Calamity at Chancellorsville

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by Mathew W Lively




  © 2013 by Mathew W. Lively

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval

  system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,

  recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of the publisher.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Lively, Mathew W.

  Calamity at Chancellorsville : the wounding and death of Confederate General Stonewall

  Jackson / Mathew W. Lively.

  pages cm

  Includes bibliographical references and index.

  ISBN 978-1-61121-138-2

  EPUB ISBN: 9781611211399

  1. Jackson, Stonewall, 1824-1863—Death and burial. 2. Generals—Confederate States of

  America—Biography. 3. Confederate States of America. Army—Officers—Biography. 4.

  United States—History—Civil War, 1861-1865—Biography. 5. Chancellorsville, Battle of,

  Chancellorsville, Va., 1863. I. Title.

  E467.1.J15L58 2013

  355.0092—dc23

  [B]

  2013006687

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  Table of Contents

  Dramatis Personae

  Introduction

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  A Little Gem

  Chapter Two

  We Will Attack Them

  Chapter Three

  Press On

  Chapter Four

  They Never Run Too Fast

  Chapter Five

  My Arm is Broken

  Chapter Six

  Don’t Trouble Yourself About Me

  Chapter Seven

  I Thought You Were Killed

  Chapter Eight

  An Old Familiar Face

  Chapter Nine

  The Shade of the Trees

  Chapter Ten

  Epilogue

  Appendix I

  Controversies Surrounding the Event

  Appendix II

  Building the Stonewall Image

  Appendix III

  An Interview with Author Mathew Lively

  Bibliography

  Index

  Dramatis Personae

  THOMAS JONATHAN JACKSON

  National Archives

  Born in Clarksburg, Virginia (now West Virginia) on January 21, 1824. Graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1846 and served with distinction during the Mexican-American War. Served as an instructor at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia, prior to the start of the Civil War. At 39, Jackson was a lieutenant general and commander of the Second Corps of the Army of Northern Virginia in the Confederate army.

  MARY ANNA MORRISON JACKSON and JULIA LAURA JACKSON

  Virginia Military Institute Archives

  Born in Charlotte, North Carolina on July 21, 1831. Mary met Thomas J. Jackson while visiting her sister in Lexington, Virginia and married him on July 16, 1857, at the Morrison home in North Carolina. She was 31 years old when she visited Jackson prior to the start of the battle of Chancellorsville.

  Julia was born in Charlotte, North Carolina on November 23, 1862, and named after Jackson’s mother (Julia) and his sister (Laura). She was the third and only surviving child of Thomas J. Jackson and was five months old when she accompanied her mother on her visit prior to the battle of Chancellorsville.

  DR. HUNTER HOLMES McGUIRE

  Author’s Collection

  Born in Winchester, Virginia on October 11, 1835. Graduated from Winchester Medical College in 1855 and originally enlisted in the Confederate army as a private. He was promoted instead to brigade surgeon under Thomas J. Jackson and then to major and medical director of the Second Corps when Jackson assumed command of the unit. Only 27 years old at the time of the battle of Chancellorsville, he was already a well-respected surgeon in the army.

  JAMES POWER SMITH

  Author’s Collection

  Born in New Athens, Ohio on July 4, 1837. Graduated from Union Theological Seminary in Hampton Sydney, Virginia, in 1861 and enlisted in the artillery service for the Confederate army later that year. He was appointed to the position of aide-de-camp to Jackson in 1862 and was 25 years old during the battle of Chancellorsville.

  ALEXANDER SWIFT PENDLETON

  Author’s Collection

  Born in Alexandria, Virginia on September 28, 1840. Graduated from Washington College in Lexington, Virginia in 1857 and left graduate school at the University of Virginia to enlist in the Confederate army in 1861. He was 22 years old and served on Jackson’s staff as assistant adjutant general of the Second Corps during the battle of Chancellorsville.

  JOSEPH GRAHAM MORRISON

  Author’s Collection

  Born in Lincoln County, North Carolina on June 1, 1842. He was the brother of Mary Anna Jackson and was a cadet at the Virginia Military Institute in Lexington, Virginia, when the Civil War started. He left the Institute in 1862 to enlist in the Confederate army and serve as a volunteer aide-de-camp on Jackson’s staff. He was 20 years old at the time of the battle of Chancellorsville.

  JEDEDIAH HOTCHKISS

  Author’s Collection

  Born in Windsor, New York on November 30, 1828. Graduated from the Windsor Academy and worked as a schoolteacher and mining geologist prior to the start of the Civil War. He offered his services to the Confederate army as a mapmaker and became the chief topographical engineer for the Second Corps in 1862. He was 34 years old at the time of the battle of Chancellorsville.

  BEVERLY TUCKER LACY

  Author’s Collection

  Born in Prince Edward County, Virginia on February 19, 1819. Graduated from Washington College in Lexington, Virginia in 1843, and studied at Princeton Theological Seminary in Princeton, New Jersey. In March 1863, at the age of 44, he was appointed by Jackson to be the unofficial chaplain to the Second Corps.

  ROBERT EDWARD LEE

  Library of Congress

  Born in Westmoreland County, Virginia on January 19, 1807. Graduated second in his class from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1829. Lee was a career army officer and served with distinction in the Mexican-American War. He refused overall command of the Union army in 1861, and instead resigned his commission when Virginia seceded from the Union. At age 56, he held the rank of general in the Confederate army and was commander of the Army of Northern Virginia.

  JAMES EWELL BROWN STUART

  Library of Congress

  Born in Patrick County, Virginia on February 6, 1833. Graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1854. He resigned his commission and joined the Confederate army in 1861. He was 30 years old at the time of the battle of Chancellorsville and was a major general in command of the cavalry of Lee’s Army of Northern Virginia.

  AMBR
OSE POWELL HILL, JR.

  Library of Congress

  Born in Culpeper County, Virginia on November 9, 1825. Graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1847. Briefly served in the Mexican-American War and joined the Confederate army in 1861. He was a major general at 37 years old and commanded the “Light Division” in Jackson’s Second Corps.

  JOSEPH HOOKER

  Library of Congress

  Born in Hadley, Massachusetts on November 13, 1814. Graduated from the United States Military Academy at West Point, New York in 1837. Served in the Mexican-American War and resigned from the army in 1853. He re-enlisted at the start of the Civil War and rose to the rank of major general. He was in command of the Union Army of the Potomac during the battle of Chancellorsville.

  Introduction

  Civil War history abounds with stories and anecdotes regarding Stonewall Jackson. Next to Robert E. Lee, no individual became more revered in the South and beloved by its people. Admiration for his personal nature and military prowess transcended national borders and extended not only into the North but also across the ocean to Europe. An editorial by John W. Forney appearing in the Daily Morning Chronicle (Washington D.C.) three days after Jackson’s death expressed the views of many in the North when he wrote: “While we are only too glad to be rid, in any way, of so terrible a foe, our sense of relief is not unmingled with emotions of sorrow and sympathy at the death of so brave a man.” Forney went on to observe that Jackson was not the first instance of “a good man devoting himself to a bad cause.” After reading the editorial, Abraham Lincoln sat down and wrote a personal note to Forney: “I wish to lose no time in thanking you for the excellent and manly article in the Chronicle on ‘Stonewall Jackson.’”1

  One hundred and fifty years later, Jackson’s life continues to fascinate people. Orphaned as a young boy, steely determination carried him from the rural mountains of what is now West Virginia to graduation from the United States Military Academy. His accomplishments on the battlefield and untimely death at the height of his greatest military victory then propelled him to legendary status. “He fell at the summit of glory,” one subordinate wrote, “before the sun of the Confederacy had set, ere defeat, and suffering and selfishness could turn their fangs upon him.”2

  Despite the abundance of praise and adulation, Thomas Jonathan Jackson the man remains somewhat of an enigma. His character and lifestyle were full of contrasting elements: ambition with humility, constancy with eccentricity, simplicity with a complex sense of duty, and gentleness with ruthlessness in battle. Perhaps the best description of Jackson’s persona is that offered by biographer Douglas Southall Freeman: “He lives by the New Testament and fights by the Old.”3

  A tendency toward modesty and secrecy in both his personal and professional lives has left minimal direct sources from which to draw a picture of his personality. He did not live to write his memoirs, few personal letters survive, and he did not grant interviews during the war. What we know of Jackson’s life comes primarily from the postwar writings of family members, friends, and fellow soldiers.

  The complexities involved in telling the story of Jackson’s life persist in telling the story of his death. First-person accounts of his wounding at the battle of Chancellorsville and subsequent passing eight days later survive, but they are replete with contradictions and omissions—even, at times, within separate accounts written by the same individual. Some descriptions were written within days of the event, while others came 20, 30 or even 50 years later, when facts tend to blur and merge with the romantic memories of days gone by. As a result, several controversies surrounding his wounding and death continue to be debated to this day.

  This account of Jackson’s last 20 days is based on the author’s interpretation of the evidence compiled from multiple primary sources. The story is told in a narrative style to make it more pleasing to read, but not at the cost of historical accuracy. Quotations and conversations are transcribed exactly as recorded in the primary source from which they were taken. A more scholarly examination of the interpretations in the narrative is contained in an appendix for those interested in the historical debate. A second appendix discusses the rapid evolution of Jackson’s image during and after the Civil War.

  Although the extent of the effect can be debated, Stonewall Jackson’s death undoubtedly influenced the course of the Civil War; both amateur and professional historians enjoy playing out such “What if?” scenarios. The legacy of his military career and the oddity of his character have appealed to people from all walks of life for 150 years. As one of Jackson’s former cadets noted, “He is not Virginia’s alone: God gave him to the world.”4

  1 Daily Morning Chronicle (Washington D.C.), May 13, 1863, in Abraham Lincoln, Collected Works of Abraham Lincoln, ed. Roy P. Basler, 9 vols. (New Brunswick, NJ, 1953), vol. 6, 214.

  2 Richard Taylor, Destruction and Reconstruction: Personal Experiences of the Late War (New York, NY, 1879), 80.

  3 Douglas S. Freeman, Lee’s Lieutenants, 3 vols. (New York, NY, 1942), vol. 1, xlii.

  4 James E. Goode, The Life of Thomas J. Jackson by a Cadet (Richmond, VA, 1864), 196.

  Acknowledgments

  Writing a well-researched book is a daunting task and one not performed without the assistance of others. It is not possible to thank everyone who contributed to the completion of this work and I apologize to those not specifically mentioned who, nonetheless, played a part in its development.

  My thanks to the numerous librarians, archivists, and curators of the depositories that provided the primary source material and photographs used throughout the book, most notably: the Library of Congress, the Virginia Historical Society, the Library of Virginia, the Museum of the Confederacy, the Virginia Military Institute, and the West Virginia University Regional History Collection.

  A special thanks to the staff of the Fredericksburg and Spotsylvania National Military Park, of which the Chancellorsville battlefield and the Stonewall Jackson Shrine are part. The unlimited access they provided me to their vast source of primary material was invaluable to the completion of the book. In particular, I would like to thank Frank O’Reilly, park historian, who long ago encouraged me to undertake this project and put it on paper. I am indebted to him for unselfishly providing me with his knowledge and guidance over the years.

  To all my friends and colleagues who reviewed the manuscript or parts of it, providing me with their much appreciated advice and critique. Each one knows the individual part he or she played in the final product. Thanks also to Hal Jespersen for the excellent, high-quality maps he produced for the book.

  Finally, I want to thank all the individuals associated with Savas Beatie, LLC, especially those with whom I worked directly: Rob Ayer, Lindy Gervin, Veronica Kane, and Sarah Keeney. Your professionalism and assistance throughout the publishing process were outstanding. Most of all, I would like to extend a special thanks to Ted Savas for accepting the manuscript for publication. Without his support, none of this would be printed.

  Mathew W. Lively

  Morgantown, WV

  Prologue

  The American Civil War raged across the nation’s landscape from 1861–1865, a short 78 years after the United States had won its independence from England. While an exact toll of the resulting casualties is unknown, an estimated 620,000–750,000 Americans died as a direct result of the conflict. Although sociopolitical differences between the states north and south of the Mason-Dixon Line had existed since the birth of the nation, the presidential election of 1860 served as the catalyst for the bloodiest war in American history.5

  Stewing in anger over Abraham Lincoln’s election to the presidency on a platform vowing to prohibit the expansion of slavery into territories that had yet to become states, seven states in the Deep South (Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, South Carolina, and Texas) seceded from the Union in 1861 and formed the Confederate States of America. Hostilities between the two governments began in
April of the same year when Confederate forces fired upon the federal garrison at Fort Sumter, South Carolina. The eventual surrender of the fort compelled Lincoln to call for 75,000 volunteer troops to “suppress” the actions of the seceded states and “to cause the laws to be duly executed.” Lincoln’s action triggered the four remaining southern states (Arkansas, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia) to quickly leave the United States and also join the Confederacy, setting the stage for civil war.6

  The first major clash between the two woefully inexperienced armies occurred on July 21, 1861, near the Manassas railroad junction in central Virginia, 25 miles southwest of Washington, D.C. Known as the battle of First Manassas by the South (which often named battles after the nearest town) and First Bull Run by the North (which often named battles after the nearest body of water), the contest ended with an unexpected Confederate victory, as Union forces hastily retreated to Washington.

  Fighting in the eastern theater of the war did not resume in earnest until the spring of 1862, when the newly organized Federal army moved by water from Washington, D.C., to the peninsula between the York and James rivers outside the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia. Advancing to the outskirts of the city, the Union army was within seven miles of ending the Civil War barely one year after the start of the conflict.

  Meanwhile, in the Shenandoah Valley of northwestern Virginia, a relatively unknown Confederate general by the name of Thomas J. Jackson was completing one of the most brilliant tactical campaigns in military history. Over a period of 30 days, Jackson’s outnumbered force marched 350 miles and defeated 3 separate Union armies in 5 distinct battles. His maneuvers prevented the Union army from sending 40,000 soldiers to the peninsula as reinforcements, while his own army eventually slipped away to Richmond to help defend the capital.

  Once Jackson’s army arrived in Richmond, a series of engagements known as the Seven Days’ battles began on June 25, 1862. The fighting culminated on July 1 with an overall Confederate victory, as the Union army was driven from the Richmond vicinity. In addition to saving the city from capture, the sequence of battles also yielded one of the South’s most significant events of the war: the emergence of Gen. Robert E. Lee as commander of the Confederate army.

 

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