Forwarded by SCV Ft. Blakeley Camp Commander Tommy Rhodes, December 2014, a short article by Karen Stokes.
Conduct of the Northern Army
Lately,
media outlets have been giving some attention to the 150th anniversary of
General William T. Sherman’s infamous march through Georgia that took place in 1864,
minimizing, of course, the barbarity and criminality of his campaign. You only
have to read the letters and diaries written at the time of the actual events
to learn the truth of the matter, however, and memoirs written long after the
fact can be just as truthful. Contemporary official military correspondence and
reports document the fact that Sherman
shelled Atlanta
without notice, deliberately aiming his guns over the Confederate lines of
defense and firing into the residential and business areas of the city, killing
civilians there. Mrs. Robert Campbell, who fled her home in Bolton, Georgia
to take refuge in Atlanta,
recalled that during the shelling in 1864, “A shell killed a newborn baby and
its mother in a house adjoining mine. I hastened into a bomb-proof, as fast as
possible. As I entered the door to this shelter a sixty-pounder fell almost at
my feet. Suppose it had burst, where would I have been?”
Any honest
person who takes the time and trouble to study the war of 1861-1865 cannot help
but perceive a striking contrast between the conduct of the Northern forces
(the so-called “Grand Army of the Republic”) and the Confederate troops. The
campaigns of Sherman and Sheridan were not the only demonstrations of savagery
by the northern army, in whose operations the practices of wanton destruction,
pillage and abuse of civilians were widespread and often systematic from
beginning to end, and characterized by a ruthlessness that was all the more
monstrous because it was directed at fellow Americans.
On December 11, 1862, after
U.S.
forces drove back the defending Confederate troops from Fredericksburg, Virginia,
the town was thoroughly and pillaged and vandalized. Even churches were defaced
and looted, and valuables were stolen from the Masonic lodge in which George
Washington had once been a member. Colonel William Davie DeSaussure of the 15th
South Carolina Volunteer Infantry Regiment was proud of his men who, despite
their own lack of food and clothing, contributed several hundred dollars for
the relief of the civilians of Fredericksburg, “pitiable refugees” whose homes
and been plundered by the Federal soldiers who occupied the town.
In the
summer of 1863, the 15th S.C. Infantry Regiment was in Pennsylvania with the Army of Northern
Virginia under the command of General Robert E. Lee. Lee’s ragged, malnourished
men were suffering from scurvy, and their horses were starving. In dire need of
food, clothing, and equipment, the army foraged extensively in Pennsylvania, obtaining
essential military supplies including horses, mules, wagons, shoes, and
livestock, and helping themselves to such in Federal property in government
warehouses and depots. Lee, however, instructed his men to pay for anything
they took from civilians. A newspaper reported, for example, that the entire
stock from a boot and shoe dealer’s store in Mechanicsburg was cleaned out by
soldiers who paid the merchant $4,000 in Confederate money for the footwear.
Anyone who declined payment was nevertheless issued a copy of a receipt. Lee
also issued an order which forbade “the wanton destruction of private
property.” His hungry soldiers often availed themselves of large amounts of
poultry and livestock from houses and farms while foraging for subsistence (not
spoils), sometimes without paying, but these orders were generally followed,
especially as far as “wanton destruction” was concerned.
Franklin
Gaillard, a Confederate officer from South Carolina who served in Lee’s army,
wrote home to his son on June 18, 1863, that General Lee had “issued very stringent
orders” concerning the treatment of private property. Gaillard added: “He is
very right for our Army would soon become demoralized if they were allowed to
do as many of them would like to. Many of them think it hard that they should
not be allowed to treat them [the Pennsylvanians] as their soldiers treated our
people.”
While the
Confederates were in control of Gettysburg,
they searched the town for horses and foodstuffs, but, with few exceptions,
left most other civilian property undisturbed. A Confederate officer there,
Captain Barziza, described the contrast between Gettysburg and Fredericksburg:
Whilst in Gettysburg, I could not
but remark the difference between the conduct of our army and that of the enemy
in invading our country. Here stood the town, after three day’s hard fighting
around and in it, almost entirely untouched. No wanton destruction of property
of any description could be seen; no women and children complained that they
were homeless and beggars. Then I called to mind the scenes around the city of Fredericksburg the winter
previous; private houses sacked and burned, books, furniture, and everything
perishable utterly destroyed; women flying from burning houses with children in
their arms, and insult and outrage at full license.
About Karen Stokes
Karen Stokes
is an archivist and writer in Charleston,
S.C. She is the co-editor of
Faith, Valor and Devotion: The Civil War Letters of William Porcher Dubose (USC
Press, 2010), and A Confederate Englishman: The Civil War Letters of Henry
Wemyss Feilden (USC Press, 2013). She is also the author of South Carolina
Civilians in Sherman's
Path (History Press, 2012), and The Immortal 600: Surviving Civil War
Charleston and Savannah
(History Press, 2013). Belles: A Carolina Love Story (Ring of Fire, 2012), was
her first venture into historical fiction, and her newest historical novel is
The Soldier's Ghost: A Tale of Charleston (Ring of Fire, 2014).
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