Thursday, December 17, 2020

GETTYSBURG CHRONICLE Posts a Great Review of "The Petersburg Regiment"

    Here is the link to a great review of The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 posted in the GETTYSBURG CHRONICLE.  There have also been positive reviews in Midwest Book Club, Civil War Books and Authors, Virginia Gazette, TimeLines, Tennessee Valley Civil War Round Table, Amazon, Beyond the Crater and Civil War Times.


    The Petersburg Regiment would make an excellent Christmas gift for those who enjoy eyewitness accounts of the Civil War.  The book includes written accounts of the war by more than 30 of the regiment's soldiers, not including accounts by still more of the 12th's soldiers recorded by others.  The accounts cover not only the battles of the Army of Northern Virginia from Seven Pines/Fair Oaks (June 1, 1862) through Cumberland Church (April 7, 1865), but the camp life in between.  

    Get it now from Savas Beatie, FREE shipping, FREE giftwrapping, FREE bookplate signed by the author, and FREE Bookplate. Use coupon code: FREEMEDIASHIP


    Next year I'll have a related article out in GETTYSBURG MAGAZINE entitled, "The Myth that Mahone's Brigade Did Not Move on July 2, 1863."





Wednesday, December 16, 2020

A Positive Review of "The Petersburg Regiment" in CIVIL WAR TIMES

    The October issue of Civil War Times included a positive review by Thomas Zacharis of my most recent book, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019).  The book won the 2019 Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History.  

    The soldiers of this unusually literate regiment did most of the distinguished writing.  They left firsthand accounts of the Army of Northern Virginia's battles from Seven Pines/Fair Oaks (June 1, 1862) through Cumberland Church (April 7, 1865).  They also depicted camp life between battles in great detail.  More than thirty of the regiment's soldiers left written accounts of their experiences, and that does not include the many accounts of soldiers recorded by others. 

    The Civil War Times review concludes:

     "With losses of more than 57 percent at Crampton's Gap, Md., and more than 41 percent at Globe Tavern, Va., the 12th Virginia might have had a place among the most distinguished U.S. Army regiments, had it fought for the Union cause.  As is, The Petersburg Regiment deserves a fitting place among Civil War unit histories."



Tuesday, December 15, 2020

A Pleasant Evening at the New Civil War Round Table in Northwest Indiana

The new Civil War Round Table in Cedar Lake, Indiana gave me a pleasant welcome last night.  The subject of the talk was my most recent book, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019).  The talk focused on the most vivid and prolific of the regiment's many writers.  The book won the 2019 Army Historical Foundation Award Distinguished Writing in Unit History.  Most of the distinguished writing was done by the soldiers.

    James Edward "Eddie" Whitehorne                                       George S. Bernard
       Courtesy of Fletcher L. Elmore                            Courtesy of Virginia Historical Society

    First Lieutenant Joseph Richard Manson                Private Philip Whitlock (in kepi, upper right)
            Courtesy of Richard Cheatham                           Courtesy of Virginia Historical Society

Thursday, November 26, 2020

One of My Goals in Writing about Petersburg

Recently I've been devouring Silent Hunters (Theodore P. Savas, ed., Savas Beatie, 2013). In that book, my friend, publisher and fellow lawyer Ted Savas brings to light the stories of half a dozen formidable but otherwise unknown warriors.

For me, singing the unsung is one of the things that writing history is all about. (Why else would anybody write about Peterrsburg? So much there remains unsung.) 

Thomas Gray wrote in his Elegy Written in a Country Churchyard (1751):
"Full many a gem of purest ray serene
"The dark unfathom'd caves of ocean bear;
"Full many a flower is born to blush unseen
"And waste its sweetness on the desert air."
One of my goals in writing about Petersburg is to show the reader that gem and and make him see and smell that flower. 

Take Pvt. Leonidas H. Dean of Company B, the Petersburg Old or 'A' Grays, in the 12th Virginia Infantry, the Petersburg Regiment. Born in 1839, Dean had enlisted on April 19, 1861, the day before the Old Grays departed for Norfolk. Wounded at Malvern Hill on July 1, 1862, he did not make his mark until May 6, 1864, when as a member of the ambulance corps--who had to be the bravest of the brave to retrieve the wounded quickly and thus keep up morale--he distinguished himself by dragging many wounded Federals out of the burning woods. On May 12, 1864, in a melee with IX Corps east of Heth's Salient, Dean picked up a musket and captured a beautiful stand of colors from the 51st Pennsylvania Infantry along with eight Keystoners. 

At Cold Harbor, a wounded Yankee private lay between the lines begging his friends to retrieve him. Dean, who had just narrowly escaped capture during a reconnaissance, asked the officer of the day for permission to fetch in the wounded Federal. The officer refused permission, warning that the Unionists would shoot Dean. The wounded bluecoat overheard this conversation and begged his friends not to fire. Dean dropped his musket, shucked his equipment and slipped out between the lines. The Unionist was suffering so much that he begged Dean to shoot him. Dean brought in the wounded Northerner, who gave his watch and knapsack to Dean in gratitude. 



At home on leave in Petersburg when the Mine exploded early on July 30, 1864, he rushed back to his regiment despite the entreaties of his mother and sisters to remain. Wearing a white calico shirt with red stripes from the knapsack of the Yank he had rescued at Cold Harbor, he reached the 12th in time to join his comrades on their trek to the Crater. 

"Do you want any prisoners?" Dean asked as he passed Brig. Gen. William Mahone while the regiment formed line. The answer was no; Mahone wanted flags, not prisoners. 

Diagram by Hampton Newsome

Company B formed on the right of the 12th. In line there, Dean pointed to a Unionist banner. "I mean to take those colors," he said to the man next to him. As the 12th charged the Federals in the Crater, a ball fired by one of the United States Colored Troops in the Crater mortally wounded Dean in front of a messmate who took Dean's testament and some other personal effects, then rejoined the charge. That night the messmate and another man crawled out and rolled Dean's body into a blanket. With one of them pushing and the other pulling, they slid the corpse into the Confederate works. 

Dean's story is just one of the many in The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019), winner of the Army Historical Society's 2019 Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History. 

What forename could have suited Dean better than Leonidas?

Thursday, November 12, 2020

Hill, Anderson and Mahone on July 2, 1863

When I started exploring this subject, I was probably unfair to Maj. Gen. Richard Heron Anderson. I think I made it seem as if he had gotten a pass for his failure to lead his division from the front rather than recline at his headquarters during the critical evening of July 2, 1863. Of course the elephant in the room was Brig. Gen. William Mahone, who refused an order from Anderson to advance that evening because he had previously been directed to stay put on Seminary Ridge in support of some artillery and the right of Pender's division. Practically every account of his brigade at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863 ends with this refusal. If the authors of the principal books on the battle had done their homework, however, they'd have known that Mahone's brigade moved around dark, which occurred about 8:45 p.m. that night, the end of nautical twilight. Good accounts of this movement have been in publication since 2012, when Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard & His Fellow Veterans appeared. What may have occasioned even more delay that evening were the wanderings of Lt. Gen. A. P. Hill, the corps commander. He was at Gen. R. E. Lee's headquarters when Longstreet's flank attack began, then meandered down to a post behind McLaws' division. Meanwhile, Anderson was seeking authority from Hill to countermand his previous orders for Mahone to stay put. It is very likely that Anderson spent more time looking for Hill than correcting Mahone. If so, that provides the answer to the question of why Mahone wasn't disciplined for his refusal to comply with Anderson's order to advance. If Mahone had required discipline, the whole chain of command up from Mahone through Anderson to Hill would have required discipline. My much more detailed article on this subject is due out in Gettysburg Magazine next July.
Mahone's brigade, 8:45-9:15 p.m. July 2, 1863
Lieutenant General Ambrose Powell Hill

Tuesday, October 13, 2020

Talk on "The Petersburg Regiment..." 7 p.m. December 14, 2020 at 12615 Wicker Avenue US 41 Cedar Lake, Indiana

Indiana had some strong regiments in the Army of the Potomac. The 19th Infantry in the Iron Brigade, the 20th Infantry in the 3rd and then 2nd Army corps, and the 3rd Cavalry in Wilson's division come to mind. Yet until recently I've been unaware of any Civil War Round Table in Indiana north of Indianapolis. Fortunately, one is starting up at 2 Old Goats Market, 12615 Wicker Avenue US 41, Cedar Lake, IN 46303. I'll be talking there Monday, December 14, 2020 at 7p.m. The group is requesting a fee of five dollars. I'll be talking about my most recent book, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1861, 439 pp., 32 maps and diagrams, $39.95. The book won the 2019 Army Historical Foundation's Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History. Most of the distinguished writing was done by the regiment's soldiers, who left about 10 volumes of material that give as complete an account of life in a Confederate regiment as exists. For precisely that reason, its extraordinary literacy, the 12th was not a typical Confederate regiment. Still, there is not only a detailed account of every battle in which the regiment participated (including two naval battles); there are detailed accounts of the time in between fights.
Place: 2 Old Goats Market Address: 12615 Wicker Avenue US 41 Cedar Lake IN. 46303 Date: Monday, December 14, 2020 Time: 7:00 PM Lecture: $5.00 For More information: Call 219-390-7183 Sponsor: 2 Old Goats Market. Check us out on Facebook!!

Friday, September 18, 2020

Edwin C. Bearss, R.I.P.

Edwin C. Bearss, former Chief Historian of the United States National Park Service, died a few days ago at the age of 97. He was the author of many books and beloved by everyone I know who had contact with him. Mr. Bearss was very generous with his time. He read three of my manuscripts and gave me good advice about each of them. From him I learned to curb my use of superlatives and employ "one of the best (or worst)" instead of "the best (or worst)." The former is more judicious. We met in person only one time, more than 20 years ago at the dedication of the marker for the 39th Illinois on the Darbytown Road about 12 miles southeast of Richmond. As I wrote my first book I learned that a man from my township in Illinois had carried the 39th's flag in a successful charge against Confederate earthworks on August 16, 1864, captured a Confederate flag, and earned a battlefield commission and a Medal of Honor. Some of us from the township had raised the money to mark the spot. The dedication took place on a beautiful, sunny August 16th, not overly warm for Virginia. My three young children ran around among a few other spectators on a field over which Federals and Confederates had charged and blasted one another more than a hundred years before. Mr. Bearss was kind enough to speak on the occasion. Gesturing with his good arm, he spoke slowly, distinctly and authoritatively on the battle fought there. Mr. Bearss was once a Marine. One of my children is now a Marine. How grateful to God I am that I recently had to thank Mr. Bearss for all his help and informed him of the career choice of the little boy playing on the site of our township's glory. Many of us have soft spots for Marines, as some have for Texans. God bless you, Mr. Bearss.

Sunday, September 6, 2020

Still Another Very Positive Review for "The Petersburg Regiment...," this one from Brett Schulte in his blog "Beyond the Crater"

Here's a link to another very positive review of "The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865." This one is from Brett Schulte in his blog "Beyond the Crater."

Tuesday, August 18, 2020

"The Myth that Mahone's Brigade Did Not Move on July 2, 1863" accepted for publication by Gettysburg Magazine

 It was an honor today to learn that my article, The Myth that Mahone's Brigade Did Not Move on July 2, 1863 has been accepted for publication in Gettysburg Magazine, probably for next July (2021)'s issue.  The thesis of the article is that Mahone's Virginia Brigade did move that evening, but at dark, too late to help Wilcox's, Lang's and Wright's brigades in their fight for Cemetery Ridge; the Virginia Brigade became involved in preparations for a night attack that was called off.  

Caption:  William Evelyn Cameron, a First Lieutenant and Adjutant of the 12th Virginia Infantry at Gettysburg, after the war Mayor of Petersburg and then Governor of Virginia

Credit:  Virginia Historical Society

Cameron, shown above, was one of the star witnesses to the movements of Mahone's brigade on the evening of July 2, 1863.  The article expands on part of Chapter 10 of my most recent book, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019).  The book was awarded the 2019 Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History.  


 


Wednesday, August 5, 2020

Thanks, Lincoln-Davis CWRT!

Thanks, Lincoln-Davis Civil War Round Table in Alsip, Illinois for the pleasant reception you gave me and my book The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 on Tuesday, July 21, 2020.  The talk focused on the longitudinal history of the regiment with emphasis on the most prolific of its writers, such as George S. Bernard, Westwood Todd, James Edward Whitehorne, James Eldred Phillips, Henry Van Leuvenigh Bird and Joseph Richard Manson.  


Sunday, July 5, 2020

Yet Another Positive Review of "The Petersburg Regiment...."

Emil Posey of the Tennessee Valley Civil War Round Table recently penned a very positive review of The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865.

"This is a great read," writes Mr. Posey. "Enjoy."


review of


Sunday, June 28, 2020

Another Very Positive Review of "The Petersburg Regiment...."

The Civil War Courier had this very positive review of The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865.

"...a first rate regimental history and a Civil War book that will appeal to any reader interested in this portion of U.S. history...."


Tuesday, June 16, 2020

"The Petersburg Regiment" Won the 2019 Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History.


"The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865" won the 2019 Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award for Unit History. 


Saturday, May 9, 2020

Beware of Taking Shortcuts in Research

National Battlefield Parks have significant resources for researchers.  Nonetheless, researchers must handle material from National Battlefield Parks with care.  The materials are often excerpts from documents which exist in their complete form at other repositories.  Sometimes the whole document says something quite different from the National Battlefield Park excerpt.

Two examples come to mind.

The first involves an excerpt from the writings of George S. Bernard, who was a private in the 12th Virginia Infantry, Mahone's brigade, Anderson's division, Hill's Corps.  He kept diaries and wrote letters throughout the war.  After the war, he compiled, edited and contributed to War Talks of Confederate Veterans (1892).  He was ready to publish its sequel in 1896 but it disappeared until 2004, when it turned up at a flea market, was bought for $50 and sold to the Museum of Western Virginia History for $15,000.  I was one of the co-editors of the book published by the University Press of Virginia in 2012 as Civil War Talks:  Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard & His Fellow Veterans.

The writing in question lies at a certain National Battlefield Park.  The writing has been cited at least twice since 1998 for the proposition that Bernard on the night of July 2, 1863 heard Lt. Gen. James Longstreet tell Maj. Gen. Richard Heron Anderson that an improvised night attack involving Mahone's brigade should be called off. 

Bernard, however, did not write the piece and was not the witness, though the account was among the papers edited into Civil War Talks.  The witness was the 12th Virginia's adjutant, First Lt. William Evelyn Cameron.  His account of the Gettysburg Campaign is called "Across the Rubicon" and it forms part of Civil War Talks, 155-156.  There is also a copy of it in Cameron's papers at the University of Virginia.

That inaccurate citation is merely embarrassing.  The next is far more substantial.  It also concerns July 2, 1863.

A historian who otherwise writes very well used a quotation from a private in the 22nd Georgia Infantry, Wright's brigade, Anderson's division, to liven up an account of the charge by Wright's brigade up Cemetery Ridge.  This was the charge that Brig. Gen. Ambrose Ransom "Rans" Wright in his official report and in a letter to his wife claimed to have summitted Cemetery Ridge and briefly driven off the Federals.  

The problem is that the complete account of the 22nd Georgia private says that because of illness Wright did not accompany his brigade in its charge up Cemetery Ridge, but that his incomparable adjutant, Capt. Victor Jean Baptiste Girardey, led the brigade's charge.  Worse than that, there are substantial grounds for believing the private, and they are both well known.  First, Wright was admittedly ill earlier that day.  Secondly, Girardey was a superb leader who later led troops to victory on June 23, 1864 as well as on July 30, 1864, for which he won the Confederate army's most extraordinary promotion, four ranks, to brigadier general.  (He perished in command of Wright's brigade August 16, 1864.)  

The historian who used the quotation from the private did not address the additional questions raised by the private's complete account.  The failure to do so calls into question the history's accuracy.

Now of course I may be wrong.  The historian may have had the complete account.  But that situation is even worse.  An historian can't duck an issue such as whether Wright actually led his brigade on July 2, 1863.  If he did not accompany his brigade on the charge, as the private says, Wright's opportunity to observe comes into question.  Instead of talking to General Lee himself, Wright ought to have had Girardey report to Lee.

UPDATE:  It's worse than I thought.  Another major historian has made the same error with the 22nd Georgia private's statement.

Names have been omitted to protect the guilty  

 


Wednesday, April 29, 2020

Handy Unit Histories

Everyone interested in the Civil War should write a unit history, whether of a battery or a brigade, a company or a corps.  They give the writer a fund of knowledge that assists in testing the accuracy of more general works.  You'll be amazed by what you can find.  I discovered some remarkable facts when I wrote The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019).  For example, you'd never guess who was considered for the regiment's first colonel. 

The sad fate of many unit histories is to wind up as reference books.  I would not be surprised The Petersburg Regiment ended up as a reference book, though I think the regiment's soldiers wrote so much that the book merits reading for their sake. 

I'm just finishing a short article on Mahone's brigade at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863 (the Petersburg Regiment belonged to Mahone's brigade) and found two unit histories particularly helpful.



The first was Red Clay to Richmond:  Trail of the 35th Georgia Infantry Regiment, C.S.A. (Winchester, VA:  Angle Valley Press, 2004), by John J. Fox, III.  The 35th Georgia belonged to Thomas' brigade of Pender's division.  Mahone's brigade was partially masked by Thomas' brigade.  Red Clay to Richmond alerted me to the abandoned preparations for a night attack around dark on July 2, 1863, about the same time as Mahone's brigade was belatedly advancing in support of Wilcox's, Lang's and Wright's brigades of Anderson's division.  Fox has also written an excellent history of the battle of Fort Gregg, April 2, 1865, The Confederate Alamo (2010).


The second helpful unit history was A Small but Spartan Band:  The Florida Brigade in Lee's Army of Northern Virginia (University of Alabama Press, 2010), by Zack C. Waters and James D. Edmonds.  This book clued me in to the actual chain of command on July 2, 1863.  I had assumed, as many other historians have, that Longstreet had control of Anderson's division that day, but no.  Waters and Edmonds provide the evidence that A. P. Hill was still in the chain of command.  A Small but Spartan Band also provided an example of the criticism from the ranks that Mahone's brigade took because of its apparent failure to come to the support of Wilcox's, Lang's and Wright's brigades.  (Lang led the Florida Brigade on July 2, 1863.)


Sunday, April 19, 2020

"[O]ne of the most important new books on the war to come out in the last decade:" A Very Positive Review of "Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard & His Fellow Veterans"

Here's a link to a very positive review of Hampton Newsome, John Horn and John Selby, Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard & His Fellow Veterans (Charlottesville, VA: University Press of Virginia, 2012).  The review is by Brett Schulte in his splendid blog, "The Siege of Petersburg Online."  Brett calls Civil War Talks "one of the most important new books on the war to come out in the last decade."  Civil War Talks is the sequel to George S. Bernard, ed., War Talks of Confederate Veterans (Petersburg, VA: Fenn & Owen, 1892).  Civil War Talks was ready for publication in 1896 but disappeared.  It turned up in 2004 at a flea market, was purchased for $50 and sold to the Museum of Western Virginia History for $15,000.  Here's the link.


Thursday, April 9, 2020

More Positive Reviews for "The Petersburg Regiment...."

Here are links to some pleasant reviews of "The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865" (El Dorado, CA:  Savas Beatie, 2019).

Amazon

Virginia Gazette  Scroll down

Thursday, March 26, 2020

Vote for "The Petersburg Regiment" in the Savas Beatie Tournament of Books Tomorrow March 27, 2020

Dear Friends,

Just a reminder that tomorrow my book, "The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War" will be featured in the Sweet 16 round of the Tournament of Books competition. The match-up like last year, will be voted on via a poll that's on the Savas Beatie Facebook page. This poll will open at 6am PST and will remain open for 24 hours.

Go to the Savas Beatie Facebook page. CLICK ON THE COVER in order to register a vote.

Here is the match-up:

Friday, March 27
Western Authors Region

The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War - John Horn VS Union Soldiers in the American Civil War - Lance Herdegen

If you have any questions, please let me know. The price of the book goes down for every round it wins.

Thank you,

John E. Horn

CLICK ON THE COVER on the Savas Beatie Facebook page tomorrow March 27, 2020.


Friday, March 20, 2020

The Aborted Night Attack of Anderson's, Pender's and Rodes' Divisions at Gettysburg July 2, 1863

So what was going on after the attack of Anderson's Division of Hill's Corps sputtered out at Gettysburg around 8 p.m. on July 2, 1863?  (This is the sequel to John Horn, Why Has Fighting Dick Anderson Gotten a Pass for Not Leading His Division at Gettysburg on July 2, 1863? www.petersburgcampaign@blogspot.com, March 13, 2020)

As Wright's Georgia Brigade of Anderson's Division recoiled from Cemetery Ridge, the Confederates prepared for an unusual move--a night assault.  From Anderson's Division, the bulk of Posey's Mississippi Brigade massed to the right of the retreating Georgians and Mahone's Virginia Brigade shifted 200 yards to its right and advanced 400 yards to come abreast of the Mississippians on Posey's left.  To the left of the Virginians, from Pender's Division of Hill's Corps, Thomas' Georgia Brigade advanced to the Long Lane line, taking position along a fence in an open field about 300 yards from the Federals on Cemetery Ridge, and Perrin's South Carolina Brigade advanced on the left of Thomas' Brigade.[1]  To the left of the South Carolinians, Ramseur’s North Carolina Brigade of Rodes’ Division of Ewell’s Corps shifted right and advanced to within 200 yards of the Unionists with the rest of Rodes’ Division forming on the left of the Tarheels.[2]  The night attack, however, was called off by General Longstreet.[3]



Map by Hampton Newsome



[1] John J. Fox, III, Red Clay to Richmond:  Trail of the 35th Georgia Infantry Regiment, C.S.A. (Winchester, VA:  Angle Valley Press, 2004), 183.  This is an award-winning book.
[2] OR, Series 1, Vol. 27, 2:44.
[3] Hampton Newsome, John Horn and John Selby, Civil War Talks:  Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard and His Fellow Veterans (Charlottesville, VA:  University Press of Virginia, 2012), 155; John Horn, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (El Dorado, CA:  Savas Beatie, 2019), 181-182.  This book is a finalist for an Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award.

About the Author


A native of the Chicago area, John Horn received a B.A. in English and Latin from New College (Sarasota, Florida) in 1973 and a J.D. from Columbia Law School in 1976.  He has practiced law around Chicago since graduation, held local public office, and lived in Oak Forest with his wife and law partner, H. Elizabeth Kelley, a native of Richmond, Virginia. They have three children. He and his wife have often traveled to the Old Dominion to visit relatives, battlefields, and various archives.  John has published articles in Civil War Times Illustrated, America’s Civil War, and North & South.  He is the author of several books including The Petersburg Campaign (1993) and The Destruction of the Weldon Railroad (1991, republished in 2015 by Savas Beatie as The Siege of Petersburg: The Battles for the Weldon Railroad, August 1864.)  He helped edit Civil War Talks: Further Reminiscences of George S. Bernard and His Fellow Veterans (2012).  John blogs at petersburgcampaign@blogspot.com.  His latest book is The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War: A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown’s Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (Savas Beatie, 2019.)  It is a finalist for an Army Historical Foundation Distinguished Writing Award.



Friday, March 13, 2020

Why Has Fighting Dick Anderson Gotten a Pass for Not Leading His Division at Gettysburg July 2, 1863?

Why Has Fighting Dick Anderson Gotten A Pass for Not Leading His Division July 2, 1863?
            The soldiers of Anderson's division, Hill's Corps, Army of Northern Virginia rose early on July 2, 1863.  Moving eastward, Mahone’s brigade formed line of battle with its right in an open field and its left in McMillan’s Woods, a big stand of oak and hickory.  The Virginians faced Ziegler’s Grove on Cemetery Ridge, which ran southward from Cemetery Hill.[1]  Brigadier General William Mahone’s headquarters lay behind the Petersburg Riflemen, on the right of the 12th Virginia, the farthest right of Mahone's five regiments.  One hundred yards in front of Mahone’s brigade, the gunners of Pegram’s battalion served their pieces behind a low rock wall on Seminary Ridge’s crest.  They were engaging the enemy artillery on Cemetery Ridge.  Mahone's soldiers slept unsoundly, cognizant of nearly everything that took place around them.  They heard the booming of cannon, the sound of solid shot as it cut through the branches overhead and the cries of men struck by shell fragments.  They felt the dirt and grit strike them as cannon balls tore up the earth around them, but still they slept.
Maj. Gen. Richard Heron "Fighting Dick" Anderson
Credit:  The Pall Mall Magazine
            Early that afternoon Maj. Gen. Richard Heron "Fighting Dick" Anderson directed four of his division’s five brigades to prepare to advance one after another from right to left across Emmitsburg Road toward Cemetery Ridge.[2]  He ordered Mahone’s brigade to remain on Seminary Ridge behind and in support of Pegram’s artillery and the right of Pender’s division of Hill's Corps.[3]  Anderson’s orders implemented General Robert E. Lee’s plan for an attack on the Federal left.  Lee’s staffers had informed him that the Unionists had left unoccupied Little Round Top and the southern portion of Cemetery Ridge.  Lee wanted Lt. Gen. James Longstreet to march two of his divisions beyond the enemy left, much as the late Stonewall Jackson had slipped around the Yankee right at Chancellorsville, then strike the enemy left flank perpendicularly, as Jackson had struck the Federal right on May 2.  Lee placed Anderson’s division under Longstreet’s orders.  It would join the attack as Longstreet’s men rolled up the enemy line.  Pender's division would pitch in after Anderson's division struck.  Meanwhile, Ewell’s Corps would demonstrate against the enemy right.  
            Lee did not have the intelligence from his army’s Cavalry Corps that had facilitated both the formulation and the implementation of the plan for Jackson’s flank attack at Chancellorsville.  Lee's staffers served him poorly, failing to observe that the Yankee left on Cemetery Ridge did not end near the G. Weikert house, but extended along Emmitsburg Road to Went’s Peach Orchard, then swung back to Devils’ Den at the foot of the Round Tops.
            Longstreet and his troops modified Lee's plan twice.  They reversed their march order when they discovered that their initial route would not take them around the Federal left unobserved.  Afterward they adjusted when they found that the plan did not fit the situation on the Union left.  The Northerners held different ground than Lee’s staffers had reported.  These changes caused substantial delays.  Not until late in the afternoon did Longstreet’s men attack. 
Before the time came for Anderson’s advance, a distraction hobbled his division—the Bliss farm, lying in the hollow halfway between Seminary Ridge and Cemetery Ridge and to the 12th’s right front.  Northern and Southern skirmishers had driven each other back and forth across the farm’s fields all day.  Shortly before 4 p.m., Anderson decided to seize the farmstead and its massive barn to facilitate his division’s advance.  This task fell to his Mississippi Brigade, which stood on the right of his Virginians and to the left of his Georgians, Floridians and Alabamians.  The Mississippi Brigade’s pickets accomplished the mission by 5 p.m.  Mahone sent men from the 12th and 16th Virginia of his brigade to support the Mississippians.[4]  
Across the field from the Bliss farm lurked Federal pickets from Gibbon’s and Hays’ divisions of II Corps.  Through holes in the sides of the Bliss barn, some Mississippians and Virginians sniped away at Battery B, 1st Rhode Island Light Artillery, on Cemetery Ridge.  This annoyed the Yankees.  A battalion of the 12th New Jersey, as well as elements of the 1st Delaware from Hays’ division and a company of the 106th Pennsylvania from the Philadelphia or California brigade of Gibbon’s division, advanced to dislodge the Confederate marksmen at about 5:30 p.m.  The Jerseymen and Delawareans captured the Mississippians and Virginians inside the barn, breaking the Secessionist picket line, the rest of which withdrew in good order.  The Unionists also retired, carrying off their prisoners.[5]  
            The time for the four brigades from Anderson’s division to advance arrived after 6:20 p.m.[6]  The three right brigades charged as planned.  Wilcox’s Alabama Brigade attacked first, followed by Lang’s Florida Brigade, then Wright’s Georgia Brigade.  The advance of Anderson’s division broke down with Posey’s Mississippi Brigade, which had spent itself in the skirmishing on the Bliss farm.  To the Mississippians’ left, Mahone’s Virginians remained on McPherson’s Ridge in support of Pegram’s guns and the right of Pender's division.    
Against stiffening resistance Wilcox’s and Lang’s brigades gained the upper reaches of Plum Run and Wright’s Georgians almost summited Cemetery Ridge.  Desperate counterattacks by Federals of II Corps halted them.  Enemy pressure built upon Wilcox, Lang and Wright to retreat.  Ammunition ran low.  Brigadier Generals Ambrose Ransom Wright and Cadmus Marcellus Wilcox sent couriers to Anderson demanding support.  The couriers found him and his staffers sitting on their butts in a ravine behind the Mississippi Brigade instead of overseeing the division’s advance.[7]  Rather than lead his division as Hood and McLaws were leading theirs, Anderson dispatched his aide-de-camp, Capt. Samuel D. Shannon, with orders for Posey’s brigade to send forward its right—the 19th and 48th Mississippi—on the left of Wright’s Georgians, and for Mahone to shift to the right and advance on the left of the two Mississippi regiments.[8] 
            The 19th and 48th Mississippi charged toward Emmitsburg Road on the left of Wright’s Georgians.  Meanwhile, Shannon reached Mahone with Anderson’s order to shift to the right and advance.  Mahone reacted to this change of plan with disbelief.


Credit:  National Archives

            “No,” he said, “I have orders from General Anderson himself to remain here.”[9]
            Shannon moved on before Mahone recovered from his astonishment and complied with Anderson’s order.[10]
            Brigadier General Carnot Posey brought up first the 16th and then the 12th Mississippi to support the 19th and 48th Mississippi on his right, leaving only a skirmish line on his left.  The Unionists in front of Posey’s left threatened that flank of his brigade, and Posey sent a courier to Mahone asking for a regiment to support the Mississippians’ left.  The courier arrived after Mahone received the order from Anderson to shift to the right and advance, which precluded literal compliance with Posey’s request though the shift provided the support sought.[11]  The attack of Posey’s right sputtered.  Only a few men from the 19th and 48th Mississippi reached Emmitsburg Road.  None neared Cemetery Ridge except for a handful from the 48th Mississippi on the Georgia Brigade’s immediate left.[12]  About that time the wounding by shellfire of Maj. Gen. William Dorsey Pender threw his division into confusion. [13]
            Mahone’s brigade left its skirmishers in place.  Around dark, the Virginians sidled around 200 yards to the right behind the worm fence on the crest of Seminary Ridge until the brigade’s right stood behind the left of Posey’s skirmishers.  This put the Virginians on the left of the body of Posey’s brigade and unmasked the left of Mahone’s brigade from behind the right of Thomas’ brigade of Pender’s disorganized division.  Mahone’s men silently advanced about 400 yards through the Bliss wheat field to the plank fence that separated it from the Bliss orchard.  The Virginians faced the Brian farm on Cemetery Ridge, between Ziegler’s Grove and the Copse of Trees.  Had they gone forward, they would have found themselves near Wright’s left, but by this time the Northerners were repulsing the rest of Anderson’s division as well as Longstreet’s men.[14]




            Too late to assist the rest of their division, the Virginians remained in their advanced position, where they might participate in another assault—this one beginning far to their left.  East of Cemetery Hill Ewell converted the demonstration of his corps into an attack.  On Ewell’s far left as twilight gathered, Johnson’s division seized a toehold on Culp’s Hill.  On Johnson’s right at nightfall, Early’s division broke into the enemy trenches on East Cemetery Hill.  Rodes’ division maneuvered to attack West Cemetery Hill on the right of Early’s division.  Pender’s division, by this time under one of its brigadiers, prepared to advance on the right of Rodes’ division, toward Cemetery Ridge.  Mahone’s brigade, the only fresh body of Confederates to the right of Pender’s division, stood where it could join an advance toward Cemetery Ridge. 
            Secessionist soldiers gathered around Mahone’s brigade behind the plank fence on the Bliss farm.  On the brigade’s far right, the 12th Virginia’s men could still see some arrive but only heard the muffled tread of others.  The regiment’s soldiers suspected they would make a night assault.  They discussed fastening white bandages to their left arms in case their suspicion proved true.  To their right and front, the fuse of an occasional shell blazed an arc through the sky.  The troops felt the order to advance would come soon.
Before Rodes’ division could get into position, the Federals drove Early’s division from East Cemetery Hill, leaving Rodes’ division, Pender’s division and Mahone’s brigade without any reason to advance.
            In front of the plank fence at 10 p.m., Longstreet and Anderson conferred.
            “It would be best not to make the attempt,” Longstreet said.  “Let the troops return.”[15] 
            The assault column did not disperse for several hours.  Mahone’s brigade rejoined its skirmishers near the center of Lee’s army at 2:30 a.m.
            Anderson, Mahone and Posey encountered controversy soon afterward.  Southern newspapers printed criticisms of the handling of Anderson’s division and Mahone’s and Posey's brigades at Gettysburg.  Anderson, Mahone and Posey fired off replies.  The Virginians’ failure to support the charge of Wilcox’s, Lang’s and Wright’s brigades on July 2 caused bitter feelings within Anderson's division and gibes about giving Mahone’s men wooden weapons and transferring their muskets to soldiers who would fight.[16]  
             Over the years Mahone has become the principal fall guy for Anderson and has even been accused of insubordination.[17]  Ought Mahone to have taken the fall for Anderson, who lay on his rear end behind Posey's brigade while Maj. Gen. Lafayette McLaws led his division, Maj. Gen. John Bell Hood lost the use of an arm leading his division, and Pender suffered a mortal wound leading his division?  If Anderson had remained at the front and personally delivered his second order to Mahone, which contradicted the first, the confusion which arose from a courier delivering the second order may well not have arisen and Longstreet's attack may not have broken down at that point.
            Was the criticism of Posey and Mahone legitimate?  Under the circumstances, it was not.  So why has Anderson, when he should have been leading his division like his fellow division commanders, gotten a pass for lying on his ass?  Almost certainly because after the war Mahone, like Longstreet, aligned himself with Republicans and was viewed as a traitor by the Democrat Establishment, though not his men.  That put a target on Mahone's back which Anderson did not have on his.  Though a good brigadier, Anderson had risen beyond his level of competence as a division commander.  Mahone, on the other hand, noted primarily as a disciplinarian as a brigadier, rose to become one of the war's premier division commanders, a mainstay of the defense of Petersburg.  Posey largely escaped the postwar controversy by being mortally wounded at Bristoe Station on October 14, 1863, and dying November 13, 1863.[18]






[1] James Eldred Phillips Memoir, James Eldred Phillips Papers, Virginia Historical Society, Richmond, Virginia.  
[2] Lt. Gen. James Longstreet, in charge of the attack, related that Anderson was to attack with four brigades.  James Longstreet, From Manassas to Appomattox:  Memoirs of the Civil War in America.  Philadelphia:  J. P. Lippincott Co., 1896., 369.  Anderson’s division had five brigades.  OR 27, 2:332, 343.
[3] Letter, William Mahone and Carnot Posey to Editor, Richmond Daily Enquirer, August 7, 1863.  See also Elwood W. Christ, “Over a Wide, Hot,…Crimson Plain:”  The Struggle For The Bliss Farm At Gettysburg, July 2nd and 3rd, 1863 (Baltimore:  Butternut and Blue, 1994) (2nd Ed.), 85-86.   
[4] Fletcher L. Elmore, Jr., Diary Of J. E. Whitehorne, 1st Sergt., Co. “F,” 12th Va. Infantry, A. P. Hill's 3rd Corps, A. N. Va.  Utica, Ky.:  McDowell Publications, 1995, 27-28.
[5] Ibid., 28.
[6] OR 27, 2:618.
[7] Douglas Southall Freeman, R. E. Lee:  A Biography, (4 vols.) (New York, 1934), 3:555.
[8] Shannon told Wilcox the order from Anderson to Mahone was “to advance.”  Ibid..  That the order included a sidle to the right is apparent from the brigade’s subsequent movements—otherwise the shift to the right would have resulted from another order from Anderson to Mahone.  William E. Cameron, "Across the Rubicon," William E. Cameron Papers, Alderman Library, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia; Phillips Memoir; William H. Stewart, A Pair Of Blankets:  War-Time History in Letters to the Young People of the South (Wilmington, N.C.:  Broadfoot Publishing Company, 1990), 97-98; Hampton Newsome, John Horn and John Selby, eds., Civil War Talks:  Further Reminiscencees of George S. Bernard and His Fellow Veterans (Charlottesville:  University Press of Virginia, 2012), 133, 155-156.  Posey confirmed that Mahone was ordered to the right.  OR, 27, 2:634.
[9] Freeman, R. E. Lee, 3:555.
[10] Shannon did not remain long enough to see Mahone move and mistakenly told Wilcox that Mahone did not move.  Ibid.; Cameron, “Across The Rubicon;” Phillips Memoir; Stewart, A Pair Of Blankets, 97-98; Newsome, Horn and Selby, eds., Civil War Talks, 133, 155-156; OR 27, 2:634. 
[11] Ibid.
[12] Harry W. Pfanz, Gettysburg:  The Second Day (Chapel Hill:  The University of North Carolina Press, 1987), 386-387.
[13]The Savannah Republican, July 19, 1863, p. 1, col. 4]
[14] Pfanz, Gettysburg:  The Second Day, 386-387; Phillips Memoir; Stewart, A Pair Of Blankets, 97-98; Newsome, Horn and Selby, eds., Civil War Talks, 133, 155-156.  Pvt. George S. Bernard of the 12th Virginia's Company E, the Petersburg Riflemen, thought this move occurred “about dark.”  Ibid., 133.  12th Virginia Adjutant William E. Cameron believed it happened around about three o’clock in the morning.  Ibid., 155.  Lt. Col. William H. Stewart of the 61st Virginia in Mahone's brigade recalled that the move occurred at “night.”  Stewart, A Pair of Blankets, 98.
[15] Newsome, Horn and Selby, eds., Civil War Talks, 155.
[16] Zack C. Waters and James D. Edmonds, A Small but Spartan Band:  The Florida Brigade in Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia (Tuscaloosa:  University of Alabama Press, 2010), 144.  Much of the derision stemmed from the mistaken assumption of Wilcox and Wright that because their brigades and Lang’s had peremptory orders to advance, so did Posey’s and Mahone’s brigades.  Freeman, R. E. Lee, 3:555-556; Christ, The Struggle for the Bliss Farm, 40; Edwin B. Coddington, The Gettysburg Campaign: A Study in Command (Morningside, Oh., 1979), 421, 759.  Mahone and Posey denied they had peremptory orders to advance.  Letter, William Mahone and Carnot Posey to Editor, Richmond Daily Enquirer, August 7, 1863.  Neither Wilcox nor Wright knew that Mahone’s brigade did move, though Wright ought to have known that part of Posey’s brigade advanced beside Wright’s brigade.  Cameron, “Across The Rubicon;” Phillips Memoir; Stewart, A Pair Of Blankets, 97-98; Newsome, Horn and Selby, eds., Civil War Talks, 133, 155-156; OR, 27, 2:634.
[17] Bradley M. Gottfried, Bradley M, “Mahone’s Brigade: Insubordination or Miscommunication,” Gettysburg Magazine, No. 18, July 1998; cf. John Horn, The Petersburg Regiment in the Civil War:  A History of the 12th Virginia Infantry from John Brown's Hanging to Appomattox, 1859-1865 (El Dorado, Ca.:  Savas Beatie, 2019), 185 n. 77.
[18] Ezra J. Warner, Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders (Baton Rouge:  Louisiana State University Press, 1959), 245.