M T Grattan Report, Commander GAR Post 122
The Decorah Journal, January 18, 1928
FROM THE RAPPIDAN TO APPOMATTOX
“Let Us Have Peace”
Submitted by Ann
Krumme
Few survivors of the Civil War have had my
opportunities for observation of the river and terrain of its great
battles, both during the war and since. In 1864 I carried a repeating
Spencer rifle on foot along the banks of the Red River in Louisiana and
traversed its length on the Ouichita, 39 guns, from the mouth to
Alexandria and returned, disabled by the Confederates at Fort Trinity,
towed by a tug. Familiar with the big river, the Mississippi, the Yazoo,
the river of death, the Ohio, the Tennessee, the Potomac and the
Rappidan, that deep, swift, turbulent stream that in one of its violent
rages cost me dear.
In the
face of Lee’s army of Northern Virginia Grant crossed the Rapidan the
spring of 1861. The critics acknowledging his many victories as they
were obliged to, urged that he had never been opposed by a General like
“Mars” Robert. This was true and Lee had many advantages, he was at
home, he knew every foot of the ground. His subordinates were able
generals, tried and true, capable and prompt in executing his every
order. His soldiers, seasoned veterans, brave, savage, resourceful
fighters whose superiors the world has never seen. In addition he had
interior lines, a tremendous advantage in military operations
constituting an almost insuperable handicap to overcome and one which he
used with rare skill. With shorter distances to move his troops for
defense of flank movements or threatened points the game was virtually
in his hands. Again the population was with high heart and soul, he was
their idol as he was the idol of his troops, not alone for his splendid
personality, his skill as a leader but for the cause of their state
which was also his, their firesides and their homes.
Grant had
no reliable maps, no reliable guides, no subordinates save Sheridan,
that he knew through and through, an army that had never gone forward
after a fight with Lee, always a stalemate, a retreat or a rout. At this
they were humiliated and shamed but were never to experience again.
Their joy was evidenced after their first battle in the wilderness, the
terrific courage, fighting hand to hand with clubbed muskets, the
burning of wounded soldiers in forest fire when Grant, the grim, silent
bull dog fighter did not halt or retreat but ordered the advance
southward to continue. A mighty shout arose from thousands of throats so
tremendous in volume as to provoke fierce cannonade and musket fire from
the Confederates in the inky darkness. Our soldiers were at last being
led by a fighter who never let go save to get a better hold and they
were jubilant. Fighting was never to cease day or night until the end
and the saving of the Union, that glorious venture in human government
which the immortal Daniel Webster had said, “Must and shall be
preserved.”
On March 23, 1864, Grant established his
headquarters at Culpeper Court House, north of the Rapidan river with
the Army of the Potomac under his immediate command. General Lee’s army
of Northern Virginia faced him south of the river. Early in May the
Virginia land in my opinion unequaled had dried so that am army could
move and Grant crossed the Rapidan plunging into the horrible wilderness
battle May 5th. On the 6th Sheridan and Hancock renewed the attack and
drove Hill’s corps a mile until reinforced by Longstreet who turned the
tide of battle until seriously wounded. Our General Wadsworth was
mortally wounded as was General Jenkins of the Confederates. Lee then
took command but was unable to get his exhausted men to attack Hancock,
the superb, who drove back both the Longstreet and Hill remnants.
Towards evening, Lee attacked with fresh troops driving the Union
soldiers under Generals Mott and Ward back in confusion, until Hancock
again turned the tide of battle, forcing the Confederates into their
intrenchments. On the 7th the only serious fighting was Custer’s defeat
of the Confederate Cavalry. The Adjutant General’s report of Union
losses in the battle of the Wilderness totaled 13, 948. The Confederate
loss I have never seen officially stated. A friendly authority paces it
at 11,000. Doubtless no more sanguinary battle was ever fought. Burial
squads and Union Generals maintained that Union losses were the least
and that the battle was a Union victory. However, that disputed point
may be, the army of Northern Virginia remained behind intrenchments,
while the army of the Potomac moving by the left flank continued its
southward march making mistakes as to roads but constantly advancing. To
prevent its reaching Richmond, the Confederate capital, General Lee
again confronted it at the strategic position of Spottslvania with his
usual advantage of interior lines which must be met by flank movements
or disastrous frontal charges against intrenchments. “Mars” Robert was
certainly a lion in the path albeit eventually a weary and exhausted
one. Spottsylvania lies south and a little east of the wilderness.
Sheridan met the Confederate cavalry more than half way at Todd’s Tavern
and defeated them, clearing the road for the Infantry night march which
rejoicing at not being in retreat towards Washington cheered Grant and
his staff riding by to the echo. They at last had a leader who never let
go save to get a better hold, who wired President Lincoln that he
proposed to fight it out on this line if it takes all summer, which it
did and more. Longstreet’s corps, under Anderson, now that Longstreet
was in the hospital was in possession of Spottsylvania when the Army of
the Potomac arrived. Anderson strengthened existing intrenchments
preparing to resist the assault which was unsuccessfully made by
Warren’s corps, while Hancock was fighting off Jubal Early in the rear,
Madday of the 9th, the two armies were facing each other. That fine
Union General Sedgwick, was killed early in the day and Wright commanded
the 6th corps in place. The fighting continued to the 20th. The Union
Generals Stevenson and Rice were killed with great numbers of their men
in a successful charge. Thus ended Spottsylvania and Grant continued his
southward march to Cold Harbor not having been checked in his onward
move. The total Union loss was 13, 601, the Confederate loss,
unofficial, according to friendly authority much loss, but this cannot
be regarded as reliable. With Lee continuing on his shorter interior
lines to keep between Grant and Richmond there was almost daily fighting
on the march to Cold Harbor. At North Anna the Union loss was 1,143
while the Confederate commander in the action General Brown was killed
and his loss was admitted to be a thousand or more. At Totopotomoy the
Union loss was 509, the Confederate loss not reported.
This
brings us to the last great battle between the armies of The Potomac and
Northern Virginia, Cold Harbor. After that came the siege of Petersburg
and Appomattox. Like its predecessors, Cold Harbor was a ghastly,
bloody, terrible holocaust, a bitter, hand to hand, savage struggle
between rugged men who fought as desperately as wild beasts. For the
awful carnage Grant was assailed by the press of the north and all his
enemies, but he did not turn back, oblivious of wounds, suffering, death
and destruction. He never relaxed the strangle hold that won him
victory, saving this magnificent Union from annihilation for all the
people enjoying its blessings today. His determination not to turn back,
as had been the habit of his predecessors is illustrated by his general
order of May 22nd, 1864: “Hold troops in readiness to march at 5 a.m.
tomorrow. At that hour each command will send out cavalry and infantry
on all roads to their front leading south.” Skirmishes amounting almost
to battles were constant, a notable one occurred at the blacksmith shop
some twenty miles from Richmond where the Confederate cavalry had
dismounted and intrenched. General Gregg attacked unsuccessfully with
his division, when Custer came along later with his cavalry brigade
including the famous first Vermont that lost so many Colonels during the
war. They dismounted and made one of their furious charges that rarely
possibly never failed and did not in this instance, clearing the road
for the rest of the army. Casualties were numerous giving the burial
squads a lot of work. The dead were inextricably mixed; Confederates in
the majority. Grant made his headquarters at this shop, owned by a man
named Hawes until May 30th ordering the advance of the various corps
toward Cold Harbor where the gethsemane of American manhood was
encountered in all its starkest horrors. It was an importand strategic
point for both armies and both were determined to possess it. On the
31st Sheridan carried it after a terrific struggle turning the
intrenchments against the Confederates. On the following day, June 1,
the Confederates charged in strong force and were repulsed with ghastly
casualties. A second time with unabated courage they flung themselves a
bloody sacrifice against Sheridan’s troopers in vain. Then they
intrenched west of the town, toward Richmond. Charges and counter
charges with little cessation day or night continued until the afternoon
of June 3rd when both armies from sheer exhaustion and depleted numbers
intrenched strongly. At night, the confederates evacuated in front of
the Union right, leaving their dead and wounded which were cared for by
Union soldiers. In other portions of the line between the armies the
wounded were not succored as the communities could not agree and by the
7th all but two were dead. On that date General Grant addressed a
message to General Lee closing with these words, “Regretting that all my
efforts for alleviating the sufferings of wounded men left upon the
battlefield have been rendered nugatory, I remain, etc. At this date it
is difficult to assign the fault, if any. Probably unavoidable, though
horrible.
Again General Grant moved by the left flank with
forces depleted by 10, 058 men, a total of 39, 259 since the nearly
continuous battle began in the wilderness, a big army of itself. This
move brought him to the siege of Petersburg, as strongly fortified as
was Vicksburg, with a more able commander as between Lee and Pemberton
there is no room for comparison. Sheridan had gone upon his memorable
Shenendoah raid which it was said required a crow flying over to carry
provisions. Cruel but necessary as the valley had been feeding the army
of Northern Virginia for years. Hancock had to be relieved on account
of wounds so Grant temporarily lost two of his best aids but Lee had
lost forever the thunderbolt of the southland, Stonewall Jackson.
It was here that Col. Pleasants, a Pennsylvania miner, commanding a
regiment of miners dug a tunnel under the confederate works which were
only a hundred yards from the Union lines. Eight chambers were
constructed and a ton of powder placed in each. On July 29th, the mine
was fired creating a huge crater into which General Leslie’s men were
rushed. He lost his nerve leaving his men without direction while his
corps commander, Mott, failed to remedy his defection resulting in a
loss to the Union of several thousand men.
General Grant
continued to be handicapped by incompetent and cowardly subordinates,
strangers to him in his brief command of eastern armies thus the well
laid mine plan resulted disastrously.
The garbling and changing
of Grant’s orders to the troops in the Valley via Washington led to the
most remarkable dispatch sent by President Lincoln during the war. Dated
Aug. 3, 1864, to General Grant in cipher it read in part as follows: “I
have seen your dispatch in which you say “I want Sheridan put in command
of all troops in the field, with instructions to put himself south of
the enemy and follow him to the death.” This I think is exactly right, I
repeat to you, it will be neither done or attempted unless you watch it
every day and hour and force it. A. Lincoln”
On receipt of this
General Grant started instantly for the Valley, General Hunter, in
command told him in substance that he had been so bedeviled by Halleck
and Stanton with criss-cross orders that he would be glad to be
relieved. General Hunter was an able, brave and patriotic soldier and
took this course only to advance the Union cause. General Grant gave
Sheridan his orders personally to find Early, drive him out of the
valley and destroy all stores he could not move. Sheridan quickly found
that “old fox” Jubal Early, one of the gamest, most resourceful
fighters of the Confederacy. Lee sent two divisions of infantry, a
cavalry force and twenty field guns to reinforce him which Grant
informed Sheridan of by courier knowing he could not get any orders
through via Washington. To make assurance doubly sure he followed up
personally and found that whirlwind of the Union cause with plans
complete for attack. Asked if he would be ready by the next week Tuesday
he answered that he should move at daylight Monday and he did attacking
Early at Opequon creek winning one of the greatest victories of the war
cheering and encouraging the Union people of the north and fully
justifying President Lincoln’s remarkable dispatch. Early retreated to
Fisher’s hill, a strong position, with Sheridan hot on his heels
capturing eleven hundred prisoners and sixteen guns.
Finding his
position untenable, despite its strength, Early abandoned the Valley
leaving Sheridan to gather cattle, grain, everything edible that he
could carry, destroying the rest. His name in the Valley is anathema to
this day, Stanton had opposed his being placed in command because he was
so young and so small. Grant, himself, was not large and Napoleon, the
little corporal, was only a boy when he said: “Soldiers, over the Alps
lies Italy.” Great soldiers come in all shapes and all ages but as a
rule young and small, the big men are too unwieldy. Grant had a hundred
guns fired at Petersburg in honor of the victory while jubilee and
celebration pervaded the loyal north.
The Confederate works at
Petersburg were so immensely strong as to defy capture by direct assault
and Richmond was so well fortified as to require few men to its defense.
Nothing remained to be done save by siege and cutting off of supplies.
These operations cost the Union army *272 men amounting to the loss in a
serious battle were effective. Early was not yet disposed of and
returning attacked Sheridan without success losing eleven more guns and
many prisoners inflicting small damage on the Union forces. At this
juncture Grant’s orders to Sheridan were again changed and the latter
called to Washington leaving his army at Cedar Creek, some twenty miles
from Winchester. Early again heavily reinforced slipped through a blind
pass in the mountains surprising in the early morning the Union army all
save the First Vermont Cavalry of Custer’s division. Frank Cummins, a
trooper in the tent of his cousin Col. Cummins, heard Early’s advance
and the regiment was quickly formed saving the Union right from the
disastrous rout of the left wing. Custer’s division held until Sheridan
from Winchester personally arrived. Comrade Cummins as fine a soldier as
ever lived used to give me the details of that fight so clear and vivid
that to this day I can close my eyes and see it in detail. Washington’s
stupid meddling with Grant’s plans again nearly lost us the war Halleck
and Stanton were the marplots. Had Early’s morning success been
unchecked he would have captured Washington with results that may be
imagined. Early had driven the Union left in utter rout taking its
artillery and thousands of prisoners. Sheridan began to meet his fleeing
troops as he left Winchester and ordered them back, Custer’s cavalry
fought off Early and drove back the panic stricken left wing so far as
possible. Sheridan found Custer holding back Early’s pursuit, with the
famous Vermont cavalry performing prodigies of valor. With the return of
the panic stricken, their courage renewed by the impetuous anger of
“Little Phil” on his big black stallion, Early was repulsed soon after
noon. Sheridan was not content, though in no way to blame for his
absence, he felt the mornings disaster humiliating and at mid afternoon
the lust of battle strong in his heart he attacked Early on both flanks,
sent Custer to his rear and flailed the earth with his beaten forces,
recapturing the artillery lost in the morning and 24 guns besides.
Early’s loss equaled in number Sheridan’s command and ended the fighting
in the valley and the timorous fears of Halleck and Stanton, of
Washington’s capture. But think! What if Frank Cummins had not been
wakeful that black morning of the 19th of October? Would there be any
United States today? Upon such trifles does the fate of Nations rest.
Sixty three years ago this month General Grant received the peace
commissioners of the Confederacy, Stephens, Campbell and Hunter at City
Point holding them several days until President Lincoln should arrive
refusing in the meantime to discuss their errand in any way. On February
29th they met the President at Hampton Roads who offered them their own
terms with the Union as it was without slavery. This was not acceptable
and the war went on, both sides robbing the cradle and the grave for
cannon fodder, a majority of the Union soldiers being under twenty years
of age, while the Confederates conscripted from 16 to 45. The writer
volunteered and was accepted in 1863 not quite 16.
Sheridan
having finished his besom of destruction in the Shenendoah Valley now
turned his attention with ten thousand cavalry to other sources of
supplies for General Lee’s army of Northern Virginia. At Charlottesville
he destroyed the railway to Lynchburg, from there wrecking the James
River Canal with mills, factories, provisions, supplies of all sorts
useful to the enemy. An industrious and busy fighting soldier he carried
on his destruction right close to Richmond, thousands of colored men
joining him in the work. General Lee set a strong force to check him
without avail and he was safely back in the Union lines by the 19th many
of his troops mounted on captured horses.
In March President
Davis, of the Confederacy, and General Lee in conference decided that
neither Richmond nor Petersburg was long tenable with supplies cut off
and agreed to evacuate as soon as the roads dried. Preliminary to this
General Gordon assaulted the Union lines capturing Fort Stedman and
other fortifications which were speedily recaptured with a loss to
Gordon of more than 4,000 men. Following this was the considerable
battle of White Oak Road to prevent Lee’s escape in that direction.
On the 29th of March General Grant issued his final orders for the
capture of the army of Northern Virginia. As usual Sheridan had the most
important part, quickly got into serious action with his cavalry at Five
Forks. Hancock’s corps now under Humphreys and the 5th under Warren were
ordered to his support. The latter was so slow that Sheridan relieved
him placing Griffin in command.
It was dusk when Sheridan
charged the confederate intrenchments capturing 6,000 prisoners,
artillery, small arms, etc. pursuing the Confederates until nine
o’clock. General Grant ordered a renewal of the attack by daylight which
resulted in the capture of 3,000 more prisoners. Forts Gregg and
Whitworth were now captured by assault. Up to this moment, Apr. 2nd, in
the late afternoon, 12,000 Confederates had been captured. On the 3rd,
Grant took possession of Petersburg but refused permission to turn the
artillery on a mass of defeated fleeing soldiers so soon to be
surrounded and captured. After all, the silent General had a heart.
There are several myths connected with accounts of the surrender at
Appomatox that gained currency in exalted circles. Roscoe Conkling made
one of them famous in his speech nominating General Grant for a third
term at Chicago. Quoting from memory he opened with: “You ask us whence
our candidate? I answer, friends, the famous apple tree, etc. There was
one meeting between two commanding generals under an apple tree. General
Lee arrived at McLean place, appointed for the interview, before General
Grant and sat down on the roadside bank with an apple tree back of him.
They met in the house, needing no introduction, having known each other
in the Mexican war. Their greeting was cordial and their gossip of the
days and the men in the halls of the Montezumas when Lee was chief of
staff to General Scott and Grant an eager, fighting Captain, was so
prolonged that General Lee finally reminded his old comrade that their
meeting was a business not a social one whereupon General Grant prepared
the terms of surrender of which I have a photographic copy before me.
General Lee accepted them as unexpectedly generous and here the story
without foundation of the return of his sword may be corrected. It did
not exchange hands, it was not asked for or offered while the two great
Generals remained until death, firm and fast friends personally. There
was no rancor or bitterness in the hearts of either of them. When Andrew
Johnson became president, after the murder of Lincoln, he moved to
overrule the terms of surrender and punish Lee. General Grant sternly
notified him that the terms of the document agreed upon by General Lee
and himself and approved by President Lincoln could not and should not
be violated.
It called for the retention of their side arms by
officers and allowed soldiers to take home horses and mules to make a
crop with, none to be molested so long as they obeyed the law. Had
Lincoln lived his just and kindly policies would have prevailed instead
of the vindictive hatred nourished by Johnson against the whites of his
own section who had fought for a lost cause.
That frame of mind
defeated for a long time peaceful reconstruction and was as cruel as it
was mistaken. Grant’s famous: “Let us have peace” would have prevailed
under Mr. Lincoln’s kindly influence. Carpet baggers, negro
legislatures, klu klux klan would not have marred the Union victory
which had cost the north 360,222 men and the south almost as many
besides an enormous treasure to both sections, wrecked homes, sorrowing
people for loved ones and lingering disease for many survivors.
While markedly unlike in appearance the two great commanders of the
Civil war had much in common. Neither were profane, neither were vulgar,
both were silent men, both were honest and sincere in all things and it
gives me great pleasure to add that both loved horses and were splendid
horsemen. America is proud of them both, the production of such men is
our chief glory while to slur either of them from lingering sectional
hatred discredits anyone. Their places in the gallery of fame is secure
for all time and in the Union’s peril in days to come may we have more
like them. The End.
M. T. GRATTAN, Post Comdr.
Underwood Post
122, G. A. R.