USA > Virginia > City of Portsmouth > City of Portsmouth > A record of events in Norfolk County, Virginia, from April 19th, 1861, to May 10th, 1862, with a history of the soldiers and sailors of Norfolk County, Norfolk City and Portsmouth, who served in the Confederate States army or navy > Part 31
USA > Virginia > City of Norfolk > City of Norfolk > A record of events in Norfolk County, Virginia, from April 19th, 1861, to May 10th, 1862, with a history of the soldiers and sailors of Norfolk County, Norfolk City and Portsmouth, who served in the Confederate States army or navy > Part 31
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Colonna, Wm.
Hansel, Warren. White, Wm.
Corbett, Thos. H. Holt, Ed. E.
Curtis, Edward.
Hyller, Thos.
Wynn, Wn. Young, Walter.
Detachments from the company took part in several naval boat expeditions. Private Win. A. Allen was transferred to a light artillery company and lost a leg in battle.
Only six men in the Harbor Guard were left at Appomattox. Those were :
T. L. Blanton,
J. Dorsett, T. R. Gary,
W. W. Mathews, J. T. Pollard, W. White.
At that date the company was not attached to any regiment or battalion. All of the names above except Wm. White were as- signed to the company after it left Norfolk.
CHAPTER XLIII.
THE SIGNAL CORPS.
This company was organized by Major James F. Milligan in Norfolk in March, 1862. It was composed originally of men de- tailed for the service from other commands, but not being able to supply the requisite number from that source, and the members being liable at any moment to be ordered back to the companies in which they were enlisted, it was determined to organize the Signal Corps as an independent command, to enlist men regu- larly in it, and to transfer to it permanently those who had been detailed to it. As the service required men of considerable intel- ligence, its members were selected with care. There were men in the organization from every State from which troops were on duty around Norfolk. The officers of the command were :
Major James F. Milligan, of Norfolk, Chief Signal Officer.
Captain-Nathaniel W. Small, of Norfolk.
First Lieutenant-Simon C. Wells, of Salem.
Second Lieutenant-Douglass C. Cannon, of Norfolk.
Third Lieutenant-Joseph B. Woodley, of Portsmouth.
First Sergeant-Francis R. Benson, of Portsmouth.
Second Sergeant-C. W. Young, of Portsmouth.
Third Sergeant-Richard A. Mapp, of Norfolk. Fourth Sergeant-A. G. Milhado, of Norfolk.
Fifth Sergeant-Andrew J. Flanner, of New Orleans.
First Corporal-John Emmerson, of Portsmouth.
Second Corporal-John C. Sannders, Jr., of Norfolk.
Third Corporal-Edward Rooney, of New Orleans.
Fourth Corporal-F. M. Hyman, of Norfolk.
At the evacnation of Norfolk one hundred and twenty-seven men were on the muster roll, and of these forty-one were from Portsmonth. Their names will be found in the lists of the va- rions companies which entered the Confederate service from that city, and in chapter XXV. After leaving Norfolk the command was moved to Petersburg and there perfected in the code of sig- nals, after which two chains of posts were established, with their bases at Bermuda Hundreds and City Point. One extended up the Appomattox river to Petersburg, and the other up the James river to Drury's Bluff, where it connected with a telegraph sys- tem to Richmond. Later a chain of posts was established down James river to the vicinity of Smithfield, where a considerable force of the company was located under command of Lieutenant Joseph R. Woodley. This detachment was mounted, and was also provided with a couple of swift row boats, with which they
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THE SIGNAL CORPS.
frequently crossed over to the north side of James river at night, inside the lines of the enemy, and gathered information of the movements of troops and vessels. In fact, it was to this source mainly that the Confederate Government relied for its informa- tion concerning movements of the Federal fleet in James river and Hampton Roads, and of troops near Fortress Monroe. Sev- eral of the members of the corps were afterwards placed on blockade runners, which frequented Wilmington and Charleston for the purpose of signaling the forts, to prevent the vessels from being fired on by mistake.
The following men enlisted in the corps in Norfolk, and, though at this late day it is not practicable to separate them, it is believed that all, or nearly all, of them were residents of that city. All of them lived through the war:
Captain, N. W. Small.
Second Lieutenant, D. C. Cannon, transferred from Company G, 6th Virginia Regiment.
Second Sergeant, A. G. Milhado, transferred trom Company G, 6th Virginia Regiment.
Second Corporal, John C. Saunders, Jr.
Fourth Corporal F. M. Hyman, tranferred from Company G, 6th Virginia Regiment.
PRIVATES.
Adams, Win. D. Forbes, Robert A.
Marable, Wm. H.
Averett, Thos. H.
Greenwood, Fred.
Norsworthy, Jos. C.
Barnes, V. H. Hastings, Wm. T.
Ricks, James R.
Boush, Isaac F.
James, Wm. A.
Seabury, Win. H.
Beach, Wm. F.
James, Rowland F. Walldren, Thos.
Berwick, Wm.
Lathrop, Wm. B.
White, Alpheus A.
Freer, Geo. H.
Lyell, Geo. E. Windsor, C. II.
Wiles, Samuel.
Of these the following were at the surrender at Appomattox : Lieutenant D. C. Cannon, Private Geo. H. Freer.
Sergeant F. M. Hyman. Private Fred. Greenwood.
CHAPTER XLIV.
FIELD AND STAFF, &C., NORFOLK.
Norfolk was represented in the Confederate Army by the fol- lowing field and staff officers :
Brigadier General Richard L. Page, Page's Alabama Brigade.
Colonel Thos. J. Corprew, 6th Virginia Infantry.
Colonel V. D. Groner, 61st Virginia Infantry.
Colonel Wm. Lamb, 36th North Carolina Infantry.
Colonel Edward E. Portlock, Jr., 21st Arkansas Infantry.
Colonel A. W. Starke, commanding artillery.
Colonel Francis Mallory, 55th Virginia Infantry. killed at Chancellorsville.
Lieutenant Colonel John S. Saunders, Battalion of Artillery.
Lientenant-Colonel Walter H. Taylor, Adjutant General on staff of General Robert E. Lee.
Lieutenant-Colonel Henry W Williamson, 6th Virginia Infantry.
Lientenant-Colonel Arthur Sinclair Cunningham, 10th Alabama Infantry.
Major Edmond Bradford, Inspector General and Mustering Officer Huger's Division.
Major James F. Milligan, commanding Independent Signal Corps and Scouts.
Major Francis Sinith, Heavy Artillery Battalion, killed April, 1865, on the retreat from Richmond.
Major Win. E. Taylor, Norfolk Infantry Battalion and General Gwynn's staff.
Major Robt. B. Taylor, 6th Virginia Infantry.
Major John Saunders Taylor, Provisional Army C. S., killed at Sharpsburg.
Major Richard C. Taylor, Artillery Battalion.
Major Robertson Taylor, Adjutant General on General Mahone's staff.
Major Chas. B. Duffield, Adjutant General on General Wise's staff.
Captain W. W. Chamberlaine, staff of General Walker, Chief of Ordnance 3d Corps A. N. Va.
Captain John D. Myrick, A. A. G. Loring's staff.
Adjutant W. A. S. Taylor, 61st Virginia Infantry.
Adjutant Alexander Tunstall, 6th Virginia Infantry.
Adjutant W. T. Walke, 39th Virginia Cavalry Battalion.
Captain Robert G. Portlock, A. A. General Fagan's Cavalry Brigade. Captain Richard Walke, Ordnance Officer, General Mahone's staff.
Lieutenant Isaac Walke, Ordnance Officer, Fitzhugh Lee's Cavalry Division, killed at Woodstock August, 1864.
Brigadier General Richard L. Page, was born in Norfolk and entered the United States Navy as a Midshipman on the 1st of March, 1824, and passed through the intervening grades to that of commander, which position he occupied at the beginning of the war, having been promoted on the 14th of September, 1855. His last duties in the United States Navy were as commander of the sloop of war Germantown, on the East India Station. Upon the secession of Virginia he resigned his commission in the United States Navy and was appointed in the Virginia Navy, and subse- quently transferred to the Confederate Navy. He was on duty at the Gosport Navy Yard the first year of the war, and after the
306
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FIELD AND STAFF, NORFOLK.
evacuation of Norfolk, was assigned to the command of the naval depot at Charlotte, N. C. From Charlotte he was transferred to Mobile, and on the 7th of March, 1864, was appointed Brigadier General in the Confederate army, and assigned to the command of Fort Morgan, at the outer defences of Mobile Bay. Ilis bri- gade was composed of the 21st Alabama Infantry, 1st Battalion Alabama Heavy Artillery, 1st Battalion Tennessee Heavy Artil- lery, five companies of the 7th Alabama Cavalry and a portion of the 1st Regiment Alabama regulars. He was in command of Fort Morgan on the 5th of August, 1864, when the Federal fleet, under Admiral Farragut, ran by it, and succeeded in sinking one monitor, the Tecumseh, with a torpedo, and a wooden gun boat, the Phillippi, with his batteries. On the 9th of Angust the Fed- erals landed a force of infantry and began a regular investment of Fort Morgan, and after a very gallant defence, in which his guns were all dismounted and his ability to resist any longer had ceased, he surrendered the fort on the 23d. His garrison amounted to about four hundred men, and they very bravely seconded his ef- forts to hold the fort, which was really untenable after the fleet had succeeded in passing it.
COLONEL THOS. J. CORPREW was in the volunteer service of the State before the war as captain of one of the Norfolk companies, and at the beginning of the war was appointed by Governor Letcher, Lieutenant-Colonel of the 6th Virginia Regiment. Upon the promotion of Colonel Win. Mahone to the command of the brigade, he became Colonel of the regiment. He was not re- elected at the reorganization of the regiment in May, 1862.
COLONEL V. D. GRONER, from early youth, evinced a fondness for a military life, and was an officer in one of the volunteer com- panies of Norfolk before the war. At the beginning of hostilities he received an appointment in the Adjutant General's office in the Confederate States War Department, but desiring to take a more active part in the struggle which was going on, accepted the position of Lieutenant-Colonel of the 4th North Carolina Cavalry in the summer of 1862, and was actively engaged with the enemy in the Blackwater River section. Ilis command drove back several gunboat expeditions, and had a successfulengagement with Spiers' Cavalry, driving them back and capturing a number of prisoners. In October, 1862, he was elected Colonel of the 61st Virginia Regiment, by the officers of the regiment. Ile was severely wounded at the battle of Spotsylvania Court House, May 12th, 1864, and did not rejoin the regiment until August, and, while still on crutches, commanded it at the battle of Davis' Farm, August 19th. Ilis wound, however, compelled him to again retire and he was not able to rejoin his command until just before the retreat from Petersburg. He commanded the regiment at the battles of Amelia Court House and Cumberland Church and sur-
308
NORFOLK COUNTY, 1861-5.
rendered at Appomattox. He was in command of the regiment in the following battles also: Fredericksburg, Chancellorsville, (May 1st, 2d and 3d) Salem Church, Gettysburg, Bristoe Station, Wilderness, Spotsylvania C. H., Davis' Farm, and numerous other smaller engagements.
COLONEL WM. LAMB was quite prominent in politics, though young in years, before the breaking ont of the war, and entered into that struggle at its beginning, as Captain of the Woodis Rifle- men. He took part in the engagements at Seawell's Point, May 19th and 21st, 1861, between the shore battery and the United States steamer Monticello, and his conduct was very highly com- plimented by Captain Colquit, commanding the post. Having re- ceived authority from the Secretary of War to raise an indepen- dent battalion, of which the Woodis Riflemen was to be one of the companies, he went to work in Princess Anne and Norfolk counties and raised two companies, but the Secretary assigned the Woodis Riflemen to the 6th Regiment as Company C, and his Princess Anne Company to the same regiment as Company B. Not relishing this treatment, Captain Lamb resigned, and was ap- pointed by the Governor of North Carolina to the position of Colonel of State troops, and was assigned to duty on the staff of General Joseph R. Anderson, commanding in that State. When the 32d North Carolina Regiment was organized Colonel Lamb was elected its colonel, with headquarters at Fort Fisher, at the entrance to Wilmington harbor. His command extended for twenty miles north from Fort Fisher, and was really that of a Brigadier General. When Fort Fisher was captured, Jannary 15th, 1865, Colonel Lamb was severely wounded and fell into the hands of the enemy. He was appointed a Colonel in the C. S. Provisional Army, and his promotion to Brigadier General had been approved by General Lee before the end came, while Colo- nel Lamb was in prison.
COLONEL ALEXANDER W. STARKE was an officer in the Marine Corps, U. S. Navy, at the beginning of the late war, and was at- tached to the sloop of war St. Marys, on the East India Station. The ship returned to the United States in March, 1862, landing at San Francisco, whereupon he resigned his commission, came through the lines without being captured, received an appoint- ment as Captain in the Confederate army and was assigned to ordnance duty. He was subsequently promoted to Major, Lieu- tenant-Colonel and Colonel of volunteers, and assigned to the command of a battalion of artillery. His command varied from five to eleven companies, and did general service. He was slightly wounded at Fort Harrison on the 29th of September, 1864. At the time of the evacuation of Richmond, April 1st, 1865, his command was stationed on the Nine Mile Road near Seven Pines. He fell back with General Ewell's Division, was in the battle of Saylor's Creek, fell back towards Appomattox,
309
ยท
FIELD AND STAFF, NORFOLK.
and surrendered with the remnant of the army on the 9th of April.
COLONEL FRANCIS MALLORY was a Captain in the United States * army at the breaking out of the war, and received a similar ap- pointment in the Confederate regular army. Upon the organiza- tion of the 55th Virginia Regiment he was assigned to it as Colo- nel. The regiment was attached to Heth's Brigade of A. P. Hill's Division. Colonel Mallory served gallantly with his regi- ment in every engagement in which it participated until he met his death, on the 2d of May, 1863, at Chancellorsville. His regi- ment was a part of Jackson's corps, with which he made his cele- brated movement to turn Hooker's right, and Colonel Mallory fell in the moment of victory, while leading his regiment in the charge.
COLONEL EDWARD E. PORTLOCK, JR., was born in Norfolk, re- ceived a military education at the Norfolk Military Academy, and at the breaking out of the war received an appointment in the War Department in Richmond, was appointed Lieutenant in the regular army, and at the request of General Roane was assigned to his staff in the trans-Mississippi Department, was elected Lien- tenant-Colonel and then Colonel of the 24th Arkansas Regiment, was captured at the fall of Arkansas Post, but exchanged and recommended for promotion to Brigadier General. His com- mission as such had been made out when Richmond fell, but did not reach him. He was in a number of engagements, frequently commanding his brigade, but escaped without a wound.
LIEUTENANT COLONEL JOHN S. SAUNDERS was a Lieutenant in the United States army at the beginning of the war, resigned and enlisted in the Confederate army, and was promoted to. Major of Artillery. IIe was appointed to command a battalion composed of Grimes' Battery of Portsmouth, Huger's Battery of Norfolk, and Moorman's Battery of Lynchburg. The battalion was disbanded shortly after the battle of Sharpsburg. Captain Grimes was killed, his men were divided between the two other companies, and Moorman's Battery was changed to horse artillery and trans- ferred to Fitzhugh Lee's Cavalry Division. Major Saunders was assigned to ordnance duty in Richmond and promoted to Lienten- ant-Colonel.
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL WALTER H. TAYLOR was one of the best known officers in the army of Northern Virginia. At the begin- ning of the war he was a Lieutenant in "Company F," of Nor- folk, but before the company was regularly mustered into service received an appointment as Lieutenant in the Provisional Army of the Confederate States and was assigned to duty with General Robert E. Lee. He continued with General Lee as his Adjutant General until the close of the war, was prompt and efficient in the discharge of his duties, and enjoyed the confidence of the Com- mander-in-Chief. After the war Colonel Taylor published an ad-
310
NORFOLK COUNTY, 1861-5.
mirable work, entitled " Four Years with General Lee," in which he gave to the world for the first time, from official sources, the great difference in the numbers of the Northern and Southern ar- mies in the various battles in Virginia.
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL HENRY W. WILLIAMSON was elected Cap- tain of Company F at the beginning of the war and was stationed with it on Craney Island until May, 1862. II ewas re-elected Cap- tain at the reorganization of the company in April, 1862, and the following month, when the election was held for field officers of the 6th Virginia Regiment, to which his company was attached, Captain Williamson was elected Lieutenant-Colonel, and held that position until the close of the war. Ile was with the regiment in nearly all of the battles in which it was engaged, and at the battle of the Crater, fought on the 30th of July, 1864, lost an arm.
MAJOR JAMES F. MILLIGAN was a First Lieutenant in the United States Revenue Service before the war, resigned on the 17th of April, 1861, and received an appointment in the Virginia navy. He was assigned to the command of the steamer Empire, which was subsequently changed into a gunboat, given a new name and sent to the North Carolina Sounds. Subsequently Captain Milli- gan was transferred to the army, and in March, 1862, under or- orders from the Secretary of War, organized the "Independent Signal Corps and Scouts," and originated a code of signals. In 1863 the company was enlarged into a battalion of two companies and Captain Milligan became Major. ITis corps was very useful to the War Department in gathering information of the move- ments of the enemy and transmitting it rapidly to Richmond. They picketed James river from Drury's Bluff to Burwell's Bay until Grant crossed over to Petersburg, and made frequent incur- sions into the enemy's lines in the neighborhood of Newport News and Old Point in search of information.
LIEUTENANT-COLONEL A. S. CUNNINGHAM was a Lientenant in the regular army, was appointed to a similar post in the Confed- erate army and assigned to ordnance duty. He was promoted to Lieutenant-Colonel of Volunteers, and during the Seven Days' battles around Richmond was assigned temporarily to the com- mand of the 10th Alabama Regiment, receiving a severe wound while in the discharge of this duty. Upon recovering from his wounds he returned to his duties as an officer of ordnance, and later in the war commanded the 40th Virginia Regiment tempo- rarily.
MAJOR FRANCIS SMITH was Commander of the 19th Battalion Virginia Heavy Artillery, stationed at Drury's Bluff, and upon the retreat from Richmond fell back with Ewell's Division. Dur- ing the night of April 5th his battalion became separated into two parts, and each mistaking the other for the enemy, began firing. Major Smith endeavored to put a stop to it, but received a wound from which he died.
311
FIELD AND STAFF, NORFOLK.
CAPTAIN ROBERT G. PORTLOCK enlisted in Company F at the beginning of the war and was on duty with it at Craney Island when he was promoted to Sergeant Major of the 9th Virginia Regiment. After the evacuation of Norfolk he became Captain of the President's Guard and did provost duty in Richmond. Subsequently he was tranferred to the trans-Mississippi Depart- ment and appointed to a position on the staff of General Fagan, commanding cavalry. Ile was wounded at the battle of Poison Spring and his promotion to Major was approved at the War De- partment, though the war ended before he received his commis- sion. He surrendered with the army in Arkansas after the fall of the Confederacy.
MAJOR WM. E. TAYLOR, though not so commissioned in the Con- federate army, deserves mention in this connection. Previous to the war the different volunteer companies of Norfolk composed a battalion, of which Major Taylor was commander, and when hos- tilities began and the battalion was enlarged into a regiment he naturally expected to be made its Colonel, but Governor Letcher appointed Colonel Mahone to command it and offered Major Tay- lor the position of Lieutenant-Colonel. This, however, he declined and withdrew from the regiment. He served for a while on the staff of General Gwynn, commanding the defences of Norfolk, and in that capacity hoisted the State flag of the Columbus Light Guard of Georgia over the battery at Seawell's Point on the 19th of May, 1861, when the Monticello made her attack upon it. Though well advanced in years and having two grown sons in the army (one of them Major R. B. Taylor, of the 6th Regiment), he was not willing to remain an idle spectator of events, but enlisted as a private in the Seaboard Rifles of Princess Anne county, Com- pany F, 6th Virginia Regiment, and carried his musket until 1863, when his health and strength broke down and he was discharged on account of old age and physical disability. His discharge was obtained for him by friends withont his knowledge.
MAJOR ROBERT B. TAYLOR was a son of Major Wm. E. Taylor. He entered the service at the beginning of the war as 1st Lieu- tenant of Company A, 6th Virginia Regiment, and on the 22d of Angust was elected Captain of the Woodis Riflemen, Company C. At the reorganization of the regiment, in May, 1862, he was elected Major, which position he held until the surrender at Ap- pomattox. The regiment was a part of Mahone's Brigade, and participated in about thirty-seven engagements, in most of which Major Taylor was present and yet fortunately escaped withont a wound.
MAJOR JOHN SAUNDERS TAYLOR was an officer in the United States navy when the war began, but resigned upon the secession of Virginia and entered the Confederate army as a Captain. He was present as an advisory ordnance officer at the battle of Roan- oke Island, and as commander of the heavy artillery in Fort Hu-
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NORFOLK COUNTY, 1861-5
ger distinguished himself in its defence. He was captured with the garrison. He was subsequently exchanged, promoted to Ma- jor commanding a battalion of light artillery, and killed at Sharps- burg September 17th, 1862.
MAJOR RICHARD C. TAYLOR entered the service at the begin- ning of the war as Captain of the Independent Grays, Company II, 6th Virginia Regiment, and was ordered to Craney Island with his company, but was shortly afterwards promoted to Major of Artillery and ordered to the entrenched camp near Norfolk to command the battalion of artillery which was on duty there. He was there until the evacuation of Norfolk, in May, 1862, when, after serving a short while on General Mahone's staff, he was ordered to Chaffin's Bluff. On the 29th of September, 1864, General Butler appeared before Fort Harrison, near Chaffin's Bluff, which was at the time without a garrison. Major Taylor hastened there with one company and directed others to follow, but before reinforcements eould arrive the attack had been made and the fort carried by assault. Major Taylor made a gallant fight with the one company and inflicted a heavy loss upon his assailants, but his numbers were too small for an effectual resist- ance. He was severely wounded and fell into the hands of the enemy.
THE MEDICAL CORPS.
Dr. John C. Baylor, Surgeon Camp Winder Hospital.
Dr. Richard D. Bagnall, Assistant Surgeon 3d Georgia Regiment.
Dr. James D. Galt, Surgeou Pig Point Battery and afterwards with 18th Virginia Infantry.
Dr. W. J. Moore, Surgeon in Charge hospitals at Liberty and Richmond.
Dr. Herbert M. Nash, Surgeon 9th Virginia, Surgeon 61st Virginia, and Chief Surgeon Artillery, 3d Corps.
Dr. Wm. Selden, Surgeon hospitals at Richmond and Liberty.
Dr. Robert Southgate, Inspector of Hospitals and Medical Examiner-Gen- eral Medical Staff.
Dr. T. B. Ward, Surgeon Mahone's Brigade, 6th Va. Regiment.
Dr. James H. Southall, Surgeon Archer's Brigade.
Dr. F. A. Walke, Surgeon 46th Virginia Regiment.
QUARTERMASTERS AND COMMISSARIES.
A. B. Cooke, Major and Q. M. Southwest and trans. Mississippi Depart- ments.
O. H. P. Corprew, Captain and A. Q. M. Mahone's Brigade.
George Chamberlaine, Captain and A. C. S. 9th Virginia Infantry.
J. Wiley Grandy, Major and Q. M. Army Northern Virginia.
James Barron Hope, Captain and A. Q. M. Lawton's Brigade.
J. Barry King, Captain and A. Q. M. Lightfoot's Battalion Artillery. Joseph Walters, Major and A. Q. M.
John W. Moore, Captain and A. Q. M.
W. C. Marrow, Major and A. Q. M. Army Northern Virginia.
Tazewell Thompson, Major and Commissary.
George C. Reid, Captain and A. Q. M. Colonel Griffin's Georgia Regiment (62d.)
James Y. Leigh, Captain and A. Q. M.
A. Meade Smith, Major and Commissary Rosser's Cavalry Brigade.
CHAPTER XLV.
IN THE NAVY-NORFOLK.
Norfolk city was represented in the navy by the following of- ficers, whose residences were in the city at the beginning of the war. They are arranged alphabetically and not by grade :
CAPTAINS.
Samuel Barron, John R. Tucker,
Wm. C. Whittle.
Jas. L. Henderson, Chas. H. Kennedy, Benj. P. Loyall,
COMMANDERS. Chas. F. McIntosh,
Robt. B. Pegram, Arthur Sinclair. Wm. A. Webb.
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