They Called Him Stonewall

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They Called Him Stonewall Page 20

by Davis, Burke;


  The day’s papers had little news of the armies, and almost all the rest was unpleasant:

  The Dispatch complained of a new bordello in front of the soldier’s hospital of the Young Men’s Christian Association, from which women beckoned to the wounded. The paper was incensed over the prostitutes “of both sexes” swarming in the city: “They have been disporting themselves extensively on the sidewalks and in hacks and open carriages … [indulging in] smirks and smiles, winks and remarks not of a choice kind in loud voices.”

  Last week there had been a Thanksgiving Day, but feasts were skimpy, except in the hotels, where rich officers and profiteers lived extravagantly. The Secretary of War had a letter from General Lee, and it had not been kept a secret:

  The troops … have for some time past been confined to reduced rations consisting of 18 ounces of flour, four ounces of bacon of indifferent quality, with occasional supplies of rice, sugar or molasses [this for each 100 men, every third day].

  The men are cheerful, and I receive but few complaints.… Symtoms of scurvy are appearing among them, and … each regiment is directed to send a daily detail to gather sassafras buds, wild onions and garlic, lambs quarters and poke sprouts, but for so large an army the supply obtained is very small.

  Early on this morning, a remarkable mob began to assemble inside the wrought-iron fence in Capitol Square before the venerable building which was a replica of Jefferson’s love, the Maison Carée of Nîmes. The guards paid little attention as the people gathered on the steps of the Capitol, for most of them were young women and girls, with a sprinkling of old men and adolescent boys. They had clearly met by concert, drifting in by twos and threes, quietly, nodding to friends, sitting, talking in hushed voices. The guards were aware that something unusual was astir, but there was yet no hint of violence; in fact, the square bore a singularly peaceful look, as if these people had gathered for a Sunday service of some sort, for most were dressed in their simple best. They clustered under the linden trees, milling patiently, as if in expectation. A number stared at the surrounding buildings as if these bore some special significance, at the roughly stuccoed brickwork of the Capitol which was, close at hand, a rather ignoble edition of its famed ancestor.

  Some women harangued their neighbors at the fringes of the crowd:

  “I took out $800 of their damned money yesterday, and all it bought was two pounds of tea, and a sack of coffee and 60 pounds of sugar! Do they think we’ll stand it forever?”

  Another shouted, and for the first time the guards turned to watch: “Yes, by God—and milk for our babies is just $4 the quart! That’s all. And who’s to pay?”

  Other voices: “And the damned planters lying up drunk at the Spotswood Hotel, drinking $10 likker and eating up $3 venison.”

  “And they pay their army substitutes $5,000—to go and get killed for them.”

  Some women shouted now at the guards, as if they were to blame for the troubles of the city.

  “Damn your kind! You let the rich out of the army on habeas corpus, or whatever in God’s name it is, and you run down the poor by night! You’re worse than the Yankees!”

  Abruptly, the mob had a leader. As if she had been in hiding, a huge woman appeared in the crowd, shouldering into the open before a guard, heedless of the cocked musket in his hands. She wore an old army jacket cut off at the shoulders and exposing huge reddened arms. Flecks of blood laced the yellow butcher’s apron which strained about her body. She turned to the crowd, holding up a dirty palm.

  A few wails burst from the throng:

  “Bread! Bread!”

  “The Union! Give us the Union!”

  “Feed our babies!”

  The woman glared over the crowd as if judging whether she could quiet it; and then, astonishingly, she leapt to the rim of a fountain, and standing with the sparkling water over her ankles, and grimacing hugely, she flung one hand in a silent, eloquent gesture, pointing out of the square. For an instant she was like some grotesque figure cast on the fountain. The crowd, with undertones of guttural excitement, began to stream away.

  The guards assumed poses of nonchalance until the last of the people had left the square, and then they ran. Within a few moments the bell in the city alarm tower began to toll.

  The mob flowed westward, hurrying and almost noiseless, going down Ninth Street, past the offices of the War Department and across Main Street, growing larger at each step, with curiosity-seekers coming to join.

  A faithful diarist stood on the street—J. B. Jones, a clerk in the War Office: “The mob … preserving silence, and so far, good order. Not knowing the meaning of such a procession I asked a pale boy where they were going. A young woman, seemingly emaciated, but yet with a smile, answered that they were going to find something to eat. I could not for the life of me restrain from expressing the hope that they might be successful, and I remarked that they were going in the right direction to find plenty in the hands of extortioners. I did not follow to see what they did.”

  The mob poured into Cary Street, still in its deadly silence, and approached the stores of the speculators, men who had become rich since war began. Windows began to smash. The women now ran and, in smaller mobs, rushed into doorways and drove out the merchants; some of these men howled in fear as they ran. The women, aided by a handful of men, seized all the drays and wagons in the street and sent out raiding parties for more; they commandeered drivers, and set groups to guard them. They loaded stores into wagons: flour, meal, shoes, cotton goods, jugs of molasses, baskets of eggs, jars of milk.

  Others swarmed around the corner into Main Street, where shops had begun to close as word of the riot spread. The mob was now about four thousand strong and had a new set of leaders. Dozens of plate-glass windows were smashed; and in the clatter, people broke into the stores to drag out bolts of silk, arms full of jewelry, liquors, senseless luxuries from pharmacies, manikins from the windows, huge fashionable women’s hats, armloads of cigars.

  In the midst of this, a company of the home guard wheeled into the street, advancing with bayonets; some of the mob ran. Governor Letcher appeared, shouting in an effort to get attention. There was a steady chorus of cries, and in the background looting continued. A bugle was blown. It became quieter. The governor beckoned to the mayor, who stood on the curb waving for silence. He had a clerk read the city’s Riot Act in a loud, contemptuous voice.

  “I will fire on you in five minutes,” the governor yelled. “If you have not dispersed I will fire on you. In five minutes.” His face was red and sweating profusely, and he looked as if he would give the order with glee.

  A buzzing at the rear announced the coming of Jefferson Davis. He stepped from his carriage at the moment a woman was screaming epithets at Governor Letcher, daring him to violence, and threatening him with lynching. Davis went past her fearlessly, a slight erect figure with a flushed face, its lantern jaws flexed in anger. The President mounted a dray piled with loot, breathing hard, looking down on the people.

  “Bread! Bread!” the women chanted, lifting their hands.

  “Citizens! Hear me!”

  They hooted him down. “Our children are starving! We want bread and the Union!”

  “You’re disgraceful!” the Mississippi soldier said to the mob. “This is worse than a Yankee victory. Go to your homes!”

  “Bread! Bread or no soldiers. Throwing our sons to them damned butchers of yours—and the lapdog generals lie around your house!”

  “Go home, people. So these bayonets can be sent against our common enemy!”

  Laughter swept the street.

  “This will bring famine on you! It is the sure way to prevent food coming to the city—the farmers will be afraid. Don’t you understand me?”

  There were further catcalls and screams of derision. “Money! Bread! Union!”

  “If any are in want …” the President began.

  A fury of cries drowned him out.

  “If you are in need, I will provide for you a
s I can from my own purse.”

  A pandemonium of insults.

  “I will share my last loaf with you. I hope you will bear our privations as our brave army does.”

  A command unheard by the mob passed among the soldiers, who advanced to surround the President; the mob began to fall back, and to quiet. The people now seemed willing to listen.

  “Bear privation with fortitude and continue united against the Northern invaders, who are the authors of all our sufferings. Hear me, people of the Confederacy!”

  The cold-faced man was obviously sincere and, as he stepped down from the dray, seemed aware that he had not reached the people. There was something in his manner to indicate that he found the necessity of speaking to them unpleasant. He went back into his carriage, as stern and forthright as he had come. The crowd straggled away, ahead of the bayonets of the guard. There were few arrests.

  The commander of the city guard asked the President for troops from near-by camps to teach the mob stern lessons, but Davis declined.

  The President, however, took steps to close the incident, and to keep it from the ears of the enemy. He had an order sent to the newspapers:

  To the Richmond Press,

  Gentlemen:

  The unfortunate disturbance which occurred today … is liable to misconstruction and misinterpretation abroad.

  I … make a special appeal to the editors and reporters of the press at Richmond, and earnestly request them to avoid all reference directly or indirectly to the affair.…

  There was a more direct order to the telegraph company to “permit nothing relative to the unfortunate disturbance … to be sent over the telegraph lines in any direction for any purpose.”

  At three in the afternoon, when things were quiet, the Government opened its first free public commissary. Without previous announcement, rice was distributed to all who came; but the place was not open for long.

  Two days later the Enquirer violated the order of censorship, but in this language:

  A handful of prostitutes, professional thieves, Irish and Yankee hags, gallows birds from all lands but our own, congregated in Richmond with a woman huckster at their head, who buys veal at the toll gate for 100 and sells the same for 250 in the morning market, undertook the other day to put into private practice the principles of the commissary department.

  Swearing that they would have goods at Government prices they broke open half a dozen shoe stores, hat stores and tobacco houses and robbed them of everything but bread, which was just the thing they wanted least.

  That week, too, General Longstreet asked for more troops, but was refused because of the threat of riots in the city.

  Squads of Yankee prisoners swung through the Richmond streets, defiantly shouting, “They’ll hang Jeff Davis on a sour apple tree!” Urchins ran behind them, enchanted by strange uniforms, learning the new song.

  Sporadically, throughout the city, army bands appeared, as if on schedule. They played “Dixie,” and “Bonnie Blue Flag.” There was a good deal in the papers about Confederate victories and the sufferings of the faithful soldiers.

  11

  THE DASH TO RICHMOND

  Far out in Western Virginia, at the village of Port Republic, it was June ninth—and for Jackson a fitting day to mark the end of a triumphant campaign which was to become his chief fame.

  The Federal flight from Port Republic had left him in a rare state. He had his victory before noon, and cantered among Taylor’s brigade of Louisianans, smiling in pride, passing congratulations. He found Taylor and seized his hand, promising him the big guns his men had taken. The guns were now hot, still firing at the retreating Federals, whom Jackson’s corps had now seen in retreat the length of the Valley from Front Royal to Winchester and back to the south of the Massanuttons.

  Ewell was at one of the cannon himself, helping fire final salutes at the enemy.

  For the first time in his career, Jackson saw his men go mad; cheering broke from every file as they caught sight of him, and the Irish regiment broke into actual tumult. A gunner rode cockhorse on a cannon, near the generals, shouting to Taylor, “We told ye to bet on our boys!”

  In the celebration, Jackson did not forget the enemy. The guns rolled until almost dark. He went into the defile, seeing far below the army of Shields, a dark current on the road to Luray. The Federals moved swiftly, not in a rout, precisely, but in full, undisguised retreat. Jackson’s men chased them for eight miles. Jackson returned to the battlefield where booty was being gathered: six big guns, eight hundred muskets, dozens of wagons, 450 prisoners.

  Jackson and Ewell were together, watching. Old Jack put his hand on his lieutenant’s arm. “He who does not see the hand of God in this is blind, sir, blind!”

  Ewell wagged his bald head, grinning, knowing that the tone of slight levity was only for him, and that Jackson was literally speaking his mind. Ewell thought, perhaps, of his own timely arrival on the scene, when his men had clawed the Federals from Jackson’s flank and saved him from disaster.

  The battlefield, they noted, was more thickly covered with dead than any they had seen. Jackson’s men had paid heavily. Taylor’s fine Seventh Regiment was cut to bits, and others were shrunken.

  Numbers of the men, including General Taylor, got their noon meal from the haversacks of Federal dead.

  Jackson and Ewell rode over the field. Jackson hailed a medical officer.

  “Did you bring off all the wounded?”

  “All of ours, sir. Not the enemy’s.”

  “Why not, Captain?”

  “They shelled us from across the river.”

  “You had your hospital flag on the field?”

  “Yes, sir. In plain sight.”

  “And they shelled that?”

  “Yes.”

  “Take your men to their quarters. I would rather let them all die than have one of my men shot intentionally under the yellow flag, trying to save their wounded.”

  The anger was passing and did not mar his mood of triumph, but it endured until he had written a stern note to Shields, protesting Frémont’s shelling of medical parties. The anger flashed like fire as he spoke to Ewell of an incident in the battle.

  Jackson had heard the story: A Federal officer on a white horse had galloped boldly under fire, in clear sight of Confederate riflemen, urging his men to the fight. And Ewell, taken with the show of gallantry, went down his own lines, ordering his men not to fire on the Federal and his horse. Finally, however, the brave enemy officer had fallen.

  Jackson asked Ewell if the story were true. Ewell admitted that it was and commented on the stirring picture made by the officer. Jackson cut him short with a new show of wrath, of a sort he was to display more than once. “Never do such a thing again, General Ewell. This is no ordinary war. The brave Federal officers are the very kind that must be killed. Shoot the brave officers and the cowards will run away and take the men with them.”

  Inexplicably, the army was hurried up the steep mountain road to the east. The troops could not know that they had seen the last of their Valley enemies and were bound for Richmond. Old Jack only pushed them on through a cold rain. The men dragged slowly. They did not recount their victories as they climbed the slope. They straggled, and men were out of ranks, though not so badly as at Winchester, when Jackson had complained to Ewell, “The evil of straggling has become enormous.” Jackson himself did not look backward through the spring fighting.

  The Valley campaign was over. Its fruits were not yet visible to all, but it was plain that Jackson had immobilized many Federal divisions on the Potomac, had struck fear into Lincoln and his Cabinet, and had prevented the strong reinforcement of McClellan before Richmond.

  Jackson had, in fact, saved Richmond. He had kept a potential force of 175,000 Federals from joining in the encirclement of the city which might have taken place, that spring. His campaign had made such demands on his troops as fighting men had seldom known. On many days his divisions had marched thirty-five miles. Bet
ween May thirtieth and June fifth, in the retreat southward to Port Republic, the army had made 15 miles a day, 104 miles in all.

  In one month the army had freed Staunton, checkmating the armies of Milroy and Schenck; had chased Banks from Virginia for a time; and had kept McDowell and his thirty-five thousand from their march to Richmond. The trio of great dangers—Banks, Frémont and Shields—had not only failed to crush him but had been battered in turn.

  Critics, turning to classic standards, were to find flaws in Jackson’s handling of troops, cavalry, guns; but he had performed miracles of a sort and made his name known everywhere. He had made such intimate use of his knowledge of Valley terrain that it became his particular locale in history and was to be studied by soldiers of many nations. All had been accomplished with men who were largely inexperienced; almost without exception his staff, his regimental officers, his troops, were green at the start.

  He had begun on March twenty-second. Since then, it was just forty-eight marching days; the troops had slogged 676 miles, an average of 14 miles a day. They had fought six formal skirmishing actions, had brushed with the enemy almost daily for the past month. There had been five pitched battles. Nowhere had Jackson commanded more than seventeen thousand men; but with few exceptions, he had managed to concentrate superior numbers and outnumber the Federals at each point of attack. Yet he had not hesitated to assault forces twice the size of his own. From start to finish he had faced about sixty-two thousand Federal troops in the region, any and all of them available to fall upon him at the whim of the Washington high command.

  He had taken thirty-five hundred prisoners, counted thirty-five hundred Federal dead, captured over ten thousand muskets and rifles, seized or burned stores of incalculable value. He had captured nine precious cannon. Against this his losses seemed slight: twenty-five hundred dead and wounded, six hundred prisoners, three guns.

 

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