daughter of Peter de Lancey of the Mills, married Hon. John Watts, Junior, then Recorder of New York, afterwards founder of the Leake and Watts Orphan House, The bridal fes- tivities at Union Hill, in the borough of Westchester, on the eve- mng of 2d October, 1775, were sufficiently gay to receive a con- spicuous notice in the " Gazetteer" of the day. These were the grand-parents of Major-General Philip Kearny, This John Watts will be referred to more at length hereafter. Many others of the family distinguished themselves in official positions, and even some of those who chose a military career may have been omitted in this notice. Not a few of their de- scendants served with honor in tli Union ranks during the last civil war. Three great-grandchildi-en of this pan*, brothers, came out of the struggle with the U. S. brevets of Colonel for services, at the age of twenty-one, Lieutenant-Colonel, at eighteen, and Major, at nineteen. That the men of the race whose blood flowed in the veins of Major-Generals Stephen Watts KEiVRNY and Philip Kearny rose to such high commands, speaks sufficiently for then* ability and fit- ness for the profession which they selected and in which they shone. That the women of that same race chose soldiers for their partners, testifies in what direction then* predilections ran. Theii- children were worthy of then- mothers ; those mothers " worthy to bear men." Major-General Philip Kearny had a double portion of this blood, through his grandmother and gi-eat-grandmother. Will any one deny that his career was worthy of the most glorious of his ancestry ? • CHAPTER II. THE KEARNY AND WATTS FAMILIES AND THEIR CONNECTIONS. " An affectionate regard for the memory of our forefathers is natural to the heart ; it is an emotion totally distinct from pride. * * * They are denied, it is true, to our personal acquaintance, but the light they shed during their lives survives within their tombs, and will reward our search, if we explore them. If the virtues of strangers be so attractive to us, how infinitely more so should be those of our own kindred ; and with what additional energy should the precepts of our parents influence us, when we trace the transmission of those precepts from father to son through successive generations, each bearing testimony of a virtuous, useful, and honorable life to their truth and influence." Lindsay. As EARLY as 1716 we find a Kearny settled in Monmouth county, New Jersey. He came from Ireland, and was a man of note. His son, Philip Kearny, was an eminent lawyer, who died 25th of July, 1775, a httle less than a year before the Declaration of Independence. One of his sons, Francis, entered the Royal service, and was a cap- tain in the corps of Colonel Beverly Robinson, known as the Loyal American Regiment of New York. In 1782 he appears as a Major in Allen's Corps of Pennsylvania Royalists. He rose to a Lieuten- ant-Colonelcy, went to Ireland after the war, married, and would seem to have settled and died there. This family were very particular about the sjjelling of their name, and if such a thing were possible, the General would tmm in his grave with indignation if he knew that his name was written and printed with two E's, jK" e a r w e y , instead oi K e am y . Philip Kearny, the son of the first Philip, " removed to Newark, and left children, whose descendants are set down as living in New • 27 28 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. York." He was the grandfather of Brevet Majoi'-General Stephen Watts Ke^iexy, U. S. Army, and of Philip, t\te father of jMajor- General Philip Kearnt, Jr., U. S. Volunteers, the patriot, martyr, and subject of this biography. Stephen Watts Kearny was a student of Columbia College, in the city of New York, in 1812, and would have graduated in the summer of that year. As soon, however, as it became a certainty that war must ensue between the United States and Great Britain, he applied for and obtained a commission in the U. S. Ai-my. Oh the 12th of March, 1812, while still in his eighteenth year, he was appointed from JVevj York 1st Lieutenant in the 13th U. S. Infan- try. He distinguished himself particularly in storming a British battery, and throughout the assault on Queenstown Heights, 13th October, 1812. Lieutenant-Colonel CnmsTiE, commanding his regi- ment, himself wounded in this action, presented young Ke.vrny with his sword on the field of battle for the cool and determined manner with which he executed the command which devolved upon him. A companion in arms states that as " 1st Lieutenant of Captain OgiIt- vie's company, he (S. W. K.) enjoyed, at an early age, the character of high promise his after years developed. He was made prisoner on this occasion, and sent to Quebec," and was long detained in cap- tivity. He became Captain in April, 1813, Brevet-Major in April, 1823, and Major in May, 1829. Upon the organization of the 1st U. S. Dragoons, he was appointed then* Lieutenant-Colonel, 4th March, 1833, and Colonel, 4th July, 1836. On the 30th June, 1846, he was commissioned Brigadier-General, was placed in command of the Army of the West, and made the conquest of the Province of New Mexico. *He received the Brevet of Major-General, United States Ai-my, for gallant and meritorious conduct in New Mexico and California, to date from the battle of San Pascual, 6th Decem- ber, 1846, in which he was twice wounded. He commanded the combined force, consisting of detachments of sailors and of marines and of di-agoons, in the battles of San Gabriel and Plains of Mesa, 8th and 9th of January, 1847, and was Governor of California from the date of his proclamation, 1st March, 1847, down to June of the same year. On the 31st October, 1848, he fell a victim at Vera Cruz to illness contracted in the course of his arduous service during the Mexican war. Like his nephew, Major-General Phujp Kearnt, he died for his country. The General's brother, Archibald Kennedy Kearny, who died BIOGKAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 29 1st July, 1868, in New York city, aged 83, was a Lieutenant in tlie U. S. Navy dui-ing the war of 1812, '15. He commanded a division of gunboats stationed in the Lower Bay for the protection of New York harbor. Commodore Lawrence Keaent, IT. S. Navy, was a second cousin of the preceding and thu'd cousin of his nephew, Major-General Philip Keakny. PHILIP KEARNY, the subject of this biographical sketch, who fell a Di\'ision Commander at Chantilly, 1st September, 1862, was born, according to the majority of accounts, the 2d of June, 1815 — his brother-in-law, whose wife, Susan Kearny, had the Family Bible, says the 1st June, 1814, which collateral cu-cumstances would go to prove was the correct date — at No. 3 Broadway, in the Fh-st Ward of the city of New York, which, together with the adjoining building, No. 1, was formerly owned by his gi-eat uncle, Hon. Archibald Kennedy, then Captain, B. N., who married Miss Anne Wattsj eldest sister of Hon John Watts, Jr., who pm*chased, in 1792, sub- sequently lived and died in No. 3. No. 1 Broadway was built by this Captain Kennedy, and stood next to the glacis of Fort George. It was an elegant mansion, and only rivaled by one other in the city, that of Hon. Williaji Wal- ton, Esq., in Queen Street, now Frankhn Square, who married Maria de Lancey, niece of the first John Watts and cousin of the second. Mr. Walton's affluence, and generous entertainment of the British officers, led to the taxation of the colonies, and eventually to the Revolution. While the British held New York, the first story of No. 3 served as a Post Office, the slits remaining evident in the doors down to 1836. The company-rooms, lofty and spacious, were in the second story. When public entertainments were given, these latter were connected with the grand apartments in No. 1 by a stau*- case and bridge. These two buildings were among the very few that escaped the great fires of 1776 and 1778. Hon. John Watts, Junior, maternal gi-andfather of Major-Gen- eral Philip Kearny, was a man more ennobled by his generosity and benevolence than he could have been by any hereditary titles or honors. He founded and endowed the Leake and Watts' Orphan House, in the city of New York, one of the noblest and purest acts of benevolence, taking into consideration all the facts connected with its endowment, in the whole Hst of om* country's elemosjrnary insti- tutions. In regard to this, a reader will pardon the quotation from 30 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. a speech, at one of the Anniversary Meetings : " There is yet another whose name we are accustomed to associate with that of John G. Leake, and who deserves no less oiu* admiration and om* gratitude. Had he been less magnanimous, less generous. than he was, this happy home, these invaluable privileges, would not have been ours. Thi'ough an informality in the will, the money devoted to the erec- tion and support of this institution might have become the property of John Watts. His it was by inheritance and undisputed right. But he was one of those men whose heart extent of riches cannot narrow or degrade — who retain, amid the luxuries and opulence of fashionable life, noble and generous influences. He knew that his claim to this property was uncontested ; yet -without reluctance, he yielded it to fulfil the benevolent intentions of its donor. Leake and Watts — theu' names are fitly associated, and worthy of being transmitted to the latest posterity. The rare benevolence of the one, the stern integrity of the other, are qualities which the Philan- thropist and Clu'istian will delight to contemplate, and which all will unite to admire. They stand out in prominent relief, in a depraved and sordid age, in evidence that there ai"e always spirits which delight to bless and improve then* race." This Orphan House is at once a magnificent monument to John Watts, the actual donor of its funds, and — thi'ough the designation he modestly and honorably gave it, sharing the honor by placing his own name second to that of anothers in the title — a memorial of his bosom fi^-iend and connection, fi-om whom the money was originally derived. It is also a witness of Mr. Watts' sorrows, since the pro- perty came to him through his finest son, Robert, who scarcely lived long enough to acquij'e legal possession of it, and died before he had the opportunity of enjoymg this magnificent bequest of the brother-in-law of his gi-eat-aunt, Margaret Watts (married to Major Robert William Leake* of the British Army), and the friend and fellow student of his father. This Mr. Watts was a man as remarkable for his manly charac- ter as for his generosity. He was full of " saving, common-sense,'* " that most uncommon kind of sense." In his famous " Thoughts," * RoBrRT Leake, the father of Major Robert William Leake, was an oilicerwho had seen much and varied service. He was wounded and maimed in the battle of Dettin- gen, in 1743, where his horse was shot under him, and he was engaged at Culloden, on the Royal side, in -1746. His loyalty was rewarded with the post of Commissary-General to the forces in North America, and in 1757 he was acting as Commissary General to the army commanded by the ill-fated Braddock. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 31 Pascal, the deepest of thinkers, and acutest of mathematical rea- soners, whose scientific development of the proofs of Chiistianitj, or rather the demonstration of its truths, is marvelous in its clear- ness and resultiveness, declares "common sense is superior to genius." Besides being possessed of such admu-able judgment, he was a man of ii'on will, and, with his keen activity of .mind and body, out of place under the new order of things, since he could not stoop to court popularity, as public men are compelled to cringe and bow to obtain it in these days. Nevertheless, although he shrunk from office, he was called upon to fiU several positions of dignity and im- portance. He was the last Royal Recorder of the city of New York ; was a Member of Congress in l793-'5 ; was thi'ice unanimously elected Speaker of the 14th, 15th, and 16th Sessions of the New York Legislatui-e — January, 1791, January, 1792, and November, 1792 — and was Judge of Westchester county, 1802-8, etc. Disgusted at the measures resorted to by his poHtical opponents — measures founded on hereditary antagonism which has outhved the com- petitors — he withdrew from public life, as he deemed no position worthy an honest man's efforts which compelled him to pander to the meanest prejudices of the mob to" win theii- votes. Thencefor- ward his attention was devoted to the care of his large estate and the vast interests confided to him. Young Philip Ke.^jeiny inherited a great many of the peculiari- ties of his gi-andfather, his generosity, energy, determination, love of horses, and wonderful horsemanship, for at the age of eighty- seven, when most old men are incapable of any exertion, Hon. John Watts was not only a splendid, but a venturesome, rider. Upon one occasion a horse-dealer brought him an annual to try, which tm-ned out to be a violent and unbroken colt, which sprang into the air, rearing and plunging as soon as Mi\ Watts was in the saddle. Thi-ough aU its struggles he sat unmoved, and when the' animal had become quiet, dismounted as calmly as if nothing had occiuTcd. Wlien a boy, young Phil Kearny was a reckless rider and a perfect horse-killer. He rode just as fearlessly over the worst as over the best roads. Upon one occasion, often adverted to in the family, while quite a little chap, eight or nine years old, he fright- ened his father ahnost to death, galloping his horse furiously for miles over an old corduroy road full of holes and inequalities. It 32 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. must have been an extraordinary feat and escape, since it was often referred to by men who were too bold riders themselves to dwell upon anything which was not something astonishing in its disjilay of daring. Neither Philip Kearny, father nor son, were residents or citizens of New Jersey, in the strict sense of the word. The father inherited a country house near Newark, but his home was in New York. About the year 1820 he had a house at Greenwich, on the North River, about the foot of the present West Twentieth street. Gen- eral Kearny's mother, Susan Watis, at that time, was in very deli- cate health. She was a lovely character, and a charming, handsome woman. She died while the General was still quite young. About 1827, Philip Kearny, Senior, lived on the east side of Broadway, nearly opposite to Morris street, then called Little Beaver Street or Beaver Lane. His nephew, who fm-nishes the facts, thinks that Mrs. Kearny died here, but she must have died long before this, for the wi'iter, who can recall facts and faces farther back than that date, has no recollection of her.* At one time it is likely the Kearny family lived in Greenwich street, just in the rear of No. 3 Broadway, doubtless on made lots, part of the river front belonging to the Watts' property, whose garden extended originally to the river. In fact, the waves at high tide and during a storm broke over an extension of the back piazza, thrust out to the west like the stem of a J., about midway the present block, between Broadway and Greenwich streets. While Phil Ke^vrny was still in college, his grandfather, seeing his inclination for the army, offored to secure to him $1,500 a year, a very handsome allowance in those days for a young man, if he would study for the ministry. " Mr. Watts thought the ministers had a good, safe time," and as he had lost all his sons, he did not wish the eldest of his only two grandsons to be exposed to the vicis- situdes of a career which had cost him the most briUiant of his own sons, George. Phil Kearny declined his gi-andfather's liberal offer, and as he was compelled to choose a civil profession, selected, much against his will, the Law, and fulfilled the usual com'se in the office of the Hon. Peter Augustus Jay. Thus, it will be seen, that one of the most dashing officers that ever lived came very near bemg made a clergyman. The same ♦" She died in March 1823." G. H. K. f or E. K. July 11, 1868. BREVET FIRST LIEUTENANT GEORGE WATTS, 1st U. S. Lig-ht Dragoons. Aid de Camp to Brig. Gen. Winfield Scott, at Chippewa, etc., 1814-'15. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 33 thing occurred with regard to Hooker, who was destined by his father for the Church. A strange coincidence that " Fighting Joe" and "Fighting Phil" soldiers born, generals by instinct, com- manders of rival divisions in the same corps, narrowly escaped an exchange of the uniform of the army for the robes of the Church- militant. Hooker often alludes with humor to the overthrow of his father's cherished plans, when he received his appointment as a, Cadet to prepare himself for the saddle instead of the pulpit. Having alluded to George Watts, this would seem to be an appropriate place for presenting a sketch of this distinguished officei', who was a perfect type in everything, form, featm-e, disjjo- sition, mind and service, of his nephew. General Philip Kearint, like him destined a generation afterwards to fill his place as Aid to General Scott, and serve with him in another war equally glorious to both. On the 18th March, 1813, he was appointed fi'om New York Thu'd Lieutenant of the 1st U. S. Light Dragoons, and promoted to a Second Lieutenancy 13th August, the same year. Shortly afterwards General Scott selected him as an aid-de-camp, and as such he acted in the campaign of 1814. He was breveted Fu-st Lieutenant for " gallantry and distinguished service in the battle of Chippewa, 5th July, 1814, and for distinguished service in Browist's Sortie from Fort Erie." When the cavalry was reduced after the war, he was retained, May, 1815, in the 1st United States Infantry, but being a " horseback-man " by nature, he could not stand the pedestrian service, and resigned the 15th January, 1816. The following conversation, had with Lieutenant>General Scoxr 15th AjDril, 1865, taken down at the time, afterwards submitted to and approved by him, is all-sufficienttestimonyof that distinguished General's estimate of his two aids-de-camj), uncle and nephew, who not only looked alike, but were alike in every quality which makes and adorns a soldier : "Lieutenant George Watts, of the United States Dragoons, Major, by courtesy, was my aid-de-camp during the campaign of 1814. He was of a very alFectionate natm-e, and a very brave man — it might be said the bravest of the brave. He looked very like Philip Kearny, his nephew, likewise, subsequently, my aid-de- camp. If one man is more brave than another, Philip Kearny was that man. He was the bravest man I ever knew, and a perfect Boldier. 34 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNT. "Lieutenant George "Watts, my Aid, saved my life on the morning before the battle of Chippewa. The chcumstances are as follows : At the mouth of Street's Creek, which empties into the Niagara River, immediately adjacent to the battle-iield of July 5th, stood a house occupied by a Mrs. Street. As there wore no males belonging to her family, she had applied to me for protection, and I had given her a safe-guard, which was perfectly respected, and she made money by selling milk and differ- ent articles to the American troops. She invited me to breakfast -svith her, and I accepted the invitation. I had just prepared my first cup of coffee, and was about to raise it to my mouth, when I experienced the truth of the proverb, that ' There is many a slip 'twixt the cup and the lip.' My Aid, George "Watts, perspiring very freely, had risen from the table and stepped across the room to another table, near the window, to get his pocket-handkerchief out of his di'agoon helmet, or casque, which he had previously placed there. My cocked-hat lay upon the same table, and I lost it in consequence. Looking out of the window, he turned to me and said, quietly but significantly, ' In three minutes the house will be surrounded by Indians.' I set down my untasted coffee, rushed from the room, cleared the piazza and steps with one bound, and ran ' like a man ' for the bridge which communicated with our own side of the stream. Thus, George "Watts, by his promptness, saved my life, for the whole thing had been arranged by JMi's. Street with the intention of murdering and scalping me. She had given the signal by wa\dng something from the house as soon as we had sat down to breakfast. " The same night after my victory at Chippewa, I made Mrs. Street's house our hospital, and its rooms and the com-t-yard, in which I had caused tents to be pitched, were filled with om- wounded. "When I visited the house I found the treacherous woman and her daughter, a very pretty person, engaged in attending to the wants of the wounded British officers in the second story. I saw the lat- ter carrying refreshments to a wounded British ofiicer to whom she was engaged to be married. As she had been moving through the rooms filled with blood from injuries and amputations, her dress was completely drenched to the knee. Both mother and daughter avoided catching my eye, and I avoided any attempt to make them catch mine ; for they were women, and, as such, I could not feel ven- geance, although they had attempted to compass my death. As I BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 35 said before, upon this occasion I owed my life to Lieutenant Watts." That affectionate remembrance of his aids liad not waited his judgment in after years is proved by the extract of a letter from him to General Beown, dated Queensto^vn, Upper Canada, 15th July 1814. " I cannot close this account of meritorious conduct without men tioning the great services rendered me by those two gallant young soldiers. Lieutenants Worth and Watts, my aids. There was no danger they did not cheerfully encounter in communicating my orders, and by then- zeal and intrepidity won the admu-ation, as they had before the esteem, of the whole brigade. They both rendered essential services at critical moments by assisting the commandants of corps in forming the troops under cu'cumstances which precluded the voice from being heard. Their conduct has been handsomely acknowledged by the officers of the line, who have joined in request- ing that it might be particularly noticed. (Signed) W. Scott." His opinion of Kearny has been too often expressed in official reports, conversation and letters, to need any repetition here. Robert Watts, the eldest brother, living, of George, the dra- goon, entered the United States Army 31st July, 1813, as Captain in the 41st Regiment of Infantry ; but none of the family seem to have taken kindly to foot service, and he resigned in the same year. He was afterwards a Major of Volunteer Cavalry during the wai of 1812-15. Thrown from his horse in the execution of a rapid move- ment, his whole command in column rode over him at speed, yet, strange to say, when picked up not a horse's hoof had touched him. General Scott spoke of him us a remarkably handsome man. He is stUl remembered by his cotemporaries as the handsomest man of his day in the city of New York ; and one who had the opportunity to know htm by long experience, declared that he possessed a per- fect temper, like his aunt. Lady Mary (Watts) Johnson, whose playiul himior exhilarated the whole household." CHAPTER III. THE SPRENGTIDE OF YOUTH. " Sometimea forgotten things, long cast behind, Eush forward on tlie brain and come to mind." — Dbtdsit. " He was a lovely youth, — I guess The panther in the wilderness Was not so fair as he !"— Wordswokth. " When a younker up I grew. Saw one day a grand review, Colors flying, set me dying To embark in life so new."— Old Sokg. Wnn^E tte Keaknt family lived in Broadway opposite Mon-is street, young Phil Kearny was a pupil at Ufford's school, on the west side of Broadway, on the corner of Cedar street. At that time he was very fond of drawing pictm'es of soldiers and designs of armies on his slate. Sometimes he condescended to caricatm-es of Mr. Ufford and his school-fellows. He always had a gi-eat talent for di-awing, and sometimes he di-ew well, that is, whatever was connected with military matters or horses. Some of his sketches of soldiers possessed considerable merit. If memory serves, he produced equestrian groups which were spu-ited. Philip Kearny was never a very strong or robust boy, nor given to any violent exercise, except riding on horseback. In the sad- dle he made up for his ordinary quietness of demeanor. When- ever he could get a horse he rode furiously, in fact he was a regu- lar horse-killer. What he was in early yeai'S is clearly depicted in a letter of the Rev. Dr. Ogilby, who officiated with so much eloquence and feel- ing at the floral decoration of his grave, in Trinity churchyard, New York city, by the members of Post Phil Kearny, No. 8, G. A. R., of the Department of New York, on Sunday, 1st June, 1868: " In my boyhood we were neighbors, and, at times, playmates. My recollection of him is that of a mild and gentle boy, whose 36 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 37 dark eye was distinguished rather for softness than for that fire which kindled it in later life. I remember, Avhen I heard of his conspicuous gallantry in the Mexican war, I Avas astonished, and said to myself, ' Can this be the gentle boy ot my early remem- brance V I never met him afterwards until we were brought to- gether by the hand of death. In the midst of the war he came from the thickest of the fight to bury a child who had been strick- en down in the apparent security of a peaceful home. Such is our mortal life ! I officiated at the funeral of the child, over the same grave upon which the flowers were so soon strewn upon the dust and ashes of the father." At a later date he was sent to Round Hill School, at North- ampton, Mass. , the noted institution kept by Dr. Joseph G. Cogswell, afterwards the Avorld-wide known Superintendent and Organizer of the Astor Library, and Mr. George Banckoft, now Minister from the United States to the North German Confederation, the Ameri- can historical writer. Di'. Cogswell seems to recollect him well while under his charge. " In answer to your inquiries about Major- General Philip Kearny, while a youth at Round Hill School," he replies, " I can only say that he then evinced none of the military spii'it which in after life marked his career with such a halo of glory. He was remarkable for his gentle and amiable character, his great docility, faithful observance of the school regulations and for his devotion to his studies. He took high rank as a scholar, and was greatly beloved as a pupil. "When the school was opened at Cold Spring by Dr. Beck and Mr. Watson, and he left Round Hill and became a pupil of it, it may be that a military spirit was already ^tm'ing within him, and on that account he wished to be near West Point ;* or that, being so near that great nursery of military heroes, he there caught the spkit which became his passion and made him one of the bravest and greatest of our gi*and cap- tains." At the suggestion of Dr. Joseph G-. Cogswell, certain questions were ad- dressed to the Pieverend John Lee Watson in regard to the school-boy career of General Keakny after he left Round Hill, Northampton, Mass. To the kindness of that gentleman is due the following statement, which is very interest- ing, although Mr. Watson falls into a general error in regard to Kearny's . t : * This opinion of the excellent Doctor is mere surmise ; "West Point had nothing to do with Philip Kbajjnt or his merits. 38 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. ever having been a cadet.* Kearny was placed at the PhilipstoAvn school in May, 1830. He entered Columbia College as a Sophomore, in the fall of that year. It is reasonable to suppose the latent military element in Kearny's structure was kindled by the " blare of bugle and roll of drum " from across the river, just as the same martial notes rouse up the Cadets to their daily routine of drill and study. Doubtless his martial instincts responded to the clarion's call, just as Arthur's "war-horse neighed as at a friend's voice," when " Far off a solitary trumpet blew." This and no more. Thus much justice must concede, and truth then refuses to allow any more. It is much more reasonable to believe that General Scott and the other officers visiting the Philipsto'mi school, attracted by his family resem- blance, spoke to liEARNY of those gallant spirits of his race who had shone or still were shining in arms, whereupon feelings kindi-ed to thens awoke to life in the boy's mind, feelings like germs bm-ied in the earth, which only required accident and light to germinate, grow, flower, and fruit in great deeds. Philip Kearny came to our school at Philipsto^vn, in the Highlands, .in May, 1830, with the intention of preparing himself for admission to Columbia College, New York, in conformity with the wishes of his friends. For a tune he piu-sued his classical studies with gi'eat diligence, and gave much encom-agement as to his future progress. But it soon became evident that all his o^\ti inclinations tended towards a military education. The Academy at West Point, with all its animat- ing sights and sounds, was constantly before his eyes ; several of his school-fel- lows were preparing for examination as Cadets ; a]i officer of the Academy came over eveiy day to instruct our pupils in Mathematics ; there was considerable in- tercourse between the officers of the Academy and ourselves, and also between the pupils who had relatives on either side ; and, besides that, Colonel Thayer and General Scott, both of whom had relatives under our care, visited our school at stated periods. All these circumstances combined to fill the mind of Kearny with a strong desire, or rather with a perfect passion for a military education ; and at last he came and told us that "he could not see his way to study for College any longer ; that he never should be good for anything unless he went to West Point, and that he would thank us very much if we would inform his fi-iends of the state of the case." Accordingly we advised his friends that it would not be wise or prudent to thwart his inclinations. During the short time that Kearny was with us we became very much at- tached to him. In liis conduct and character as a boy, the often-quoted line of Wordsworth seems peculiarly to apply to him, "The boy was father to the man." Such as he was mth us and among his schoolmates, he continued to be in after life in his brilliant career as an officer of our gallant army. He was bold and daring even to recklessness ; fond of all manly sports ; the best g^Tnnast in the school ; an excellent horseman, and an indefatigable pedestrian. He was * "West Point, July 29th, 1868 — General Kbakny never was at "West Point as a cadet. I have had the record of those who have reported hero examined. This is a complete record. I am positive he never was here." A. S. W., Brev. MaJ.-Gen., U. S. A. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 39 always obedient and respectfiU to his instructors, and entirely submissive to au- tliority. As to the state of his moral or religious character, at that time, I do not now feel myself competent to express any opinion. * * « * * « * * • * I believe that this comprises all my recollections of ' ' the boyhood of Philip KeA-ENY." While I was Kector of Grace Church, Newark, New Jersey, (from about 1846 to 1854,) I frequently met him, and he often took occasion to say how much he was indebted to Dr. Beck and m)^self for the excellent training that he received during the time that he was at the ' ' Highland School," — as he ex- pressed it — "the most critical period of his life ;" he said that "it made a man of him." I have only to add that I took much interest in Kearny's life as a soldier, and during the war of the rebellion I followed his course through all his military operations, up to the time of his last battle ; and when I read the ac- count of his death I could not but call to mind the words, which, in his school-boy days, were so frequently on his lips, " DULCE ET DECORUM EST PRO PATRIA MORI." Keaeny was seven or eight years older than the writer, and as he was always kept away at boarding-school, it was not until he had reached the age of fifteen that the latter's reminiscences of him commence. About the year 1830 he came to reside with his grandfather, Plon. John Watts, in whose house the wiiter was born and brought up. Thenceforward they were constantly to- gether for six or seven years. Even at that time Kearny was very jjeculiar, proud and shy, and averse to those associations which youths of his age generally form from impulse rather than from judgment. His companions were selected, with all the cool- ness of maturer age, for qualities which suited his prejudices — and these extended to everything. In the choice of friends, he was regulated by his own arbitrary rules of what they should be, rather than what they were. He was fond of di-ess, and exceed- ingly neat and careful of his person, and always afiected a sort of mihtary carriage or touch of something military in his costume, so that any observer would have said, " There goes a soldier in civil clothes, or one intended by nature for a soldier." In corroboration of this, the following quotation from a letter to the writer is appo- site : " When we were on om* way home, at West Pomt (the boats never landed at Cold Spring, where Keaeny was at school) we saw a young gentleman step on board with a Mediterranean cap on (you remember that cap) : I thought that that cap could only cover Phiixy's head, so up I jumped, and the young gentle- man tm-ned his head, and much to our mutual dehght, it proved to 40 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. be good Phil, on his way to town to spend a week ; so we joined company, and I had the satisfaction of having him with me for a v^eek. He is coming to to^vn in about two weeks to be examined before he enters college." One ofthe first remarks of Kearny's, which thewi'iter remembers was, that whenever he owned a pair of horses, they should be named TUly and Count Lippe. Although so much younger, he was sufliciently read in history to be astonished at Kearny's partiality for two generals, the most marked, perhaps, in military history for quahties not only dii'ectly opposite each other, but diiferuig from those ofthe vast majority of leaders of armies. Subsequently, how- ever, when military reading became a passion, it was no longer diffi- cult to understand why Kearny selected these men as his favorites. The youth was father to the man. Kearny was already thinking. Wlien close after-study made their characters known, the predi- lection was no longer sm'prising. Tilly, whom his great antago- nist, GusTAvus Adolphus, styled the " Old Devil," on account of his cruelty, and the " Old Corporal " from his strict attention to drilling, was a thorough soldier. As an organizer and as an ad- ministrator he had no superior in his era, the first fourteen years of the " Thii-ty Years' War." As a general he was unconquered, until new tactics, new material, new men, grown great in their ex- perience under a new order of things, appeared in Germany. His command-in-chief, for nearly a quarter of a centmy, was a cai'eer of victoiy, until Gustavus shattered and ruined the magnificent army which Tilly had created, at Leipsic, in 1632, and finished the work bv putting an end to his antagonist's fame and life at the Lech. A persecuting priest (it has been stated that he was an affiliated Jesuit), in his intolerant bigotry, perfectly chaste as regarded women, sober, uncompromising, in his self and general discipline he was in many respects a consummate commander. "With him originated the expression, " a ragged soldier and a bright musket." Doubtless Kearny liked him because he was a stern and sagacious disciplinarian, one who knew how to knead a discordant personnel into that fanaticized unity which makes an army a machine, irri- sistible to everything but another army inspu-ed with ideas more potent in their influence than mere fanaticism, and sufficiently dis- ciplined to execute simple manoeuvres and maintain cohesion. As to his second favorite, Kearny had, much in common with Count Lippe, a quick temper, a rough tongue, an open hand, a BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 41 compassionate heart, an acute, active mind. To their sick and wounded both were equally attentive, and their supervision of their camps and hospitals was only limited by their other pressing du- ties. Those who will study the life of Count Lippe, after they have read these pages, will find that Keabny had not studied the German in vain. They will perceive that he understood what was ' needed in a general, when he left the beaten track of popular opinion — always fonder of "shams," or " would-be's," or "but- chers," than real generals — to jjick out and appreciate a man so great in his influence on his times, and greater in the parts he was called upon to play than most of those to whom such prominent positions have been intrusted. A soldier who won, enjoyed, and retained the esteem and confidence of Feederick the Great, king and hero, and of Pombal, the great Portuguese minister, the Richelieu of his century, must have been one far above his fellows, at least in some grand properties, if not in the startling magnitude of a Ferdinand of Brunswick (under whom he served for some time as general of artillery) in the capacity of handling a huge host to advantage ; or of a Ziethen or a Seydlitz, marvelous in their specialty, and unsurpassed in the world's history as creators and leaders of cavalry — stUl equal to either, if not superior, in a combina- tion of qualities, which made him shine in the high and difiicult posts to which he was called by public opinion as the person best fitted to fill them. Count William of ScHAtnMBURG-LipPE, sometimes styled Count LiPPE-BucKEBURG, was a general of an enthely different type from Tilly; but as a disciplinarian, as a tactician, as an artillerist, and as a commander, in his sphere, he is chargeable with scarcely a single error of judgment. The officer who could convert " Westphalian peasants into Prussian soldiers," and " fifteen hundi-ed ragged, ill- paid Portuguese vagabonds, commanded by ofiicers as poor, idle and beggarly as themselves, into ordinary soldiers," worthy the name and capable of beating good troops, must have understood his business thoroughly. Two anecdotes of him attest his coolness and self-confidence : Dm-ing the year 1758-9, he greatly distinguished himself as a general of the Hanoverian artUlery (to whose command he had been appointed by George II.), under Prince Ferdinand of Bruns- wick. One day he invited a number of Hanoverian officers to dinner, and while the company were in the full enjoyment of the 42 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. entertainment, cannon-shots were heard, and several balls flew about the tent. The company started to then* feet, exclaiming that the French were at hand. The Count pacified them as far as regarded the enemy, although it is doubtful if his explanation left his guests with undiminished appetites. "Do not be alarmed, gentlemen," said he, "I wished to convince you how well I can rely upon the officei's of my artillery. Accordingly I ordered them, while we were at dinner, to practice at the flag-staff over my tent." Whether the guests did feel at ease after this explanation is ques- tionable. But the cannon-balls continued to fly about, and, if memory serves, one story runs that a final shot, by hitting the main support of the pavilion, brought the whole structure down upon the company and put an end to the frolic. Had one of om" generals indulged in such dangerous sport, he would have been considered a lunatic, and Mr. Stanton would have been down on him in a trice for waste of ammunition and material. The Count, however, was not crazy. There was a perfect method in his madness, and he won the respect and admu-ation of every sovereign and com- mander under whom he served — so much so, that Joseph, King of Portusral, one of the most bio:oted of Roman Catholics, was O 7 Off •' willing to pm-chase the services of a rough, uncompromising Pro- testant by concessions and gratuities rarely made even to the most transcendant genius — concessions, in the case of Count Lippe, which cu'cumstances rendered a necessity. When he quitted Portugal, the king conferred upon him extraordinary honors, and gave him magnificent presents : six golden cannon, each weighing 32 poimds, mounted on ebony carriages, heavily ornamented with silver, a button and aigrette of diamonds for his hat, and the royal portrait set with the same precious stones. To these the King of England added a sword mounted with diamonds. By " Practical Strategy," — a term used by an expert in the mili- tary art, which di-ew down upon the wi-iter, in 1862, the thunder of the oldest West Point Professor, — ^by Practical Strategy afterwards carried out in so masterly a manner by Rosecrans and Sherman — Count Lippe, in 1762, gained for hunself immortal renown, Avithout even ventxuing to bring his badly organized Por- tuguese troops into du-ect collision with the Spaniards. Merely by skilful manoeuvi-ing, the selection of positions and encamp- ments by the English and Portuguese, the admu-able Spanish army was checked, and prevented from making an attack with advantage, BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 43 till, at length, weakened by sickness and want, it was obliged in autumn to retu*e from the kingdom. In 1776, when a new war seemed imminent between Spain and Portugal, the Queen Regnant of the latter kingdom desired that he should reassume the command of her army. Feeble health, the greatest di-awback to a general — Marshal Count Saxe, says, "a general must possess robust health" — would not permit him again to take the field. Fear was something unkno-^n to Count Lippe.* A second anecdote proves this. A similar one is told of General Seves, better known as Soliman-Pacha, a French convert to Islamism, and right hand to Ibrahim-Pacha, in making that EgyjDtian army Avhich conquered the Tm-ks so gloriously at Horns and at Beylan in 1831, at Konieh in 1832, and again at Nezib in 1839. One day, while Count Lippe was strolling through his camp, a Portuguese soldier, incited by insane religious fanaticism, or, jDer- haps, instigated by a bigoted priesthood, fired at him with an au-- gun. The ball passed thi-ough the Protestant general's hat. With- out quitting the spot he called several ofiicers about him. His officers begged him to withdi-aw. No ; he determined to maintain his position until he could discover the rascal. At length he spied him out just as he was taking aim a thu'd time, from his tent. Count Lippe ordered him to be hung upon the spot. The Regi- mental Chaplain insisted upon being allowed to administer extreme unction to the culprit before he was executed. The Count refused, and the intended assassin was run up instanter, unshriven — a fear- ful- fate for one of his faith. That Philip Keakny, at the age of fifteen, selected two such char- acters as his heroes, proves that he had ah-eady read and thought discreetly upon military matters, since both Tilly and Count Lippe were distinguished rather for scientific and solid properties than for dash and brilliant qualities. Nevertheless, by a strange contradiction, although Kearny thus selected men of thought for his favorites, he always wished to be a Hussar, particularly, as he admitted, on account of the jaunty dress * " cfnrtljt liHmite tt gar nicljt." The writer has heard it stated, or else some one wrote out to one of the family, that Kearny was sent out of Italy, in 1859, for his too rash self-exposure. As will be shown from his own letter, he came very near experiencing at Solferino the same fate that he met at Chantilly. 44 BIOGKAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. and attractive service of that corps. Moreover, in youth, the tactics he affected were reckless cavahy charges, although convinced by theoretical experiment that they were made in vain against the resistance of a steadfast infantry and the fire of a capable artillery. In after life, when he aspired to a general's command, he had lost all his predilections for cavalry. "An officer who commands a cavalry regiment" — was about the amount of what he said — " has to perform double duty. He has in fact to drill two regiments instead of one, the one of bipeds and the other of quadrupeds; and I don't know but that the latter is the easiest to make and manage." While General Keaeny and the writer lived together in the house of their gi-andfather, from 1829 to 1834, almost all the leism-e time of both was spent in mimic campaigns, with armies composed of from fom" to six thousand leaden soldiers with perfect trains of artillery, and even other adjuncts of a well-jirovided host. Battles were fought according to a digested system, which even regulated what proportion of those knocked down by the mimic fire of musketry or artillery should be considered as dead or too severely wounded to take j^art in the rest of the campaign, and how many as slightly wounded, and how long the latter should be looked upon as remaining in the hospital before they were again available. The firing was done with small spring-guns, one shot for each can- non, one for each regiment or separate detachment of infantry and so many for each line of sharp-shooters. When the firing, alter- nating, had gone through both lines of battle, the different bodies were moved a shorter or longer determined distance, according as they belonged to the different arms, over spaces dictated by the real relative speed of the different services, whether light or heavy cavalry, light or line infantry, field or reserve artillery. This was not left to hazard, but according to a written or stipulated code. Field works and permanent fortifications were constructed of paste- board, and the in-egularities of gi'ound represented by piles of books and similar objects, built up in accordance with agreement before operations commenced. One siege lasted a number of weeks, and the tidy, dearly-beloved, and respected old house-keeper, wife* of a * Mrs. F T . This admirable woman deserves more than a passing notice. A sad and eventful life was hers. A debt of gratitude is due to her, for an affection and fidelity, motherly, as great as rare, of nearly thirty-five years, to the Watts family. Such was General Kearny's appreciation of her devotion to his grandfather and race, that he united in presenting her with an annuity which, together with her own prop- erty, enabled her to live con sistently with the position in life which she was entitled to fill. BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 45 former sword-master at West Point, was di-iven almost wild by the accumulation of dust, and the appropriation of huge dining-tables of solid mahogany, the pride of her heart, whose oiling and polish- ing absorbed the greater part of her time. Every other kind of table or flat piece of fm-niture was impressed, which could be drag- ged out of its place and made available to eke out the theatre of action. She could scarcely be pacified at the subsequent disorder of the spacious rooms and the pi'ohibition, strictly enforced, against sweeping and dusting, lest the bustle should knock down or dis- arrange the soldiers. Fleets of paste-board were even attempted, but maritime operations could not be made to work, since many a pellet which hit the sides of a vessel would level all on board, and then a quarrel would ensue as to how many were killed and how many wounded, which often ended in a fight, and put an end to inimic hostilities until the actual hostilities, between the leaders, were settled and the wounded honor of either or both was appeased. A very forcible shot from one of the spring-guns, close at hand, against a paste board shi}), had the same effect as the impact of one of Faeragut's vessels, when they butted the iron-clad " Tennessee" in the Bay of Mobile. All the poor little leaden soldiers were knocked off then* feet and a number overboard. As the question of how many knew how to swim and how many ought to be drowned was never taken into consideration, when the code of pro- cedm-e was drawn up, it led to so much argument, that the bellige- rents came to the conclusion of Napoleon, that it was as useless for them as for him to attempt the empire of the sea. Kearny con- tinued to enjoy this amusement even while he was in college, and . perhaps still longer. When he began to go into society, he took so much pains with his dress, and spent so much of his time out of the house, that he gi'adually relinquished a game which had given him such great delight and occupation for years. He used to sleep under an old but very fine engraving of Napoleon Buonaparte, tri-color in hand, at the bridge of Lodi, per- haps for the pui-pose of deriving inspiration from the pictm-e in his dreams. Strange to say, tlu-oughout all the military talk which occurred, the writer has no remembrance of his discussing Napoleon or his Marshals, with the exception, perhaps, of one, Suchet. His favorite generals, at that time, were almost all those who figured in wars prior to the rise of Napoleon. One reason may have been, there was such a total disagi-eement as to then- excellence that no 46 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. satisfactory result could be arrived at by any discussion ; whereas, the achievements of those who had flourished at previous dates were themes which could be canvassed without degenerating into open ruptures — ruptures which, in after years, gi-ew out of differ- ences hardly more important, and yet occasioning long estrange- ments that were only healed by temporary absence. In such cases, mutual respect, affection and still higher sentiments of esteem, brought the cousins together again, and everything went on as pleasantly as if no unkind feeling had ever arisen. After passing through Columbia College, in New York, and study- ing Law in that city, he accompanied the writer to Europe in 1834. There his only idea seemed to be looking at soldiers and their manoeuvres. He would be out of bed with first dawn, to Avander forth and watch the exercises of a regiment of cavalry. Artillery he never had any eye or taste for, and then but very little for infantry. CHAPTER IV. IN THE SADDLE AT LAST ! " Arouse ye, my comrades, to horse I to horse 1 To the field and to freedom we guide I For there a man feels the pride of his force, And there is the heart of him tried. No help to him there by another is shown, He stands for MmseK and himself alone." Schiller's " Wallbnstein's Lagbb." " Faugh-a-ballagh— clear the way, boys ! Never did our gallant corps Yield an inch of ground behind them, Give an inch of ground before." Nugent Taillefeb. On the 3d September, 1836, the death of his grandfather, Hon. John Watts, set young Philip Keaeny free, at last. For several years he had been.chafing under the restraints of civil life, like a caged eagle or panther. At once he exerted all his interest to obtain a com- mission in the United States Cavalry, and on the 4th (8th) March, 1837, was appointed Second Lieutenant of the 1st U. S. Dragoons, commanded by his uncle, Stephen Watts Kearny. This able and gallant officer had only been commissioned Colonel of this "model regiment" on the 4th of July of the previous year, but he may be said to have commanded it from the first. Yes, to him is due the organization of the first real cavalry which the country possessed since the general disarmament after the war of 1812-15. It is true that Henry Dodge, a sagacious fron- tiersman, an experienced ranger, and a gallant man, was its first Colonel, and Stephen Watts Kearny only its first Lieutenant-Col- onel, but the latter was the creator and soul of that magnificent little body of cavalry, whose superior or equal has never been seen on this continent. "If ever there was a soldier by natm-e," are the words of one of his classmates in Columbia College and fellow officers in the war, an 47 48 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. uncle of the "\ST^"iter, who commanded a company in the regular ser- vice, dm-ing the war of 1812-15, before he wasof age, "if ever there was a man whom I considered reallj^ chivalrous, in fact, a man in all that that noble term conveys, that natural soldier and gentle- man was Stephen Watts Kearny." Upon the receipt of his commission, PiiiLir Kearnt immediately abandoned the enjoyment of all the luxuries placed at his command by the inheritance of a splendid fortune — equal at this time to $1,000,000 — and started for the West to join his command at Jefferson Barracks, on the Mississippi, 12 miles below St. Louis, in Missouri. It has been more than once stated in print, in this connection, that Jefferson Davis was Captain in the regiment at the time Phil Kearny was Lieutenant. This is an error. DA-vas became 1st Lieutenant, 4th March, 1833, and was Adjutant 'in 18o3-'4, but resigned in 1835. Still, the moral to be deduced is the same as if they had met or simultaneously served. Well might Parker exclaim, "How widely divergent their subsequent paths of life and thought !" Colonel Brackett in his history of the U. S. Cavalry, says, "It would, no doubt, have been much better for the country had he (Davis) been killed dm-ing that period ; but it was designed other- wise, and he resigned on the oOth June, 1835. Davis, as a cadet, manifested a proud, haughty, and cold disposition, which he seems to have retained through life. He is eminently selfish, and has no friends aside from those who can be of use to him. Neverthe- less, it must be admitted that he was a good officer, and gained the respect of those with whom he was thrown in contact." What a contrast, the histories of Kearny and of Davis. Kearny after an honorable life — a life of patriotic duty, fulfilled to the uttermost — and a heroic death, was buried in the tomb of his fathers, amid the tears and lamentations of a people and its army, both of whom loved and adrnked him, and apj)reciated the great loss which they had sustained. Davis, after rising to the bad eminence which he sought to attain, fell, like Lucifer, from his height of pride, and continues to exist, like the arch-spii'it of evil, the object of scorn to every good and honest man thi-oughout the universe. He presents an example of great gifts perverted for the perpetration of the greatest crime of which a man is capable — trea- son : in his case a double treason, not only against his country, but against God's most precious gift, Liberty ; treason, for the estab- BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL TEILIP KEARNY. , 49 lishment of slavery, and the substitiition of slaveiy, with all its evils, for freedom ; treason against the country that educated and made him, which his great gifts, with nobler aims, might have illus- trated and glorified, as did the dead Kearny ; a country which the misapplied intellectual powers of himself and party persistently labored to betray and to destroy. From 10th June, 1837, to 21st May, 1839, while Kearny re- mained West of the Mississippi, he devoted himself with great ardor to mastering the details of his profession. During a portion of this time, 22d August, 1838, to 10th April, 1839, he was aid-de- camp on the staff of Brigadier-General Henry Atkinson, who com- manded in that region, and had his headquai-ters at St. Louis. Active service in the line, as well as on the staff, gave Kearny an opportunity of a course of double instnaction, similar to that of young staff officers in the French army, who, after being educated in then- own peculiar duties, serve for a stated period with the dif- ferent arms to acquire a practical knowledge of each. Kearny's after life proved that he profited by his opportunities. Thus he became proficient in details which can never be acquired for sub- ordinate positions (line or field) by theory, or any amount of study. A general, born with the genius for command, may so fit himself by study for a high station, that a very little practice, good sub- ordinates, and an efficient staff Avill enable " his genius to compen- sate for the want of experience," as in the cases of Lucullus, Spinola, Gustavus Adolphus, Toestenson, Conde, Frederic, and Napoleon. But this never can be the case with a line or field officer. Let us see what one of liis comrades says of Kearny at that time : " I recollect him only as an active, energetic subaltern of cavahy, discharging efficiently all professional obligations, and in personal bearing observing the most gentlemanly com-tesy towards his peers ; always brave, and generous to a degree that won for him the adrau-ation and esteem of all who knew him." What changes have taken place since Kearny joined his first command on the banks of the Mississippi ! At that time the Jef- ferson Barracks were as far out of town, as regarded St. Louis, as one of the southern tier of Westchester villages was to New York in the beginning of the centmy. Then, the population of St. Louis did not exceed, if it equalled, 10,000 souls; and it is doubtful if the whole State of Missouri contained as many people in 1837 as St. Louis and its submbs do at the present day. 50 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. " The City of St. Louis," to quote a letter of an officer, a fi-iend of Keaksht, written a few years afterwards, " extends over a large space — large enough for twice as many inhabitants as it contains. Many of the shops are small wooden structures ; not a few lots are still unoccupied, and about them, as about the whole town, there is an an- of dirtiness, as if the city had grown up rapidly from the soil, and was not yet free from much adhering mud. And such a busy stir as there was in the streets, and in the hotels ! The people that thronged the latter appeared to be generally intelligent, genteel- looking persons, who had come West probably for making invest- ments." The same officer, a very distinguished loyal general during the late war, makes the follo^\^ng remarks, worthy of preservation, in a letter dated June 6th, 1857, while on his way to join the army, ostensibly sent out to subject the Mormons to om* institutions, which it did not do. The army was only used in the interests of slavery. The wi'iter of the letter resigned in disgust ; but even then he pro- phesied that triumph which God has vouchsafed to Freedom. One. of the first prominent victims of the late struggle was the com- mander of those troops, that able Albert Sydney Johnston, the hope of the Slavocrats, who did not do then- Avork negligently in 1858-'9,-or whenever he had an opportunity to do it. " Chicago— with its 109,260 inhabitants in 1860—250 miles to the northeast of St. Louis, where Kearny was stationed in 1837-9, was still Httle more than a settlement, gi-ouped around Fort Dearborn, ' and the house of the Indian agent. These were the only edifices to be seen there in 1832," the year when the wi'iter quoted entered West Point, andthe Black Hawk War broke out. "In 1840, Fort Dearborn had entirely disappeared, and Chicago contained 4,853 inhabitants." In 1837, the " Father of Waters" had still a population peculiar to itself Arks, broad-horns and flat-boats, of more or less primitive \J construction, barges and keel-boats, di'ifting with the cm-rent, or navigated by a class of men rough and n;de, but intellectually strong as they were physically powerful — a class wliich produced Abraham Lincoln — had not yet been superseded by steamboats for the general transportation of merchandise. Kearny lived to see changes, which to predict would have been set down as madness. Fort Leavenworth, on the border line between Missouri and Kansas, was then far, far out in the wilderness. When BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 51 . Kearkt retiu-necl from Europe and his Algerian campaign, it was a sort of nucleus, around which border progress — the pen came near wi'iting civihzation, of which, in its true sense, it is very doubtful if there is veiy much on the border — ^had just begun to aggregate itself. All beyond was wilderness, in the true sense of the word. Then the one regiment of di'agoons, which superseded Dodge's "Border Rangers," sufficed to keep the Indians in awe. Now thanks to civilization and its inevitable whiskey and contracts for the benefit of pohtical favorites at Washington, then' control, in the slightest degree, tasks the brains of a Lieutenant-General and an ai'my almost as numerous as that which fought four grand battles in the valley, and captm'ed the capital of Mexico. When Keakny next appeared upon the frontier, in 1845, Fort Leavenworth had become a great frontier def)Ot. St. Louis had over 50,000 inhabitants, Missoiu'i over 500,000. Before he died, those sjjarsely populated regions, whose protection constituted his first chief duty, had become thickly peopled States. Missouri alone could boast of 1,182,012. Beyond these a tier of new States had grown up, and carried civilization 500 to 900 miles farther on to the plains, which, in 1837, were the domain of the Lidian, the Bufialo, and the Ti-apper. CHAPTER V. A REPBESENTATIVB AMERICAN. " Dreaded in battle and loved in hall." " Bold as thou in the fight, Blithe aa thou in the hall, Shone the noon of my might." — St. OliATB. " Prepare a banquet, and, costly let It be, And in magnificence bespeak my mind ; Whatever the East of delicacy yields, * * * Let the commanders. Worthy companions in the well-fought field. Be summon'd to partake. The cheerful goblet Shall raise our souls." * * *.— Frowd. " The banquet waits our presence ; festal joy Laughs in the mantling goblet, and the night, Illumined by the tapers' dazzling beams, Kivals departed day." — Bkowh. " There was a sound of revelry by night. And " Sanmur's " capital had gather'd then Her beauty and her chivalry, and bright The lamps shone o'er fair women and brave men ; A thousand hearts beat happily ; and when Music arose with its voluptuous swell, Soft eyes look'd love to eyes which spake again. And all went merry as a marriage bell.— Childk Hakold. As mentioned in the preceding chapter, "the Fu'st Regiment TJ. S. Dragoons was the first corps of the cavah-y arm established by the government, after the general disarmament subsequent to the war of 1812-'15. Consequently, at the time of its organization, and for several yeai-s afterwards, no complete system of cavalry tactics had been provided." Joel Roberts Poinsett — Secretary of Wai* under Maktin Van Buren, 1837-1841 — conceived the idea, in the first year of his term, of sending out to France thi-ee of om' di'agoon officers, "for thepm-jDose of going through the regular course at the " Royal School of Cavalry," at Saumur ; who, on then* retm'n to this country, were to compile a work on Cavahy Tactics, moulded on that of the French system, but so modified as "to 62 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNr. 63 suit the wants of oiu' own service." The three officers selected were, 1st Lieutenant, William Eustis ; 1st Lieutenant, Hekry S. Turner, . /and 1st Lieutenant, Philip Kearny, Jr. The result of then- laljors was the Cavalry Tactics, printed by order of the War Depai-tment, at Washington, and bearing date 10th February, 1841,. — three weeks before the close of Mr. Poinsett's term of office. Colonel Brackett, in his History of the U. S. Cavalry, remarks : " The system of Cavalry Tactics adapted to the organization of the Di-a- goon Regiments, was authorized by Hon. J. R. Poinsett, Secretary of War, on 10th February, 1841. It is mainly a translation of the tactics of the French ser\ice, and has not been yet improved upon, though several attemi^ts have been made, which have all proved failures. I believe almost every cavalry officer of experience con- siders the tactics of 1841 as far superior to anything which has yet been introduced into our service." Pursuant to orders, Philip Kearny left his regiment to proceed to Washington, D. C, 21st May, 1839, and there received farther or- ders, dated 9th August, 1839, to proceed to France on special duty. " The Three " sailed from New York in August, and " arrived at Fontainbleau October 1st, 1839, where they found the TJ. S. Minister, Mr. Cass, on a visit to the royal family, then residing at the Chateau, in the midst of one of the finest forests in France, 37 miles S.S.E. of Paris. They .were presented at Coiut by Mr. Cass, and had every reason to be satisfied with their reception. They dined twice at the Chateau, and accompanied the king to a review of troops at the Camp of Instruction." On the 8th October "the Thi"ee" were at Saumur, but Kearntt, after remaining there a short time, "obtained a leave of absence, and accompanied the Duke of Orleans, eldest son of Louis Philippe, on one," if not two, " of his campaigns in Africa." The incidents of that campaign — which will be treated of in full in subsequent chapters — were given "in a fiill and most interesting report," made at the time to Major-General Scott, commander-in-chief of the XJ. S. Army, by Lieutenant Keapjn-y, who, after his return from Eiu'ope, was attached to the staff of that General as aid-de-camp, thus succeeding, in regular or- der of generations, as it were, to a position of honor held by his imcle, George Watts, of the 1st U. S. Light Dragoons, dm-ingthe campaign of 1814. But the reader may say, Where is Saumur ? and what of the Military Academy ? The question is a just one. 54 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Saumiu", about one hundi'ed and seventy miles southwest of Paris, is a cheerful place, gleaming from afar with its white build- ings, and one of the most picturesque towns, in its quaint struc- tures, towers, pinnacles, and sph-es, on the Lou-e. It stands on the left bank of that river, and prior to the " Revocation of the Edict of Nantes," 24th October, 1685, was one of the strongholds of the Huguenots, or Protestants of France, who were diiven forth from their native country, or worse, by that iniquitous decree. Two centm-ies ago it was the capital of a district in the province of Anjou — known as the " Saumvu'ois." The confines of this petty government presented exactly the outline of one of those dehcious pears for which France is so celebrated, and Saumm* was situated at the apex or root of the stem. Its captm-e by the Yendeaus, 10th June, 1793, was one of the grandest exploits of that marvellous effort of loyalty and honor. The Royal Cavahy School, transferred to this city from Angers towards the close of the preceding centm-y, is located to the south- west of Saumm-, and covers quite a large space with its buildings, riding-schools, and grounds for exercise and drill. It is destined to receive officers, non-commissioned officers (from three hundi'ed to four hundred of this grade), and even picked riders {cavaliers). They are instructed in every branch of information appropriate to their Arm, and, after a complete course, are distributed through all the cavah-y regiments in the army, to diffuse a complete k]iowledge of the horse and horsemanship and the best method of imparting instruction according to a uniform system. It is somewhat curious, just as om- thi-ee young American officers were sent to complete then* military education at the Royal School of Cavalry, at Saumm*, so Pitt and Wellington took a course of lessons at its predecessor, the " Academy of Equitation," at An- gers ; the latter, in 1785-1787. Thus the bitterest and the most successful enemy of France laid the foundation in a French Mili- tary School of that knowledge of war which led the latter — " the Iron Duke" of after years — through Vimiera, Vittoria, and Water- loo, to Paris. While at the Cavalry School at Siaumm', Lieutenant Keaeny de- termined to give an entertainment which would not only do honor to himself but to his country. He was incited to doing this by the generous sentiment -W^hich he felt for the attentions he had received and in order to make some adequate retm-n for the civilities shown BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 55 by the civil and military authorities of the place to the thi'ee Ame- rican officers resident among them. The story of this ball is as follows : On " Twelfth Night," (1840) — an anniversary kept in Em-ope with almost as much exactitude as Christmas — General de Brack, in command at Saumur, gave a party at his residence. Formerly " Twelfth Night," or the " Eve of the Festival of the ' Three Kings," was one of those periodical seasons which have always been consecrated by European nations to amusement and festivity. Thus, we find Baeentz and Heemskerck imprisoned amid the Ai-tic ice, on the coast of Nova Zembla, during that terrible winter of 1596-7, expending their last little supply of wine in pigmy bumpers to the king of the festival, and with a courage and sjjhit without example, indulging in all the customary merrunent of home, which they seemed destined, in all human probability, never to revisit, and when they were, to all appearances, within the jaws of destruction. The Twelfth Night king was a potentate, with authority and functions somewhat similar to those exercised by the King of Mis- rule in Old English Chiistmas revels. Among the more elevated and refined classes of society, this festival assumed a stately char- acter, and became susceptible of very great display. The selection of King and Queen was generally left to chance and determined by a bean, which was placed in a cake, cut and distributed in pieces before the supper. The drawer of the slice containing the bean became King or Queen, and was privileged to select a jDartner to share his or her temporary regal honors. All drank to his or her majesty, who reigned and received homage from every one dm-ing the evening. In this custom originated the French title of the festival. The Feast of Kings ("La Fete de Rois), for which the revolutionary government of 1793 substituted, "The Merrymaking of those without breeches, i. e. Radical Democrats" ("Xa Fete cles Sans Culottes"), thi-ough their hatred of anything savormg of royalty. Before the disastrous close of the reign of Louis XVL, the French monarch and his nobles waited on the Twelfth Night king. This proves the importance given to the occasion in former days. Kearny was "prevented by indisposition from attending the party at the house of General de Brack on Twelfth Night," wi-ote the first of "the Three," who kept a sort of jom-nal of what trans- 56 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. pired, "When the cake was cut, some of the ladies sent him a piece with the bean in it, and from that the ball originated. lie first in- tended to give a party at the assembly rooms, but the idea gradually expanded, and when he was offered the gi'and rooms of the school, he put the whole thing in the hands of some French officers, with ' carte blanche ' as to expense. The result was a ball which eclipsed even the gi-and ball given by the city, some years before, to the Duchesse de Bekri, and which seemed to be the only notable event on record when we arrived there. The rooms were beauti- fully decorated under the superintendence of General de Brack, who was an artist. The supper was sent from Paris by one of the most celebrated restaurateurs ; flowers in profusion came from An- gers and other places," "each lady on entering received a bouquet of the choicest flowers in an elegant silver holder," " and with the mu- *ic of the fine brass band of the school, and an excellent string-band from the city, nothing was wanting to make the whole aflak a per- fect success. Applications were constantly received for invitations, many from a great distance, and if it had been delayed much longer, the rooms would not have held the crowd. Kearny em- ployed an artist who was present to make a picture of the ball, a copy of which he presented to General de Brack." Kearny's ball " was gotten up in a style of magnificence that was wholly unprecedented in that part of the country" — these are the words of another eye-mtness, the second of "the Three." It was "given 11th February, 1840, and presided over by the Commandant of the School, General de Brack," Avhose A\"ife Kearny selected as the Queen of this substitute Twelfth Night merry-making celebra- tion, and it was attended by all the prominent people of that parti- cular section, and by many from Paris and elsewhere. It was in every respect a brilliant affau-, and procured for General Kearny, from the inhabitants, the most enthusiastic acknowledgments, for the liberality he had displayed in thus contributing to then- enjoy- ment. An artist Avas engaged to make a picture of the scene on canvas. In this he was very successful in giving admu-able like- nesses of several prominent individuals." The only discrepancy, in the recollections of those who participated in the festivities, is as to Avhether the town or the giver of the fete employed the artist who executed the picture which commemorated this gi'aceful evidence of Kearny's patriotism and grateful appre- ciation of the com'tesies of the French government and officials, but BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 57 more particularly the attention of the officer in command. At all events, by whomsoever commanded, the original picture, or a copy of it, was a prominent object, at the time of the General's deatli^ among the paintings which adorned his spacious and elegant man- sion, at Belle Grove, on an elevation opposite Newark. This building stands on the site of a country residence which, prior to the Revolution, belonged to his grand-aunt, whose husband built and dwelt in No. 1 Broadway, a very fine building for its date and the young city of New York, and originally owned the adjoining No. 3, in which Keakny was born. This painting is on too small a scale to do full justice to the occa- sion, but it affords some idea of its splendor, attributable in a great measm-e to the variety, grace, and elegance of the numerous uni- forms of the Turkish, Polish, American, and French officers belong- ing to the different arms and services, which filled the room — uni- forms, of whose richness and contrast, our people, accustomed to the universal sameness of our present blue, tame and simple, can have no idea whatever. At that time the Turkish and Polish mili- tary costumes were still, if not the most serviceable, the most strik- ing in Europe. They were susceptible of any amount of decora- tion, almost as much so as the Hungarian, with its plumes, em- broidery, jewels, lace, buttons, jacket and dolman. All that is most attractive in the dress of the Chasseurs d'Afrique — to which Kearny was afterwards attached — was borrowed from the Polish ; every- thing which looked well and yet was serviceable, just as the Zouaves, was modeled on the Turkish military costume. All that was re- jected was those details which were in reality unmilitary and un- fitted for active service. All that was good and good-looking was retained. And, yet, Kearny told the writer that his own uniform, that of the American Light Dragoons of thirty 'years ago, was as efi'ective and imposing as any in the room. Doubtless he made it so, although it was very jaunty in itself. The coatee, blue, double- breasted, was not a frock, but cut in a much more graceful fashion; the collar, cuff and turn-backs, bordered with lace and ornamented and trimmed Avith gold, pantaloons, blue-gray mixtm-e, known as light army-blue, with two stripes of orange cloth up each outward seam ; the cap, such as the French term " shako," with drooping^ white horse-hail" pompon, or rather plume, silver and gold ornaments, and gold foraging cords and tassels. The latter could be detached and worn over the coat and around the neck, producing the effect of an 58 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. aiguilette. The sash was silk net, of a deep orange color, which, if made in France, as the writer has seen them made, shone in the glancing lights like a waving zone of gold. Thns Kearny de- scribed it, and thus onr officers did not make a bad show among the dazzling di-esses whii-Ung in the waltz, or polka, or promenading about. "VVTien Keaent resigned, in 1851, the same striking and elegant uniform was still worn by our Dragoons ; and the writer will never forget his expression and manner, when he came back in 1861, and saw some of his o^vn regiment again, in Washington, after the lapse of ten years. " I left them," said he, " a set of elegant gentle- men, and now I come back and find them a set of dirty black- guards." The Dragoons at the National Capital certainly did not present an attractive appearance in Maj^, 1861: especially in the horrid felt hat of an "Italian bandit," — as some one styled it — which Jefferson DA'sas, while Secretary of War, had clapped on their heads. That this ball must have been something extraordinary, there can be no doubt, from the glowing accounts given of it by those who were present, and Kearny's lavish expenditure, doubtless, did make a strong impression on a people so susceptible to display as the French, particularly at that period, when extravagance had not attained the vast proportions it has reached under Louis Napoleon. That it must have cost a very large sum, is certain, from the horror- stricken expression of Kearny's agent, when called upon to remit the necessary moneys. He threw up his hands, as if the young repre- sentative of American munificence had lost his senses. BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 59 DOCUMENTS. The following letters, received from the TJ. S. War Department, Washington, D. C, arrived too late for incoi-poration, and are therefore printed and added entire. The author hereby acknowl- edges the assistance of Brevet Major-General E. D. Townsend, Assistant and Acting Adjutant-General TJ. S. A. Saujiub, October 12, 1839. Monsieur Lieutenant-Comjixndeii MICHAUD: Sir : — Let me take the liberty of consulting with you, (as you are the officer to whose charge the General has entrusted us), on the course that I had best pursue whilst at Saumur, to answer the end that government has in view in sending me abroad. And to do so let me first explain the organization and the origin of our regiment. At the close of our late war with Great Britain, in 1815, our cavalry regiments were disbanded. In 1833, after one of our Indian wars had proved the necessity of having cavalry on the frontiers, ours, the First Eeginaent of Light Dragoons, was raised. It was organized, not by squadrons, but by companies, each company hav- ing a captain and a first lieutenant and a second lieutenant. It was officered principally by officers taken from the infantry. Everj'thing was new to them. ' The cavaliy regulations for the manoeuvres were taken from the French, almost literally translated. But as for police and the internal administration of the regi- ment, and evertliing else of that kind, there was no other pi-ecedent than as far as the experience om- officers had had whilst in the infantry — some had been in for many years ; the present Colonel for more than twenty years, having served during the war. Thi'ough the zeal of our officers, and from our being kept constantly actively employed in sending detachments through the Indian country, our system and disciplme has been rendered nearly complete. But as in cavalry, which, like the French, has been kept progressing in perfection ever since the great wars of Europe, everything useless has been rejected, and everything requisite is practiced in the best manner. It is for the pm-pose of making a statement of the differ- ences that exist between our omu and the French cavalry, that I have been sent abroad. My object is to remain at Saumur for six months, for the puqaose of acquiring the French language, becoming instructed in the use of the sword, and of arms pcrtaming to cavahy ; to follow a course of riding, but rather the " pratique" than the theory, and more especially for gaining ideas generally, to assist me in the more thoroughly visiting and making observations on the regiments themselves. Secondly, to visit some of the best dragoon and light cavalry regiments ; proposing also, should it be ad\'isaljle and meet with the approval of our Secretary of War, to \'isit the regiments in active service in Africa. The result of these observations is intended to make known to our government, and more particularly to the Colonel of our regiment, the differences that exist in the organization, in the manoeuvres, in the police, in the administration, and in 60 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. all tlie internal regulations of the French cavalry and our o^vn. Also, to inform myself of the course i:)ursued vnth the soldier from his joining as a recruit till admitted to the squadron. Your advice as to the consideration of the above points will be esteemed a great favor and Idndness by Y'our obedient servant, P. KEARNY, Second Lieutenant First Dragoons. Lieutenant-Commander MiCHAUD, Instructor of the School of Cavalry. ■ - SAtrnuB, October 16th, 1839. HOXORABLE J. R. POINSETT : Sir : — We arrived here last Monday a week, and reported to general BRACK, the commandant of the school, on the following day. I liave not written to you before, from irty not having had anything satisfactory to communicate. , I am now happy to say that, at least as far as I am concerned, I will be enabled to accompUsh at Saumur the objects proposed. As I understood from you in our first interview at Wasliington, it was your intention, in sending Lieutenants EusTis and Turner, that they should remain o^e year, and accom- plish in that one year, as far as they were able, the studies pursued by the students in the course of two years — the usual term at Saumm-. For myself, I had the highly gratifying honor to have been selected originally with the same intent, but finding myself situated in a manner that rendered my sta}' in the army uncertain, I considered myself in honor bound to explain to you the circumstances. I had the satisfaction to find that my motives were understood, and the honor of being sent abroad on a leave" of absence, having military subjects for its purpose. I have repeatedly regretted that j^our being obliged to leave Saratoga so imme- diately after j'our arrival (which I had not been aware was yowc intention) pre- vented my seeing you to converse with you in a more particular manner as to the precise disposition of my time whilst a.broad. At Washington, you spoke of my entering Saumur under the sanction of our government, and remaining there with the others for a few months, and then, by traveling, to make myself acquainted with the interior economy, and all that was connected with the French cavalry, by observing, as an eye-mtness, what was actually practiced in the best regiments — communicating the same to you un- officially, by letters, or by a private report on my return — though, as I under- stood it, rather l)y accumulating facts, by which j-ourself and our Colonel would be enabled to institute comparisons between the utility of the practices of our own and the French I'egiments. I think that in our conversation you did not fix a precise time for my stay at Saumur, but rather left it to myself to remain a few months. Had I had a second interview with you on this subject, I would have requested you to name the pi'ccise time. But as that did not occur, and to fix on a precise time in ad- vance was necessary for regulating my studies here, I determined it at six months, that being about the time you would have recommended, and decidedly the period BIOGKAPHT OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 61 best adapted for the objects for which I have come abroad. For six months could not be more serviceably spent than in mastering the French language, availing myself of the riding-school, and becoming instructed in the sword exer- cise, and in the use of arms proper to cavalry, and more particularly the gaining ideas to enable me to study most advantageously the regiments that I shall after- wards visit. The eleves of St. Cyr, and all foreign officers (there are at present here two of the cideoant Polish and Turkish services), are put under the immediate direc- tions of one of the Instructors. We have been placed under the charge of Lieu- tenant-Commander MiCHAUD, an officer who stands high in his profession, and who, even in tliis short time, has evinced a degree of polite attention that merits our sincere thanks. Finding that our situation generally, and more particularly my own, was not fully understood, I wrote, as to a friend, to this Mr. MiCHAUD, explaining, in a few lines, the natm-c of my mission. This was translated into the French by our Professor of that language, an Englishman, but one who had been recommended to us as being thoroughly master of the French from a fifteen j'ears' residence. A copy of the same accompanies this communication. It was handed to General Beack ; he approved of it, and under his authoi-ity Mr. MiCHAUD told me that he understood and entered fully into my views, and would, through his instruc- tions, enable me to attain the objects I proposed. Let me take the liberty of as- suring you that there could not be rendered a greater favor, both individually and as from the Institution, than this permitting me to pursue an unusual course at a school where, as at West Pointy there are none but regular classes. The course is two years, and each year and part of a year has its particular branches of study ; and on my part, let me assure you that, if assiduity and zeal for my profession •will avail anything, an opportunity like this shall be improved to the utter- most. In my letter to Mr. MiCHAUD, you will perceive an allusion to my visiting some of the French regiments serving in Africa. Should you have no positive objections, I think that this and the particular regiments that I visit had better be left to the advices that I may gain in conversation with General BRACK — an officer who distinguished himself whilst in the Imperial Cavalry, and also with other officers here. • In the course of a few days, Messrs. EUSTIS, Tukxer or myself will give you a more concise account of the school ; as a cursory remark, I inform you that there are two classes of officers among the students here. The class to which wo shall bo attached, though their course does not commence till January, is that com- posed of the eleves of St. Cyr — St. Cyr being a preparatory school for the Infantry and Cavalry officers. Those who are intended for the Cavalry, after finishing their course here, are gent to Saumur to learn CaValry duties. The other class of stu- dents are called the " Officers from the Eegiments," that is, they are officers who, before coming here, have already served for some years with their regiments. Besides the department of Instruction are three other military branches con- nected with the Institution : one is the School for Non-Commissioned Officers — the best and most capable of the privates being selected and sent here to be prepared as non-commissioned officers for their regiments. The second branch is for the instruction of their cavalry bands — boys— the sons of Gendarmes and old sol- BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 62 diers being sent here, to be rendered musicians previous to being admitted into the regimental bands. ThS effect of it is plainly visible ; and I doubt if the English bands, though sustained at enormous expense by the officers, can equal the French. The third branch is the School for Farriers. It may be added, though not appertaining so immediately to the military, that there is connected with the school a very large Government Haras, numbering some as beautiful animals as I have ever seen, many of them Arabs, many, too, of English blood, all being des- tined for the use of the Institution. Sir, again let me apologize for thus addressing you unofficially, but such I believe is your desh-e, and is the only mode for an officer communicatmg direct with the War Department. Sir, with all respect, &c., Your most obedient servant, P. KEAENY, Second Lieutenant First Dragoons, The Honorable J. R. Poinsett, Secretary of War, Washington. CHAPTER VI. EL TELL AND EL SERSOUS. FKANCE IN AFRICA. " I speak of Africa." Shakspe are's "Hbnbt IV." " Behold the African, That traverses the vast Numidian deserts In quest of prey, and lives upon his bow.— Addison's "Cato," "COMBATTRE ET SOUFFRIK." " Journal de V Expedition et de la Betraite de Constantine en 1836 / par un Voluntaire, OJicier de PArmee Afrique." KEARNY IN ALGIERS. Sicily was considered the training ground of the Roman and Carthaginian armies, contending for the Empu-e of the Mediter- ranean. Algiers has been the training ground of the French Army — dreaming of another Em'opean career of conquest and spoliation like that which they enjoyed under the Fu'st Napoleon. The present French ruler seems never to have forgotten a remark made by Frederick! the Great: "That if he were King of France, not a shot would be fired in Em'ope without his permission." It is a very hard school ; it forged and tempered the steel-heads of those columns which did the fighting in the Crimea; who stormed the heights at Alma; brought succor at Inkerman; captured the Malakoff, and wi*ested victory from the Austrians in 1859, from Monte Bello to Solferino. Although a tropical land, the vicissitudes of the temperature are as fearful as those which convert iron into steel. In the mountain regions, only a short distance from the coast, the changes are almost 'incredible. In the retreat of the first expedition against Constan- tine — 23d November to 11th December, 1836 — ^the French sufiered as much from snow and cold as they did in other yeai's fi'om heat. 64 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. This retreat, in many of its hardships and perils, was a repetition iu miniature of the retreat from Moscow, 1812. Indeed, some of the old officers declared that daring tliis campaign of seventeen days they liad encountered in Africa the icy cold of Moscow and the bottomless mud of Warsaw. No wonder Kearny did not con- template the mire of the sacred soil vnth. a di'ead equal to that of McClellan, after floundering tln'ough that of Barbary, road- less, and soaked with the continual and severe rains of that zono. During the second siege of Constantino, which was successful, one French regiment was exposed "for fifty hours, without rest or sustenance, to a pelting storm of snow and rain." Lieutenant Raasloff, of the Danish Artillery, a very prominent officer, who, like Kearny, participated, as a volunteer, in the cam- paigns of 1840-41, relates a very interesting anecdote of this retreat, fi'om commencement to end a series of the most fearful sufferings, labors, and privations. One of his friends, who was present, told him that after twenty-four hours of almost insupportable miseries, he mustered his energies to enable him to live through the comingr night, which promised no alleviation of them, standing, leaning against his horse and holding him by the bridle. Two private sol- diers, wrapped in their cloaks, had lain themselves down in the deep mud at his feet. After they had remained quiet in this uncomfor- table position for some time, one of them suddenly roused himself into a sitting position and exclaimed : " Well, I declare, I wonder what they are playing at the Varieties Theatre (in Paris) to-night," after which he sank down again into the sleety slush and slumber of exhaustion. When the day broke, Raasloff's friend sought to awaken the two sleepers, but in vain. They both slept the sleep which knows no waking. What an illustration of the careless dis- position of French soldiers, and under such cu'cumstances ! Then again, during the operations in summer, the heat almost sm-passes belief In some of his letters, Kearny spoke of men and horses falling dead around him from the heat under a burning sky, like the heaven of brass prophesied to the Israelites as a curse. Notmthstanding, the French troops were called u^^on to undergo marches and privations — such as it is almost impossible to conceive that men can survive, especially dm-ing the season of the Simoon, or wind from the desert. Life at times becomes a burthen to them, and the exclamation is quoted as made by more than one : "I wish that the Bedouins would grow out of the gi-ound by millions and BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 65 put an end to lis all." All this, however, realizes the truth of the proverb, "Fatigue and privation render the soldier careless of danger," and, or yet make the best soldiers. The writer can speak, to some extent from personal experience, in regard to the climate in the fall. Suffering from a disease of the chest, lie made a trip to Algiers in 1851, in the latter part of the I month of November, which C a stellae, an old African campaigner, styles "the Father of Tempests " {le pere des tempetes). The party experienced the truth of this remark. They looked forward to a trip over summer seas of not over forty-eight hom-s' duration- Vain hope ! Worse weather and more wicked seas were never encoun- tered on the ocean. It Avas not only tempestuous, but the wind was intensely cold and penetrating, one of those terrible piercing north- westers, descending from the snow-clad Cevennes and Pyrenees, which share dominion with the Mistral, whose cradle is the ever- lasting snows and glaciers of the Alps. These are the winds which render the south of France so dangerous to persons affected with weak lungs, and make the navigation of the " Gulf of the Lion " — not "of Lyons," as it is now wi'itten — so perilous dm'ing the late fall, winter, and early spring. The Merovee left Marseilles, 15th November, at 2 p. m., in one of these gales so fierce that the steamer, instead of putting forth on its du-ect course, crept along the French coast not five miles fi-om the land until off Cape Creux, one hundi-ed and eighty-five miles, where the mountains are thrust forth just north of the Gulf of Ro- sas. Thence the vessel was steered for the straits between Majorca and Minorca, passing in sight of the former and of Cabrera — a den of horrors for the French prisoners taken by the Spaniards during the Napoleonic wars — and then dnectly south for Algiers, where it arrived on the 18th, about 11 p. Mj, having consumed eighty-three hours in accomplishing what the passengers Avere assm-ed would take only forty-eight. Amid all the discomforts of this passage, there are incidents which linger on the memory like glimpses of fairy land. On the 17th the passengers had a magnificent view of the Spanish coast, with the Pyrenees rising in all their grandeur, one sheet of glistening snow, Uke a vast succession of pyi'ainids of polished Pentelican marble, and on the night of the 17th, in per- fect contrast, the shores of Majorca — where the best oranges eaten in France are gi'own — ^were plainly visible, all bathed in lovely moonliffht. 66 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Finding Algiers anytliing but a suitable place for an invalid, and the temperatiu'e entirely dependent upon the sun, Avhich did not shine auspiciously, since it poured almost the whole time, the party determined to seek a more propitious climate. While the sky is clouded and the rains fall, fires are indispensable for those who do not enjoy good health and are accxistomed to such a comfort ; then when the sun does come out, the contrast makes the heat almost in- supportable. While in Algiers, the party saw all that was to be seen ; ascended the mountain Sahel, in the rear of the city, looking down upon the plain of the Metidjah, where Phil Kearnt fought in 1840, the last time that the Arabs ventm-ed a descent into the fertile lowlands, between the Sahel and the Lesser Atlas, an intervale varying from fifteen to twenty-five miles in width — many remem- bered an American officer who distinguished himself the last time the Arabs descended into the plain — drove in and out the different gates through the new and stupendous fortifications, and along the splendid military roads ; climbed to the ramparts of the Emperor's Fort ; visited the son of the last Mufti, himself an old man, at his villa a few miles outside the walls, who did not think much of the French, but seemed to have the highest respect for the broadsides — which he had heard — of England and America: threaded the lanes, and roamed through the Cazbah, the former palace of the expatri- ated Deys ; in fact viewed everytliing except the interior of a mosque — and that no one cared to enter for fear of cold, or adding to it, from walking on damp floors with bare feet — a sacrifice visit- ors must make to then' curiosity, since everyone had to take off his boots or shoes. The return passage occupied nearly five days, in consequence of a succession of fierce blows. The Merovee sailed from Algiers on the 20th, at 1 p. m., in the height of a strong Libecchio or south- wester, and, with a heavy sea running, steered toward the Islands of Majorca and Ivica, passing so close to the former that the city of Palma — its capital — ^was distinctly seen. On the 22d, 2 p. m., when off the Gulf of Rosas, the Mistral burst from the N. E. like a thunderbolt upon the steamer, with the fmy which makes it a terror at this season to those who navigate these waters. The tempest and the sea leaped into existence simultaneously, as if they had been evoked by the wand of an enchanter, and the vessel was struck down and deluged with water in an instant. No descrip- tion can do justice to a veritable Mistral, or give a just idea of its BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 67 powers. A very ugly heavy sea rose like magic. Almost the first filled the whole deck, crowded with soldiers, well, sick, and wounded. The captain hoisted jib, put the helm up, wore ship, and ran for the port of Palamos, as the nearest safe harbor, Rosas not being sufficiently good holding groimd. While rounding to, the light iron boat was almost rolled over, the gunwale went under, decks flooded, wind howling; but once before the gale, all right, although the sea, ' bright green, foam-crested and streaked, followed like a wall, threatening to poop the steamer — that is, break over the stern — and sweep the decks, and reared like a wall before. All the time the sky was as serene and beautiful as possible, and the sun shone in all its brilliancy ; meanwhile the wind raging like fury. With the first gust the captain remarked : " The Mistrao" — so they call it in then- patois — "was a good broom; it swept the sky clean." And so it did, and \asibly, driving before it the dense masses of clouds like vast flocks of sheep hunted by dogs, and in a very few minutes the vault above was one vast expanse of blue, undefiled by a single stain. Palamos seemed quite a pretty place, or rather a series of villages than one continuous town — with houses and churches constructed of stone — ^pictm'esquely disjDosed around a cu'cular bay, well pro- tected from the prevailing winds. Some of the houses were on the beach almost at the water's edge, the others a little back in the gorges of the hills — apparently well cultivated and handsomely wooded — ^Ti^hich surrounded the harbor like the wall of an amphi- theatre, while the main town at the Eastern extremity of the bay has a mole and breakwater sheltering quite a commodious although small port. There were a nmnber of vessels at anchor here, one a bark, the rest large-sized coasters. On Sunday, 22d, 6 p. m., after twenty-fom" hours' detention, the wind having subsided, the Mero- vee put to sea, but, at the same spot as the day before, off Cape Creux, was assaUed by a second and severer edition of the Mistral, and driven back to Palamos. On Monday morning, 23d, 2 a. m., anchor was weighed a second time, and at 11 p. bi. on the 24th the party landed in Marseilles in another rain storm. This is a worse climate than America. When it don't rain, oh, how it blows, so cold, so bitter cold ! A calm, quiet, joyous day, and clear sunshine, seem incompatible. Rain and lowering skies and murggy, warm, damp weather, with poming or soaking rain, always go together. On board the steamer there were said to be five hundi-ed soldiers, 68 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. mostly invalids, many with constitutions prostrated with African fever. Whether drenched from the waves, which broke over the vessel, or the rain, which fell in floods, succeeded in the Gulf of Perpignan by the Mistral, which — while it broomed the sky of clouds and unveiled the sun — ^brought with it the piercing cold of the Alpine snows and glaciers, these soldiers had no shelter what- ever, for five days, but a saU stretched across the bow, simply to break the force of the icy gale. Allusion has been made to the condition of the five hundred invalids on board the Merovee, during the return trip. This was nothing to the crowd on the passage to Algiers : it seemed as if there was scarce- ly an inch of the deck but was occupied with soldiers, colonists and then- wives, children, and all those who could not afibrd to pay for better accommodations. The tempestuous weather was bad enough for those unaccustomed to it, but it was the intense cold that made it so terrible to these exposed human beings. The wind, descending firom the snow-clad Alps, Cevennes, and Pyi-enees, penetrated like "gimlets of ice;" and it was stated in Algiers that on board a naval transport, the " Pluton," from Toulon, loaded with troops, which jDut into Minorca, one or two men died from the effects of the cold, and a nmnber of others — " a dozen" was the word used — were so severely frost-bitten as to become, comparatively speaking, invalids for life. These troops were not either sick or wounded, returning from Algiers with broken constitutions — who make the transit, whatever may be the state of the weather, without shelter on the open deck — but healthy reinforcements from the mother country. Laiviping, a German officer, who served in Africa in the " Foreign Legion," who spoke from experience, testifies, that " a jjickled her- ring has more space allotted to it in the barrel than a soldier on board a French (Mediterranean) steamboat." " During the summer the surface of the Mediterranean is almost as smooth as a mii-ror. The blue transparent water looks so gentle and harmless that one can scarcely believe in the terrific powers which slumber in its bosom. In the later autumn it entu-ely alters its character : storms, and frequently even hurricanes, render the African coasts the most dangerous in the world." The changes of temperatm-e in the province of Algiers itself, present contrasts just as startling as the sea which bathes its shore. In mid-summer the thermometer rises to lOO'^, and in the Avinter in the mountain regions, snow storms rage with violence. As a rule, BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 69 in the sirring and early fall, and always during the summer, the extreme heat is constant in the plains and valleys. Amid the mountains, however, sudden storms occur when the thermometer Hills, to such a degree that the soldiers suffer as much from the cold and wet as they had previously from the heat and di-ought. In the fall, winter, and spring the rains are very cold, and often of long contintiance. The author of "A Summer in the Sahara," writing from Medeah, 22d May, 1853, records that even at that late period "Winter still kept his foot planted on the white summits of the Mouzaia," and on the 28th October, 1840, the summit of the Djcbel Mouzaia, or else the Beni Sala, visible from the north through the Pass of Tenyah, is represented like a glistening pyramid of frosted silver. This must be the mountain, Nador, alluded to by Castellane, 19th November, 1840, which rises to the north of Medeah. He says, "the last platoons of the rear-guard disaj^peared behind Mount Nador. The last image, the remembrance of France, seems to have withdrawn." These, however, maybe exceptional cases, although it would seem not, since a deserter related the following curious anecdote of the Emir's troops, who occupied that pass in October, 1840. "The Ai*ab Regulars in order to protect themselves against the cold, stuck each one his leg into the wide pantaV>ons of his next neighbor, and thus lay down to sleep, chained or trowsered together, as it Avere, in one mass." Had the alarm been sudden, "The Philistines are upon thee," they must either have been all captm'ed or slaughtered. Fortunately, they had time to disengage them- selves before they were attacked by the French troo23S. Tliis proves, however, that it must have been exceedingly cold to compel acclimated men to resort to such an expedient to- keep themselves warm in the presence of the enemy. Ra ASLOFF, at another place, furnishes statements which prove what a fearful mortality attends the campaigns in this fitful climate. In 1840 — the year when Ke^vkny won his sj^urs, and first saw fire — during the months of July, August, and September, there was a monthly average of 14,000 sick, and during the last five months of that year 7,000 died in the military hospitals in Algiers. This does not include those who were sent back to France to die or recover there. In the year 1841, the number of days during which patients were on the sick list amounted to 2,269,588. These, divided by 75,000 men, give 31 days in the hospital for every military man in 70 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOE-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Algiers. During this same year, the mortality in the hospitals in Africa was 7,812, to which must be added 484, who died on their passage back to France, or in the hospitals there. Total, 8,296, or over 11 1-2 per cent, of the eifective force of the army. As to the mortality and suffering among the beasts of burthen, it was almost incredible. Not a single expedition took place which, when it terminated, might not have been justly termed disorganized in a far greater degree than om* own dear Ai"my of the Potomac, on the 2d September, 1862, when, to elevate the rehabilitating powers of McClellan and his favorites, it was represented to be in such a shocking condition. If any officer wishes to appreciate the hard- ships of a soldier's life, he has only to make one campaign in Africa, to comprehend all its labors, privations, hardshij^s, and dangers — ^the worst, since the climate engenders diseases which assail the body through the mind as well as through the ordinaiy channels. One of these is nostalgia, or home-sickness, to which Raasloff and Lamp- ing both feelingly allude. The other is that inexplicable depression of sj)irits — very similar in its effects to the preceding, but yet not altogether the same, which too often converts a slight or cm-able wound into a dangerous one, or mortal, such as neither surgeon, medicine, nor any amount of care can alleviate. To show of what indomitable stuff Phil Kearny was made, when he left Saumiu" to proceed to Algiers he was so ill that he had to be carried to his carriage, and one of his comrades ^vi'ote out to the United States that "he would not be at all surprised if Keaent left his bones in Africa." Whether it was that intense mental excitement overcame any physical weakness, there Avas something astonishing in the manner in which the climate of Algiers, so trying or fatal to the majority, agreed with him. One of his rela- tives refers to this at the time, quoting from one of his letters, that while he was dashing about and fighting for the love of the thing under the burning skies of Africa, when men and horses were fal- Img around him from the effects of the intense heat, he was breath- ing in health and strength, and retui-ned home in robust health. Having thus endeavored to present a clear idea of the climate of that region in which France forms the rierves and sinews of her army, as bad, if not worse, than the majority of the weather which our ai-mies had to encounter, the reader may desu-e to know some- thing in regard to the French conquests and wars in Northern Africa. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 71 111 May-July, 1830, General Bouemont landed a French army, and captured Algiers. By this conquest the French obtained a colony, fertile and accessible, which they had long coveted, and con- siderable plunder. It is questionable whether tliey have ever derived any other benefit from it than the formation of im army, which, as fiXY as it goes, shows it has no superior. Down to 1845, the con- quest was hardly more than nominal, although the campjiign in 1840, in which Kearny participated, gave some very rude shocks to the native powers of resistence. In 1836 occurred the first expedition against Constantino which ended in disaster. Up to this time Abd-el-Kadek, although a powerful chief, had not become the suj)reme leader of the Arabs, although he had opposed the French with ability and intrepidity, especially in the west, for several years. There, in 1832, before Oran, he expe- rienced a Gettysburg defeat in a conflict which lasted three days, like our own great battle for national existence. In 1835 he seemed to have established a regular government, and even to have reconstructed the Arab nationality. Dmiug the succeeding years he gained great desultory successes over the French. These, on the 3d May, 1837, concluded with him the Treaty of the Tafna, which, while it conceded great advantages to the Arab Chief, and afforded him the amplest opportunities to consolidate his power, left them free to turn then* arms against Constantino and restore then- mili- taiy credit by the capture of that place, 13th October, 1837. This was a happy stroke, both of arms and of policy, for the French, since their influence had suffered greatly by their failm-e under its walls. The subsequent campaigns of 1840 and 1841 may be said to have broken the confederated power which Abd-el-Kader had consoli- dated. Then the campaigns of 1842 and 1843 were directed against the individual tribes, and soon brought them to reason. When Damremont, the French Governor and Commander-in- Chief, was killed before Constantine, 12th October, 1837, at the moment when his plans for tlie' capture of the city were on the point of being crowned with success, the command devolved upon Valee by the unanimous voice of those highest in rank, as well as by right of seniority. He realized the truth of the dying words of the heroic Colonel Combes, who fell in the triumphant storming. Pierced with two balls, this oflicer of the old Roman type reported the success of. the movement, which he had du-ected and led, and closed the account with these words : " Happy," said he, to the Royal Duke of 72 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Nemours, "happy are they who are not wounded to the death {i. e.y mortally) ; they will live to enjoy the triumph — i. e., reap the rewards." Then he withdrew to his tent, and the next day the army had to deplore his decease. Valke received the prize due to Damrbmont, just as too many in our late civil war assumed the laurels which ought to have been hung on the tombstones of the dead. For the capture of this African stronghold — the prize of so much blood and suffering — Valee was raised to the dignity of Marshal of France, and made Governor-General of Algiers. His power was despotic, and his disposition did not move him to use his authority with gentleness. W. von Raasloff, a distinguished representative of the Danish Artillery, afterwards Minister or Political Agent from Denmark to this country, hereinbefore quoted, who made the campaign in 1840 under him, and another under Bugeaud, would seem to represent him as one of the most severe and most unfeeling of men. If his character is not over- drawn by this writer, he might almost be styled pitiless. Yet it was, perhaps, well that Kearny saw his first real service under such a man, who, with all his faults, was a commander of very great ability, and the "creator of the French Artillery" of his day. It taught him the difference between the true and the sham, the "Man of Iron" from the want of appreciation of men, and the "Man of Iron" from the inexorable demand of the hour, the latter the man for the crisis of a nation. He could apprehend all that Avas great in Valee and lay it to heart as an example to be followed, and appreciate all that was unworthy of imitation. * * Abd-el-Kai)er, which signifies "Servant of the Almighty," and refers to his saintly extraction and religions education and claims, a true representative of Arab ability, was a politician of no mean capacity, and a General well adapted to develop and direct the warlike and fiinatic tribes Avhicli acknowledged his authority. His personal appearance was alone sufficient to inspire respect. The writer had ample opportunities of judging of this. He was introduced to him in 1851, had rooms adjacent to him in the same hotel in Marseilles, and saw him again in 1852 at Avignon. At this time he was about forty- seven years of age. No portrait begins to do justice to his BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Y3 beauty — if such a term can be applied to a man ; although it is just in his case, for very few women could surpass him in the delicacy and regularity of his features. Select the handsomest portrait ever exhibited of this Arab Chieftain, and it falls far short of the original in the prime of manhood, since no paint- ing could give any idea of the gentle expression of his eyes and countenance in repose, nor of its fire when aroused. The operations in the fall of 1839, and of the spring and sum- mer of 1840, were among the most glorious for the French arms in Africa. In October, the Duke of Orleans achieved a moral military triumph which will ever be coupled with his name — the passage of the "Iron Gates of the Atlas." This marvellous cleft threaded by the French column was justly considered im- practicable for an army, much more so for one carrying with it any kind of artillery or material. The natives were almost justified in believing that no armed opposition was necessary to render it unfortunate, since nature itself had done all that was requisite to make it dreadful and perilous, and a single shower could not only render the bold adventure impossible, but utterly destructive. The belief that the Roman Legion- aries — those universal and irresistible conquerors, who have left traces of their iron-handed occupation throughout Northern Africa, in whatever quarter the French have penetrated — had never achieved the passage of these "Iron Gates," must have been a great incentive to the Duke and to his troops. To accom- plish what the Romans had not, was indeed a superlative honor. At all events, the fact was Avell established, that if the Roman Eagles, at some unknown date, had gone through the "Iron Gates," no other military ensign had passed through except the Gallic Cock, eleven years afterwards, to be superseded by the Imperial Eagle. In the ensuing year the same young, gallant Prince achieved even greater fame by a purely military triumph at the Pass of the Mouzaia, since the Gates of Iron were not defended ; whereas the Col de Mouzaia, scarcely less strong by nature, was held by a strong force of Abd-el-Kader's best regular troops, likewise an army of irregulars, admirable sharpshooters, all inspired with the courage of fanaticism, w^hich, in such a natural fort- ress, could not have been overcome but by the discipline of 74 BIOGEAPHY^ OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. picked veterans, winnowed out in many such an encounter, and led by the ablest officers, formed in encountering the ferocious and peculiar tactics of the Arabs. The th( litre of operations embraced in the campaigns of lS39-'40 constitutes an obtuse triangle, the apex at Algiers, Avith a base of about one hundred and seventy-live miles near the thirty-sixth parallel of latitude ; or else a trapezoid, with Algiers at the northwest corner; Bougia at another, the north- cast, at either extremity of the north parallel line ; Setitf at the third corner, southeast ; Milianah at the fourth corner, on the southwest; Medeah, about one-sixth of the distance, thirty miles, to the eastward of the last. The farthest points to the eastward, considered in detail in this work, are the "Iron Gates," at tlie extremity of a southeasterly course of about one hundred miles, running through Algiers. Fondoucd and Hamza, Medeah, and J^Iilianah, respectively, thirty-seven to forty miles (sixty kilometers) southwest, and seventy to eighty miles (one hundred and twenty kilometers) west southwest of Algiers, constituted the base of French military operations in this quarter for years. CHAPTER VII. THROUGn EL BIBAN ! ^ " II visita cnsuite TAlgeric ou il obtint d'occompagner le Due d'Oblbans, comme aide- de-camp houoraire, pendant la campagne des Fortes de Fer." DE Trobriand, 1, 290. " To traverse the Black Mountains from Neustadt to Freyburg, it is necessarj', for the space of two hours, to travel along a narrow valley between perpendicular rocks. Thia valley, or rather this crevice, at the cud of which runs a torrent, is only a few paces wide, and is named the 'Valley of Hell.' By this terrible defile the greater part of the French army (under Moreau, in 1796,) traversed the Black Forest, with an enemy (the Austrian army) ou its front, on its flanks, and in its rear. It was of this valley that Marshal Villabs, in 1700, wrote the following concise note to the Elector of Bavaria, who pressed Villars to cross the Black Forest aud join him : ' This Valley of Neustadt, which you propose to me' is the road which the people call the ' Valley of IIcU.' Well, if your Highness will pardon me the expression, I am not devil enough to pass through it." — Campagnes de Moreau ; CusVs "■Annals of the Wars" §43,1,5, 5G. Compare Murray's '■'■ Handbook for Southern Germany^'' 397. " behold black Acheron 1 Once consecrated to the sepiilchre." — CmLDK Harold. " Come on, we'll quickly find a surer footing, And something like a pathway, which the torrent Hath wash'd since winter." —Manfred. In the summer and early fall of 1839, the despatches from the Generals in Algiers to the Home Government plainly demonstrated that hostilities, sooner or later, were inevitable. Abd-el Kader seemed to look forward to a renewal of the war as the only method of maintaining his authority over the Confederation of Tribes, which he had labored so long to bring about and consolidate. Marshal Valee, Governor-General of the French poss<. ^sions, was perfectly willing to accept the gage of defiance, and was even will- ing to provoke the Emir to throw it down that he might take it up. This state of affah-s soon became known in the army, and thus, at an early date, Kearny became apprised of what was going on in Africa, He at once applied to the French Government for pei'- mission to accompany an expedition into the interior, and make a campaign under generals who had akeady won a reputation where- 75 76 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. ever a soldier's name was known and respected. His request was acceded to, and whether as an honorary aid on the staff of the Duke OF Orle.vns, or as a supernumerary officer attached to the finest light cavah-y regiment in the service, he had an opportunity to acquh'e, under the best conditions, a practical military knowledge, and learn the utmost which a soldier is called upon to endure. These gratifying appointments gave him a delightful position and protected him against the prejudices entertained by the aged com- mander-in-chief against foreign officers, whose presence in his camp was extremely distasteful to him. They annoyed and bored him. Such, at all events, was Kearxy's opinion. And armed with despotic power, and gifted with an unamiable disposition, it is not likely that he would have made the American volunteer's service particulai'ly agreeable to him, had the young transatlantic dragoon been forced to come in du-ect contact with him, or without the intermediation of powerful and willing protectors. In the fall of 1839 an exi^editionary corps was assembled in the province of Constantine, whose constituents were brought thither partly in transports, direct from France, and partly fi-om Algiers. The command-in-chief was assumed by Marshal Valee. Under him the Duke of Orleans had a fine division. To the staff of the latter Lieutenant Philip Kearny was attached as an honorary aid- de-camp.* The Marshal and Royal Duke privately resolved to undertake "svith this corps the somewhat adventurous march from Constantine, along the Akkaba precipices, through the Jujura {Djordjora) to Algiers — adventurous, indeed, for if Abd-el-Kader, or any of his dependents (which latter, at that time, the French had no longer any right to trust), with a mere handful of theu* people, had undertaken to bar tne way, at certain defensible points, the French column, totally destitute of any resom-ces except those which it carried with it, would have been j^laced in a most desperate position ; nay, more, if only a few days of rain had occm-red, the principal defile would have become totally impassable. When aU these risks are taken into consideration, this march seems like a bravado, since no real advantages could be obtained through it, while, on the contrary, as long as Abd-el-K4Der had not ratified the Convention of Tafna, which regulated the boundaries of the French and his own jm-isdiction, and had not publicly acknowledged * De Trobeiand's " Quatre ans cle Campagnes, etc,' 1, 290. BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 77 it, this march could only serve still more to excite the inimical feel- ings of the Arabs who adhered to the Emu*. This march has been represented by the French as an act of taking possession of the country ceded to them; but "such an interpretation of it can only excite a smile," for the reason that at times the French trooj)S advanced with such celerity that they appeared more like a body of fugitives than an army of conquerors, and because they scarcely left any more ti-aces of then- passage through the greater part of the country tra • versed than a ship of its course through the ocean. Until the French army had actually marched thi'ough the district, which they were about to attempt, the most wonderful representa- tations and the most fabulous descriptions of its defiles were received with most implicit faith in France. The following relation is com- piled from various authentic sources, but particularly from the jour- nal of an officer who participated in whatever glory accrued to the expedition, which, in many respects, was truly glorious, since almost eveiy human success is dependent upon 'fortune, and it required a concurrence of the most fortunate accidents, the favorable co-oi3era- tiou, not of men alone, but of nature also, not merely to make it successful, but to prevent it from being disastrous. This description will show what extreme difficulties the expedi- tion had to overcome, and how well it was adapted to exalt the impressionable minds of the French, so easily excited and affected by elevated and extraordinary ideas. The reno-wn of this exploit will be forever connected with the name of the Duke of Orleans, the pet of the nation, but especially of the Army of Africa, whose dangers and privations he had so often shared in 1835, 1839, 1840 — an army which not only looked up to him as an able and courageous leader, but confided in him as the true and acknowledged fri(?nd of the soldier. On the 24th October, 1839, the expedition was at Setif, seventy- nine miles west-south-west of Constantine, du-ectly south of the Gulf of Bougia. The troops believed that they were destined to open the communication between Setif and Bougia, through the most important Kabyle tribes, which dwelt in the mountains around the latter port ; an operation of the greatest consequence as regarded the affairs of the province of Constantine. The Kabyles, with whom the feint of negotiations was initiated, did not show them- selves so much opposed to laying out a road thi-ough their land as the French authorities had expected. 78 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. On the 25tli October the column marched in a direction which still kept up the idea that the objective was Bougia. On the 26th, early in the morning, the course was changed, and after a march of two hours a joyful murmur suddenly arose throughout the column, for the soldiers of the advance guard had discovered that they were not on the road to Zamoiu'ah — a small town northwardly and west- wardly of Setif, occupied by Turks, which had submitted to the French — but were " going it loose " in a more southerly dh-ection towards El Bibau, that awful pass renowned for ages. In a moment the cries, "Algiers!" "ElBiban!" "Les Fortes de Fer !" "the Iron Gates !" were in every mouth. Without orders the soltliers quickened then' pace ; from front to rear the music of its favorite song resounded in each regiment. There was no moi'e fever in the column. The brave French felt no more sickness, no more fatigue; no one considered the countless difficulties which they had to encounter, or the weakness of the column, or tlie mountain brooks, which a single shower could swell into torrents, and thus render advance and retreat equally impossible. The wildest enthusiasm took possession of the tro.ops, m which the leaders perceived a sure token of a brilliant result. Now that the secret Avas out, the most important affair was to se- cm"e, by the rapidity of the march, those advantages which had al- ready been won thi'ough the astute and scrupulous silence of Mar- shal Vaxee, and make the most of them. In two days, 26th and 27th October, the expedition had accomplished over sixty miles, and already on the evening of the latter day, the peaks of El Biban were visible. On the 28th, the divisions, commanded respectively by the Dcke op Orleans and General Galbois, separated, the former inclining to the left and south, while the latter wheeled off to the right into the plain of Medjanah, in order to secure the good will of the Turks of Zamourah for the French, and to finish the necessary preparations for establisliuig the great military camp at Setif, first occupied by the French, under the same General Galbois, in 1838. It had rained on the morning of the 28th, and the col- umn did not move again until this rain had ceased, since its contin- uance would have rendered the defile of El Biban impracticable. The column consisting of a single division, that of the Duke of Orleans, comprised 2,551 foot, of the 22d of the Line and of the famous 2d and 17th Light Infimtry, 248 cavalry detachments, from the 1st and 3d Chassem's d'Afrique — to the former of these K!ear- BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 79 NT was attached — and Spahis ; and 250 men of the more scientific corps, engineer troops (Sappers and Miners), one company, and artil- lerists with four 12 pounder mountain-howitzers, on the pack-saddle system. Each soldier carried provisions for six days, and sixty car- tridges ; 800 head of cattle and sheep followed the division. The Administration (Field Commissariat) had the precaution to add a reserve supply of provisions for seven days more. Proud and ex- alted at the very idea that they were about to solve a military prob- lem which the Roman legions had never dared to undertake, the troops advanced with alacrity. After a difficult march — severe upon the troops on account of the obstructions encountered, rather than the distance traversed — in the bed of the Oued-Boukheteun, the mountain valley all at once began to contract, and grow more and more narrow ; gigantic, sav- age-looking masses of rock, heaped the one upon another, rose up before the troops and restricted the sphere of vision in the most peculiar manner. Next the column had to labor along a rough foot-path, up ascents almost perpendicular, succeeded by descents almost as precipitous. The spade and the pickaxe of the Sappers and Miners were continually called into action to render these practicable for the cavalry and pack-mules, especially those of the artillery. Each time that the column had attained the plateau which crowned the wild summit of one of these ridges, they hoped that the barrier was surmounted, but on arriving at the crest, the soldiers beheld new peaks present themselves like an immense sea of rocky waves, clothed with wild woods and crowned with cactus and aloes. At length they plunged into a deep defile, and all at once found themselves hemmed in on every side by gigantic walls of hmestone, which, a few moments before, they had not been able to discover, piled up in isolated and detached fragments, several hundi-ed feet in altitude, their outlines sharply drawn against the blue sky in strange and fantastic shapes. Farther away, towards the east and west, all these isolated peaks arrayed themselves into parallel ranges of gray or swarthy limestone, leaning, as it were, against abrupt gi-anite supports,* the latter shooting up perpendicularly to the * No one need be surprised at these limestone walls, being propped np by still more Btupendous walls of granite, since primary limestone, associated with granite, is of the same age and has the same origin. They are Phitonic. There is a remarkable instance of this in the Highlands, on the Hudson River, near Sing Sing, and at Cruger's Station. 80 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. height, m some places, of 800 or 900 feet, in others, of more than 1,000 feet, whose crest line, broken by long intervals, illuminated by the light of the snn, jDresented the aspect of an immense ram- part with colossal embrasm-es. These walls, which seemed to real- ize the fable of Atlas, and support the azure vault, were not more than from 40 to 100 feet apart, and had the effect of appearing to close in upon each other in order to frustrate any attempt to ad- vance. \ After a rough and almost scarjoed descent, the troops found them- selves in the wildest position it is possible to conceive, in a little patch of green, shaped like a pointed egg, or rather the orbit of a comet, cut off at the butt by angular rocks, most savage in then* aspect, while the whole contour was sm'rounded, except where the rifts afforded entrance and exit, by almost unappreciable walls of limestone, whose summits, at an immense height, overhung their bases, craning over as if to see what was passing beneatii them, and along the narrow track, which, again and again, crossed the thread of water known as the Oued-Boukheteun. This streamlet, after it leaves the mountains, receives the name of the Oued- Bibaii. A feeble brook in the dry ileason, after heavy rains it be- comes a wild torrent, which fills the whole defile. The ellipse of verdure, just described, constitutes a sort of vesti- bule or entrance-court to the "Gates," and can be compared to nothing but a narrow trap or deep kettle, in which an enemy could have overwhelmed the column with the gi-eatest ease, shooting down the troops from the surrounding cliffs, slaughtering them like poultry — "tame ducks" is the word in the journal generally followed, in a coop, without ■rtieu- being able to inflict the slightest iujmy in return. The exit is a split, not over eight feet broad, cleft vertically through the beetling Titanic cliffs — ^the loftiest, of reddish granite, the lowest of gray or dark-hued limestone, T/ils S2)llt was the FIRST IRON' GATE. After passing through this opening, the column had to string out along a narrow path formed by the disintegration of the marly portions of the rock, and clamber over huge blocks of chalk, almost filling the gigantic furrow between the parallel walls, which seemed to spring up to meet the sky. The Secoxd Iron Gate was soon reached, and, twenty paces farther on, the Third ; both of these, like the First, cleft as perpendicularly as if cut with a plumb- line, but so narrow that there was scarcely room for the passage of BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 81 a loaded pack-mule. Fifty paces farther on, again, the Fourth Irox Gate was encountered, a little less narrow than the thi-ee previous cues. Three hundred paces farther on, the defile proper ceases, and opens into a beaiitiful and gracious valley. How many centuries must have elapsed before the waters of a little brook could have worn down this abyss,* whose wonders are not susceptible of a description which can afford, to any one who has not seen them, a just idea of the reality — an abyss which in all time has received the title of the Iron Gates of the Atlas, and Avhose passage has been regarded with awe ! The domination of the country would almost seem to appertam to the master of an army which dared to attempt, and succeeded in passing them, in tlie attitude of a conqueror. Through these Iron Gates the van-guard hurried on, the Marshal and DuivE of Orleans with then* staffs (including Kearny) leading, amid the triumphant clangor of military music and the jubilant shouts of the soldiery, which seemed to make the very rocks tremble. The only trace of this interesting expedition which remained behind upon its stage was the simple inscription, engraved by the sappers upon the natural walls of the pass : "Armee Francaise, 1839." About seven or eight hundi'ed feet beyond the fom'th Iron Gate, the defile enlarges, and opens into such a smiling and peaceful val- ley that nature seems to have placed it at this point for the express pm-pose of cheering up the soul rendered extremely melancholy by the gloomy depths of the pi-eceding gulf, so unearthly and so savage as must abate the courage of the manliest with an u-resistible sensar- tion of awe. That he accompanied the column wliich forced its passage thi'ough those famous Gates of Iron must have been a never-ending source of congratulation to Kearnt ; for while it was received in * "It appears to me that one of the best proofs of the youth of our globe, or of its population, at all events, is that its surface gold has not been exhausted. Gold is such ,".n essential to civilization that if the world were as old as some believe, it would have been exhausted long ago. These are the words of Brigadier-General J. W. P., one of the acatest of observers and a very scientific man. After visiting that strange passage on the route from Foit Leavenworth, through Fort Laramie, to the South Pass of the Kocky Mountains, known as the ' Devils's Gate,' he writes : ' It looks, at first view, as if that gentle, pellucid stream (the "Sweet Water") had worn a passage through the hard granite— * * but on a closer examination I was confirmed in a previous opinion, that the channels of rivers are formed for them oftener than they are by them." 82 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. France as a glorious achievement of her armies, it had a most bene- ficial effect npon the tribes of Algiers, who looked upon the French as something more than human for having dared to attempt it. As soon as the soldiers — carrying in their hands leafy branches, torn from the scattei'ed palms, which counted theu- growth by cen_ turies, and grew here and there among; the rocks — issued forth into this lonely dell, they saluted with shouts of joy and welcome, that sun which they had completely lost sight of in the previous abyss, whose rays now almost bUnded them. Here they halted for a sj^ace to rest, and under the influence of recollections, fresh and vivid, of the awful scenery which they had traversed, these brave men soon forgot all their fatigues in communicating to each other impressions made upon them by the wonders they had witnessed. Militarily, to occxipy or bar the Biban Pass would be impossible, since it can be turned, but for the light infantry to do so, would have requu'ed some days, when every minute was precious. The Duke of Orleans did everything that the military art teaches to get possession as soon as possible of the farther end of the defile, and thus, in a meastire, to insure the safe passage of the column. For- tunately, all the measures which foresight indicated were superfluous. Not a single enemy showed himself The expedition was fiivored with the finest weather, and nothing surpassed the joyous sense of relief in which the army passed the first evening out of this Brob- dinagian trap. ^ The next day, the 29th October, the division which had bivouacked on the bank of the river Makalou, six miles north of El Biban, tra- versed an immense forest, and finally reached another beautiful val- ley, bordered by the chain of the Jurjura. Here Marshal Valee derived intelligence, from letters seized upon captured messengers of Abd-el Kader, that the Kalifa (Lieutenant) of the Emu* had estab- lished himself on the plateau of the Fort of Hamza, in order to bar the road to Algiers against the advancing division. To frustrate this movement, the division made a forced march on the 30th, thi'ough a country so destitute of drinkable water, and so abundant in salty, that the natives styled it the "Thu-sty Way." Meanwhile, the Duke of Orleans pushed ahead, with two or three companies of picked infantry, the whole of the cavalry, and two mountain howitzers, in the du-ection of Hamza. This fort occupies a position selected with judgment. Diu-ing the period of the Tm-kish domination it was a place of such importance that the BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 83 Deys always maintained a strong garrison T^dtliin its walls. This was by no means due to any military perceptions of their engineers, for the Romans, nnsm*passed in their occupation of keypoints, built a fort there, named Auzea, coeval with their first invasion of the country, which was confided to a garrison of veterans. Tradition ascribes, however, the foundation of Hamza to a king of Tyre, who flourished nhae centuries before the Christian era. The last account belongs to fable rather than history; but the French were only fol- lowing the footsteps of the Romans, who won more than one signal victory xinder its ancient walls, which dominate a vast plain at the in- tersection of three valleys, the first leading towards Algiers, about fifty-five miles to the northwest; the second towards Bougia, from seventy to eighty miles to the northeast, and the third to the Gates of Iron (El Biban), from forty to fifty miles to the eastward. To the westward again, a road crosses through a depression, or " Col," of the Jm-jurah to Medeah, fifty-five miles to the west by south on an air line.* When the French column arrived on the heights of the Oued (Stream) Hamza, the hills on the opposite side were covered with mounted Ai-abs, who broke and fled without firing a shot as soon as they were charged by the French cavalry. This must be the ac- tion which serves as the basis for the anecdote of Count St. Marie, for it does not appear that the Arabs had any artillery with them in the other actions in the open field in which the Duke was pve- sent, nor is there any account of warlike opposition at any previous time during the advance of the expedition : " One day, at sum'ise, the rocks called ■ the Iron Gates in the Bibans were covered with Arabs, defending the passage of the defile. The Duke of Orleans, enveloped in a brown burnous, appeared on horseback at the head of the first attacking column. In the midst of a shower of grape- shot, ordering the charge to be sounded, he was the first to reach the guns of the Ai-abs, which he compelled them to abandon in disorder." The fort of Hamza was found deserted; 150 Arab regulars, thi'own into it as a garrison, had abandoned it. The fort, which had been a square, with bastions at the corners — the French ex- * It is extremely difficult to locate places on the maps, for the reason that the different accounts not only disagree with each other, but with any map, and the maps themselves, English and French, and French and semi-official French, are not only dis- cordant as to names, but as to locations. 84 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. pression is a " starrj^-square," {carre etoils) — was little better than a mass of ruins. The revetments had either fallen or were in a miserable condition, so as scarcely to hold together or sustain them- selves. The interior constructions were notliing better than heaps of rubbish. Five cannon were found here, three of which were spiked. Having completed the destruction of this once important strong- hold, the French resumed theii* march, expecting to be attacked at ^ any moment by the tribes which acknowledged the authority of Abd-el-Kader, whose territories they had now entered. They did not meet with any resistance of the shghtest consequence until, on reaching a plateau along one of the affluents of the Issen, they found themselves m fiice of a body of cavalry and quite a numerous array of infantry. The Duke of Orleans, having placed some companies in ambush, tm-ned the Arabs with his cavalry, and di'ove them against the companies in reserve. These did not fire untU the Ai-abs almost ran against the muzzles of their muskets. Then the French pom-ed upon them such a slaughtering volley as put them to flight with quite a severe loss ; a few shells from the moun- tain howitzers cleaned them out entirely. Raasloff calls this a brilliant aflair, and adds, as if they constituted more formidable obstructions, that the column crossed a number of mountain streams, which in less favorable weather might have proved im- passable. Some of these traverse the Biban Pass itself. One is an affluent of the Adousse, which empties into the Gulf of Bougia. All are capable of being transformed by a single heavy shower into raging torrents. The same difficulties attended the march of the next day, 1st November, and it was late in the evening before the column, worn out by the terrible fatigues which they had undergone, reached the camp of Fondouck, where the division Rulhiere, sent out from Algiers to escort them in, awaited then* arrival. Thus ended an excursion — which deserves the title of a "military promenade" rather than any more serious term — of seven days, through a coun- try bristling with perils, inhabited by a population which had al- ways inspired the previous rulers of Algiers vnth. the greatest di-ead and caused them the hveliest disquietude for the stability of their power. The distance accomplished was not in itself so very gi-eat, ranging from 150 to 200 miles, but the natm-al difficulties overcome made it more trying and laborious than an ordinary march of BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 85 double the distance. The news of the successful arriva,! of the column in Algiers occasioned, not only in the colony but through- out France, the liveliest joy and enthusiasm, which, to compre- hend, a man must appreciate the dangers Avhich actually impended over it, verily, like the sword of Democles. The route followed by this comparatively " little band " led tlirough wai'like and inimical tribes, from whom no assistance, in the shape of the necessaries of life, could be expected ; but on the contrary, open hostilities at any moment. The whole of the country traversed was in the highest degree difficult, and the laiforeseen occupation of the "Iron Gates," or even a few heavy showers, might have proved the ruin of the division. The countrj^ itself, and its resources, were only known by report through the accounts of the Arab guides, who were little to be depended on. Such critical circumstances constitute the great- est charm, however, of war, and elevate the soldier, not only in his own eyes, but in those of his comrades and countrymen. When the column arrived at Algiers, the enthusiasm was indescribable. The Duke of Orleans gave a grand banquet to the whole division in the square of Bab Azum. Thus, in the beginning of November, 1837, joy reigned in Algiers, and the future was forgotten — while the storm-clouds were gathering over the Colony, which burst with a suddenness and fury as terrible as unexpected. No one surmised that this apparent triumph was the forerunner of the greatest disaster. It is im- j>ossibie, in such a work as this, to go further into anything like a historic consideration of the causes which led to the ensuing campaign, in which Kearny was conspicuous, and made the American name glorious through his fortitude and his valor. Abd-el-Kader — who knew that every action which tended to elevate the French in the opinion of the natives depreciated his own influence in an equal degree — had been waiting for a pretext, and Avas glad that an excuse was now given him for the resumption of hostilities, by this expedition through the " Gates of Iron." He held his forces all ready in the leash, and now he let them loose in all the fury of fire and sword upon that beautiful plain of the Metidjah, which embraces Algiers in its arc of luxuriant fertility, whose either extremity bathes its 86 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. verdure in the sea. No declaration of war preceded the inburst of devastation. Up to the very gates of Algiers swept the Arabian cavalry in the prosecution of what they deemed a " Holy War." The Emir's fury fell, not only upon the scattered gar- risons beyond the reach of succor; upon the colonists who saw the fruits of years of patient toil disappear in a moment in flame ; but also upon the native tribes who had submitted to the French and had refused to arm against them. Years after- Avards, the sad mementoes of this erruption were still visible in the Metidjah, and the colonists had not yet recovered their con- fidence in the protection of the French government, for the po- litical horizon could scai'cely have seemed more serene, on the evening of the 30th November, 1839, and yet with the dawn of . the next day the hordes of Abd-el-Kader poured down from the Lesser Atlas, and, except within the lines of Algiers, left nothing behind them but corpses, ruins and ashes. All who survived were dragged into captivity. It is said that Marshal Valee was not disappointed at this turn in events ; and if those who treat of the French Dominion in Algiers are correct in their judgment of his character, it was very likely that he was pleased at the opportunity of adding to his military renown by a successful campaign at the close of his life. The idea expressed by Raasloff, the Danish eye-witness, is equivalent to this : " The Emir precipitated the hostilities which Marshal Valee: had invited." Raasloff's exact words are: "Valek and Abd-el-Kader wished to bring on the war."* * This chapter is the only one in the whole book which is not founded on original docn- ments, or well-known works. There is only one definite authority for it, quoted at the head of the Chapter, which is to be found at Page 290, Vol. 1 : " Qiiatre Aus de Octmpagnes a VArmec du Potomac, par Regis de Tkobkiand, Ex-Major-General au Service Volontaire, et Colonel au Service Regulaire des Etats Unis d'Amerique," Paris, lalS; which seemecj sufficiently corroborated by rumor, intimations and references in letters. The subject- matter of the residue of this biography is either founded on personal knowledge, publica- tions, or information derived from actors in tlie events treated of. In almost eveiT case, where practicable, the language of the original has been incorporated. Whether or no Keabny accompanied the Duke of Orleans to Africa in the Fall of ISJiO, this chapter is nevertheless valuable, inasmuch as it serves as an introduction to the subsequent cam- paign, and more particularly as it presents an accurate accoimt of one of the most brilliant expeditions of the French Army in Algiers. Although scarcely attended with any blood- shed, it is a notable example of what may be accomplished by audacious energ>' in an art or science in which success depends on what the Romans verified two thousand years ago, and Marshal Saxe formulized as a rule or principle of war, that victory depends nioro upon tlie legs than upon the arms of the soldiers. This all great Captains demonstrated to be the fact since we have any reliable accounts of military progress. CHAPTER VIII. over the mouzaia to medea ii and milianah. "the ateican battle above the clouds." "Major-General p. Kearnt, * * * at the age of twenty-two, accepted the commission of Second Lieutenant First Dragoons, and soon after was sent to Europe by the government, to study and report upon the French cavalry tactics. '•To accomplish this object he entered the military school at Saumur, France, and from thence went to Africa, where he joined the First Chasseurs d'Afrique, as a volun- teer. By his daring exploits he attracted the attention of the French army, and was pre- sented with the Cross of the Legion of Honor." — " Military and Naval History of the Echellion in the United States /" by W. J. Tennet." "A trois heures du matin le canon douna le signal. "■ AHons, enfants,^ s'ecrie le Due d'Okleans, ' fcs Arabes nous attendent et la France nous regardeP Et les troupes gravissant les rochers s'eippareut du premier plateau ou elles font une halte. Eusuitc commence rescalade du pitou. La resistance fut terrible, la premiere colonne seule etait engagce, uu nuage epais diirobait a la rue les combattauts. Bieuttit une fanfare annonga la prise d'undesmamelosn. A cc momeus le soleil, se dcgagcant de sou voile de tentbres, cclaire les flancs de la montagns, et Ton peut admirer d'une part les efforts presque surhumaiues de nos soldats, qui ne se laisscnt arreter par aucuue craintc ; d'autre part, le calme et le sang-froid des Arabes, qui penches sur 1' abime Tcnil attcntif, le doigt sur la detente du fusil, attendent, immobiles, le moment de viser juste et bien. Le 3d Leger, encourage par la vols si puissautc du general Changauniee, redouble d' ardeur, et le drapeau f rangais est arbore sur la crete la plus elevee."— La Comtesse Dboeojowska's ^* Histoire de VAlgerie." -^i-ThcT?ederals fought not less firmly [at "Williamsburg], encouraged by their chiefs, Hooker, Heintzelsian, and Kearnt. KETrny in. especial, who lost an arm in Mexico, and fought with the French at the Moiczaia, and at Solferino, had displayed the finest courage.'''—"' The Army of the Potomac^' by the Prince db Joinvillb. CAMPAIGN OP 1839 AND CAMPAIGN OP 1840. In December, 1839, Valee, having received strong reinforce- ments from France, gladly accepted the defiance of Abd-el Kadeiu and recommenced hostilities. He divided his troops into different columns, and launched these forth against the enemy in every du-ection. Everywhere the French resumed the offensive gloriously. As the Fu'st Chasseurs dAfrique played a distinguished part in several of the first engagements which followed, it is but fair to suppose that, as Philip Keakxy was attached to 'this regiment, the young American volunteer, with the daring and dash Avhich was always conceded as peculiarly his own, had a share in its dangers and honors. 88 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNT. It was a fortunate thing for Philip Kearny that, although he had an honorary position on the staff of the Duke of Orleaxs, for actual service, his place was with the Fu-st Chasseurs d'Afrique ; and still more fortunate that their commander was Colonel le Pays de BouRJOLLY — afterwards Lieutenant-General and Senator of France. This chivalrous officer, directly the reverse of his superior in dispo- sition, was a perfect gentleman. He was a gi-and specimen of the French colonel of romance. Through his family, position, and per- sonal character, he stood equally high. Intimate associations with him, demonstrated at once what a French gentleman should be to fill the character ascribed to the grand and true nobility of the " old school," and also what a gentleman actually was. To his inferiors in rank he was as kind, generous, and forbearing as he was inde- pendent, fierce, and resolute towards his superiors, maintaining his own rights and those of his subordinates against the presumption of higher rank with a dignified determination which would not yield an inch to the encroachments of authority. Kearny always spoko in the highest terms of Colonel le Pays de Bourjolly, and the latter — to whom the -writer carried a letter of introduction, in 1851, irom his cousin — remembered his volunteer companion-in-amas as a valued friend, testifying the warmest feelings towards him, and an affectionate pride in the fame and success of his subsequent career. The wi'iter has heard him translate to his aid and company the his- torical eulogies of his former pupil. It was of inestimable advantage to Kearny to be attached to the Fiist Chassem-s d'Afrique, which " had always been a favorite regi- ment, brave and triumphant in the field ;" " indefiitigable, enter- prising — a model light cavalry." The Duke op Nemouiis, second son of Louis Philippe, generally wore its uniform ; the Duke of AuJiALE, a still younger son, shnred all its dangers. This shews how highly this corps was esteemed. St. Marie, a reliable author- ity, testifies that " the Colonels who have had the command of the Fii-st Chasseurs have always been men of family, fortmie, and education. The consequence is, that the officers are received into the best society, wherever they go." This proves that Colonel le Pays de Bourjolly could not have held the position he occupied had he not been the " elegant gentleman" and thorough soldier he was. The first collision of a year — which numbered twenty successful engagements — took place in the early part of December between BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 89 the camp of the Arba and the coiu'se of the AiTouch (Harrach), about eighteen miles southeast of Algiers, where a force of 1,200 Hadjouts — audacious robbers, practicing the tactics of the ancient Numidians — were encountered by a column, consisting of detach- ments of the Fifty-second Line Infantry and of the 1st Chasseurs, charged, completely beaten, and scattered. About the same time, towards the end of December, 1839, the regular batallions of the Emir made an attack upon a convoy between Boufarick — a fortified camp and small village on the Harrach, in the middle of the plain of the Metidjah — andBlidah, at the foot of the Little Atlas, twenty-nine miles south by west of Algiers, on the dh-ect road to Medeah. These Arabs were like- wise charged home by the French and driven into a ravine, where they experienced a considerable loss. Let no one undervalue these sons of Northern Africa — descendants of the ancients Yandals, who, in A.D. 697 di-ove the Romans out of Africa — of whom it has been said "the very men partake of the nature of the lion." A few days afterwai'ds, on the last day of the year 1839, the united forces of the Kalifas, of Medeah, and of Milianah, Lieu- tenants of the " Modern Jugurtha," — as Abd-el-Kader has been appropriately styled — suffered a complete rout. This was the first time that the Emir's newly-created regular infantry had an oppor- tunity to measm-e themselves with the French invaders in the open field. They occupied a position chosen with no small degree of military capacity, between Blidah and the Chiffa. The ravine of the Oued (river, bed of a river, or defile) El-Kebu" was occupied by Abd-el-Kader's regular infantry, supported by from four thousand to five thousand cavalry. The ground was very favorable for defence, and the Arabs were well posted. The inequalities of the gi'ound served as intrenchments for the Kabyles, who are excel- lent marksmen, and do terrible execution with then- long guns or rifles, which will carry almost as far as European wall-pieces. Their position enabled them to deliver a plunging fire upon the French, whose counter volleys proved almost ineffectual. Marshal V.u:ee, who commanded the French column in person, soon became satisfied that the only way to decide the affau* was at once to resort to cold steel. He accordingly launched the Twenty-thu'd Line Infantry, and Second Light Infantry — a famous regiment, com- manded by the no less famous Ch^vngarnier, sm'named by his troops the " Iron Head" — also the First Chassem-s d'Afrique, against 90 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. the enemy. The ravine itself, which covered their front like a vast dry ditch, and the steep acclivity beyond, was overcome with im- petuosity, and the assailants soon found themselves face to face with the Emir's regulars, who had contracted their line to meet the French fah-ly and squarely. Fortunately for the latter, the Arabs, like the Wahabees, dread the " long nail " at the end of a musket ; and the French charge, with that Aveapon, which tests the solidity of aline, overthrew that infantry which Abd-el-Kader had taken so much pains to organize, and hurled it back upon the cav- alry, to whom it communicated the disorder. In a few minutes there was no more resistance ; every Ai'ab was seeking safety in flight. The enthusiastic intrepidity of the French horse and foot rendei'ed any further attempt to make a stand unavailing. The field of battle was covered with the corpses of the Arab inflmtry and cavalry^ over four hundred dead were counted. Three flags, or military ensigns, five hundi'ed muskets, and a piece of artilleiy, were the trophies of the day. Colonel le Pays de Bourjolly led the charge which captm-ed this gun, a present from the French Govern- ment to Abd-el-Kader on the conclusion of the last truce. With a short-sightedness about equal to that of our Washington authori- ties in regard to the Indians, as a rule, and towards the South in 1860-61, the Home Government at Paris, although they knew that the Emu- would not long keep quiet, made him a present of a section of field-artillery. As Bourjolly said with an ironical smile : " They gave him guns to shoot down then- own troops with." R.AASLOFF calls this again a " brilliant afl'au'," and Al ison says : " This success, though not on a great scale, was very important as restoring the spirits of the troops, and giving the turn to a long train of disasters." Castellane calls Oued-el-Aleg " the tomb of one of the regular batallions of the Emu-." Colonel Le Pays de Bourjolly was veiy proud of his share in a conflict which was better known in France as the affair of Oued- el-Aleg. In this officer's cheerful study or reception-room, orna- mented with trophies of his Algerian campaigns, glistening in the sunlight which floods the apartment through the broad expanse of windows opening to the sunny east, in Paris — where the wi'iter met several officers who had served m Africa with Kearny, and had many pleasant things to say of him — hung, in 1851, a grand painting of the capture of Abd-ej^Kader's cannon. In this, Bourjolly, in the uniform of his regiment and splendidly mounted, leads the BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 91 charge, spurring his white barb to cut down the artillery men at the gun. CriANGARNiER, who led the infantry, claimed a lion's share of the honor of the day, and a duel was considered imminent ; but Valee — flattei'ed in Bourjolly's report as having accompanied the cavalry — conceded the glory to the First Chasseurs d'Afrique. In the painting, however, the infantry are seen in the back ground with Marshal Valee at their head, following up the success in another quarter. From the admirable sketch of the life of Kearny, by a distin- guished New Jerseyman, it would appear as if one Colonel Guie, and not le Pays de Bourjolly, commanded the First Chasseurs d'Afrique while Kearny was attached to them. This is an error. Bourjolly continued Colonel of the Fii*st Chassem-s d'Afrique until 21st June, 1840, when he was made Marechal-de-Camp — synonymous with General of Brigade. By that time all'^he hard fighting was over, as the second engagement at the Col de Mouzaia was on 15th June, 1840, when the army was retracing its steps. If Bourjolly had not been in command, and actually with his regiment, at this time, he never could have made such a display in a pictui-e, since an hundred witnesses would have started up to disprove his claim to the honor. In November, 1851, the writer was standing on the ramparts of the Emperor's Fort — built by Charles V. — ^which dominates the city of Algiers, and commands a partial view of the rich plain which spreads itself, clothed in all the luxuriance of tropical vege- tation, from the shores of the deep blue Mediterranean to the dark blue ranges of the Atlas ; while standing there and looking down upon the plain of the Metidjah, most interesting to the native of a Northern clime in its palms and natural features peculiar to this land of story, a stranger approached him and prefacing his words with a military salute, remarked: "Monsieur," pointing to the south, " has been there." "No; this is my first visit to Africa.'' " Are you not an American ? Did you not serve in the Chasseurs d'Afrique?" "No; I only amved in Algiers yesterday." "This is strange ; I thought you were an American officer who served with that regiment, to which I belonged." This mistake of identity led to an explanation, and the soldier then went on to express his admiration for Kearny for his dash and his daring. "He was a very brave man," said he ; "I have often seen him charging the Arabs with his sword in one hand, his pistol in the other, and hia 92 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. reins in his teeth." Such testimony from an old African trooper tells the whole story, and it was corroborated by others. Several officers who had served with him, Avho w ere encountered on the passage between Algiers and Marseilles, were loud in his praise. One, who was a Marechal-de-Logis (Quartermaster's Sergeant of Cavalry) in one of the companies of the Fu'st Chasseiu's dAfrique, which made the campaigns of 1839-40 (in 1851 a Lieutenant in the same regiment) spoke of him in about the same terms as the old soldier who thought that he recognized Kearny on the summit of the Chateau de I'Empereur. It would require too much S2>ace to follow Kearny through all the details of his Algerian experiences, it will be sufficient to note the most remarkable. The best proof that he profited by all that he saw is the development of ability disclosed in the last year of his life, when he had attained a posi- tion to show how great he really was, and how much gi'eater he might have become had he survived. In Algiers he learned the enormous capabilities of a well-trained infantry. He never could speak in terms of sufficient commenda- tion of the French Light Infantry. He said that theu" conduct was something magnificent, their coolness combined with enthusi- asm ; their orderly disorder ; accommodating discipline to the terribly broken and difficult ground on which they had to operate ; then* individual intelligence and combined action. He was justi- fied in his eulogies, for no country ever possessed a more perfect light infantry than that which so often scaled the Atlas and cleared the way for the columns and trains. Fine as the cavaliy was with which he served, noble its deeds, and wonderful its endm-ance, it was ever the light infantry for which he reserved his enthusiasm. This was just, for if ever there was a difficult country to g\ain ground in against an intrepid foe — which only needed scientific ti-aining and good weapons to secure theii' independence — that country was the Atlas. To restrain the natives the French were obliged to maintain an ai'my of 100,000 men. Pdlszky, who bases his statements on authentic documents, sets down this number, and adds that the colony costs France $20,000,000 a yeai'. The biogi-apher of Mar- shal Valee admits that he had an army of 57,000 strong, excellent troops, no one can deny. He had girdled that portion of the plain of the Metidjah, which had been colonized and brought under cul- tivation, with a chain of camps, forts and block-houses ; and yet in BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 93 November-December, 1839, "all the Province of Algiers was in volved in a general blaze." In 1840 the natives were driven back apparently across the Lesser Atlas, defeated and disorganized. Notwithstanding, in May, 1841, they were back again in the Metid - jah, and slaughtered a whole company — 49 men lost their heads, and one hid in the bushes, severely wounded — the garrison of a block-house, not more than nine miles from Algiers, nor three from Delhi-Ibrahim, a considerable military post, not more than three or four miles W. by S. of that city. Well might Lamping exclaim : " So you may judge tolerably well of what is meant by the French territory." A people who could defend their independence with such indomitable pertinacity were antagonists worthy of any troops in the world. Where would the South be now if they had evinced a like unconquerable spirit under disadvantages as dispro- portioned and odds as overwhelming. The combats already described, as well as minor collisions, taught the Emu- that it would not do to risk the troops, which had cost him so much labor to organize, in any more pitched battles. Many times his banner was descried in the plain floating over his scarlet batallions and squadrons in the distance, but on all occasions the combat which the French sought diligently was refused by their leader. On 25th April, 1840, Marshal Valee determined to carry the war into the interior, and on the 27th marched from Blidah upon Medeah. Between these two places rose the mountain of the Mou- zaia, 5,117 feet high. To afford some idea of the difiiculties which the invader had to encounter, the new military road from Blidah to Medeah, laid out in the most scientific mannei", crosses the Chiffa no less than sixty-two times. Nevertheless, this road, a marvel of engi- neering, becomes impassable at times in winter, and its mainten- ance requires constant repairs. Like the Khyber Pass, in Af- ghanistan, it might be the grave of an invading army in the hands of an enemy which knew hoAV to combine their efforts and avail themselves of the natm-al difficulties. The road by which Valee advanced was doubtless that followed by the Roman legions. It is longer and even more difficult than the new one con- structed by the French. • It crosses the Col de Tenyah, or rather Col de Mouzaia, for Tenyah simply signifies "Peak of the Moun- tain." The defile Tenyah begins about nine miles west of the Haouch (farm) of Mouzaia, which again is about fifteen miles from 94 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Blidah, and twenty-five from Algiers. It requires a peaceable march of two hoiu-s to reach the neck or cleft of the mountain through which the road crosses. Lampikg, who climbed it more than once in the course of the various campaigns in which he was engaged, says that from the foot of the Col de Mouzaia up to its highest point, is full seven hours' march when no resistance is en- countered. In May, 1840, that ascent which required seven hours in-.peaceful times, was to be made under a constant fire of sharp- shooters, each of whom selected his man. On both sides, the defile is partially cultivated, but the greater portion of the narrow path, traversed by many rivulets, leads through a rough thicket, some- times interrupted by bold lime cliffs. Towards the crest of the range it becomes continually naiTOwer ; the cliffs from both sides ap- proaching each other so closely that scarcely four men can march abreast ; finally two conical rocks form a kind of natural gate. Be- sides all this, the road clings in many places to the sides of a j^re- cipitous mountain. * In the depths below, to the right, so far down that its murmur can scarcely be heard in the dry season, in summer trickles a thread of water, in winter roars an irresistible ton-ent; while to the left hand soar the rocky cliffs. In the distance — as seen through the pass — soars the snow-capped peak of Nador, be- neath which nestles the objective of Marshal Vaj>ee, Medeah, em- bosomed in the luxuriant gToves of fruit-trees, the fragrance of whose flowers, in their season, are said to be sickening to those who seek their cool shelter to sleep over night. Raasloff, the distin- guished Danish officer who, like Keaknt, served as a volunteer under Valee, in his interesting work, published at "Altona" in •1845, furnishes a view of this defile at the instant when the French troops were forcing it, in October, 1840, climbing the serpentine track which clings, mid-air, to the precipice, with the Kabyles, con- spicuous in then- white "bournous" or cloaks, firing upon them from every covert afforded by the overhanging or projecting rocks. At first sight a soldier would agree with Pulszkt that fifty resolute men might, here, detain an army for several days. Facts, however, have demonstrated the truth of Marshal Bugeatid's ad- dress to his officers at Orleansville that " an army which knows how to obey, an army which knows how to suffer, is the hope and strength of the country ; the time will never come when it will be found wantino- to France." Accordingly, in 1830, Marechal-de-Camp (Brigadier-General) Achakd, with a single batallion of the 37th BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 95 Infantiy of the Line, carried the Pass of tlie Mouzaia, although it was defended by 2,000 Turks, Kabyles, and Arabs. The foremost of the French rushed with j&xed bayonets into what seemed tlio very jaws of deatli; but, says Lamping, the Arab or Bedouin, the Ivabyle, who is great and admirable at the hour of death, who never begs his life or utters an unmanly complaint, has " a holy hor- ror of the bayonet." Achaed's Infantry burst through the African ranks with a heroism Avhich had its parallel in that of the four Hungarian batallions, which under General Guyon, carried the Branyiszko Pass, 5th February, 1849. Keaiiny was now to witness and have a share in an exploit simi- lar to that of Guyon's, which was almost dramatic in its effects, if death had not made it sublime. The Prince de Joinville, in his " Army of the Potomac," refers to Kearny's participatiou in this severe fight on the Mouzaia, which he couples with Solferino, as if to have heen there was indeed something to speak of. From the 1st May, starting from the "Tomb of the Christian" — a ruined monument, so styled, in reality an ancient burial-place of the Mauritanian kings, — till the 12th of the same month, when the army reached the foot of the northern range, proper, of the Atlas, every mile of the advance had been won by a combat. The march was one continual skirmish. The column might almost have been said to have cleaved its way onward as a ship ploughs through a head ^ea, only tlie waves were not impassive adversaries, but surges of u-regular cavalry, which made incessant and harrassing attacks on the French flanks, front, and rear, and returned shot for shot, and cut of yataghan for slash of sabre. In repelling these assaults, the First Chasseurs, to which Kearny was attached, were invariably successful, executing a number of brilliant charges. In one of these, the Duke of Aumale, the youngest son of the king, made a dash with a single company of this regiment and achieved a brilliant success, by the rapidity and hardihood of his manceuvre. The manner in which the Arab horse are accustomed to fight accounts for the old soldier's description of Kearny's conduct on such occasions, " charging with his sabre in one hand, his pistol in the other, and his reins in his teeth." The Bedouin, or Ai-ab horse? hover round a column all day with wild yells of "Lu-Lu," gallop- ing up without order, within 80 or 100 yards of the French sharp- shooters, " and discharging their rifles, at full speed. The horse then tm-ns off of his own accord, and the rider loads his piece as 96 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. he retreats ; and this is repeated again and again all the day long." " The Bedouins never wait for a close encounter hand to hand when charged by our cavalry ; they disperse in all directions, but instantly return. The only diiFerence between them and the Nu- midians, of whom Satxust says, ' They fight flying, and retreat, only to return more numerous than before,' is, that the Numidians of old fought with bows, and the Bedouins with rifles." " This kind of fighting is equally dangerous and fatiguing to us. It is no joke to be firing in all directions, from sunrise to sunset, and to march at the same time, for we seldom halt to fight at our ease. The general only orders a halt when the rear-guard is so fiercely attacked as to require reinforcements. Any soldier of the rear-guard who is wounded or fatigued has the pleasant prospect of falling into the hands of the Bedouins, and having his head cut off by them. One comfort is, that this operation is speedily performed ; two or tlu'ee strokes of the yataghan are a lasting cure for all pains and sorrows." Abd-ei. Kader had neglected nothing which could render the defence of the Col de Mouzaia successful. To the natural bulwarks of this formidable pass, he had added abattis, entrenchments armed with batteries, and a strong redoubt, on the very culminatmg point or principal peak. To man these works he had drawn together large numbers of troops, and especially all the sub-clans of the gi'eat and valiant tribe of the IMouzaia. These last had always shown themselves the most intrepid of the .Arab infimtry whenever the French had forced the passage of the Col. The very geogi'aphical position of this tribe of the Kabyles had won for it the highest consideration from the Turks, while they governed Algiers. It depended dh-ectly on the Agaa of the Capital ; it had received large concessions of fine land in the plain ; it was exempted from tribute of all kinds ; and was charged with a sort of supervision over the other mountain tribes. On the 12th May, at 3 o'clock in the morning, the Duke of Or- leans, pointing to the crest of the Mouzaia — seven hours' march from the foot of the mountain — and the entrenchments which crowned it, crowded with defenders, whose white garments glistened like silver in the rising sun^ — addressed these words to the French sokUers, impatient to begin ; " My boys, the Arabs are expecting us, and France is looking on." Then he gave the signal for the attack. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 97 In an instant the scarped flank of the rocky heights was covered with French soldiers, leaping, climbing, mounting almost at a run. The di*ums beat, the clarions sounded the charge; the officers animated the men with then.' voices and by their examples. The first column gained the lowest plateau without much difficulty. Thei-e they found themselves before three lofty swells, or rounded elevations, disposed in echelon, each crowned with a formidable redoubt. At this point the resistance was terribly resolute. From the ramparts of these natm-al forts, strengthened artificially, the Ai-abs ctelivered a plunging and murderous fire upon the assailants. Between these, three masses of rock thrust themselves forth at intermediate points, which afforded covers to the enemy, ai-med with "long rifles, which carry almost as far as wall pieces." Thus sheltered, the Ai-abs kept up a continual and lively du-ect and cross-fire upon the French, who, to overcome the ascent of the abrupt rocky steep, were obliged to cling to every projecting rock, to every bush, and consequently were unable to reply. Soon a thick smoke enveloped the mountain like a cloud, and nothing more was visible to the rest of the army below. This state of affairs lasted several hours. During this time nothing was heard but an almost continual roll of musketry, to which the artilleiy added then- reports like single and severe claps in a' thunder storm, and ever and anon, as the fire slackened, the progress of the attack could be distinctly measured, by the responses of the drums and bugles of the Second Light Infantry, higher and higher, amid the cloud which enveloped the mountain. At length, about mid-day, a peculiar flourish of clarions or bugles announced a decided success. The Second Light Infantry had carried the second and commanding peak. Then the two other columns moved in turn, and began to ascend the heights under the fire of the enemy. The column Lamoriciere having made itself master of a wooded ridge which extended to . the right of the peak, the Arabs, who were dislodged by this success, came together again in his rear, and posted themselves in a ravine. By this disposition they were enabled to stop the march of the column d'Houdetot, mth which the Duke of Orleans advanced. At once the young general ordered the soldiers to unsling theii' knapsacks and make a bayonet charge. To this the Arabs opposed such a vigorous resistance that all the troops in succession became engaged. The very staff was obliged to cut in and defend them- 98 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENEEAL PHILIP KEARNT. selves. General ScHRAjni, Chief of the Duke's staff, fell wounded at the side of the Duke of Orleans, and other officers were hit. Fortunately a battalion of the Twenty-third succeeded, in a mea- 8ui"e, in turning the ravine. They rushed with the bayonet upon the Ai'abs, who, taken in flank by this luiexpected attack, disbanded and fled. Meanwhile, the first column Duviviers had arrived at the foot of the main redoubt. There they were received with such terrific discharges of musketry that even these veterans recoiled. It was now three o'clock in the afternoon. ' For twelve hours the» brave men had not ceased to march, to climb, and to fight. On all sides the men were falling, overcome with heat, fatigue, and thirst. A last eflbrt remained to be made, the most important of all, and the least indecision would have compromised the success of a day so heroically begun. General Changaenier comprehended this critical moment, and turning towards the Second Light Infantry, he placed his sword under his arm as coolly as if on the exercise ground, and gave the order, "Forward." At the sound of his voice, so reas- sm-ing in its calmness, the diaims beat and bugles sounded the charge, the ranks reformed, the soldiers rushed xapon the redoubt, some succeeded in making a lodgment within the entrenchments. The Ai-abs, thus vigorously assailed, defended themselves no less resolutely, but at length, attacked on all sides, they began to waver, then to yield ground, and finally fled before the French, who swept everything before them. Then the tricolored flag, planted on the very summit of the Atlas, was saluted by the roll of all the di'ums, the flourishes of trumpets, and the enthusiastic shouts of the army. The Col de Mouzaia was gallantly carried, (after a desperate fight like that of Hooker's at Lookout Mountain "above the clouds,")* * Battles above the cloubs are not so rare as many think. In 161)2, there was not only a battle fought, but a campaign carried on, on a level with the limit of perpetual snow. Marshal Catinat, "■ PerelePensee" a term applied a century afterwards to Napo- leon, established his camp on the summit of the Cottian Alps, near Peuestrclles, a spot still renowned in military annals as the " Pre de Catinet." The remnants of the French and Sardinian entrenchments are still to be discerned amid the snow. In the previous century the same nations encountered in as elevated regions, and pitched their tents amid the clouds, under the famous Lesdiguieres and Prince Thomas of Savoy, grandfather of the great Prince Eugbnio von Savov, as he wrote his name in the languages of the three tations from which he derived his blood. lu 1797, on the 3-2d March, Massena defeated the Austrians on the summit of the Julian Alps, when cavalry charged and artillery manosuvred on fields of ice, while the infantry waded to the attack through deep snow drifts. Some of the fortresses which constituted the "Armour of Piedmont" are on peaks so lofty that their garrisons often basked in the sunshine, \"hen the lower world was entirely shut out from them by strata of clouds. BIOGEAPHT OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 99 and Medeah occupied. This Algerian " battle above the clouds " was as much more romantic in its incidents than our own, as the Atlas Mountains exceed in altitude the Lookout range, but not more glorious. The disposition of the ground simply made the effect finer. So much space has been given to the consideration of the de- tails of this battle of the Col de Mouzaia, because it very much resem- bled our own battle of the South Mountam, 14th September, 1862, which the wi'iter looks upon as the most brilliant feat of arms in the lo!ig list of glories Avhich the Army of the Potomac can claim as their own. The success in the Tenyah Pass, as in that sunny Sun- day fight in Turner's Gap, depended on the possession of a peak to the right of the road: only the Algerian Peak was 960 metres, 3,200 feet in height, and the Maryland, 1,000 feet. Lamoriciere andr Changarnier had noble representatives in Meajde and Doubled ay, and DuviviERin poor Reno. The Duke of Orleans, the hero of the day, might have been proud of such a substitute as Hooker ; but in McClell.an, Valee had a very poor proxy. It would have been well for the former if he had possessed a little of the latter's iron will and severity. There is a great parity of circumstances between the advance of McClellan, from Washington, through Frederick, to Antietam, and of Vaxee from Blidah to Medeah, besides the mere fact that in both, a mountain range, vigorously defended, had to be over- come. It took McClellan twelve days to advance forty-five miles, over excellent roads, and through an open and friendly country, without opposition — Valee, the same length of time to fight his way fifteen miles through an extremely difiicult country, against the opposition of every soul in that country who could bear arms ; when every hour brought a sku-mish, and every day a bloody con- flict. McClellan had ample supplies, and troops double the num- ber of his adversary. Valee could depend upon nothing except what he could carry with him, and the Arabs outnumbered him at least two to one, fighting on their own soil, every inch of which was well known to every man, with a virulence and courage which the rebels might equal, but could not surpass. When Valee did cofue in contact with the enemy entrenched and admh-ably posted in his mountain fortress, he inflicted such a defeat upon him as needean is chargeable with a total want of strategy at South Mountain, for he could have turned the rebel po- sitions there through Braddock's Gap, a com-se that would have ob- viated a hard day's fight, and have produced far gi-eater results, with a much less sacrifice of life. But, Valee, if not a man of genius, Avas a capable and experienced soldier. No wonder that Kearny, when he looked upon McClellan, looked back, as he wi'ote, with deep regi'et upon the absence or want of such brilliant commanders as those xinder whom he had seen the gi-eat African chain conquered and crowned with the ensigns of France. Abd-el Kader's troops, thus driven from then- position — selected with so much addi-ess, fortified with so much care, and defended with so much resolution — fell back into the " Wood of Olives," an- other strong post. This is a narrow tongue of land, sejiarating the water of the Chiffa from those of Oued-el-Djer, or Djels, midway be- tween the Col de Mouzaia and Medeah. Here another short, but severe combat ensued, in which Ciiangarnier again distinguished himself, and dislodged the Arabs with some loss inflicted upon them, and impressed them with still stronger convictions of the fu- tility of further resistance to such troops as he commanded. On the 17th May, the French army advanced down the Southern slope of the mountain and occupied Medeah, one of the objectives of the French operations. The other was Milianah next to be assailed. These keypoints occupy the same position, relative to Algiers, to- wards the south-west, as Constantine, towards the east by south, and constituted Abp-el-Kader's chief strongholds in this direction. Medeah is situated on a plateau on the summit of the Lesser At- las, sm-rounded by a belt of gardens and enormous groves of fruit trees, jjarticularly oranges, almonds, and olives; all the tropical fruits, however, are produced in abundance. It is one of the old- est cities in Africa, of Roman origin ; and an immense aqueduct, of Roman construction, clothed with creepers, winding like a serpent and following the levels, still conveys to the town the water of tlie mountain springs, and feeds its numerous fountains. It was once very populous ; and this aqueduct and other Roman remains attest its former importance. The plateau upon which it is built has a rapid descent towards BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 101 the valleys of the sea-coast, while it slopes more gently down in the du'ection of the desert, so that the town may be said to look into the Sahara. Its altitude above the sea is 3,018 feet. This plateau sinks sheer down on two sides, and these precipices make it susceptible of easy defence. A rather high stone wall, one mile in cu'cumference, encompasses the town, pierced by five gates, two to the north, and three respectively to the south, east, and west. These gates, in 1840, were weakly defended by a few loopholes. Above the south gate two old 8-pounder Spanish culverins were mounted, which were captm-ed by the French, and preserved as trophies. Like Algiers, Medeah has a Casbah and a very pretty palace, the residence of the former Bey of Titteri. Such was the first purely Ai-ab to^vn which Kearny saw, and thence he could look down into the great desert, of which such wonderfal stories had been told. Here he had an opportunity to note the marked difierences in the climate of Algiers. In winter the weather is very cold, and in summer the heat is excessive. But when does the summer commence 1 The military author of a "Summer in Sahara" speaks, 22d May, 1853, of "winter still hav- ing one foot planted on the white summits of the Mouzaia, eight miles N.N.W. of the town ;" and Pulszky alludes to the snow cap- ped mountains, which cool the hot and dry winds of the desert. The mountain Ouanseris, 5,904 feet high, easily seen from Medeah, sixty-five miles to the southeast, in January, 1842, was all white with snow ; and some sharp needles of the Jm'jura, or Djordjoi-a, about the same distance to the eastward, are covered with snow the whole year round. Castellane, in describing Mascara, still farther to the south, but on the same range, says, " the climate is frightful during the winter in this part of the country ; snow, rain — rain which beats upon the tent like strokes of a stick — ^hail, winds, and every irregularity of climate." At Medeah, three mountain ranges seem to come together ; one from the west, one from the north, and one from the east. Towards the south, had the human vision sufficient range, Keaexy might have beheld the Great Desert — not altogether so in reaUty, since French military exploration has proved it to be an ocean of sand, thickly dotted with islands of verdm-e and fertility, with abundant water, at no veiy great depth, responding to artesian wells — ^for, 102 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. as before stated, Medeah, from the elevation of its site, overlooks all intervening objects in that dii-ection. Lamping, who camj^aigned in this country in 1840-1, remarks that the tract of country must have been thickly peopled at some former time, judging from the cemeteries which he and his comrades saw in then- marches in the district of Medeah. " These are generally near the tomb of a marabout, and of enor- mous extent : they might truly be called cities of the dead. The gi-aves are all exactly alike ; no distinction seems to exist among the dead. All are carefully covered with masonry, to keep the jackals from scratching up the bodies ; and indeed no one can wonder that the Bedouins should wish to rest undisturbed in death after such restless, wandering hves. Each gi-ave was marked by a large up- right stone, but no date told the dying day of him who lay beneath it, no escutcheon proclaimed his bhth and descent." On the 20th of May, Valee — having left behind him in Medeah a garrison of two thousand fom* hundi'ed men — retraced his steps across the Atlas to the farm of the Mouzaia, at the foot of the mountain, on the Northern side. The indefatigable Emir did not permit the peaceful prosecution of this march. A veiy. severe attack upon the rear guard occm-red on the 20th, in the " Wood of Olives," in which tliat picked body of men, the Kiflemen, ( Chasseurs c?' Orleans, or de Vincemies) suffered such terrible losses that it might have been looked upon as destroyed as a battalion, and as such it took no further part in this campaign. The first period of the gi-eat spring operations was ended. The Duke of Orleans and the Duice of Aumale, both of whom had evinced the highest distinction in the discharge of their fimctions, bade adieu to the army to return to France. All the disposable troops were now brought together, and every possible preparation made for the next move. While the French were straining every nerve to reorganize their cohunns, Abd-el-Kader was not idle, and sought by able disposi tions to render his numerous but scattered forces available for a protracted defensive. One body remamed in the neighborhood of Algiers to harass the territory around this city ; a second maintained the blockade of Medeah ; a thhd was posted in the lowlands along the River Cheliff to observe and obstruct the advance of a French column, upon MHianah ; while a fom-th was posted at the bridge of El Cantara, which spanned this river to the west of MiUanah, ou the route to Mascara and the province of Oran. BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 103 On the 5th June, the French column, ten thousand strong, started afi-esh from Blidah ; pressed forward from the west end of the p\am of the Metidj ah into the Atlas; on the 7th passed the Cap or Col de Gontas — about fifteen mUes east of Milianah, and about eighteen miles west of Medeah — and on the 8th captured Milianah after a short but brisk engagement, fortunately in time to arrest the con- flagration, kindled by order of Abd-el-K^vder. This, but for the efforts of the French, would shortly have laid the whole place in ashes. Like Rotopschin, Abd-ei^Kader resolved to destroy his Moscow with fire rather than leave it in a condition to tempt the return of its own population, which he had driven forth to settle in a more inaccessible place, or to serve as a permanent shelter to the invader. An immense convoy of ammunition and provisions had accompanied the march of his troops, partly to serve as a sui^ply for a garrison of three thousand men, which Valee established in Milianah, and partly to re-victual Medeah, and thus enable its garrison to hold out thi'ough the winter. MUianah, situated about eighty miles west-south-west of Algiers, nestles in the bosom of the mountains, surrounded on all sides by an abundance of water, the greatest of blessings in this torrid clime. Towards the north and west the ground is flat, with a gentle descent to the plain of Cheliff. Towards the east and south it sinks precipi- tously from the wall of the city down into a very deep vallej^, wliich, full of the most beautiful gardens, presents a prospect from the town which can scarcely be exceeded in beauty. This valley of the Cheliff was to Milianah — the Richmond of Abd-el-Kaoer — what the Shenandoah Valley was to the rebel capital. It was his granary ; the soil scarcely needed the hand of industry to produce the richest crops. Magnificent harvests rewarded the rude Arab irrigation. On these two last mentioned sides (eastward and south- ward) Milianah, Uke Medeah and Constantine, is not susceptible of attack. Milianah, the ancient Maniana, is another evidence of the stra- tegical engineering of the Romans. Its site, like every other selected by that wonderful mUitary nation — of whom it was said : " A God must have instructed them in the art of war" — rendered it a mihtary post of the liighest importance. When Abd-el-Kades consigned it to the flames, it wa^ indeed the Emu-'s Moscow. It was his chosen city, which he had destined to become the center of Ai-ab industry. There he had constructed his forges ; and all his 104 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. grand establishments, since situated on a detached mountain plateau, even as if on a cornice, ("e/i corniche") its position was admii'ably calculated against any attack, except that of Em-0]3ean discipline and artillery. Handsome houses, flagged with marble, with gal- leries in the second story, sui^ported by graceful columns and magnificent Moorish sculptm'es, attested the opulence of the ancient inhabitants. Four miles to the northeast, the mountain Zakkar towers to the height of five thousand and thhty -one feet, the sixth peak of the Atlas in altitude. From its flank bursts forth abundant fountams of the purest water, not only suflicient to supj^ly the town below — ^built on a spur of the lofty source — ^but susceptible of fui-- nishiag motive power to a large number of manufactories. When the French entered by the Gate of Zakkar, all that remained of this comparative magnificence was the palace of the Eimr and a few other buildings. Lajviping speaks of Milianah as besieged and taken by the French on this occasion : " One half of the besiegers assailed the town from below, while the rest, having planted some cannon on a height commanding the town, poured then- shot down upon it. When Abd-el-Kader saw he could hold the place no longer, he determined to retreat by the only gate which was left still free, and first rode, sword in hand, through the streets, cutting do-\vn every one who would not follow him. Nearly all effected then* retreat in safety, and most of the famines settled on the northern slope of the Lesser Atlas." This bears out the wi'iter's recollections of Kearny's account of these operations ; he always spoke of this captm-e as the siege of Mili- anah, and referred to the cemeteries — such as excited theast onish- ment of Lajveping — in connection with this service. He said that one of these old Turkish graves made a capital place to sleep in dur- ing the investment. The head, foot, and side stones at once afforded shelter from the wind, and kept a man from rolling out. Wrapped in his cloak, or burnous, he often slept soundly and comfortably over one of the former inhabitants, sleeping still more soundly underneath him. Castellane refers to a "cemetery which received, in 1840, an enthe garrison." It is situated at the foot of the walls, and as this is one point fi"om which the town was assailed, it' is very likely that this is the spot to which Kearny referred. Having left a garrison of three thousand men in Milianah, Valee marched thence, 12th June, through the Djendel — ^the district of BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 105 country between that town and Medeah. Down to 1841 these towns had been, as it were, advanced posts of French- African occu- pation. After that time they became the basis of French occupa- tion in Algeria. This movement was for the purpose of supplying Medeah, and in order to do so, it was necessary to cross a spur of the Col de Mouzaia, the third time this spring, but now from south to north, and not, as previously, from north to south. On this occasion the Zouaves — imitation Arabs — moved with more celerity than the real natives, and were beforehand in the oc- cupation of the pass. By a manoeuvre which proved that Abd-el- Kadeb was an intuitive General, the Emu- sm-passed the experi- enced leaders of the French in their own profession, and came near invohang the whole column in destruction. Finding that he could not anticipate the French Light Infantry, he hurried forward his Arabs, j)arallel to the French, in perfect silence, under the blind of a rocky ridge. Simultaneously, 15th June, both reached the sum- mit of the mountain. The van and main body were permitted to pass unmolested, but the rear-guard was saluted with an unex- pected volley from an invisible enemy. This fire covered the ground with dead and wounded. Profiting by the surprise, the Arabs threw themselves upon the French, and a hand to hand com- bat ensued, in which the Ai-abs, four times repulsed, retm-ned as often to the attack. Bayonets, modeled after the yataghan, were crossed with the original weapon, swords with the long and keen, but rude and home-made dagger of the Arabs, and the discharges of the rifles and muskets were answered by pistol-shots, muzzle to muzzle. Of the 800 Zouaves and Chassem-s de Vincennes, on whom as usual the brunt of the combat fell, 120 were killed, and 300 wounded. Raasloff says 32 dead, 290 wounded; and adds that it reqmred a lively fire of Ai'tillery to bring off the remains of the rear-guard. Wliile any soldier must admu'e the disciplined coui-age of the French troops, he cannot refuse the highest meed of admu-ation to Abd-el-Kader and the regulars he had formed. Again and again the Emu- led these regulars to the charge, and, judging from results, it would have gone very hard with the French if the Ai-ab chief had had a competent artillery, with which to an- swer that of the French Marshal. Valee having suppUed Medeah, again dispatched Changarnier back to MiUanah with 5,000 men, to escort a convoy of provisions. He was again attacked by Abd-el- Kader, and only repulsed the Emu- after another severe engage- 106 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. ment. It v/as now the end of June, and the heat had become so intense that farther operations were impossible, and on the 5th July the army was placed in summer quarters, men and animals pretty well used up. The cavalry sent over from France was so thorouo-h- \j disorganized, that of the ten squadrons there was no longer any trace; and even the GUasseurs d'Afrique, mounted on Moorish ~\barbs, the artillery and train, could only parade a very few horses which were in ser\dceable condition. Of the men, 7,000 died from disease between August and December — a mortality of about one- eighth, without counting those who fell in battle, or had already succumbed from sickness during the thi-ee previous months. Nevertheless, the return of the hot season brought with it no repose for the troops — ^is the remark of the Duke of Aumale. The summer and autumn passed in supplying the posts which the French had occupied in the spring, an operation as difficult and as mm'der- ous as then- conquest had proved. The bullets of the foe, the climate, and incessant fatigue, thinned the ranks of the soldiery, and as a just compensation, carried off veiy many of the officers. The Duke of Aum^vle, in his historical sketches of the Zouaves and Foot Chassem's or Riflemen — then* real title might be trans- lated African Foot Cavalry — ^Paris, 1855, says it would be impos- sible, in a succinct narrative, to describe all the combats which took place during this bloody campaign on the plain of the Metidjah ; at the Col (pass) of Mouzaia; at the foot of the Chenouan ; in the valley of the Cheliff; on the Ouamri; at the Gontas. Every day was marked by an engagement, every inch of ground was disputed. The cavahy of all the tribes of the provinces of Algiers and of Oran, supported and kept in hand by the Emu-'s '^ Meds" — ^the name given by the French soldiers to Abd-el-Kader's regular cav- alry, clad entu'ely in red or scarlet — inundated the plain ; every passage of the mountain was defended by the Emu-'s regular infan- try, and by thousands of Kabyles. This insures the fact that Kearny learned his business in a very hard but thorough school, for the lightest of the French trooper's duties in Africa is less \\ke a military promenade than many deemed the worst in European soldiering. For fortitude, as well as for gal- lantry, he won equal consideration, and in one of the marches (when, under a torrid sun, water was so scarce and thu-st so burning that the men thi'ew themselves down to lick xip a puddle) Kearnt marched on foot to add his example to those afforded by his regular BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 107 comrades. Moreover, on this occasion, when many had to be brought in on ambulances or vehicles, he came in among the fore- most on foot, high in sph'it, however exhausted in strength. It is a great pity that his journal of these trials is lost, for this expedition, although " illustrated by so many deeds of glory," was attended Avith no results adequate to its harassing labors, inasmuch as the French colmnns on their retui-n to the coast were followed by the Arabs of Abd-el K.u)ER, who swept with fire and sabre the plains betAveen the Atlas and the capital of Algiers. Nevertheless, it taught IvEAR>fY many a lesson, tm-ned to account in his after years ; in his Mexican campaigns ; his expedition agamst the Indians of Oregon ; and that year of service against the rebels — lessons which boi-e fruit in the admii-able discipline and police of his First New Jersey Brigade, and in the example he set to the officers and men of the army ; an example imitated so honorably by Bekrt, who followed his type to glory at Chancellorsville, and Birney, who, up to the end of the war, helped to make the reputations of others, and win successes of which the rewards were reaped by immediate superiors. Paris, April 20th, 1840. Sir : — I have the honor to inform you, that I left Sanmur on the 25th of March, since which time ill health has obhged me to remain at this place. In accordance vnth. my letter to j'ou of October 16th, 1839, after remaining attached to the Cavalry School at Saumur for six months, for the purposes therein mentioned, I have left it to carry out the objects proposed when I came abroad : that is, to, by personal examination, make myself acquainted with the practices of cavalry regi- ments in the French and other services. In that same letter I mentioned that I thought it would be profitable to visit the regiments serving in Africa, as there alone would I have the opportunity of observing troops in active service in the field. This present spring's campaign, under the Duc d'Orleajs^s and Marshal Valee, has presented an occasion which I am anxious to improve. It is true that you have not signified your opinion to me since receiving my communication, but as you had laid out no system of travels for me in particular, when I left America, I presumed that had it not met with your approbation, you would have signified the same to me. Indirectly and unofiicially, however, I have heai-d that in respect to the plans in my letter, you made no objections ; though, indeed, so unofficially- has it reached meeculiar situation it is a circumstance to aid me in making up my determination. Were the campaign a thing I qould see some months later, I would be far better satisfied in waiting till I heard from you explicitly, and till my health, which has been extremely delicate, was in a greater measure restored to me. But that cannot be, as after the middle of June all active operations cease, and do not recommence till late in fall, or the ensuing 108 BIOGRAPHY OF ILUOE-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. year ; and that this ig a subject more worthy of my attention than aught else, I am fully persuaded of from what service I have had in the Dragoons, and more especially from our Colonel's high opinion of the ends to be obtained by an exam- ination of what a theatre of war must constantly present. It is, sir, with extreme regret that I find myself without -WTitten intructions for myself, and directions to our Minister at this Court, to exercise his influence in my behalf, for I am thus obliged to go as a mere private officer traveling, instead of an accredited agent of the public, which throws in my path obstacles, where there otherwise would be none. Might I then ask for instructions, it would be. more satisfactory, as assuring me of your approval of such plans as I may have laid down, or giving me orders to pursue another course. I should think it most advisable for me, in the course of the ensuing summer, after my retm-n, to be present at the Camp of Instruction at Lundville, where, annually, five to six thousand cavalry are assembled ; and, also, to visit the German and English Cav- alry, As the system of schools varies always essentially from the practices in regiments, I have refrained from sending communications to the Department which might be incorrect in then- conclusions, as applied to the French Army generally, and wait until I have studied regiments in detail. Still I have seen sufficient to be convinced that though the French theory of tactics is the most per- fect, and though (as they are allowed by all nations) their manner of going through a campaign is the least harrassing and destructive of soldiers, that here the study of their army stops. For their grooming and the state of their horses, their stables, and everything that refers to them, their quarters, and everytking pertaining to high discipline in garrison and military neatness, are everywhere here wretched in the extreme — to a degree that would not be tolerated nor dreamt of in the most slovenly company of our whole regiment. These points must b< studied in England, where, perhaps, they are carried to an excess, and in Germany where, both in the Prussian and Austrian cavalry, I believe it must be perfect. Sir, I leave Paris to-morrow. The campaign Avas to have opened on the 20th April (to-day), and I indulge the hope of, by rapid traveling, not beuag more than a week behind hand. I have the honor to be. With high consideration, Your obedient servant, (Signed) P. KEARNY, Firsl Lieutenant First Dragoons- The Honorable J. R. Poinsett, Secretary of War. AiiGiERs, 7th May, 1840. MON. General VISCOUNT DE SCHRAMM. General :-~I take the liberty of sending yon this letter at the same time that I transmit to you the letters of General Cass, Ambassador of the United States near His Majesty the King of the I'rench, addressed, the one to yourself, the other to General Viscount de Rxjmigny, m the hope that you will have the kindness to BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 109 obtain for me an authorization from His Highness the Duke op Orleans, or from Marslial Valee to join the first expedition which can take place during the time I can remain in Algiers. I would not liave taken the liberty to make this request if I was not an officer sent out by the Government of the United States, with the object of studying my profession in Europe in order to introduce improvements into our Cavalry. With this intention I have been attached for the last seven months to the Royal Cavalry School at Saumur ; and I am one of the three officers admitted by the Government in last October. At present I have the permission of my Govern- ment to travel during the rest of the year, to observe the practicable working o£ the regiments themselves. In doing so, I am entirely free to dispose of my time as seems most advantageous to myself. Still as our ambassador has no positive instructious fi'om our Government to prefer this request to the French Govern- ment, he considered that the letters addressed to you and to General RUMIGNY (ydth. whom he had the honor of being acquainted) would be sufficient to obtain this authorization, if such a request was a proper one to bo granted. A severe sickness pi-evented me from arriving in Africa before the departure of this expedition, but if it should last some time longer I would be happy to join it immediately. In any event, I request your intermediation to obtain for me an authorization to join the next, even if it consists of only a single regiment. This request is not made with the intention of annojdng you by joining the General's staff, which must always be sufficiently numerous, but to attach myself to some regiment of Cavalry which belongs to an Army Corps. I have the honor to be, mth the highest consideration. Your very humble and very obedient servant, P. KEARNY, Lieutenant Dragoons, United States Army. ALGrEBs, May 8th, 1840. Thb Honobabls J. R. POINSETT : Sir : — I have the honor to inform you that I arrived here yesterdaj'^, the 7th of May. I was unable to leave on the 21st, as I had expected, General Cass changing his intention as to applying for me for an authorization from the French Minister of War to join the intended expedition; moreover, I was detained two more days, till the 24th of May [April] , in waiting for the private letters he had offered me to Generals Schramm and Rusiigny, and which were necessary as introduction to theij- notice. This made me too late for the packet from Toulon of the 27th, and it only leaves weekly. Our Consul here, IMr. Jacrous, has, since my arrival, exercised in my behalf the influence he has ; but, as I had not an authorization from the Minister of War, the commandant of the place, Colonel DE MARENGO, did not feel himself entitled, though anxious to serve me, to grant me a pass to join the armj^, but forwards by to-day's express, my letters for me. As I find that the army left on the 2Gth, from Blida, and' the communications are impracticable but for large convoys and escorts, I have little reason to be flattered with the hopes of an answer being in 110 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. time to be of the ser-\-ice I had hoped. As the letters General Cass favored me with to General Schramm and to General Kumigny did not enter at all into the details of my ha%-ing been sent abroad by Government, and the objects of my travels, I felt necessitated to accompany them by one fi-om myself, applying to General Schramm, who is Chief of the Staff of the Army of Africa, to obtain for me from the Marshal Valee or the Due d'Orleajs^s (though he is here only acting as a subordinate General) an authorization to join any expedition that might take place wliilst I remained in Africa — in fine, a permission to be at liberty to pass wherever I might please in Africa. I herewith send you a copy of the same. Successful or not in this or any other endeavor I may make whilst abroad to obtain those ends for which Government has sent me, Iselieve me, Sir, as always actuated by the truest zeal for the service, and it is in this that I rest the hope, in some degree, to make up the deficiencies of laiowledge and the want of experience. I have the honor to be, Sir, With the highest sense of respect, Yom- obedient servant, (Signed) P. KEARNY, Lieutenant First Dragoons, The Honorable J. R. Poi:nsett, Secretary of War, United States. Algiers, July 1st, 1840. Sir : — I have the honor to report myseK as j ust returned from the late expedi- tion in the pro\ince of Algiers, Africa, under the orders of Marshal Valee, and at the same time transmit, to be forwarded to the Secretary of War, a letter — [letter and report both lost] — detailing some observations made whilst with the French troops. I have the honor to be, Your most obedient servant, (Signed) P. KEARNY, Jr., Lieutenant First Begiment Dragoons. General R. Jones, Adjutant General United States Army, Washington, D, C. CHAPTER IX. FROM THE MISSISSIPPI TO THE EOCKT MOUNTAINS. THE SOUTH PASS. " Well pleased, could we pursue The Amo, from his birth-place in the clouds, So near the yelIo\y Tiber's — springing up From his four fountains on the Apenuine, That mountain-ridge, a sea-mark to the ships Sailing on either sea." Eoqebs' "Italy." In the fall of 1840, Lieutenant Philip Kearny returned from liis Em'opean mission, having done honor to Mr. Poinsett's selection of him as well as to the American name. He was almost immediately appointed aid-de-carap to Major-General Alexanbek Macomb, Com- mander-in-Chief of the United States Ai-my. This distinguished officer is best known to the American people for his decisive victory at Plattsburgh, 11th September, 1814, when, with one thousaiid five hundi'ed Regulars, aided by a body of three thousand militia and volunteers — under Generals Moers, a soldier of the Pevolu- tion, and Strong; — from New York and Vermont, he repulsed and defeated an army of fi-om fourteen thousand to fifteen thousand British veterans, fresh from triumphs over the troops who had conquered Em-ope, imder the leading of IST.apoleon and his chosen Lieutenants. Kearny retained this position until the death of General Macomb, which took j^lace, at the Headquarters of the Ai-my and Capital of the nation, 25th June, 1841. From October to December of that year he was on duty at the United States Cavahy Barracks at Carlisle, Pennsylvania. Thence he returned to Washington as aid-de-camp to Major-General Winfield Scott, next Commander-in-Chief of the United States Ai-my, With him Kearny remained — " dispensing elegant hospitality" — from Decem- ber, 1841, to April, 1844, when he was relieved and ordered to join his company. On 12th May, 1844, he was with his regiment at Fort Leavenworth, and was enabled by his experience in Africa 111 112 BIOGEAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. to prepare liis immediate command for efficient service against the Indians, and the projected display of om- mihtary strength upon the plains. In May, 1845, Colonel Stephen Watts Kearnt, with five com- panies of his regiment,' the First United States Dragoons, made a march to the South Pass at the summit of the Rocky Mountains. This was the first military expedition which struck out so far from the settlements into^ the Indian country. Its object was to aAve the savages and thus alFord protection to -the emigrants who were crossing the jjlains in great numbers on their way to settle in Ore- gon. The Avriter is indebted for some particulars of it to Major Alexander Saranac Mac03ib, brother-in-law to General, then Lieutenant, Philip Kearny, whose tent-mate he was on this occasion. The incidents of this military promenade are the more familiar to his mind, and afforded the Major greater pleasure, since he found himself once more among old friends and associates, having served three years with the First Dragoons before he was transferred to the Second Regiment, and thence as aid-de-camp to the staff of his father, Major-General Macomb. The many agreeable reminiscences connected with the novelty of the trip, the jokes among comrades on the march and by the camp-fire, would naturally make all who sm-vive look back with pleasure to the period when they were still young and fresh enough to eiijoy an excursion which was accom- panied with just enough danger to season it. The staff of this expeditionary column consisted of: Lieutenant Henry S. Turner, Adjutant and Acting Assistant Adjutant-General of the Third Military Department on the expedi- tion through the Rocky Mountains, and at the headquarters in St. Louis, Missouri, 1845 ; Captain First Dragoons, April 2d, 1846 ; in the war with Mexico, 1846-47, as Acting Assistant Adjutant-Gen- eral of the Army of the West, participating in the combat of San Pascual, California, 6th December, 1846, where he was wounded by a lance; Skii-mish of San Bernardo, California, 7th December, 1846 ; Passage of the San Gabriel River, California, 8th January, 1847; and Skirmish on the Plains of Mesa, 9th January, 1847. He resigned, 21st July, 1848. This gentleman is (1868) President of the Union National Bank of St. Louis, Missouri, and the author has to thank him for much interesting information. He was Actmg Assistant Adjutant-General on the Staff of Briga BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP K^parnY. 115 dier-General Atkinson at the same time that Philip Keaknt ^>..a attached to the same military family as Aid, in 1839y Lieutenant Ja^ies Henry Carleton, Quartermaster, afterwards Brigadier-General. Lieutenant William Benjamin Fkanklin, Topogi-aphical En- gineer. This very able, scientific man, afterwards rose to the rank of Major-General of Volunteers, and commanded, first a Corps, and then a Grand Division in the Army of the Potomac, afterwards the Expedition to the Sabine Pass. « :;: ;;: ^ ,-;; -; His division comprised the fiimous New Jersey Brigade, made and commanded, from 14th August, 1861, to 2d May, 1802, by General Kearny. ' G. J. De Camp, Surgeon, since dead. The five companies of Dragoons were commanded respectively by: Captain Philip St. George Cooke, now Brigadier General and Brevet Major General U. S. Army; author in 1862, of a new book of Cavalry Tactics. Captain Benjamin D. Moore, killed' 6th December, 1846, in a charge upon the Mexican Lancers at the battle of San Pascual. ******* Lieutenant William Eustis, afterwards, 1845, Captain of 1st Drasroons, resigned 1849. He was the son of Brevet Brifjadier General Abram Eustis, who served in the war of 1812-'! 5, who died Colonel of 1st U. S. Artillery, at Portland, Maine, 1843. He was a very fine officer, and Hooker says he owed a great deal to his training. Captain Eustis is still living, a prominent civil engineer at Natchez, Mississippi, and has shown gi-eat kindness in assisting the writer in the preparation of chapter on the Ball at Saumur. 1st Lieutenant Philip Kearny. Kearny, Eustis and Turner while in France, and at the cavalry school of Saumur, translated the French Cavahy Tactics, which in 1841 was adopted for the TJ- S. Dragoons, and published by order of J. R. Poinsett, Secretary of War. Lieutenant Philip Kearny^s command was a fine company, under good discipline, and evinced in every respect the influence of its commander, who always had the power of infusing a high militaiy spirit into his men. 112 BIOGR>T^^ OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Iq i-^is command, 1st U. S. Dragoons, took up its line of March iromFort Leavenworth about the middle of May, as soon as the grass was sufficiently grown to aiFord good gi'azing for the animals. Fifty head of sheej) and twenty-five head of oxen were driven with the column xmder charge of the commissary, by order of Colonel Kearnt, "always a provident officer, so that the officers and men were furnished with fresh beef and mutton, every now and then, vm- til they got into" the buffalo country." It is more than likely, how- ever, that this foresight was due to the lessons learned by Lieuten- anth-KEAJRNY in his Algerian campaign, for, according to Lieutenant • LA3rpiNG,(0]denburgh Service, author of the "French in Algiers," who served as a private for some time in the Foreign Legion, and participated in a great number of severe expeditions,) " besides what rations were loaded on mules, each soldier carried nine days' provisions, consisting of ship biscuit, rice, coffee, and sugar. Bread and wine are not given on a campaign, owing to the very limited means of transport, for it would be imj^ossible to use wagons and the number of mules and donkeys required to carry the provisions, for a march of five weeks is great enough as it is. Cattle are di'iv- en, and during an expedition each soldier is allowed double rations — that, is one pound of meat daily." The tactics adopted by the French generals in Africa afford capi- tal lessons for the warfare on our plains, nor are the habits and 'usages of the semi-barbarous tribes of Africa, or those of the Turcos, which won such a name in the Solferino campaign — a corps organized by the French — ^\'ery unlike the American savages, even in the treatment of the dead. Both as a rule torture the living captive, and the Kabyle carries off, as a pendant at his saddle bow, the whole head of a fallen enem?y ; whei-eas the Indian strips off the scalps to ornament his person or accoutrements. The Indian is the' most sensible, for the scalp is easily preserved, and more merciful, as far as life is concerned, for, if rescued in time, a scalped man may sm-vive ; a man with his head wholly or even half severed off, certainly not. Moreover a' dead-head is a ghastly object at best, and soon becomes unpleasant unless salted or smoked, as practiced by the Dyaks of Borneo, who set as great a value on the heads of then" enemies as the Kabyle, and take as much pains to secure them and more to preserve them longer as cherished ornaments of theu* homes. " The bivouac of a French column in Afi'ica usually forms a perfect BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 115 square, modified, of course, by the ground ; the infantry, who are outside, lie in double file behind their piled arms. Each battalion sends out one company as an advance j^ost, and another company remains within the lines as a picket. The baggage, artillery, and cavahy hre placed in the middle. The cavalry do not furnish any outposts as horsemen, especially in broken ground, as they are too much exposed to the fire of the Bedouins and Kabyles, who steal sin- gly tOAvards us. The infantry, on the contrary, can more easily hide themselves, and by laying their faces close to the ground can hear the slightest sound, i This is essential, as the Bedouins nnd Kabyles upon all fom-s, like wild beasts, fall upon single outposts, or shoot' them fi'om a distance when they can see them ; for which reason the outposts change their ground after dark, to deceive the enemy. They generally di-aw back a little, leaving then- #atch fires burnino-, which enables them to see whatever passes between them and the fire." TheJ.ine of march followed was that which is called the "Oregon Trace," along the North Fork of the Platte River. At Fort Lara- mie, what hve stock remained were left to fatten, as bison were now at baud. At this Fort commences the ascent of the moimtains ; it is very gradual, and quite i^racticable for wagons. Along the valley of the Sweet River, fat bufialoes were met in abundance. About the -1st July, the command reached the summit of the South Pass, and the troops were mustered at the head waters of the rivers which flow thence into the Pacific. The retm-n march was by the same route as far as Laramie ; thence along the base of the moun- tains to Bent's Fort, under Pike's Peak, a considerable trading post near New Mexico, and thence again along the Sante Fe Trace, to Fort Le'avenworth. The troops arrived in splendid condition, hav- ing accomplished a distance of about two thousand three hundi-ed miles in ninety-nine days, without the loss of a man by accident or sickness, and with the expenditure of but a few horses. General Stephen Watts Kearnt held a council with a large de- legation of Sioux warriors at Fort Laramie, and" this display of troops, at this date, so far out from the settlements, had the desu-ed efiect, and for some time to come the emigrants were not molested by the Indians. . ^ The following notices of prominent objects encountered along this march westwards, although not compiled from the con-espon- dence of Keaknt or officers attached to the expedition of 1845, 116 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOU-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. are, nevertheless, pertinent. The reader will find them gi'aphie and interesting from the peculiar manner in which things seen are presented and commented on. They are from the pen of a common friend — an officer who distinguished himself in the Mexican war — who traversed, a few years afterwards, the same route fol- lowed by the expeditionaiy column, while things remained in about the same condition, and long before those great changes occm-red which made such a stride in advance, in ten years, as would have cost half a centmy for then* accomplishment in the Old World. About one hundred miles west of Fort Leavenworth, that fertile soil, which attracted into Kansas such vast numbers of immigrants with its prolific yield, changes its character and becomes less and less prolific. Fort Leavenworth. " The land is pretty nearly occupied at last — tliat is, the good land ; for, from about a hundred miles westward of this point to the Rocky Mountains — a distance of some five or six hundred miles — the soil is said to be very poor an;l not worth occupying. There is probably more waste arable land in the Continent of Asia now than there is in North America. " The prairie is a hea-\dng, swelling ocean of grass, mingling mistily with the sky, like the unbounded sea. In the ravines — or rather troughs of this sea — are occasional streams, or perhaps series of water-holes, bordered with a thin skirt of trees. All else is grass. A strange absence of animated life is observed. A soli- tary wolf now and then ; one antelope ; a few doves and larks ; two or three crows . a few other birds, one toad, one lizard, and some cat-fish, are almost the only living things, except grasshoppers and flies, that we have seen in the entire distance tra- versed. Not until two or three days since did we begin to see even the wreck of a buffalo, their bleaching, decajdng skulls and bones then beginning to appear scat- tered here and there upon this their vast and ancient pasture ground. Their car- casses, as we advanced, became more numerous, until at length, yesterday, we saw pieces of their furry skins, recently torn off, scattered about the deserted lodges of the Pawnees." [Some eighty miles east of Fort Kearny, about midway between that post and Fort Leavenworth, upon the left or north bank of the " Little Blue," a branch of the Republican River.] " After a soaldng day's march, the rain-clouds of the day are retiring in the dis- tance, Avith low-muttered thunder ; the lightning flashes out, as of a summer's eve, at various points of the horizon ; and small masses of clouds move slowly over the twilight sky of the west, as if surveying the field of battle of the day. The air is mild and warm, and the cricket is filling the stillness of the night with its pleasant song. " Not the least pleasant part of the march, to my ear, is the harvest hjann of the insects, which raise a constant strain of thanksgiving — a joyous fritinancy of song — I BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 117 for the ripe weed-seeds that grow along the road, for the road is bordered » with weeds. As if in fulfilment of the curse pronounced upon man, they spring up, not only where he tills the land, but even where his wagon-wheels have plowed, " The column as seen in the distance, moving across the prairie, presents the api)carance of a small blacldsh head, (for the regiment looks small in such un- bounded space,) followed by a very long whitish tail. This tail is the baggage- train, for the wagons, drawn by six mules each, are roofed with wliite cotton covers. " The Platte River, upon the right bank of which we are encamped, is by far the greatest curiosity that we have seen. It seems to be nearly a mile wide, and 3'et it is so shallow that one may wade across it. Its current is all filled mth sand- flats and little islets. It is but very little below the general level of the country. Eight along the edge of the stream is a little ridge of sand, and then several miles back is a larger ridge. The land between these ridges is xery level and is all sand, except a little co-\'cring of black vegetable mould. The horses lick tliis soil in a way that shows that there is something saline in it ; and it is here, perhaps, that the buffalo finds salt, or its substitute. It is said that if holes be dug in this soil for water, the water is cool and pleasanter to the taste than the river water, but that it is certain death to drink it. The country is very level, and the Great Pacific Eailroad, if ever built, may run along the Platte, from its mouth, above Fort Leavenworth, to where it takes its rise in the Rocky Mountains. There is not so much timber, however, but that even ties, as well as rails, would have to be brought from a distance. , _ " Our road still leads up the right -bank of the Platte, which still remains as great a curiosity as ever. Imagine an immense ditch dug through the tolling, undulating prairie from west to east — from the Rocky Mount;iins to the Missouri River — some several miles in width, and two or three hundred feet in depth, and you can form some idea of the valley through which the Platte runs. The ri\er itself is in the middle of this valley, and consists of a mile or more in mdth of shallow threads of water running among sand flats and small islands. The banks of the river are but a little above the water, while those of the valley are deeply seamed and gullied, and look like chains of rugged mountains. On the precipitous slopes of some of the deep gullies there ai-e clumps of cedar, reminding one of the belts of fir trees that are lifted up into the cold, thin an* by the loftiest mountains. Nowhere else is this cedar seen here. The smooth, wide, and nearly level bottom valley is verdant with rich pasture, and along the course of the river, on either side, numerous herds of buffalo are seen grazing. " At one of our encampments a buffalo was noticed wading across the river towards us, and some of the men couched in the gi-ass to lie in wait for him. On he came, boldly and determinedly, though occasionally stopping to look at our camp. Numerous mules and horses were feeding peacefully there, and this seemed to reassure him. Presently, reaching the shore and mounting the bank, he stoi> pcd a while in half surprise to gaze upon the novelty of the scene before him. There he stood, with his shaggy front lifted up high, in a boldness of relief and an untamed spiritedness of attitude that gave him, I assure you, a most magnificent appearance. Pang ! went a rifle : and the noble brute but barely blinked. AVhang ! went another ; and now he starts on the run for the inland priarie. But whang ! Wiiang ! ! whang ! ! ! go the fire-arms — pistols, musketoons, and rifles of all sorts. 118 BIOGBAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Pierced mtli numerous balls, the amazed animal stops again to gaze ; and so do his pursuers stop, half-frightened at the blood and fierceness of his look. Again he starts to run, and again his pm-suers renew their fire, until at length, exhausted by his efforts to escape, and from the loss of blood from liis many wounds, he falls, tumbles down upon the plain, and out the butcher sallies with steel and knife to cut him up." [Camp near Court House Rock, two hundred and forty miles west of Fort Kearny, on the North Platte.] " Court House Rock is a castle-like mass of lunestone, which probably received its name from those with whom a court-house was considered as the grandest of all edifices. Near by it are two other masses, which from this point look like pyra- mids. There is a solidity, repose, durability, and a gradual ascending of the thoughts towards heaven in the pyi-amid, that doubtless gave that monument a great retroactive effect upon the character and manners of the Egyptians. How serene is the expression of the face of all their ancient statues ! " ' Chimney Rock,' a little to the west of the preceding freak of nature, ought to be called ' Monumental Rock,' for it is perfectly like a monument. The valley of the river opened out there, and this monument, as it stands on the slope of the right bank of the valley, overlooks an immense level region of country, and can be seen from a great distance. As we struck our camp and marched by it early in the morning, we entered, among numerous other resemblances to works of art> such as temples, palaces, pyramids, domes, towers, turrets, and buttresses ; and finally, after a march of some twenty miles, an immense wall, not unlike a city's wall, extended across the way, rising to the height of five hundred to one thousand feet above the river, and through which there is a lofty gate-way.* Through this gate- way we passed, while a hawk was hovering around its summit, as if around a mountain's crag. So like the ruins of a Babylon or a Karnac, or some such city, was the entire scene of this day's march, that when, at an early hour, the cry of the wolf, like that of the jackall, resounded through the stillness, the illusion was almost perfect. And then the reflection arose — where's the difference between this, nature's mockery of ai't, and art itself, since, some once-mighty Thebes, where myriads of human beings have swarmed, and where human art has run its course, what now remains but exactly such shapes as these ? The primeval stillness that rests upon the one could hardly be distinguished from the pall of oblivion that has settled over the other. " From the gateway on, our route has not presented much of interest ; being almost void of animal life, and scorched with drouth. "We have passed through the lofty gateway of Scott's Bluffs, and encamped among the mock ruins. These when the morning dawned, shewed to a beautiful effect, dome, pyramid, turret, tower, monument and battlement, rising in calm re- pose amidst the grey light. And wheu two Indians came riding over the scene, like any two Arabs over the ruins of a Karnac or a Nineveh, the illusion for a moment was complete. There was a charm in this apparent playful effort of in- * This is almost tlie same lusus natures as the " Iron Gates" of the Atlas, only this ia single and those are quadruple. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 119 telligence on the part of nature that was quite captivating. Here, before the hu- man race was created — before man was born — Natui'e had mimicked beforeliand his proudest seats of empire. From the lofty walls in the west to the monument in the east (which needed only the figure of a man upon it with folded arms, in a pensive mood, to be complete), the distance was more than twenty miles ; giving a grand idea of the vastness of this irony of nature at the grandeur of man. It is in a Nvilderness which ■will jDrobably never become much peopled, and the sandy, shallow Platte flows away in mock commercial importance in the distance. Our good mother, Nature, seems to be in a very kindly, amiable mood, when she can be thus so seriously facetious at our expense. " If you have been in Canada again this summer, you may probably have fallen in Avith some Sioux Indians ; for, if I am not mistaken, they used to reside about the great lakes, and have gradually retired from these before the advance of the white man. They extend now along the Platte far up into the Rocky IMountains. A party of these which met us as we were coming away fom Laramie, fur- nished the cplunin considerable amusement. It consisted of an Indian and his ■wife and two small children. The man was mounted on a horse, with a boy astride behind hun. He wore a soldier's cap with a feather stuck in it, and by his side hung a large dragoon's sabre. He looked pretty fierce and warlike, but behind him was another horse which he led by a lariat. Two lodge-poles were attached to both sides of this horse, at one end, while at the other they trailed upon the ground; and upon a staging, fixed upon these poles, rode his wnle and a small girl. It was as odd a compromise between savage and civilized life as over was seen. The addition of an axle-tree and two wheels to the poles would have been an effort at civilization absolutely beyond the Indian's capacity; yet he seemed to be, naturally, as much of a man in every respect as we are. * * "We have passed several large collections of lodges, and there is now one just above me, and another below ; for the Indians still come here, as has been their wont, to intercept the buffalo when they come down from the prairie to drink in the Platte and roll their huge carcasses in the sand and mud. • » • But their white conical lodges, the original of Sibley's tent, seen amidst the green margin of the Platte, look pretty. Near them, always, are tripods, formed of three poles tied together at the tops, from which are suspended quivers and a white shield. In time of war, however, the sliield is red. It is a tasty, picturesque sight, and I suspect that it originated with the Canatlian French, who, from mari- tal alliances with the Sioux, seem to follow them westward into the mountains. " This Point (Fort Laramie) appears to be the center of the buffalo-robe trade — not that the buffalo are numerous here, but that the trade naturally finds this as one of its centers. " I am told that the robes are prepared by the Indian women, and that a great deal of patient labor is bestowed upon them. To tan the robe they put upon the hairless side a preparation made of the brains, liver, and marrow of the animal ; and the skin is made supple by being dra'wn repeatedly athwart a rope. " Already these robes have become comfortable, for, though the days axe very warm, the nights are cold. We are at an. elevation of four thousand two hundred and fifty feet above the level of the sea — an elevation at this latitude which ought to render it pretty cool the year round. 120 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNT. " Fort Laramie, for an outpost, is a pretty place. It is situated in a large basin through which a clear large stream, called Laramie Forks, flows, skirted with cot- ton-wood trees. A bridge across this stream ; the white edifices of the post ; the nmnerous men and animals of the military corps now assembled here ", the blue peaks of mountains seen in the west — all these form a scene which, come upon in so wild and desert a region, looks odd, interesting, and beautiful. "The westernmost of the Rocky Mountains, ' Laramie Peak,' will soon be peer- ing at us over the intervening hills." [Camp two hundi-ed and fifty miles west of Fort Laramie.") ^' At length we have left the Platte, which we had followed so long, and struck across to one of its tributaries, which we are still on, and which is called the SMxet Water. It is a fine, large mountain brook, clean, sweet, musical in its bubble, and stocked ■v\ith fish ; but not a tree or shrub is seen along its course. Its com-se is from the S.W., and it is one of the remotest tributaries of the IVIississippi. We shall still fclloAv it several days up the South Pass, where its head source is not far £fom that of other brooks which flow westward into the Pacific. ' ' A few hours before arriving upon the banks of this stream, we passed through a region where potash occurred in the greatest abundance. There were several ponds Ijing along our route that had become dried up, and the potash that was left in them looked like that which is seen in the potash kettle after the lye has been evaporated. It lay in large clots, so that hundreds of tons might have been shoveled up. " We are at length among the Rocky Mountains indeed, and if you were to see them you would admit that they merited their name. Such nude, bold masses of granite I have never before seen. They rise as abruptly from the sandy soil around them as if fi'om the waters of the sea — no debris lie scattered do^^Ti their sides, only a few stunted cedar or pine dot them here and there, and small patches of grass among the rifts invito the mountain sheep — all else is cold, bare, massi\'e granite. But what is remarkable, such only is the case with these mountains, that for the last four days have appeared on our right — those on our left have been covered vnth. soil, and seemed black with fir forests from their crests half way down their flanks — the rest of their height being brovra with grass. "To-day we have been In sight, almost all the time, of Fremont's Peak. It is a range of mountains, rather than a peak, and is covered ^\ith snow ; a garland of beautiful cumulus clouds has hung round its brow all day." [Camp at " Red Buttes," about fifty miles N. W. of Laramie Peak.] " The Sweet- Water is rather an interesting stream. For some thirty or forty miles of its course it runs along the base of a chain of gi-anitic hills. At last it runs through them in a chasm about one hundred feet wide and two or three hundred in depth. It looks, at first view, as if that gentle, pellucid stream had worn a passage through the hard granite — that after dallying along theu* base for a while, as might a young gii'l -Nnth an old bald pated man, it finally bolted right through them, and went laughing away in freedom into the open countiy beyond; BIOGRAPHY OP MAJQR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 121 but on a closer examination I was confinned in a pre\'ious opinion, that the chan- nels of rivers are formed /o?* them oftener than they are by them. This strange passage through the rock is called ' The Devil's Gate.' " [Summit of " South Pass," East slope.] " I write you from the hanks of a hj^aline stream skirted with golden willows. The pure crystalline Sweet- Water runs away in romping glee towards the distant Gulf of Mexico. * * * # # The Wind Eiver Mountains, from whose flanks it pours, are looking down upon us seriously from the northwest. There is something sublime in being at a point among mountains, so far inland, from near which go forth to such widely distant mouths, three such large rivers as the Columbia, the Mississippi, and the Colorado. It is like being in the immediate scene where Nature is carrying on one of her grand- est operations. " We left the Pacific Springs at sunrise this morning, and by ten o'clock we were drinking your health in a cup of water from this fine stream. From Green Iiiver to this point the country seems like one huge swell, as of the sea, the as- cent and descent being very gradual and fornung an easy roadway. The road fgr a part of the distance to-day was stre^vn with cornelians ; but the country is the same dreary desert as ever. Does it not seem strange that such large rivers should head on a region so dry and barren. "The country, otherwse, is uninteresting ; it is a lifeless waste, glaring in bar- re'uness and aridity to an unpitying sky. The stunted sage bushes look like the stray poils of beard on a witch's chin, making the barrenness look doubly barren." (^Ford on Green River, 110, West Longitude.] " We encamped for two nights upon the Sweet Water, finding considerable grazing for our lean and hungry animals ; but finally, at about ten o'clock A. M., on the 25th, we crossed the dividing Une to the Pacific Spring, which flows away in a small, clear thread of water to find its way at last into the distant Gulf of California. As we looked back there was a ridge of high land which separated U3 from our eastern homes." " The height above the sea at that point of the ridge over which the road leads is about 7, 500 feet, considerably over a mile, and yet so gradually had we attained this elevation that we never should have suspected ; and, indeed, we should never have kuo\vn that we were among mountains at all, were it not for the sno^vy sum- mits of the Wind Eiver Range, which rose immediately on our right ; for the abrupt rocky heights, which I mentioned to you in my last, we had left behind and out of sight. "And thus we came through what is called the South Pass. After a long, gradual ascent, we then commenced the descent, which is a little more rapid than the ascent, but still pretty gradual. And our road has been descending most of the way since, a distance of some sixty (60) miles, but through such barreimess and desolation as you could hardly conceive. The land is but a waste of sand, sparsely dotted -nith wild sage and grease wood, both small shrubs. Hardly a tree is any- where to be seen, and only once in a mile or two along the road." 122 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. [Summit of the " South Pass," West Slope, one thousand miles from Fort Leavenworth.] "We are on a deeply furrowed stream, the Big Sandy, ■which winds through, without fertilizing, the soil. The rabbit, the sage hen, and the raven, or a large species of crow, are all the animals met with. Beliind us rose the Wind lliver Mountains, and how beautifully did they look one morning when the sun first shone upon them ! Their lofty summits, shrouded with clouds and snow, and yet lit up by the sun, gave forth a warm but benevolent smile, well befit- ting such a benefactor of mankind as poured from its flank : the three great streams, the Oregon, the Colorado, and the Missouri. Before us, as we advanced towards the north, arose the chain called the Uintah Mountains. Running east and west, they presented their northern slopes to us, and they were covered with far more snow than are the southern slopes of the Wind lliver liange, though the former are more than one hundred miles to the southward of the latter — the dif- ference arising from a difference in exposure — the one being to the north and the other to the south. " The solemn, serious beauty of the Uintah mountains, their summits covered with snow, standing like a vast hydrant pouring forth rivers of water, again arrest my gaze. "At length, at about 11 o'clock, A.M., to-day, we reached the verge of the right bank of Grreen lliver. Tlie valley through which it runs is pretty wide, and the enclosing banks are steep and precipitous. The view below burst upon us all at once ; and after such barrenness, how beautiful it appeared ! "There is a solemn joy in these mountains that lifts up the heart as in k temple of worship, where the M'inds and the streams are the music of the choir, and the hoar peak seems preaching holy Sabbath to the land." ^^ CHAPTER X. THE MEXICAN WAR — KEARNY IN MEXICO. " In process of time, when your Western territories are perfectly settled from the Ohio to the Mississippi, which in time cannot fail to be perfected; and when your Western and Southern colonies become in population as numerous as the sands of the sea — then will the riches of Potosi attract the attention of the Americans to the conquest of Mexico and Peru. This is an object which, from the magnitude of its wealth, is certain in time to take place ; but as that cannot happen for at least fifty or an hun- dred years, I think, gentlemen, we should not postpone taking a part of the wealth of that country immediately ; therefore I freely offer my services to the Congress on such an expedition ; and on my honor, I will serve them as faithfully as I have my king and country, " for I am a soldier of fortune." So, taking the bottle, I filled a glass, and drank to an expedition against the Golden Spaniard. My toast was pro- ductive of much laughter, mirth, and good humor, together with many observations on the situation and wealth of the Spanish colonies so contiguous to them ; and I am inclined to believe, that at that time even the company did not think that the possession of the wealth of Mexico was quite so difiicult, or required so many years' application and study, as to arrive at the knowledgeof the Philosopher's stone."—" Life, Adventures, and Opinions'^ of and by Colonel Geobgb JIangek. London, 1801. Lieutenant Philip Kearny was too much of a real soldier to be able, after having tasted the excitement of actual service, to submit to the constraints, the indolence, and monotony of garrison life. After his return from Algiers he chafed under the restraints of in- activity for nearly five years, hoping all the time for something to occur which would give him new opportunities for distinction in active service. Notwithstanding war seemed imminent with the Mexican Confed- eration, in 1845, it was scarcely conceivable that a power like Mexico, which had been utterly foiled in its invasion of Texas, in 1835-'6, which had sufiered a miniature Waterloo at San Jacinto, 21st April, 1836, at the hands of a thousand undisciplined frontiers- men, would dare to rush into a war with Ruch a gigantic power as the United States, upon a mere question of national honor — ^for the possession of Texas had become a mere question of honor. Whether from the same reasons which actuated Worth, or be- cause his promotion had not corresponded with his hopes or merit, or from the persuasion that his services were undervalued, Kearni 133 124 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. on the 2d April, 1846, tendered Lis resignation, which was accepted as of the 6th of that month. Had he dreamed that a war was upon us, he woukl never have done so. No sooner, however, had the clash of arms resounded fi'om the Rio Grande, and the national banner been unfurled amidst the blaze of battle, than Kearny, like Worth, sought to recall his resignation, and applied to the government to be restored to his former rank and position. On the recommendation of Major-General Scott, Commander-in- Chief, and Brevet Brigadier-General Roger Jones, Adjutant-Gene- ral U. S. Army, he was reinstated in the army on the ] 5th April, 1846. It was not until the 9th July, that he was enabled to join his regiment, having been employed in the meantime in recruiting his company up to the war-footing. He was determined that it should be a model troop in every resjject, not only in men, but in horses, and he repaired to the West, where he knew he could find such material as he wanted — material which he had seen put to the test of a march of two thousand three hundred miles, and come out of the trial first proof With a liberality which distinguished every prominent action of his life, he determined to augment the government bounty out of his own private purse, in order to obtain not only first-class men, but first-class animals. His principal re- cruiting ground was Illinois, and at the State Capital, Springfield, he fell in by accident with a resident lawyer, who was looked upon as a rather eccentric, but earnestly patriotic man, by name Abraham Lincoln, who was touched by the enthusiasm of the young di-agoon officer, and zealously assisted him in carrying out his plans. This eccentric man, as he was styled, was afterwards, " Honest Abe," President of the United States, and the Lieutenant Kearny, whom he assisted in raising that model company of di'agoons, was ins appointment as a Brigadier-General, one whom he always styled " HIS GENERAL ;" One whom he destined for the highest command, when an untimely shot put an end to the life of the man of his choice, as unexpectedly as the shot of the assassin, Booth, put an end to his own, so precious to his country. When Kearny reached New Orleans, on his way to Mexico, the appearance of his command attracted the attention of the whole city, who were in a condition to judge of the relative value of troops, since the majority of those destined to earn such distinction in Mexico, passed through the streets of the "Crescent City." BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 125 The New Orleans Tropic devoted quite a space in its columns to Kearny and his dragoons, fi-om which the following is an extract. The rest of the article is even more complimentary, but needs no quotation here, as it is altogether personal and refers to events in the life of Keauny, with which the reader is akeady acquainted. " Lieutenant Philip Kearny, nephew of General Stephen Watts Kearny, arrived here day before yesterday with as fine a company of cavalry as was ever seen in Xew Orleans ; the horses, ninety in number, are all greys, and beautiful in the extreme. The men are picked and noble-looking fellows. The trappings of the horses and the accoutrements of the liders are all that the most fastidious com- mander could wish." Kearny was not despatched into Mexican territory until October, 1846, when the fighting for the year was over. His first service was along the Rio Grande, where he did not come in contact with the enemy. What struck him most, while in the neighborhood of Camargo — and he often referred to it as some- thing marvelous: — was the vast extent of the bm'ial-grounds cFevoted to the interment of the American soldiers. Plis investigations led him to believe that the same influence which produced such fatal effects in the French army ui Africa, was the cause of the mor- tality among our troops — that is, nostalgia, or home-sickness, which was attributable, however, to a different origin. French soldiers, as a general thing, have few ties which bmd them to their homes, and it is rather the deprivation of those gay distractions and familiar scenes that brings on, in Africa, where there is scarcely any allevia- tion of then- labors and sufferings, that awful depression of spirits which proves so fital to life. In the case of our Western volunteers, who were mostly men of fomily, and accustomed to comforts of which an European soldier would never di-eam, it was actualy home-sick- ness. This moral miasma took a strong hold upon our Western volunteers, and populated vast cities of the dead, similar to those around Medeah and Milianah, which have attracted the attention of otherts besides Kearny, who have campaigned in the Atlas. This nostalgia seemed to exercise comparatively no effect upon the regulars. Kearny, with his company, did not join Taylor until after the capture of Monterey, and the advance of the army of occupation to Saltillo. Major-General Scott having completed his plan of operations, 126 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. based upon the capture of Vera Cruz, and the advance from that port directly upon the Mexican capital, a large portion of the troops under General Taylor were withdi-aAvn from the line of the Rio Grande and marched to the coast, to be embarked for the new point . of concentration. The general public, who have not participated in military opera tions, suppose that it is a light task to follow and relate the every day action of an officer and make it interesting. To furnish a mere diary would be easy, but suoh a narrative would be almost devoid of interest. The soldier and line-officer are almost indistinguisha- ble parts of a grand machine, from which the killed and wounded fall off like chips or filings, unnoticed, except by those Avho are immediately interested in each individual. An able General cora- jaared those who fell to the parings of a man's nails, so little were they missed, and of so little account were they among the casualties of a great army and a protracted compaign. It is only when fortune accords to a man the opportunity to achieve a deed of high emprise that the historian can linger upon the picture, and make him a prominent object in the vast and crowded panorama of a war. We shall see Keauny enjoying one of the fortunate occasions, and pro- fiting by the opportunity to its utmost extent. Meanwhile, it is all sufficient to say that in the ordinary routine of duty, he did his share of it thoroughly, and in every position and on every occasion won the approbation, as he had always enjoyed the respect, of his superiors, as well as of his comrades. On Taylor's line of operations Kearny had no chance to shine, but he was neither unnoticed nor forgotten. In the latter part of November, -when Scott determined to withdraw aboxit five thous- and troops from Taylor, his first selection was couched in the fol- lowing words : "You will * * put in movement for the mouth of the Rio Grande the following troops : About five hundred regular cavalry of the First and Second Regi- ments of Dragoons, including Lieutenant Kearny's troop." ■-:- .- :;= ^r- :!< * * ^ :); :{; These four words from such a man as Scott were in themselves no small meed of praise. The very fact that Scott thus designated him by name was a high encomium. Such a man and such a troop he wanted for himself Kearny had previously served under his immediate eye. He knew the young soldier thoroughly ; knew BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY: 127 that in him he had a weapon of approved temper, appropriate for a crisis, and in his troop a select body of soldiers, for, disciplined by Keaunv and inspired by his example, they could not be otherwise than good soldiers. " Including Lieutenant Ke.venv's troop /" fom* words, but signi- ficant as an oration. We shall see that whenever Scott did let them loose they did then* duty better than well — that when Kearny was left to himself, the young Captain wi'eathed his brow with laurels as immortal as those due to the conquest of a country by ten thous- and men, which has elevated Scott to the first rank as a General — a conquest which will be remembered in the military history of our country as one of its marvels, when subsequent battles, attended by a slaughter of as inany men as constituted the whole force under WiNFiELD Scott's command, are unnoticed or forgotten. Kesults dignify actions. In Em-ope, Scott would have been overwhelmed with dignities and rewards, whereas he was rej^aid for an achieve- ment, which added new lustre to our national escutcheon, with an ingratitude which disgraced a Democratic administration in the eyes of the whole world. Before his connection was severed with the "army of occupation," Kearny was entrusted with a duty which very nearly cut short his career and nearly added his name to the Hst of victims of the assassin tactics of the Mexicans. About the 11th January, 1847, Lieutenant John A. Richey, Fifth United States Infantry, bearer of despatches for General Taylor, started from Saltillo towards Victoria. Having passed through Monterey, he arrived, the 13th January, at the small town of Villa Gran. Here he separated himself from his escort — con- sisting of ten Dragoons — and entered the town for the purpose of purchasing provisions. Alone and unsuspicious of danger, he was lassoed and murdered under the most atrocious and cowardly cir- cumstances. The despatches which he bore were taken from his person and at once transmitted to Santa Anna. From the infor- mation derived from these, the Mexican commander-in-chief became possessed of Scott's plans, and learned to what an extent Taixor's army had been depleted to complete that collecting on a new line under General Scott. The result was, he struck at Taylor. Thus, had it iiot been for the murder of Richey, the battle of Buena Vista — on which it might be said the subsequent operations of the whole Mexican war pivoted or depended — would never have been 128 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. fought. Buena Vista was one of the decisive battles of the world, as events tui'ned out, for in many respects it was the battle of the Mexican war which gave us auriferous California, and determined the whole future of this continent. The reader may ask what has this to do with Kearny ? This much : he narrowly escaped at this time the fate which befell the unfortunate Richey ; and had a similar and imj^ending cast of the lasso encircled his throat Avith the same successful aim, there would have been an end of this biography and of one destined to fill a prominent place in the gallery of American Generals, Patriots, and Heroes. On his arrival at Vera Cruz, the splendid condition of Kearny's company — he was promoted to a Captaincy in December, 1846 — coupled with the fact that its commander had formerly been his aid-de-camp, induced the general-in-chief to constitute it his body-guard. This connection Avith headquarters prevented Kearny from participating in any of the cavalry engagements which occur- red between our Dragoons and the Mexican horse, which attempted to harass our army and hinder the progress of the siege. When the city surrendered, Kearny escorted his victorious chief on his triumplial entry, and he used to dwell with exultation on the superb appearance of his men and horses in that ovation, due to the scientific generalship of Scott. He said that his men felt as much pride in the matter as himself, and were up the greater part of the previous night fiu-bishing their arms and accoutrements and cleaning their horses, so that the latter " shone like glass bot- tles " when paraded the next morning. Kearny was always exceedingly partial to iron greys, and no horses in the world look better than those of this color when in high condition and properly groomed. On the advance from Vera Cruz, Kearny was always with Gen- eral Scott, and saw little or no fighting. That he profited by the lessons in strategy taught by that superlative commander, at the exjDcnse of the enemy, the future proved. Napoleon held Turenne in the highest esteem as a finished general, and this camjDaign was carried on in the highest style of Turen-ne. After the battle of Cerro Gordo he was detached in pursuit, and it was reported at the time that he came near captm-ing Santa Anna. The writer recollects perfectly Kearny's account of one chase and its incidents ; but it may have occurred on one or another BREVET MAJOR PHILIP KEARNY, Captain 1st U. S. Dragoons, Mexico, 1847. From portrait in possession of Autlior. J BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 129 occasion (at Tepeahualco? or after Puebla), when Keajrny was sent out with a flag of truce in order to try and open communica- tions with the defeated army. The following letter from an officer, an eye-witness of the inci- dent, a friend of Kearny, refers to the pm'suit after Cerro Gordo, which occurred about this time. It also alludes to an interesting fact, which has been related, to show that Kearny, like a great ■many other soldiers of his stamj^, was, to a certain extent, a fatalist, and put implicit faith in his star : "In Mexico he (Kearny) commanded a comjjany of horse of the First Dragoons, which accompanied General Scott's movements in his march from Vera XIruz to the Capital. At the battle of Cerro Gordo he followed up in advance the pursuit of the retreating enemy. I remember seeing him in full career after them. His horses were all white (grey), and showed that they had received the care and attention for which the First Dragoons, his uncle's regiment, were honorably distinguished ; but for the want of proper forage in the barren strip of tierra caliente thi'ough which the army had beon marching and operating for several days, they had become very much reduced in condition ; and consequently, in the rapidity of the ptu'suit, not a few of them tufnbled down headlong upon the road, never to rise again. It was a sad sight to see ani- mals dying in that way in those days, but the service during the late war got quite beyond these scruples, whole squadrons of horse being wasted with as much dash and recklessness as though the de- struction of property were a gi'eat merit. " The next incident that I remember in the career of General, then CajDtain Ke^vrny, occmTcd among a party of officers at a hotel in Puebla. These officers were dining together a short time pre- vious to the continuance of the march of the American army upon the city of Mexico ; and the conversation turned upon the approach- ing conflict. Captain Kearny spoke with a great deal of feeling, with an earnest unafiected thirst for gk)ry, and said he would give his left arm for a brevet. The army moved not long afterwards, and in the very first day's battles in the valley of Mexico, Captain Kearny pursued the routed enemy again, up to the very gates of the city, and there lost his left arm, by a shot fi-om the enemy within the walls. It is needless to add, that he received a brevet. " My i^en has dwelt thus long upon the theme, because of the particular pleasure which I have derived from the intercourse Avhich 130 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. I have happened to have with him. Take him altogether, I have seldom met with a more agi'eeable gentleman, or a more chivalric soldier." It is said that Keaent remarked, before he went to Mexico, that he felt sure that he would not lose his life, that he would return alive, but that he felt equally assured that he would lose his left arm. Napoleon had implicit faith in his star, and actually pointed out, on more than one occasion, the very star which, according to his- belief, presided over his destiny. Presentiments are very common among military men, and a great many instances are related in which they are known to have come true, v/ithout affecting theu' condact, however. Desaix is a cm'ious instance of this. When he joined the army of Italy, in 1800, on his retm'n from Egypt, he remarked that he was afraid the bullets in Europe would not know him again, and he fell at Marengo, a few days subsequently, the very first battle in which he was engaged and almost immediately after he came under fire. In the advance from Jalapa, Kearny had few opportunities of displaying his superior soldiership, but it was only from lack of opportunity. As a common friend recently remarked of him : — "High soldiership, as in his case, exhibited itself often, in attention to a multitude of minute details, which inspire confidence and tell in the hour of action. This enabled him with his troops to pene- trate to the very gates of the city of Mexico, where he lost his arm. While the army lay in Puebla he performed several daring recon- noissances, by which he procm-ed much valuable information ; but, as the enemy avoided combats, there was no special oj)portunity to add to his lam-els." Shortly after the dinner alluded to, at wdiich Kearny expressed his willingness to purchase a brevet at the price of the very arm he actually expended in obtaining one, he was entrusted with a mis- sion of some danger and importance, over whose remembrance he was accustomed to laugh heartily when he recalled the details of the " Run." While om- army was at Puebla drilling and organizing into that irresistible machine which, like the beast "with great iron teeth'' in thd vision of Danhel, " brake in pieces," and trampled in the bloody mire every antagonistic armament, Scott, on the 11th July, 1847, resolved to take some action in behalf of the American pris- oners held by the Mexican authorities. These were Majors Gaines BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 131 and BoKLAND, Captain Cassius M. Clat, and their associates, cap- tui'ed at Incarnacion, near Buena Vista, in the preceding January, likewise passed midshipman Rogers, taken in December, 1846, near Vera Cruz, and since then imprisoned as a spy. To Captain Philip Kearky was entrusted the proposals for an exchange, and he was sent forward with two companies of dragoons, under a flag of truce, to endeavor to communicate with the Mexican military authorities. At seven a. m., 12th July, Kearnt started out, accompanied by the Semmes who afterwards became a traitor to his flag, and made his name notorious as a burner of merchantmen, until his career in the Alabama was closed by the destruction of that Corsair by the Kearsage, commanded by the glorious Winslow. Kearnt expected at this time to be able to continue on, and enter the city of Mexico, and trotted on rapidly, filled with the glad hopes of carrying good news to his imprisoned countrymen, while enjoy- ing the glorious scenery, for which the journey to the Aztec Capi- tal is almost without a rival. As he proceeded, to his right soared the Malinche, " the storm-gatherer of Puebla," whose rugged peak served as a barometer to the inhabitants of that city, and, beneath it, stretched away the plains of Tlascala, while to his left the pictur- esque pyi-amid of Cholula stood out against the clear blue sky ; while over all towered the eternal snow-crowns of Popocatapetl and Iztaccihuatl, which look down, at the same time, into both the valleys of Puebla and Mexico. What thoughts must have passed through the " Knightly" mind of Kearny, thus pressing onward in the track of Cortes. Ten miles from Puebla, the Black River {JRlo Prieto) was crossed, an'd as much farther dn again the di-agoons dashed into the village or town of San Martin. As they approached this small but popu- lous place, there was an awful stir, and forth fluttered a body of Mexican Lancers about equal in number to the American detachment, who " vamosed the ranch " in such a hm-ry as to leave behind their baggage, and even some of their party, who broke ofl" and took to the bushes. Among these were Canalizo's son, a Lieutenant- Colonel of cavalry, and two or three of his men. The youth was eventually looked up by two of his papa's aids, subsequent to the termination of the chase, and conducted back in safety to the pa- rental wing. These aids, with half a dozen blanketed lanceros, retm-ned, under escort of Keara-y's di-agoons, to San Martin, to 132 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. recover their general's baggage and to hunt around for the missing youngster. Away went the Mexicans, consisting of about seventy lancers, led by Generals C an alizo (formerly President ad interim of Mexico) and PoRTiLLO (who had disgraced himself by his prominent action in the Fanning massacre (Fannin!) in Texas in March 1836. The Mexicans left in such haste, and spm'red so furiously, that Kearnt described the road over which they traveled as resembling one on which a flurry of early wet snow had fallen, so whitened was it with the froth flakes which fell from the horses, m-ged to the uttermost by the merciless Spanish spur. As Kearny did not care if the chase lasted to the gates of the capital, as that was his objective, he held in after he found that fear had lent wings to the enemy, and contented himself with keeping them in sight. It was Ainsworth's Dick Turpin's ride to York over again in the plm'al. Kearny caught a glimpse of them at the Puente (bridge) de Tezmolucan, eleven miles from San Martin ; and at Pio Frio, about eleven further on — making forty miles accom- plished since mounting — came in full siglit of the two generals pursued, then winding away up the heights beyond the Cold River (Hio Frio). By this time the Mexicans had somewhat recovered their senses, or felt that their horses had the heels of the pursuers for they halted, as if to investigate the white flag conspicuously dis- played ; then, seemingly, not liking the apjDearance of the escort, resumed their flight. This inspection, through glasses, doubtless, was repeated several times, till discretion seemed the better part of valor, and away they went, as if convinced of the truth of the old saying, "the devil (American) take the hindermost" if he can catch him. As Kearny's men had been in the saddle for ten hours, . and all chances of overhauling the red pennons had passed away, the Captain halted at an inn at the bridge across the Rio Frio, and sent forward a Mexican on a fresh horse to catch the fugitives. In an hour or two this native intermediary retm-ned, accompanied by an aid of General Portillo, who protested against Kearny's further advance, but entered into an arrangement, in behalf of his superior, for a meeting on the following morning, when Kearny was to ride forward, accompanied by Sejijies, as an improvised aid, and five dragoons. So, amid good cheer and much merriment, evoked by the rapid "change of base" efiected by the Aztec chiefs, the night passed very pleasantly, clouded by only one di-awback, BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 133 that the protest of the Mexican officer precluded a glimpse of the Valley of Mexico, which, in all its glorious beauty, was visible from a range not more than ten or eleven miles beyond then- place of repose. The next morning, 13th July, KexVkny, with Semjies, the latter's servant, and one di-agoon to carry the white flag, rode forward to meet General Poktillo, who was encountered just beyond the Hill of Sleep, ( Cuesta del Sueno) with five lancers, Avho, -with his two aids, made his party eight, when seven was the stipulated number. PoRTiLLO — ^like Louis XI. of France at his interview with Edward IV. of England, on the Bridge of Picquigny, across the Sorame, 29th August, 1478 — had no idea of giving his adversaries a chance of " gobbling " him, if a little addition of force could prevent it, even though contra mores. Portillo, after mutual salutes and es^jlanations, refused permission for Kearny either to continue on to Mexico, or even to proceed any farther, although the glorious vision of the basin of the capital could be witnessed from a crest only seven or eight miles in advance. He feelingly reproved Kearny for the " unchivalric " manner in which the latter had hunted him out of his comfortable quarters in San Martin, and gently protested against such an obliviousness of the amenities of war, then kindly offered to take charge of the despatches of which Kearny was the bearer. As there was nothing else to be done, this was agreed to, and Kearny, not to be outdone in politeness, escorted the general as far as Portillo would permit him : half-way back to his detach- ment, whom, it appeared, had been originally left or stationed in San Martin as a picket of observation to watch the movements of General Scott and his troops, or more likely to collect the reports of spies in Puebla and forward them to Santa Anna. Kearny described Portillo as Sejimes does in his " Service Afloat and Ashore" only somewhat more mirthfully, or less re- spectfully. Semmes says, " he was a good-looking man, rather stout (it is to be feared dashing Phil rendered this ' punchy'), of about fifty years of age, and quite dignified and gentlemanlike in his manners." The effect of the latter part of this description is marred by the additional remarks that the stout and genteel general '■' not being well dressed," "being mounted on a small pony," hav- ing " a somewhat villainous expression of countenance," — which, adds Semmes, " I did not wonder at so much when I was informed by our guide that he had been a prominent actor in the massacre of 134 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Fannin") — disadvantages which must have required an awful amount of dignity to compensate for them, and Kearny's recollec- tions of PoRTiLLO, if memory serves, were very much al^in to Mr. Pickwick's idea of bulky Mr. Tupman's putting " himself into a green velvet jacket with a two-inch tail " to attend Mrs. Leo Hun- ter's fancy ball. Indeed the meeting of Kearny, on his sixteen hand horse, (he always rode a very large horse, and Sejimes was mounted on an elephantine animal,) and Portillo, on his pony, re- calls that of Charles the Bold, on his noble charger, with Locis XL, on his little ambling palfrey, when the efiect was almost gi'otesque. The reader who does not recognize the simile cannot hr^ve read "Quentin Durward," by Sir Walter Scott. If he has not, he will thank this allusion if it leads to a perusal of that chai-m- ing novel. Thus Kearny just came short of being the first of om* gallant *' Boys in Blue," to visit pacifically, but " m arms and under banner," the Mexican Capital, into whose gate he was destined to cut his way only four weeks later (20th August), as a conqueror, inside of which his comrade, Major Mills, was actually killed. No reader, however intelligent, can comprehend military opera- tions without good maps. Even with good maps it is difiicult to comprehend details without some acquaintance with tactics and terms. Consequently, there is no attempt made in this chapter to follow the movements of the army, and readers JU'e refeiTcd to Mansfield's generalized and Ripley's detailed but partial^ or pre- judiced, " History of the Mexican War ;" likewise Sojqies " Ser- vice Afloat and Ashore," very interesting and instructi\'«, as well as other worLs, not so accessible, but worthy of examinalion as the records of a conquest as memorable as that of Cortez. When Scott had abandoned the idea of making a direcfe attack on Mexico from the east, and accomplished his remarkable move- ment, /auo/^ef? Z»y Providence, the direction of his rcBewed ' opera- tions was from the south. Two battles Avere fought on this lia© prior to the Tacubuja Armistice. . The first at Contreras, August 19tkand 20th ; the second at Churubusco, August 20th,. 1847. Between these two villages, to the west and nortb, about nuae miles apart by the road and the villages of San Antofoio and San Augusiin Hapan — the latter about six miles east of Contreras — Ia;y fche volcanic region called the "Pedi'egal." Tills Pedi'egal was tiu'^wn up in shai*p rocks and braken pieces. BIOGEAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 135 m in such a manner that the Mexican officers supposed it to be im- passable. " South of the Capital the great thoroughfare is the Acapulco road, which enters the city along the causeway and at the Garita of the San Antonio. A line of entrenchments had been commenced, connecting the fortified hacienda of San Antonio, six miles south of the city, with the position of the Mexicalcingo. From the im- mediate vicinity of the hacienda, the Pedregal extended west to the mountains. The Pedi-egal was an obstacle of no ordinary nature to militaiy operations. A vast field of lava, intersj^ersed with a few patches of arable land, it was practicable for the passage of any troops at but few points, and entirely impracticable for cav- alry or artillery, except by a single mule-path." This lava field was rent by chasms, which intersected it with their rifts in such a manner that to worm a way across it, even in the day time,, was a work of time, difficulty, and peril ; and yet it was absolutely necessary to reconnoitre it, as it lay between the wings, or grand divisions, of the army. The credit of this difficult opera- tion lias always been given to the arch-rebel Lee, when an officer of the United States Engineers, and he is said to have been the only officer who made his way across the Pedregal ; but the writer under- stood at the time that Kearny was the one who first ti'aversed this extrejtnely difficult and perilous track on horseback, and Avas the first thus to link the combinations of our separated divisions through the information which he carried across. Kearny, on his return from Mexico, dwelt upon this exploit as one of the most difficiJt he had ^ver achieved. Kearny, if not the first, was certainly one of th^e first who succeeded in doing so.. It was wonderful how he succeeded in accomplishing the feat, as he made his way over at night-^moonlight, however, it is true — leaping his horse over the clefts, which nobody but a fearless rider like himself would ever have dreamed of attempting. CHAPTER XL THE GARITA SAN AKTONIO. 'THE CHARGE OF THE 'ONE' HUNDRED." '» Half a league, half a league, Half a league onward, All in the Valley of Death Rode the ' one ' hundred. •Charge,' was the captain's cry; Theirs not to reason why, Theirs not to make reply, Theirs but to do and die. Into the Valley of Death Rode the ' one ' hundred. " Cannon to right of them. Cannon to loft of them. Cannon 'before' them Volley'd and thundered ; Stormed at with shot and shell. They that had struck so well, Rode thro' the jaws of Death, Half a league back again, Up from the mouth of Hell, All that was left of them, Left of 'one' hundred. "Honor the brave and bold 1 Long shall the tale be told, Tea, when our babes are old- How they rode onward." ■ Tenktson. "While Clavebhousb, who, like a hawk perched on a rock and eyeing the time to Bounce on its prey, had watched the event of the action from the opposite bank, now passed the bridge at the head of his cavalry at full trot, and, leading them in squadrons throu-h the intervals and round the flanks of the Royal infantry, formed them on the moor,°and led them to the charge, * * * their broken spirits and dis- heartened coura-e were unable to endure the charge of the cavalry, attended with all Us terrible accompaniments of sight and sound ;-the rush of the horses at full speed, the shaking of the earth under their feet, the glancing of the swords, and waving of tho plumes and the fierce shouts of the cavaliers. The front ranks hardly attempted one ill- directed and disorderly fire, and their rear was broken and flying in confusion ere the (itiarge had been completed ; and in less than five minutes the horsemen were mixed with 136 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 137 them, cutttng and hewing without mercy. * * * Their swords drank deep of slaughter among the unresisting fugitives. Screams for quarter were only answered by the shouts with which the pursuers accompanied their blows, and the whole field p'resented one general scene of confused slaughter, flight, and pursuit." Scott's '■'■Old Mortality." " The eagle eye of Cortes lighted up with triumph. Turning quickly around to the cavaliers at his side, among whom were Sandoval, Olid, Alvahado, and Avila, he pointed out the chief, exclaiming : ' There is our mark ! Follow and support me !' Then crying his war-cry, and striking his iron heel into his weary steed, he plunged headlong into the thickest of the press. His enemies fell back, taken by surprise, and daunted by the ferocity of the attack. Those who did not were pierced through with his lance, or borne down by the weight of his charger. The cavaliers followed close in the rear. On they swept with the fury of a thunderbolt, cleaving the solid ranks asunder, strewing their path with the dying and the dead, and bounding over every obstacle in the way." * * * " The guard, overpowered by the suddenness of the onset, made little resistance, but, flying, communicated their own panic to their comrades. The tid- ings of the loss soon spread over the field. The Indians, filled with consternation, now thought only of escape. In their blind terror, their numbers augmented their confusion. They trampled on one another, fancying it was the enemy in their rear." Peescott's " Conquest of Mexico." KEARNY S CHARGE. HoAYEVER honorable and pleasant a position it may be to command the body-guard at headquarters, in the society of men 23re-eminent in abihty and position, it is not the place for a young officer to win fame. In foreign countries and in royalties — where favors dro20 into hands not entitled to receive them, to the prejudice of those who have borne the bm*then and heat of the day, who have deserved and not obtained — a post around headquarters, is a capital place to get a decoration or an advance step in rank. Unfortunately, it is too much so in this country, but not in anything to the same degree as abroad, since the army at large see clearly and judge honestly, and only acknowledge that soldiership as of the true ring and genuine stamp which has undergone the baptism of blood and the purification of the fire of battle. The reputation which is sought at the cannon's mouth is the true glory of the soldier. Keaent knew this. He had yearned to shine in his proper sphere, the front of battle. The man who could offer his left arm as the price of a brevet, as he had done among his fellow-ofllcers at Puebla, was the man to court danger as a coy mistress. Like Korner, when he indited that " Sword Song," which Avill live forever, he must have often toyed with the " u'on bride" which hung at his thigh, and prayed to see her shming face blush with the blood of the enemy. 138 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. " Thou sword at my left side, What means thy flash of pride ? Thou smilest so on me, I take delight in thee, Hurrah I " The clanging trumps betray The blushing bridal day ; When cannons far and wide Shall roar, I'll fetch my bride. Hurrah ! " Yes, in my sheath I clash ; I long to gleam and flash In battle, ■wild and proud, 'Tis why I clash so loud. Hurrah !" Throughout the advance from Vera Craz to this moment, when his ardent wishes were to be gratified, his heart must have leaped whenever the signal to charge was blown and beaten, with the strong desii-e to answer it with the spur and the appropriate order. On the 18th August, a_ recounoissance was made by four of the engineer corps — three of whom afterwards became notorious rebel generals — with a support of cavalry and infantry. An engagement or skmnish ensued, in which Khakny distinguished himself, and enabled the engineers to perform then* duties with success and results. This service was of sufficient consequence to deserve a special mention in Scott's official report. It is sm-prising how UTesponsive to the deeds of om' own soldiers are the lyres of our poets. The world has read with admu-ation the " Charge of the Six Hundi-ed " at Balaklava ; but how few would have ever heard of that feat of " derring do " had it not been sung by the poet laureate of England. And yet the charge of Cap- tain Philip Kearxy, at the battle of Churubusco, was as wortJiy the genius of Tenntson as the charge of the Light Brigade " into the jaws of death" in that Crimean valley, with three armies as spectators. To appreciate the marvel of dash and bravery, it is necessary to undei'stand the theatre in which it was displayed. Our little army less than nine thousand men all told — it has been set down at six thousand fighting men, as the Rebels counted then- forces — small indeed in its numbers in comparison to the magnitude of its BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 139 exploits, but great indeed in the successes it achieved — awoke from their bivouacs on the morning of the 20th August, 1847 with the assurance of victory ; that whatever then* General willed them to do, would grandly by them be done. In front of them, in the heart of the enemy's country, occupying the village of Chm-ubusco, and in a chain of fortified positions — strong in the natural dispositions of the gi-ound, still stronger in the art witli which it had been fortified, and even stonger yet in the outnumbering forces — were disposed twenty-seven thousand to thu'ty thousand Mexican troops, backed by the population of the city of Mexico, who could tm-n out, if they willed, fifty thousand males capable of bearing arms. These forces, outnumbering ours four to one, or at least three to one, held the village, of solid con- struction ; and scattered buildings of stone, along then* line of battle lined the dykes, and almost impervious hedges of " thorny maguey or cactus Im'ked in the extensive plantations of tall maize, and filled the field-works with then- small arms and artillery. The flat land was broken and difficult, and rendered more so by the enclosm'es, morasses, and canals or ditches which covered it with a net- work of obstacles. " The ground on which the troops operated " — is the language of the gallant WorvTii — " off" the high-road, is remarkably intersected ; loose soil, growing grain, and, at brief Intervals, deep ditches, for the pui-pose of di'ainage and irrigation. These ditches vary from six to eight feet in depth, about the same in width, with from three to four feet of water — the reverse banks lined with the enemy's light troops. " When I recm* to the nature of the ground, and the fact that the division (two thousand six hundred strong, of all arms) was engaged from two to two and a half hom-s in a hand-to-hand conflict with from seven thousand to nine thousand of the enemy, having the advantage of position, and occupying regular works — which our engineers will say were most skillfully constructed — the mind is filled with wonder and the heart with gratitude to the brave officers and soldiers whose steady and indomitable valor has, under such cii'cumstances, aided in achieving results so honorable to our coun- try — results not accorapUshed, however, without the sacrifice of many valuable lives." Thi-ough this ground, and the Mexican line-of-battle, ran several causeways. One of these "passed through the village of Chm-ubusco. 140 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. All of these united with the causeway of San Antonio, which bisected the field-of-battle in a direct line, almost north and soiith, and terminated five and a half miles distant in the Grand Plaza of Mexico, upon which front the National Palace and Cathedral. At the junction referred to, and the apex of the right and acute angled- ti-iangles formed by them, was the bastioned bridge-head ( Tete de I*ont) on the Churubusco River. This was held by a strong gar- rison with three pieces of heavy artillery. It has been the fashion to decry the Mexicans as soldiers, although the Spaniards and French found them foes which proved worthy of then- steel. Like the Turks, and their cognates, the Ai-abs, Kabyles, and Moors, every people of Spanish blood have proved themselves most tenacious in the defense of fortifications and walled towns — witness Sarragossa. This the French experienced before Puebla in 1863, and the cap- ture of this city was considered of sufficient importance to justify the elevation of General Fokey, its captor, to the dignity of Marshal. The Mexican engineers understood their business thoroughly, and it is admitted that the works which they threw up for the defense of their capital were of exceeding strength, and " admh-a- ble both in then* construction and locality." The bridge-head was a beautiful work, solidly and scientifically constructed, with wet ditches and embrasures and platforms for a large armament. More- over, it was flanked by a massive stone church or convent, sm- rounded by strong field-works mounted with heavy guns. Previous to the battle of Churubusco, Captain Keaeny could restrain himself no longer, and had requested permission to partici- pate in the impending action. This was granted, and with his command. Company F, Fu'st United States Dragoons, was detached for general service, and he was attached to the division of General Pru-ow. He was now watching the com'se of events, and, like Dbkdee at " Bothwell Brig," biding his time and opportunity. Meanwhile the roar of Mexican musketry — " more than twenty thousand muskets were continually discharged with a rapidity which showed the stern determination of the enemy " — " was the gi-eatest noise of all the din of battle; it was continued and terrific, di'own- ing the noise of the artillery, the shouts of the combatants, and the groans of the wounded." Despite the severity of such a fire, and the. fearful play of the BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 141 artillery, our troops forced theii' way across the river. At the earae time a vigorous assault was made upon the bridge-head. The gar- rison, so to speak, finding their position turned and in danger of being taken in reverse, thus cutting off then* retreat, slackened the " paj'ticularly spiteful " fire to which Ripley feelingly alludes, and after a short conflict, abandoned the work, and fled over the bridge in the rear towards the city. Previous to this time Keaknt had been able to effect nothing. He had accompanied Pillow in his advance from Coyacan, a vil- lage farther to the east or left on the Rio (River) Chm-ubusco. He had experienced a " great difiiculty" in getting his horses across the broken country, partially inundated, and the deep and intervening ditches, to the causeway, but had succeeded in doing so. There he was joined by a troop of the Thu'd Dragoons, commanded by Cvrp- tain A. T. McReynolds. During the course of the action, a gallant attempt was made to tm-n the Mexicans with this small body of horse, and with them assail the left flank of the enemy. The deep ditches which traversed the " wide and marshy fields" prevented the carrying out of this manoeuvre, and the cavalry, after ineflectual en- deavors to execute it, were compelled to return to the causeway, and there await the development of events. As soon as the bridge- head had been carried. Pillow says : " I then let him loose. Furi- ous was his charge upon the retreating foe, dealing death with the unerring sabi'e." Before Kearny, however, could bring the " unerring sabre" into play some time elapsed. The Dragoons had to make their way through the mass of obstacles which encumbered the causeway be- fore they could operate or even form. To the left of the bridge- head the huge wagons, which composed the Mexican ammunition train, were crowded together in the road leading from Chunibuseo, which entered the work from the west, or its right, immediately along the bank of the river. Every di'aught animal attached to these had been killed, and the passage was almost blocked up by the mass of wagons, war material, and dead men and animals, shat- tered and thrown together by the answering fires of assailants and defenders. To heighten the confusion, one of the powder wagons took fire, and threatened an immediate explosion. This would have been most disastrous in the narrow space completely jammed with the bloody wi'eck and rubbish of war, through which our advancing cavahy had to pick and force their way. With a reckless daring // 142 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. some of the soldiers on the road devoted themselves to the preservv ation of theu* comrades. They climbed into the bm-ning wagons, tore out the ammunition chests already kindled into flame, and tum- bled them into the ditch before the fire could reach their contents.* A path thus frayed for him by this exertion of heroism, Keaeny •was now enabled to extricate his di-agoons, and get them forward on the causeway, where it was partially clear. The retreating Mexi- cans had meanwhile made good use of their respite, and had already placed a distance of over a mile and a half between themselves and then- pm'suers. As soon as he had space, Keakny formed his troop, * "More of the New York Boys. We most gladly give place to the following additional leaf in the chaplet of glory worn by New York, for that her sous have proved themselves worthy of such a mother : " We hardly know how we could have omitted the name of the gallant Kearnt, for it has often been on our lips with words of admiration and praise, but we can hardly lament it, since it affords us this opportunity to lay before our readers such details as the follow- ing interesting communication furnishes : To the Editor of the Courier and Enquirer : "Allow me to add a sixth to the names of the gallant 'New Yorkers,' whom you so justly mention with admiration, as having, under the folds of the American flag, soaked with their blood the soil before the city of Mexico. "I know the omission was accidental, and therefore recall it to your recollection : I al lude to Lieutenant (now Captain) Philip Kearny, of the First Dragoons, as chivalrous an officer as ever wore spur or belted sabre. "Having served ten years in the far West with his regiment, with the exception of two passed in France, under the requisition of Government, daring which he served a cr.ra- paigu with the army in Africa, he was about to resign his commission and retire to his estates, \vhcn the country was startled by the battle of Palo Alto. "Hastening to Washington, he arrived in time to withdraw his resignation, and was em powered to raise his own troops. He immediately applied himself with all his energies to the task, and by lavish expenditures of his own means, in addition to the bounty offered by Government, he was soon at the head of a body of picked men superbly mounted. "Joining General Scott at Vera Cruz, his troops were made his body-guard, and par- ticipated at the battle of Cerro Gordo, enduring, in common with the rest of the army, the fatigues and exposures up to the city of Puebla. " At the battle of Churubusco his Dragoons (it is unnecessary to say that he was at their head) were in the thickest of the fight. " Charging upon the retreating masses of the enemy, and exposed to the murderous dis- charge of four batteries, belching cross-fires of ball and grape-shot, besides an incessaut torrent of musketry from all sides, his arm suddenly fell helpless at his side, shattered by a ball a little below the shoulder. Although suffering intense pain, and bleeding profusely, he still retained his position and command, till, becoming faint, he reeled in his saddle, and was only prevented from falling by the hold of one of his dragoons. " From exhaustion and loss of blood he soon swooned entirely away, and being placed in a blanket, was carried to the rear of his men. " The next day his arm was amputated, and at the last accounts he was doing well. "My acquaintance is slight with Captain E., much more so than with Lieutenant ScnuTLER Hamilton, the only other of the gentlemen that you mention whom I have the pleasure of knowing, but whose elegance and modesty in the drawing-room fully pre- pared me for his gallantry in the field of battle ; but, slight as it is, I felt bound to call your attention to what I doubt not was an accidental omission." & EIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 143 and galloped furiously after. His original force, small as it was, had only been augmented by a single platoon, under Captain Kerr, who was accompanied by Colonel Harney without a command. The column overtook the Mexicans about a half a mile outside the Garita (Barrier or Gate) of San Antonio Abad, through which the causeway enters the city. Beyond this commenced the suburbs of Mexico. Into the dense mass of thousands of the enemy — Santa Anna and several other generals were involved in the tumult — Kearny plunged his command. It is not probable that it exceeded 100 horsemen. It could not have comprised over a hundi'ed and fifty horsemen, volunteers included, had his ranks been full, after deducting casualties and sick — victims to the enemy, campaigning and climate. It plunged into the Mexican armed crowd, just as one of the Brig- antiaes of Cortes crushed its way onwards thi'ough the midst of the enormous fleet of Aztec war canoes on a like sunny May-day (1521), 326 years previously ; or just as Cortes himself, with his devoted band, charged home, and wrested victory out of defeat. " Out of this nettle danger we plucked the flower safety," at the famous battle of Otompan, or of Otumba, on the 8th July, 1520. Or perhaps, even more like the charge of Claverhouse, at Bothwell Bridge, after the gate and barricade had been battered down by the artillery and cleai-ed by the infantry ; when that model trooper of the day followed up the Covenanters until his "Life- Guard's swords were blunted and their horses blown." The sabres of the dragoons scattered death and dismay through the Mexican soldatesca, and hewed their way onwards with as fatal effect as the light broadsides of the vessel of the Conquistador thi'ough the fleet of their Aztec forefathers. Those of the crowd who were not cut down or ridden over, either thi-ew themselves into the ditches on either side of the causeway, and dispersed over the fields, or else jammed themselves, in a confused mass, iato the entrance of the barrier. A battery or lunette, mounting two guns, defended the Garita,* The garrison — either bewildered and terror-stricken at the wild ♦ There was a regular line of defences from the Nino Perdido Gate to that of San An- tonio. There the line stopped. To the left or east of it was a lunette connected, a quar- ter of a mile farther on, a priest's cap or swallow-tail, detached, and about a quarter of a mile to the left of this again a simple redan or fleche.— " ilfa^j attached to Official Beport." y 144 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENEBAL PHILIP KEARNT. tumult, which surged upon them in all the panic of a rout, instead of the assured victory they had been promised, or determined to make good their position regardless of then- own people — now opened their fii-e upon friend and foe, dealing death promiscuously amid the crowd. Unfortunately, while this charge was progressing with so much success. General Scott — unaware of its success or opportunities — had despatched an order to arr^t the pursuit, fearful that it might be carried too far, and compromise what had been gained. As soon as this order reached Colonel Harney " he caused the recall to be sounded from the rear." Amid the thunder of artUleiy and the shouts and cries and uproar of the flight, the notes of the bugle were either unheard or unheeded by those in advance. Those in the rear, however, gradually obeyed the signal, and small parties con- tinually dropped off, from time to time, as the trumpet notes which conveyed the order made themselves heard. Thus, those who held on their adventm-ous way were soon reduced to " three or four sets of fours." With this hand-full, Keaeny kept on as undauntedly — " Into the jaws of Death, Into the mouth of Hell," as if he had been followed by the whole force with which he launched out upon the enemy. In this he was accompanied by Major Mills, of the Fifteenth Infantry, who had joined his squadron as a volunteer after participating in the fierce struggle in which his own regiment had its Colonel wounded and one-third of its force cut down. Just in front of the Garita a ditch had been dug nearly across the causeway. Although numbers of the Mexicans had been precipi- tated into this cut by the pressm-e of the mass behind, it was yet impassable for men on horseback. Perceiving that the Mexican mounted officers — mingled with the flying crowd — abandoned their animals to make then- way across this obstruction on foot, Kearny threw himself from his saddle, called upon his men to follow, dashed across the ditch, and threw himself into the midst of the Mexicans, to enter the battery with them. He was nobly supported by two officers and about a dozen dragoons. It is a sorrow and a shame that American History has not preserved the names of all these men. From the context it would appear that the officers were Cap- tain Andrew F. McReynolds, Tlurd U. S. Dragoons, from Michi- BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 145 gan, who was severely wounded on this occasion, and Lieutenant John Lorimer Graham, Tenth U. S. Infantry, likp Major Mills, serving with Captain Kearny, and " attached" to his command, also severely wounded. It is a very curious fact that Kearny, McRey- NOiJJS and Graham, were all three injured on this occasion, in the left arm. Major Mills fell, slain at, or, as claimed, inside, the very gates. Kearny always had a confused idea of what occm-red at this juncture, and yet he preserved a distinct recollection of many inter- esting incidents. He said that when he threw himself into the press, hewing his way over the rampart and into the battery, he distinctly saw one Mexican officer pointing him out to the infantry in the work, and by his gestures, urging the men to take good aim and shoot him down. The features of this officer seemed to have been impressed upon his mind with such vivid force that he could have recognized him subsequently. The jam soon prevented Kearny from using his weapons, and it appeared as if a hundi'ed hands had hold of him at once ; otherwise, the pressm'e itself ren- dered his sword arm powerless. How he extricated himself he never could tell. When he found himself free, his leather baldrick or cross-belt — ^to which his officers' cartridge-box was attached — was gone, likewise his pistol. It had been torn off in the struggle to get free, likewise his waist-belt ; yet he could not remember how or when. This may be readily conceived, when the reader calls to mind that a cannon had been belching forth death almost in the face of Kearny and his little band, striking down Americans and Mexicans on either hand. Thus fell the gallant Major Mills ; thus the staunch McReynolds and Grahajm were disabled. Nothing saved Kj;aknt and the sm'vivers of his party but the panic, inspu-ed by his audacity. Terror-stricken, the Mexicans at the moment when he was in their power seemed to have shinmk back appalled- They either abandoned their guns or ceased to charge and discharge them ; and even the musketry discontinued its fire. It was the very chm-m of battle, a whirlpool of human life. But the thunder of the tempest had a pause. Had K-earny been followed by the number with which he commenced this charge, or had no signal of recall been blown, and had he been supported by a force of infantry, he could have made his way into the city, and Mexico, most probably, would have been captured that day. From the Garita of San Antonio to the Grand Plaza is less than a mile 146 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNT". and three-quaxters, and within the ban-ier there was not a single defensive work, and no organized defenders had there been any. All was indisci'iminate panic, consequent confusion and flight. The following extract fi-om the " other side," or Mexican History of tiiis war, is too complimentary to justify its omission. The reader will pardon its inaccuracies, since the Mexicans, from their own showing, were in no condition to see things clearly or relate them accurately : — " General Santa Anna, with his staff and General Alcoeta, re- th'ed also from this place" — the Villa or Village of Portales, about three-quarters of a mile in the rear of the bridge-head, " which still was contested." " He mixed himself with the cavalry, and, desperate, gave the whip to some of the ofiicers, who fled. On the causeway a horrible disorder was seen ; all were confounded, and pushed one another, and trampled one another under foot. " The American di-agoons, mounted on fleet horses, coming up to our rear-guard, increased the fright, by crushing those whom they met in their way. General Santa Anna reached the Garita of San Antonio, and after him, the rest of om*s, cut to pieces, mixed up with some of the enemy's dragoons, intoxicated with blood. The men at the guns discharged some grape-shot among these, and the infantry, feeling that their entrance was now covered, opened a thick fire along the causeway, animated by the presence of Gener- als Santa Anna, Alcorta and Gaona, who personally commanded them. At this moment an American officer, in an uniform of blue, penetrated through the low earthen rampart, mounted on his horse, sword in hand, dealing sabre-blows, and falling wounded on the esplanade." [Mark this : inside the San Antonio Gate must be inferred from the Mexican account.] "Many swords were drawn to kill him ; but the others also hastened to defend him on seeing him fall. He rose crippled, radiant with valor, and smiling at the feli- city of being at the Gates of the Capital" This officer was Philip Keaknt !* * " It is not often that we prodigalize eulogium. We do not consider every officer who cornea bacli wounded a hero. That epithet must be won by more than mere bravery— it belongs only to bravery in the excess ; patience under fatigue ; unmurmuring endurance of pain, and an ardent thirst for glory. Of all the officers who have fought under our bauuers, no man has shown all those characteristics more fully than Captain Kearnt. Yet no voice here has been loud in his p"raise, no city newspaper has invited public atten- tion to his gallantry, and called upon the citizens of his native place to do him honor. If the story of his charge at Churubusco be not exaggerated, certainly there is no cause to be shown why he should receive two brevets, as did Captain Mat. Captain Kbabnt is in BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 147 Finding himself alone, but free, Kearny comprehended his situ- ation at once, that nothing was to be done but get out of the scrape as soon as possible. He accordingly retraced his steps along the causeway on foot. It would have been fortunate for him had he continued to do so, for he had scarcely withdrawn when the Mexi- cans remanned then* guns, and commenced firing grape down the road. Unluckily, Kearny encountered one of our di'agoon horses, whose rider had been kUled, sprang into the saddle, and attempted to spur him into a gallop. But the animal was done up, and whe- ther from exhaustion or wounds, could scarcely hobble along. An- other discharge of grape now tore down the causeway. While on foot, the first missiles passed over his head. Fhing too high was a common fault of the Mexicans. They seem to have often aimed along the line of metal, mthout allowing for the dispart. Being elevated in the saddle, a single ball took efiect and completely shat- flne health, but we regret to learn that Lieutenant Graham, who accompanied the charge and shared in his misfortune, has not recovered from the effect of his wound, for the want of attention, but has just passed through a dangerous illness. We hope they may both be shortly again in the saddle. To show that we have not exaggerated the merit of Captain Keabnt, we subjoin a description of his and his troop's share at the battle of Churubusco : "The charge of Keabnt's dragoons upon the flying masses of the Mexicans in the battle of Churubusco is one of the most brilliant and decisive feats which have occurred in the war. As soon as our troops had carried the formidable tete de pont by which the avenue leading to the city was laid open to cavalry, Captain Kearny's dragoons rushed upon the flying masses of the Mexicans with an impetuosity and fury which made amends for the scantiness of their numbers, and bore them back in confusion upon the town. The enemy had upon the causeway a force of cavalry fourfold that of our own, but the nar- rowness of the avenue prevented him from availing himself of this superiority, and re- duced the conflict to those single-handed issues in which the Mexicans must ever yield to our prowess. The audacity of the onset of Kearny's troops struck dismay to the host which fled before them. The retreat became a confused rout, and the causeway was blocked up by the entangled masses of the enemy. But even through this obstacle the tri- umphant dragoons forced their way, trampling down those who escaped their relentless sabres. Scattering their foe before them, the dragoons came at last within reach of the formidable batteries which defended the gates of the city, and a murderous fire was opened upon them, which was even more terrible to the fugitive Mexicans than to the dragoons. The latter continued their pursuit up to the gates of the city, and were shot down or made prisoners upon the very parapets of its defences. This was the moment, if ever, that Gen. Scott might have entered the city, had the instant possession of it conformed to his preconceived designs. Already had the inhabitants of the town set up the cry that the Americans were upon them, and the whole population was stricken defenceless by panic terrors. But the dragoons were recalled from the pursuit, and the survivors of that des- perate charge withdrew, covered with wounds and with honors. " In every narration of the events of Churubusco we have seen this charge and pursuit of Kearny's dragoons commemorated and applauded, but it appears to have impressed the Mexicans far more than the popular mind of our own countrymen. In various letters which we have seen written by them from the capital, they speak of the audacity of the dragoons as terrible and almost supernatural."— iVeic Orleans Picayune, Nov, 21s<, 1847. 148 BIOGRAPHY -0^ MAJOE-GENEBAL PHILIP KEAENY, ter6d the bone of Kearny's left arm, between his elbow and shoul- der. He described the pain as excruciating, but still was able to keep the saddle.' Tlie flow of blood, however, soon brought on such exhaustion, that he was about to fall when he came across a group of our soldiers. They staunched the blood as well as they were able, placed him in a blanket, and carried him to the hospital He suffered terribly irntH an operation was performed ; and he often said no words could express his sense of relief as soon as the arm was amputated. Wliile Sm-geon De Leon was at work. General Pierce, of New Hampshire, held his head. Kearny often spoke with grati- tude of the feeling displayed on this occasion by the future President. Thus had his presentiment been realized. He had saved his life, but lost his left arm as he foretold. Nor had the words, lightly spoken at the dinner in Puebla, fallen unheeded to the gi-ouud. He had won his brevet, and paid the price with his left arm. This was the end of Kearny's service in Mexico ; brief, but how o-lorious ! He was not at that time the robust man he afterwards developed into, nor was his wound an ordinary one. Scarcely any of the arm was left, it was taken off so near the shoulder. Before the stump was healed, Scott was in Mexico, reveling — if the con- sciousness of a triumphant issue due to his superior generalship is not thus correctly construed, what is ? — in the haUs of the Mon- tezumas. On the 13th September, Mexico was virtually captured; on the 14th, " Old Glory" waved over the National Palace, and Scott en- tered the city amid the acclamations of his soldiers. Captain J. W. P , Fom'th U. S. Ai'tiUery, seiwing as Infan- try, stood w^ith the remains of his regunent, drawn up in the Grand Plaza when Scott entered. The old General, the hero of twowai-s, was in full and splendid uniform. Conspicuous above all the rest towered the grand Commander-in-Chief, as magnificent a specimen of an American as he was an illustrious example of a general. Be- hind followed an escort of di-agoons, grand men on tall horses. As the honored Chief entered the open square, a loud hurrah, a shout such as can issue from none other than Anglo-Saxon throats, bm-st from the troops akeady di-awn up there. Brandishing their sabres high in air, the dragoons responded with a like manly hm-- rah ; and the old walls and buildings echoed, until they seemed to shake, to such victorious cheers as no Latin or Hybrid race caa utter. BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 149 Sut the first man who had entered, sword in hand, the gate Oj that captured capital, was Captain Philip EIeakny. DOCUMENTS. EXTRACTS FROM OFFICIAL REPORTS. " An-Iving here, the 18th (August), Woeth's division and Harney's cavalry were pushed forward a league to reconnoitre, and to carry or to mask San Antonio, on the direct road to-the capital. This village was found strongly defended by field works, heavy guns, and a numerous garrison. It could only be turned by infantry to the left over a field of volcanic rocks and lava ; for, to our right, the ground was too boggy. It was soon ascertained, by the daring engineers, Captain Mason, and Lieutenants Stevens and Toweb, that the point could only be approached by the fi-ont, over a naiTow causeway, flanked -with wet ditches of great depth. WOETH was ordered not to attack, but to threaten, and to mask the place. "The first shot fired from San Antonio (the 18th) killed Captain S. Thoextox, Second Dragoons, a gallant oificer, who was covering the operations with his company. '"The same day a reconnoissance was commenced to the left of San Augustin, first over difficult mounds, and farther on over the same field of volcanic rocks and lava which extend to the mountains, some five miles from San Antonio towards Magdalena. This reconnoissance was continued to-day by Captain Lee, assisted by Lieutenants Beaueegaed and Toweb, all of the engineers, who were joined in the afternoon by Major Smith, of the same corps. Other divisions coming up, PiLLOW's was advanced to make a practicable road for heavy artillery, and Twiggs' thro\vn farther in front to cover that operation ; for, by the partial reconnoissance of yesterday, Captain Lee discovered a large corps of observation in that direction, \vith a detachment of which his supports of cavalry and foot, under Captain Iveaeny and Lieutenant-Colonel Geaham, respectively, had a suc- cessful skirmish." (Compare Semmes' "Service Afloat and Ashore," pages 378 -584.) Major- General Scott's Official Report, No. 5, of the "Battles of Contreras and Churu- busco" Executive Documents, No. 1, page 304. " Arriving at Coyoacan, two miles by a cross-road from the rear of San An- tonio, I first detached Captain Lee, engineer, with Captain Keaeny's troop, First Dragoons, supported by the rifle regiment, under IMajor LoEiNG, to reconnoitre that strong point ; and next des^Datched Major-General Pillow, with one of the brigades, (Cadwalladee's, ) to make the attack upon it, in concert with Major- General WoETH on the opposite side." Major-General Scott's Official Report, Ibid., JSTo. 82, page 809. "As soonn%t}\eUtedepont was carried, the greater part of Woeth's and Pillow's forces passed that bridge in rapid pursuit of the flying enemy. These distinguished Generals coming up with Brigadier-General Shields, now also / 150 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. victorious, the three continued to pi-ess upon the fugitives to within a mile and a half of the capital. Here Colonel Harney, with a small part of his brigade of cavalry, rajiidly passed to the front, and charged the enemy up to the nearest gate. " The cavalry charge was headed by Captain KeaKNT, of the First Dragoons having, in squadron, with his o^vn troop, that of Captain McReynolds, of the Third — making the usual escort to general headquarters ; but, being early in the day attached to general service, was now under Colonel Harney's orders. The gallant Captain, not hearing the recaU that had been sounded, dashed up to the San Antonio gate, sabring in his Avay all who resisted. Of the seven officers of the squadron, Kearn"Y lost his left arm, McReynolds and Lieutenant Loeimer Graham were both severely wounded, and Lieutenant R. S. Ewell, who suc- ceeded to the command of the escort, had two horses killed under him. Major F. D. Mills, of the Fifth Infantry, a volunteer in this charge, was killed at the gate." MajOT'Oeneral Scott's Official Report, Ibid., No. 32, page 315. " Captain KEARNY, of the First Dragoons, commanding a squadron composed of his own and Captain INIcReynolds' companies, was on duty with my division , during the action, and made his way with great difficulty across the wide and marshy fields and deep ditches. Seeing no field for the action of his fine squadron until the tete de pont was carried, I had held him in reserve. I then let him loose. Furious was his charge upon the retreating foe, dealing death Avith the unerring sabre, until he readied the very suburbs of the city, and drew from tJie enemy's batteries at the garita a heavy and destructive fire, by which the gallant Captain lost his left arm ; and Captain McReynolds, Third Dragoons, who nobly sus- tained the daring movements of his squadron commander, was also wounded in the left arm. Both of these fine companies sustained severe losses in their rank and file also." Major- General Pillow's Official Report, Ibid., pageZid-"'!. "The reports of Major Sumner, commanding First Battalion, and Lieutenant- Colonel MooUE, commanding Second Battalion, which I have the honor to forward herevrith, will show in what manner the other troops and squadrons of my com- mand were employed. Tlie three troops of horse, brought by me on the field, being ordered away in different directions, Major Sumner and myself soon found ourselves without commands. I then employed myself with my staff in rallying fugitives and encouraging our troops on the left of the main road. Major Sumner, towards the close of the engagement, was placed by the general-in-chief in charge of the last reserve, consisting of the rifle regiment and one company of horse, and was ordered to support the left. This force was mo\'ing rapidly to take its posi- tion in line-of -battle, when the enemy broke and fled to the city. At this moment, perceiving that the enemy were retreating in disorder on one of the main causeways leading to the city of Mexico, I collected all the cavalry in my reach, consisting of parts of Captain Kebr'S company, Second Dragoons, Captain Kearny's company. Fust Dragoons, and pursued them vigorously until we wero halted by the discharge of the batteries at their gate. Many of the enemy were overtaken in the pursuit and cut down by our sabres. I cannot speak in terms BIOGKaPHY op major-general PHILIP KEAENT. 151 too complimentary of the manner in which the charge was executed. My only difficulty was in restraining the impetuosity of my men and officers, who seemed to vie with each other who should be foremost in the pursuit. Captain Kbakny gallantly led his squadron into the very intrenchments of the enemy, and had the misfortune to lose an arm from a grape-shot fired from a gun at one of the main gates of the capital. Captain jSIcReyxolds and Lieutenant Gkaham were also wounded, and Lieutenant Ewell had two horses shot under him." Colonel WiLLiAJi S. Harnbt's Official Report, Ibid, page 347. " Return of killed, woanded, and missing of the army under the immediate com- mand of Major-General Winfield Scott on the 19th and 20th August, 1847. haeney's brigade. Killed : "First Dragoons, Company F (KEAnxY's)— Privates Patrick Hart, jAiiES McDonald, McBropht, John Hitter. • •***«* " Third Dragoons, Company K (McRbtnolds')— Prirates Edwabd Curtis, Augustus Dessoll, George Duvee. Wounded : " First Dragoons, Company F (Kearny's) — CaptainVKlLTP Kearny, severely^ lost left arm; Lieutenant Losimer Graham, (Tenth Infantry,) attached, severely. "Third Dragoons, Company K(MC!REYNOLDS')—Ca^tem A. T. McReynolds, severely; private Co^vden." Senate Executive Document, No. 1, December 7, 1847, page 431. CHAPTER XII. HOME, SWEET HOME; * * * "Behold my success in your service," and the Abbe produced a long leather case, richly inlaid with gold. "Faith, Abbe," said I, "am I to understand that this is a present for your eldest pnpil ?" "You are," said Montreuil, opening the case, and producing a sword ; the light fell upon the hilt, and I drew back dazzled with its lustre ; it was covered with stones, appar- ently of the most costly value. Attached to the hilt was a lable of purple velvet, on which, in letters of gold, was inscribed, • • • Deyeeeus. »Tis a sword of Spain « * * • " Behold ! I have a weapon: A better never did itself sustain Upon a soldier's thigh • * « • Othello. After his return from Mexico, in December, 1847, decorated with the loss of Ms left arm, and honored with a brevet — ^which he had won as justly as ever a brevet was earned — ^for distinguished gallantry in action — ^for which, alone, such a distinction should be conferred — ^Major Keakny was on recruiting service in the city of New York from May, 1848, to July, 1851. Dm'ing this period, for the first time in many years, he was settled down in the midst of his few surviving relatives and many friends, and happy in his own home, buUt on a portion of the country seat of his gi'eat-gTand- ' father on his mother's feide. Honorable John Watts, senior. He used to speak with deUght of this period, when he was " master of his o\vn estabUshment, his nice gai'den, and pretty play-ground for his children," in his native city. Daring his sojourn in New York, a compliment was paid him which he always seemed to regard as the most welcome token of his fellow citizens' appreciation of his military services. A great many per- sons at the time, especially New Yorkers, did not think that the government had taken sufficient notice of Kearny's gallantry at the Gates of Mexico. Many officers had received two brevets for far less conspicuous merit In fact, such was the injustice 15a BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 153 slioN^Ti that one of the finest officers in the service returned hi:; brevet in disgust. Philip Keaunt was a member of the Uniou Chib, a body of gentlemen, which comprised numbers of the first men of the city, both as to position and intelligence. This body of representative citizens determined to present a " costly and superb testimonial" of then* feelings towards theu* fellow-member " for gallantry during the Mexican War, but especially at Churubusco." Tliis testimonial was a "magnificent sword," which was indeed magnificent for the time when it was made. As a rich and chaste specimen of art it has never been exceeded, although more money has been lavished upon similar presentation gifts in recent years. ^ Tlie guard was formed by a large spread eagle in gold, holding in its beak the head of a serpent, the folds of which constituted the guard, which was studded with agates. The handle itself was solid silver, richly chased, and it was fastened to the blade of " the ice- brook's temper," arabesqued and polished in perfect taste. " The scabbard, which was also of sold silver, was relieved with ornaments in gold and etchings. In a long oval was a sketch of the battle of Chm-ubusco, where Captain Kearny lost his left arm, and within a cu-cle, the word " Churubusco." Upon one of the Ixands was a representation of Hercules crushing the Serj)ent, and on another a military device, admkably aiTanged. The following inscription shows the pm-pose of the gift : — " Presented to Captain Philip Kearnt, Jr., Fu-st Regiment U. S. Dragoons, by his Friends and Associates, members of the Union Club, New York, 1848." The sword was enclosed m a curiously contrived case of black walnut, which was worthy of the weapon it contained. When his body lay in state, prior to his interment, in the parlor of his mansion at Belle Grove, this sword was clasped in the arms of the dead soldier, closely pressed to that bosom which had twice been decorated by the hands of foreign sovereigns, for the same pre-eminent soldiership that won the exquisite weapon for the iallen warrior — a weapon his patriotic right arm never again could ^^deld for the country he loved so deai'ly, the country for which he died. CHAPTER XIII. THE GOLDEN GATE ; AND VICTORT ON THE KOGUE EIVEK. "Tausend TEtTFLEN ! that I shouM say so, and so like to be near my latter end," ejacn- ated the Captain ; but under his breath, " what will become of us, now they have brought musketry to encounter our archers ?" Sm Waitbb Scott's '■'■Legend of Montrose.^ In midsummer, 1851, Keaknt received orders to join his com- pany in California, and sailed for San Francisco in August of that year. Thither he was not unwilling to proceed, as he wished to look after some very large investments made for him by an agent, but without his knowledge. These tm-ned out very unfortunately, and swallowed up a fortune. Nevertheless, as lucky in his daring specu- lations as La his military dashes, he more than retrieved the loss while at the " Golden Gate." The writer has reason to be well acquainted with all these cii-eum- stances, for to him, as to a brother, in preference to all others in the world, Phil. Kearny came for assistance in difficulties for which he was in no way responsible in honor nor called upon to remedy, except thi'ough that high sense of chivalry and regard for his name which always distinguished his actions. Prostrate from typhoid fever and almost powerless, the writer was still happy to be able to accomplish all that was necessary, and this fact is mentioned simply to demonstrate the mutual confidence and affection at ciises which existed between his cousin and himself It was dm-ing this period of Kearny's residence in New York that he experienced that attack of varioloid — taken in the discharge of his duty — which was almost as severe as the worst form of small- pox. He was very deeply scarred in consequence of this disease, and through it a complete alteration was wi'ought in his appearance. Not only were his featm-es affected, but a complete physical change occurred. From this time forward he began to spread and develop into that magnificent figm*e of a trooper which atti'acted the atten- 154 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENEEAL PHILIP KEARNY. 155 tion of every one who saw him as he lay upon the embalming table. From this time, also, that resemblance between the cousins, which had so often attracted notice, terminated, and was no longer remarked. Major Philip Kearny had scarcely been transferred from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast when he demonstrated the truth of what has so often been claimed for him, that he seemed destined to shine in whatever he undertook. His summer campaign of 1851, against the Rogue River Indians, Avas one of the most telling blows ever delivered by our army in this harassing warfare. These sav- ages at that period were the most wicked, most warlike, and most difficult to subdue of all the tribes on om- Pacific coast. What rendered them more formidable was the fact that they occupied a district which intercepted all intercourse between Oregon and Cali- fornia ; scattered along and across the direct road, north and south, on the banks of the Rogue River, which di-ains a rugged, moun- tainous wilderness, and flows as a general thing west and perpen- dicular to the coast, emptying into the Pacific, twenty miles south of Port Orford, and fifty miles north of Crescent City. Much information in regard to this expedition is derived from Major-General Rufus Ingalls, Chief Quartermaster for so many campaigns of the Army of the Potomac. At that time he was stationed at Fort Vancouver, on the Washington shore of the Columbia River, where he fitted out Major Keaeht. To use his language, " this handsome campaign opened that country." It has often been commented upon with surprise how Keaent, one-armed as he was, kept his saddle on all occasions, even when the march lay along mountain tracks most dangerous, and often seemingly impracticable for a soldier on horseback ; tracks difiicult enough for the sure footed mules. The principal engagement was that of the Table Rock, laid down on the maps as Fort Lane, about mid- way between Rosebm-g, north, and Crescent City, south. The former (Rosebm-g) is the residence of Joe Lane, as he was famili- arly styled, then Governor of the Territory, who wi'ote to Kearny one of the most flattering letters which can rewai'd an oflicer who has succeeded in solving a difiicult and dangerous problem. He gave him the greatest credit for the ability with which he had planned, and the resolution with which he had executed his opera- tions. The fight at the Table Rock was a complete triumph. It awed the savages, pacified the district, and accomplished the great 156 BIOGRAPHT OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. object in vieTV, making the route safe between our farthest north- western territory and California. On this occasion a very gallant officer fell — Captain Stewart, who passed thi'ough the whole Mexi- can war with distinction, unscathed, to die at the hands of a miser- able Indian, shot through the body with an arrow by that savage whom he had rushed forward to save from the just fmy of our troops. The torture which preceded his decease must have been t-errific, as was testified by his reply to Major Keaknx's question, " Stew AKT, ai"e you suffering much f "Suffering! I feel as if a red hot bar of ii-on was thrust through my bowels." Major Kjiaunt took the greatest pride in the letter which he received from Governor Lane of Oregon in relation to these engage- ments and their happy results. This letter he exhibited to the writer when next they met with an honest exultation, such as he seldom displayed, as an acknowledgment of his able and brilliant soldiershij). This letter, like all the rest of the testunonials which Kearny received fi'om time to time, is no longer to be found. As soon as the present work was projected, a letter was addi-essed to Governor Lane in the hope that a copy of it might have been preserved by him. The following is the Governor's reply, but it cannot approach the concise elegance with which he expressed his commendation in the original document : KosEBUEG, Oregon, April 27th, 1868. General de PEYSTER: Sir : — I regret my inability to furnish you a copy of the letter you mention in yours of the 21st January,* but it aifords me pleasure to supply, as well as I can from memory, a brief statement of the conduct, in Oregon, of the late General • New Yoke, No. 59 East 218t Stbeet, January 21st, 1868. GmemoT Joseph 'L&.Tfm^ formerly, about 1851, Governor afOreaon: Sib :— The person who addresses you is the cousin, co-heir, and biographer of MajorKxonoral PHiLrp Keabnt. About the year 1852, or 1853, my counsin, General Keaeny, then Major United States Dragoons, came to my house on the Hudson, having just returned from the Pacific coast and Ills campaign against the Rogue River Indians, which gave peace to that Territory. He showed me a letter from you. In which he seemed to take great pride. In this you gave him the highest credit for the ability with which he had planned the expedition, and for the vigor and intrepidity with which he had carried it out. If I recollect aright, you stated in that letter that the chastisement which ho had inflicted on those particularly lawless tribes had given peace to the State or Territory of which you were the Executive. What has become of this valuable testimonial, I linow not. If you could give me a duplicate of it you would oblige me exceedingly. If you cannot give mo a copy, can you not give me a paraph' fifl->, or a certificate of equal force, to embody in the General's biography. Your early attention to this will exceedingly oblige me, and assist me to present to the world properly a peculiar iihase in the life of my cousin. Very respectfully. Your obedient servant, J. WATTS DB PEYSTEE. i BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL THILIP KEARNT. 157 Kearnt, the important results of which induced from myself the merited compli- ment to which you allude. During the summer of 1851 Major Phil Keakitt received orders to proceed with two companies of United States Dragoons, Captains Stewart and Walkebj from Oregon to some point in California. En route, he was informed of a recent attack of the Rogue River Indians, in which they succeeded in killing quite a number of miners, and doing other mischief. These Indians were at that time the most warlike and formidable tribe on the Pacific coast. Never having known defeat, they were exceedingly bold in their depredations upon the miners and settlers, and were the terror of all. Major Kearny determined, if possible, to give them battle, and finally found them, three hundred braves strong, in the occupation of an excellent position. He ordered an attack, and, after a sharp engagement, succeeded in dislodging them, Idlling, wound- ing, and capturing fifty or more. It was here that the lamented, brave, and bril- liant Stewart fell. The Indians retreated across Rogue River, and feeling that they had not been suiRciently chastised, the Major concluded to pursue them, and, wliilst in the prosecution of this purpose, I joined him. He followed until the Indians made a stand quite favorable to themselves on Evans Creek, about thirty miles distant from the scene of their late disaster. Here he again attacked them, killed and wounded a few, and captured about forty, among the latter a very import- ant prisoner in the person of the Great Chief's favorite wife. By means of this capture, and these successes an advantageous peace was obtained. Being an eye- witness, in part, of Kearny's movements and action, I can, with great truth, and do with no less pleasure, bear testimony to his gallantry as a soldier and his ability as an officer. I was then, and still am, sensible of the great good secured to Oregon by his. achievements at that particular time. Very respectfully, your obedient servant, (Signed) Joseph Lane. CHAPTER XIV. KEARNY A WANDEREE. "And from his native land resolv'd to go, And visit scorching climes beyond the sea." Byeon's "Childe Harold.'" •♦Yon snn that sets upon the sea, We follow in hia flight ; Farewell awhile to him and thee, My native laud— Good Night I" Bybon's "Childe Harold.'" ♦•Sir, to a wise man all the world's a foil: It is not Italy, nor France, nor Europe That must bound me, if my fates call me forth; Yet, I protest, it is no salt desire Of seeing countries, shifting for a religion, Nor any d'lsaffection to the state Where I was bred, and unto ivhich I owe My dearest plots, hath brought me out" B. Johnson's " Yolpone.'" KEARNY A WANDERER. After that gloriously successful campaign against the Rogue River Indians, in which Governor Lane bears such explicit testi- mony to his enterprise, gallantry, and efficiency, Kearny was sta- tioned in different parts of California. All his own letters, which were exceedingly able and interesting, have been either lost, mis- laid, or destroyed ; but the wi'iter has been able to find a series of intimations from the only surviving relative on his mother's side, his aunt, in which his movements are constantly referred to. In one, written out to Europe on the 7th October, 1851 : " I re- ceived a letter from Major Phil this morning, he desires remem- brance to you ; he is, at his quarters in the beautiful Valley of So- noma (in Northwestern California), well contented with the balmy breezes and the society of some right j^leasant officers — is going to take a look at Southern California ; expects to receive the accept- ance of hia resignation about the middle of this month, and then 163 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 159 comes home. I am sorry for this ; I had set my heart upon your meeting him on the top of the Pyramids ; now you must not go until next year, when you and Phil can take a fresh start from New York. I think that will bp delightful. We can all think serious- ly about it when the Major comes to New York." On the 14th November, the same correspondent wi'ote : " I have received another letter from the Major ; still enjoying himself to the full, expecting now daily to hear that his resignation is accepted, and be off to France by way of China, India, and Egyjjt ; a snug way to get to Paris, He has a great deal of military parade, guard- mounting at nine and a half in the morning, di*ess foot parade at retreat, with trumpets sounding, sometimes with full band (military doings), from day-break until nine at night, tattoo. His advice to have a post established at a certain point has been approved by General Hitchcock (Fort Lane, on the Rogue River scene of his victory?) on his visit to Oregon." Kearny's next letter, dated 14th November, 1851, spoke of sailing the next day in the United States ship-of-war Vincennes, as a guest of the Commander, Captain Hudson, to the Sandwich Islands, from thence to proceed to China, Calcutta, Bombay, where he expected to arrive in April, 1852. As intended, he sailed in the Vincennes, for China, stopping on the way at the Sandwich Islands. On the 7th December, 1851, he was at Honolulu. "He had the upper and second story in a new cottage with a piazza running around ; the native family (a chief's) occupied the lower. He breakfasted with them, or in his own apartments, and dined at a French restaurant. The Vincennes, a noble ship, struck the trade winds in four days, then went on dash- ingly, making, for hours at a time, twelve knots." Hence, Kearny went round the whole world, and met with a great many strange and interesting adventures. He visited a gi-eat many places, whither Americans very seldom go, except in the pur- suit of gain. He appears to have stopped at Ceylon, and on his re- turn was full of his stories of strange lands, but always declared that he had seen no such scenery — which united all those beauties, which afforded him the most pleasure, — as the banks of the North River immediately opposite the glorious Catskills. Again and again, while at Tivoh, and standing on our pine- clothed shore, with our magnificent mountains before his eyes, our majestic river at his feet, and the mm-mm' of air, of trees, and of 160 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. waves -svhispering music in his ears, he was wont to exclaim : " I have been throughout the world, and, after all, when I get back here and look around me, I feel I have seen nothing more beautiful, nothing so beautiful elsewhere." Or, as he remarked at another time, " The more I gaze upon this scenery, the more it satisfies. One can dwell in its midst, or return to it again and again, without its tiring. It is satisfyingly lovely. Always the same in its featm-es and effects, yet ever changing in its expression, and ever presenting some new or hitherto unnoted charm." In the spring of 1853, Keakny was in Paris, where the writer met him in the full enjoyment of the society of the distinguished ofScers with whom he had served under the torrid sun of Africa, and with whom he was destined to serve again under the scarcely less burning sky of Italy — soldiers in the highest sense of the word, who appreciated him as a glorious type of an American soldier. One of these was that cavahy General Morris so often mentioned in orders for brilliant feats of arms. When Kearny first knew him he was Major of the Chasseurs d'Airique. Since that time he had risen to the rank of General of Division in the Cavahy of the Im- perial Guard. Between 1840 and 1853 he had distinguished him- self on numerous occasions, pai'ticularly at the captm'e of the Sma- lah (camp) of Abd-el-Kader, at the battle of Isly, and in the Crimea, Kjearnt was attached to his staff, as volunteer aid, at the battle of Solferino. Although decorated by the loss of his arm, and by universal acclaim a brilliant cavahyman, few men bore their honors with more difiidence. For a man who had done and seen so much as Kearnt, his deportment was entirely devoid of ostentation. It was at this time that he introduced the wiiter to one of the best artillery oflicers in our service, a man of rare gifts, an able and fluent writer, whose correspondence is well worthy of preservation, for the beauty of its descriptions of scenery as well as the elegance of its style. This officer also published an admirable translation of a French political work which, if the ordinary class of our miser- able politicians ever read, might have served as indications to en- able them to avoid the shoals on which our countiy was neai-ly wrecked in 1860-61. When the writer began to collect notes for this work, a letter was received from the party immediately before alluded to, an exti-act from which is extremely interesting, as it refers particularly to the time when all three met in Paris : BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 161 " Yours * • • requesting to be informed of any incidents in the life of General Kearsty * * has just been received. I regret tliat I am not able to furnish you with any that would probably be possessed ^vith any general interest. My intercourse with him, though not infrequent during our period of military service, was always of a casual nature ; yet I saw him in many traits of character that v/on my esteem and kind regard. He was marked by a generous disposition, exhibiting itself at times in an affecting mood of self abandonment, and even desolateness, which was calculated to give one a deep and atti-active inter- est iu him. He had some of the very best traits of the soldier : he was gallant, ambitious, devoted, enterprising, decided, and embued with a thorough love for his profession. Though possessed, in many respects, of sound sense and good judgment, jet there are some incidents of his life, known to me only in vague, I general outline, that seem to border on the romantic. • * «■ It was in the spring of 1853, I think, that he. Lieutenant Bankhead, of the Navy, and myself, were at a reception of English and Americans given by the Empei'or Napoleon III., at the Tuilleries. I was much struck at the bearing of Major Keaeny. He had then left the service, but still bore the title, and for the occasion, wore the uniform. He was introduced to the emperor by our own min- ister, Mr. Rives -, and when his name and services were being mentioned, he shrank as if from modesty and bashfulness, although a lost arm showed that he had not shi-unk in the face of the enemy." * * * Kearny subsequently retui-ned to the United States, and devoted considerable time to embellishing his country-seat, Belle Grove, which he had recently purchased. It is on the Passaic, imme- diately opposite to Newark, and on its commanding site he after- wards constructed his elegant mansion, which he gi'adually filled with the finest statuary and choicest paintings. For his means, Kearny was a munificent patron of American art, and his collection contained several masterpieces of native chisels and pencils. Their aggregate display he never lived to enjoy, for he had scarcely brought them together in his New Jersey home, when he resumed his uniform ; and it is very doubtful if, living, he ever had an oppor- tunity to admu-e all his gems of art together, although the body of the hero lay in state surrounded by them. An enthusiast in everything he undertook, it was about this time that he turned his attention to the finest wool-bearing sheep. In the selection of his animals he spared no expense, and it is doubtful if there was a finer flock for its size in the United States. He also paid some attention to cattle, but it would seem that his investments in this line were not fortunate. One certainly was not, and he very soon relinquished the idea of forming and maintaining a herd. He visited the writer's neighborhood several times to exam- ine the magnificent Devons at " The Meadows," owned by the 162 BIOGRAPHY OF MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. brothers Wainaatright, both of whom, like Kearny, relinquished the sweets of happy homes to serve and save then' country. The elder, William P. Wainaveight, a Christian gentleman, commanded the Seventy-sixth New York Volunteers, a very fine regiment, with gi-eat distinction. The younger, Charles S. Wainavright, a very able, practical man, commanded the Fu'st New York Artillery, a corps surpassed by none in the service. Both breveted Brigadier- Generals for gallant and conspicuous service, survived the friend whom tliey admired. We shall see the younger, referred to by Kearny, as displaying unusual gallantry and capacity at the battle of Williamsburgh. Kearny always and earnestly desired to settle on the banks of the North River. Several of the sites which were the objects of his choice are for natural positions and peculiar charms unexceeded by any in the most beautiful district of the Hudson, between Hyde Park and the boundary line between Duchess and Columbia Coun- ties. One of these sites is the prominent Turkey Point on the Avest bank of the River, about three miles beloAV Saugerties. Kearny never desired to settle in New Jersey, and he did not actually begin to build on the Passaic until he found himself unable to purchase any one of the places which suited his taste on the Hudson. Con- cerning this the Avi-iter can speak with certainty, for his own agent, at the request of Kearny, was employed to negotiate and attempt the purchase of one magnificent site in Red Hook and anotlier in Hyde Park. Besides these, a number of others Avere examined, and in two cases, Kearny ofiered higher prices than Avere actually re- alized for the same property afterwards, when sold. It has often been the occasion of remark that Kearny did not visit the Crimea to witness the siege of Sebastopol 1853-'5. This is easily explained. His business required his attention after his return home in 1853 in consequence of his frequent and protracted absences, and he was detained for a long time in consequence in this country. Subsequently accident — severe injuries from the fall of his horse through a bridge — and circumstances beyond his control prolonged his stay on this side of the Atlantic. Nothing but insurmountable obstacles would have kept him fi-om Avitnessing and participating in the grand di'ama of suifering and peril in the trenches, and on the blood-stained heights before Sebastopol. The atmosphere of such a charge as that of Balaklava would have been as congenial to his instincts as fire to the fabled Salamander, or to I BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 163 the" actual " Salamander," the nickname applied to the British Gen- eral CuTTS, of King William's "Wars, whose elements seemed to be danger and the exchanging fires of opposing batteries and lines. Kearny, however, was one .of those restless dispositions which cannot brook any repose, however charming, provided it afforded none of that excitement which, to him, was the very breath of his nostrils. He suddenly started off, in 1856, to be present at the cor- onation of the Emperor Alexander at Moscow, and nothing could exceed his grapliic description of the fetes which attended the cere- mony. He seemed to experience a vivid satisfaction in his recol- lection of the military displays in which he participated and the pomp of which he was a spectator. He also made a torn* through Spain, and, previously, to prepare himself for it, applied his energy to mastering the Spanish language. This was characteristic of the man, and although the wi'iter cannot speak with certainty as to all the foreign tongues which he understood, he was certainly profi- cient in French, and was acquainted with the Italian and Spanish — very likely, the German also, in a less degTce, since he took a great deal of interest in the military matters of Germany, and visited Prague, to be present at some grand reviews which were held near that city. It is very cm*ious, but when, in 1852, the writer reported in favor of the gray uniform and system for the designation of rank, which in many respects was identical with that adopted by the Re- bels, this color and system received the full endorsement of Kearny, who dwelt with emphasis on the superior advantages of grey,* • ♦ * "Blue is now (1854) the national military color of nearly the whole civil- ized world. The United States, France, Belgium, Holland, Sweden, Prussia, Greece, Swit- zerland, several of the minor German States, Spain and Great Britain, in many branches of their services, Naples, States of the Church, Piedmont, Tuscany, Turkey, and even Tunis, have adopted the dark blue coat, with some little difference of ornament. What objection can there be to the assumption of the well-known iron-grey as the uniform of the State of New York? None is more beautiful or striking than the old national grey, faced and trimmed with bright yellow somewhat similar to the dress of the Voltigeurs, or Foot-Rifle- men (See T 1004, U. S. Army Regulations 1847). The Tyrolese and Austrian Riflemen, likewise the Modenese, wear a similar grey with a shade of blue, which makes a very sim- ple and handsome suit. Likewise the Noble Guard of Tuscany. With their gold embroi- dery and splendid appointments, the latter's was the richest uniform * * * abroad. A light bluish-grey tunic, and darker pantaloons, constitute the undress uniform of Ans. trian General Ofiicers. But a month since, and the English War-Ministry adopted a grey uniform for their Light Infantry and Rifles, very similar to that of the Austrian Cacciatori, or Sharpshooters. Iron-grey, the coat lighter than the trousers, would make a very handsome uniform for our generals and staff-oSicers, and at once distinguish them from the regulars of equal grades. As it is abroad, accustomed constantly to see the uniform of the United States Army and Navy, it is impossible for foieigu officers to appreciate the trifling cbangea r 164 BIOGRAPnif OF MAJOB-GENERAL PIHLIP HEAE^sTT. founded on what he had observed at the grand Austrian reviews. He laid particular stress upon the rapidity with which the powder smoke swallowed up lines in gvey, and rendered them mvisible to au antagonistic force. That this was the fact had previously been shown by experience and statistics. In 1859 and 1860, Kearny resided in Europe, and in the latter year Edwin de Leon, "late confidential agent of the Confederate Department of State in Em'ope," in his "Secret History of Confede- i-ate Diplomacy Abroad," admits that Keaeny rendered important service to the Loyal North while in Paris. This is his language : "While the interregnum in the diplomatic representations lasted, by the lagging on the stage of the reluctant veterans of Mr. Bdch- anan's Ministers, before the new ones had anived to represent the views and wishes of Mr. Lincoln's administi-ation, one Minister made Imnself wonderfully active, at both the English and French foreign offices ; and in other places where public opinion was to be influenced- This was Mr. Sanfokd, then, as now, Minister to Bel- which designate the State service This often places a State oiScer in an unpleasant posi- tion, and renders a long and embarrassing explanation necessary, unless he wishes to practice deception and sail under false colors. Over and above the many cogent reasons urged, • ♦ the following addi- tional recommendations may not be without weight. At morning and evening twilight; in foggy, muggy, and rainy weather, a body of men thus clothed would be undistinguish- able at a very short distance, and amid the smoke of battle they would be swallowed up at once in the clouds of kindred hue. Grey and yellow, or gold, form the richest dress in the world; without bullion, it is the cheapest, taking into consideration its serviceability, it is national to a great degree, and last, not least certainly, it is the least fatal to its wearer. Grey, it is stated, was the uniform of the English troops in the reign of William III., and is now again adopted by the Light Infantry on account of its suitableness for corps exposed to practiced marksmen, and, themselves, assigned to the dangerous duty of sharp- shooters. It is now worn by the Austrian riflemen, and good reasons must have dictated the choice, for it was not appropriate to any province of the Empire. "It would appear, from numerous observations, that soldiers are hit, during battle, according to the color of their dress, in the following order: Eed, the most fatal ; ('■'■our scarlet is more distinguishable than any other color (Batty's " Campaign of 1815, page 160); the least fatal, Austrian grey. The proportions are: red, 12/ rifle-green 7 / brown 6 ; Austrian bluish-grey, 5." (Jameson's Journal, No. 105.) General Philip Kearnt stated that, during a sham fight he saw at Prague, in Bohemia, in 1851, in which seventeen thousand men, with thirty-four pieces of ai-tillery and a rocket brigade were engaged, he was particularly struck with the admirable fitness of the gret DRESS of the Austrian riflemen, of which a full battalion, about one thousand, were act- ing as skirmishers ; at times invisible, when the powder-smoke rolled over the field, dis- appearing in its curling clouds on account Of the similarity of their uniform, and again appearing when least expected like phantoms, as the breeze, aided by the movements of the combatants, drove aside the sulphurous canopy. He added, he was astonished at the facility with which they were lost to view, and that uniforms of grey cloth, for riflomen, had not been maintained in this as well as in every other country where military propriety orappropriateness of dress is the object of constant and scrupulous attention." Brigadier General di Pbtsteb's Beport of 1852 ; Ecladbbdk 11, page 31. BIOGEAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. 165 gium, but who gave himself a roving commission, and worked in- defatigably, some said obtrusively, on the Northern side. So om- nipresent and so brisk was he in his movements, that some wicked wag dubbed him — ^the ' Diplomatic Flea ;' and though perhaps open to the charge of over-zeal, or officiousness, he certainly was one of, if not the most efficient advocate of the Northern cause in Europe. « « » " Generate Fremont, who was then in Europe, also threw the whole weight of his name and influence on the Northern side, as did also Gen. Phil Kearny, whose social qualities had given Jiim^ influence in certain circles in France. The great horde of Ameri- cans resident abroad possessed but little weight or influence, either £'om intelligence, culture or distinction of any kind. They were chiefly peo^Dle of good incomes, who left home because they found themselves — or imagined themselves (good) — of more consequence abroad; and at the commencement of the war it was rather then- style (!) to afi^ect sympathy with the Southerners, as representing the more aristocratic side" (better). It is very curious, but equally true, that in whatever character, Kearny undertook to shine, he always played his pai't well ; his hospitality was princely, his equipages and horses inferior to none in style, beauty, and qualities. His taste was chaste and elegant, and in his appreciation of the beauties of natm-e, nothing could ex- ceed his delight in them or his judgment in the selection of points of view. Since his resignation in 1851, his wanderings were worthy of a more lengthy notice, for he reveled in perils, in the gi'atifica- tion of his instincts, from which the majority of even the boldest men would have shrunk, or at all events, have but rarely indulged then- fancies. It is very unfortunate, as noted more than once be- fore, that his correspondence between 1851 and 1861 seems to have entirely perished, since Kearny wrote well, and described what he saw concisely but with a peculiar force, which rendered his descrip- tions " word-pictm-es." Had he ever wi'itten a book, it would have been a gallery of word-pictures, for, as he often declared, the peoj3le of our day demand and will not be satisfied with any other style of wi'iting. ' Thus, all the pains possible have been taken, to follow the hero of this sketch thi-oughout all his various wanderings, and it is to bo regretted, for the sake of the readei*, that so few data from the hand of Kearny have rewai'ded the diligent search made for them. 166 BIOGRAPHY OP MA JOE-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. Judging from what has been preserved, or what still lingers on the memory, they would have amply repaid penisal, and his letters alone, edited with care and judgment, would have constituted in themselves not only an agreeable and instructive book, but, like Michelet's "Life of Luther" — constructed almost entirely from his correspondence — would have presented the best word-portrait of Kearny, and the most attractive and satiafkptQiy luatory of his remarkable career. CHAPTER XV. ITALIAN CAMPAIGN OF 1859. KEARNY AT SOLFERLNO. ♦• In thy faint slumbers I by thee have watched, And heard thee murmur tales of iron war ; Speak terms of manage to thy bounding steed ; Cry, courage 1 to the field 1 and thou hast talk'd Of sallies and retires ; of trenches, tents, Of pallisadoes, frontiers, parapets ; Of basilisks, of cannon, culverin. Of prisoners ransomed, and of soldiers slain, And all the current of a heady fight" Shakspbabb's "Hbnbt IV." / '• The shining images of war are fled, The fainting trumpets languish in my ear. The banners f url'd, and all the springtly blazo Of bumish'd armor, like the setting sun. Insensibly it vanished from my thought" , Tottnq's "Busmifl." Paris, 14th July, 1859. " Mt two months' absence has been all that a military man could have desired — a school of such grandeui' as rarely occurs, even here in the Old World — and the drama has been complete. "Leaving Paris the day after" (10th June) "the emperor, I ai'rived just two days before him (14th July). " I have roamed about everywhere, and in the day of Solferino, I was not only present with the line of our cavalry skirmishers, {but) as well in every charge that took place. That day I was mounted from six in the morning till eleven at night — scarcely oft' my horse even for a few minutes — depend on it, he was a good one. The cavaliy of the guai-d came up some sixteen miles in full trot and rapid gallop to take our places, under fire ; for there was a gap we had to stop. I remained until I saw the Mincio passed and Peschiera invested, and the whole Austrian army demoralized and broken up. 168 BIOGRAPHY OP MAJOR-GENERAL PHILIP KEARNY. "The night before the battle I had a mu-aculous escape, haviiig been inveigled by folse gnides into the midst of the Austrian masses.* " There are seven American officers following the Piedmontese army. I am going to the baths of Homburgh for awhile. Paris is very warm, more so than I have ever known it. My health has been excellent until I ai'rived home. "When at Turin I had a coiqy de soleil. " The peace has taken us by sui"prise — it is in consequence of some underhand and revolutionary moves of Count Cavour, which the emperor had to put a stop to. " Very truly, yours, "Phiix." When General Kearnt returned from Italy, while in conversation with the wi'iter, he expressed the utmost admu'ation for the French army, and then* doings at Solferino, he seemed to feel that the Austrians might have won the battle, or maintained their position, had they held out with greater tenacity or been aware of the condi- tion and dislocation of the Allies. The reader may remember that quite a stampede was reported, just as occun-ed at Wagram in 1809, and according to the journals some of the French troops did not stop until they reached Brescia. The presence of Napoleon III. in front of Solferino, at the crisis, electrified the French, and a renewed attack, fed with fresh troops, cai-ried the keypoint of the Austrian position. Then, the scale long poised, declined, deciding the victory against Francis Joseph. The letter with which this chapter opens, written within tlu-ee weeks after the great battle to which it refers — a battle in which General Kearny so distinguished himself as to win (a second time) the ci'oss of the Legion ot Honor — covers the whole ground; tells the whole story. Kearny, like others of his race, was a very unequal man in his conversation. At times he was particularly reticent, and seldom prone to narrative. In referring to his military service, he usually alluded to it incidentally and as a means of illustrating a question under discussion, or to give point to an argument, rather than directly as a matter in which he was personally interested. * General Kbaent had just such another hair-breadth escape after Glendale, 30th June, 1802, and at Chantilly, 1st September, 1S62, a similar plunge into the skirmish line or lines of the Rebels cost him his life. Doubtless, it was his previous immunity made Kearst f e