March 17 marked 152 years since the death of Confederate
artillery officer John Pelham at Kelly’s Ford, Virginia.
Leaving the military academy without waiting for graduation,
Pelham joined the Confederate army; his service was duly noted, especially his
performance at the battle of Fredericksburg in December, 1862. Fighting an
overwhelming number of oncoming federal forces, Pelham, himself, with the aid
of his few surviving artillery men, successfully held the ground and stalled a
Union incursion. At the site of the battle, Robert E. Lee stated, “It is
glorious to see such courage in one so young.”
Fredericksburg was a great victory for Lee; it was the first of two of Lee’s successive strikes against the greater Union army. The fight at Chancellorsville, in late April and early May of 1863, would be Lee’s second successful initiative against Union opposition during this phase of the war. In the larger battle at Chancellorsville, Lee would lose one of his key advisors and strategists, Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson. Before that battle, in a bit of a less tempestuous fray at Kelly’s Ford, Virginia, on March 17, Lee would also lose one of his significant operatives.
Carhart describes the scene of John Pelham’s final fight:
When Pelham arrived on the scene of the battle, his artillery had not yet come up, though he had sent for it. The most commonly told story of what followed has the 3rd Virginia forming up for attack, and Pelham staying by them or riding with them, standing up in his stirrups, waving his hat or his sword and cheering them on: “Forward! Forward!” But soon after those words left his lips, a Yankee shell exploded above and behind him, and a piece of shrapnel, later said to be the size of the end of one’s finger, pierced the back of his head at the hairline. The charge by the 3rd went on as Pelham fell from his horse.
The gallant Pelham never knew and never awakened. He would be
mourned by thousands as he lay in state in Richmond, and from there he would be
taken home to Alabama where he would be buried in his home town of
Jacksonville. Young girls from Virginia and Alabama would weep at the loss of
this brave and handsome southern officer, while the Confederate leadership
would view this loss as a significant one. Major John Pelham’s star had burned
brightly, but briefly for his cause.
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