History of the Fifth West Virginia Cavalry, Part 1

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HISTORY


-OF THE-


Fifth West Virginia Cavalry,


-FORMERLY THE-


SECOND VIRGINIA INFANTRY,


-AND OF-


Battery G, First West Va. Light Artillery,


IBR


-BY-


RARY OF CONGRE COPYRIGHT AUG 8 1890 a 1


WASHINGTON.


FRANK S. READER, Author of the Life of Moody and Sankey.


NEW BRIGHTON, PA. : Daily News, Frank S. Reader, Editor and Prop'r. 1890.


COPYRIGHT 1890, BY FRANK S. READER.


D


MAJOR GENERAL ROBERT H MILROY.


PREFACE.


This work has been written at the request of the Author's comrades of his old regiment, and he has endeavored to give in a plain way, with- out exaggeration, the facts, and some of the incidents, that made up the life of the regiment in its service of over three years. The basis of the work is the diary kept by the Author during most of his service, on which he has built from all the sources of information that could be reached. Dates, places, and facts, it is believed, can be relied upon, though there may be a few unimportant errors, which will in no wise affect the correctness or value of the history. No pains or expense have been spared, and no labor avoided, that would secure the facts needed; and whatever omissions may be found, are not the result of the want of care or labor, on the part of the Author.


He is indebted to many of the comrades, officers and men, for valu- able information supplied, and help given, but the names are so many, that they cannot be given here. Much credit is due them for the com- pleteness of the work, and for the valuable assistance given in doing justice to the brave men of our regiment.


It is well to state, perhaps, that these pages are not intended as a history in full of any of the battles or campaigns mentioned, or of the armies that took part in them, but rather of the part our own regiment took in them. Other commands, no doubt, did as good service as our own, and they are not given the prominence they would have in a more general history, because this is intended solely as a regimental history, in which other regiments and commands are incidentally mentioned.


4


PREFACE.


The writing of the history was a labor of love, for which the Author has received no compensation, and would under no circumstances ac- cept any, being glad of the opportunity to set forth the services of his noble, brave comrades, who were as brothers to.him in their long asso- ciation together. The work is theirs, the cheerful gift of one who has a just appreciation of their patriotic services, and it is hoped that they will find in it a faithful portraiture of the work they did for their country. THE AUTHOR.


TABLE OF CONTENTS.


CHAPTER I.


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA, 9


CHAPTER II.


ORGANIZATION OF REGIMENT,


25


CHAPTER III.


COMPANY HISTORIES,


40


COMPANY A,


4I


COMPANY B,


49


COMPANY C,


60


COMPANY D,


65


COMPANY E,


71


COMPANY F,


81


COMPANY G, 83


91


COMPANY H,


94


COMPANY I,


COMPANY K, 100


CHAPTER IV.


THE QUARTERMASTER'S DEPARTMENT,


108


6


TABLE OF CONTENTS.


CHAPTER V.


THE CHAPLAIN AND HIS WORK, 124


CHAPTER VI.


IN CAMP AT BEVERLY, 1861, 132


CHAPTER VII.


RELIEF OF CHEAT MOUNTAIN,


137


CHAPTER VIII.


IN CAMP AT ELKWATER, 143


CHAPTER IX.


CAMP ON CHEAT MOUNTAIN SUMMIT,


152


CHAPTER X.


MOUNTAIN DEPARTMENT, 160


CHAPTER XI.


THE ARMY OF VIRGINIA,


173


CHAPTER XII.


RETURN TO WESTERN VIRGINIA,


189


CHAPTER XIII.


FOURTH SEPARATE BRIGADE,


... 197


CHAPTER XIV.


ROCKY GAP EXPEDITION, ..... .


203


CHAPTER XV.


DROOP MOUNTAIN,


213


CHAPTER XVI.


THE SALEM RAID, ....


222


.


TABLE OF CONTENTS.


7


CHAPTER XVII.


CAMPAIGNS OF 1864,


238


CHAPTER XVIII.


SCOUTING SERVICE,


248


CHAPTER XIX.


PRISON LIFE,


270


CHAPTER XX.


ESCAPE FROM PRISON, 283


FRANK S. READER, CO. I.


CHAPTER I.


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


HE determination of the loyal people of Western Virginia not to yield to the demands of the Secessionists of the State, created a great deal of enthusiasm in the bordering states of Pennsyl- ania and Ohio, and did much to attract volunteers from those states, to the support of the brave loyalists of this section. The treason of Richmond furnished the occasion to the West to assert its dignity and independence. The triumph of secession on the James, led to the triumph of loyalty in the mountains; but it was a struggle such as few people have ever gone through, and fixed for all time the undaunted courage, the sublime devotion to principle, and the patient endurance, of the noble people of this western section. While Gov. Letcher was training the State militia for use against the government, the people of the western counties were holding Union meetings for the support of the govern- ment. The militia in the western part of the State were called into action, but largely refused, many of the officers and men becoming gal- lant officers in the regiments that were soon formed for the defense of the Nation. The sketches of many officers, and of companies, in the succeeding chapters, will show the work of some of them, and give a tolerably fair idea of the intense loyalty of these men. For a number of years, there had been a heated contest between the contending prin- ciples that were fully developed by the war, and there was no neutral ground upon which any persons could stand. This so completely de- fined the positions of the two, that when the war actually broke its dark and hideous cloud upon the rugged mountains and fair valleys of West- ern Virginia, the people were in line where they belonged, and the battle was on. The dominant party of the State being naturally for the prin- ciple of states rights, the Unionists suffered much at their hands, and it was no easy matter after all to be for the Union. Speakers were mobbed, meetings were broken up, rough and tumble fights were frequent, and neighbors were arrayed against neighbors, yet there was no yielding of the loyalty of the people.


B


IO


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


During all this stormy period, there were a number of avowed aboli- tionists along the border of the state, some also in the interior of the state, but their influence was abridged. They could not get access to the masses. The preachers of the M. E. Church North, had a large membership in the state, and were closely watched. They were pressed by the M. E. Church South, and other denominations, on account of their anti-slavery tendency. Hon. F. H. Pierpont, one of the leading men of the state, though not a member of that church, wrote one of his most effective letters and published it in a local paper, vindicating the preachers of the M. E. Church, maintaining that they were simply living under the rule promulgated by Wesley. This letter had wide circula- tion, and served the end designed.


In the fall of 1860, the Virginia legislature was called in extra session: then came the state convention; then on the 17th of April 1861, the ordinance of secession was passed, and on the 25th of the same month the state, by secession commissioners, acting under authority of the convention in session at Richmond, was annexed to the Southern Con- federacy at Montgomery, Ala. Of this the people knew nothing. They were called upon to go through the farce of an election on the fourth Thursday in May following, to vote on the adoption or rejection of the ordinance of secession, the time for electing members of the senate, house of delegates and members of congress. The news of the passage of the ordinance spread like wild fire. The union members of the con- vention escaped from Richmond, some at the hazard of their lives. Hon. John S. Carlisle was among the first to escape. As soon as he arrived at Clarksburg, his home. he called a public meeting, and that meeting called a convention, to consist of ten men from each county. which would send delegates to a convention to be held in Wheeling on the 11th of May following. In the meantime, public meetings were called in every county, the shortest notice calling out large concourses and they were addressed by union men and secessionists.


All the leading offices, civil and military, were held by rebels. Orders were issued from Richmond to assemble the militia by companies, bat- talions and regiments, and to push forward the militia officers' training. Rebel military companies were being raised in every county, their rendezvous being Grafton. What were called the "terror men" were active. A few of the most determined men in each county called on militia officers, and notified them that they must go with the state or resign: also on union men, to admonish them that if they did not go with the state, they might expect serious consequences. Mr. Pierpont was among the most active of the speakers, and was approached, to learn what he meant by stirring up sedition in the state, and opposing the organized commonwealth of Virginia; and assured that if he per- sisted, he would be arrested and sent to Richmond, and tried and hung for treason against the great state. He had been in four or five princi-


II


LOYAL WVESTERN VIRGINIA.


pal counties, and the old men asked him what the union people could do. He expected advice from them, and in his own language, "the very heavens appeared as brass without a single rift." His neighbors in the midst of this terror, asked him what they should do. He simply said, "hold on to the union."


In this depressed state of mind. he went to his office and took down the Constitution of the United States. Audiby he said, "Old constitu- tion, I will give you one more reading." He does not know why he had not done it before, but he commenced at the preamble, carefully reading article by article and section by section, until he came to the section which provides-"The Government of the United States shall guarantee a republican form of government to each state in the Union, repel invasion, and suppress insurrection and rebellion when called on by the legislature, or by the Governor, if the legislature cannot be con- vened in time." When he got through the section, he sprang to his feet, threw the book with force on the table and exclaimed, "I have got you." The cold chills ran from his head to his feet and his hair stood on end. He walked the floor for a few minutes in brisk step, and in less than a minute the whole proceedings of the convention, its representation, the declaring of all offices held by secessionists vacant, representation in Congress and division of the State, passed before him like a panorama. He went into his house and told his wife that it was clear. He met one of his neighbors on the street and remarked to him, "It will all come out right." He knew at that stage that success could only be had by secrecy.


The meeting at Wheeling, on the 11th of May, came off in a few days, and was presided over by Dr. John W. Moss, of Parkersburg. It was a great mass convention. The wealth and talent of the Union men in the State were there, earnest and determined, without reference to numbers from counties. Thirty odd counties were represented. They assembled in the afternoon in a large hall. A large number of resolutions were presented, all breathing a strong Union spirit. Daniel Lamb, Geo. Mc- Porter and F. H. Pierpont were appointed a committee to whom all the resolutions were referred, with request to report next morning. Pier- pont met with the committee and told them that they could report that he had three resolutions, which he desired adopted before the conven- tion adjourned. They were about as follows:


ist. That this convention call a delegate convention, to be com- posed of all the Delegates and Senators elected at the ensuing election, and a number of delegates from each county, equal to twice the number of its representatives in the house of delegates; these delegates to be elected under the direction of a committee of safety to be appointed by this convention.


2nd. That this convention so elected, should meet in Wheeling on the 13th day of June next following.


I2


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


3rd. That this convention appoint - members as a committee of safety, whose duty it should be to direct the manner of electing mem- bers to the convention, who were not members of the Legislature, and to attend to such other affairs as they deemed necessary for the Union cause.


Pierpont put these resolutions in his pocket, and said he would wait for a proper opportunity to offer them. Speech-making began in earn- est at an early hour in the evening. Mr. Carlisle led off, advocating the division of the state at once, the new state to be composed of two congressional districts, and he had a strong following. He was followed by Gen. Jackson, of Parkersburg, Hon. W. T. Willey, Hon. C. D. Hubbard, Campbell Tarr, J. S. Burdett, Daniel H. Polsley, and others, nearly all of whom had been members of the Richmond convention. Various propositions were suggested. About half an hour before dinner next day, Pierpont was called for; he took the stand and spoke until adjournment for dinner, and promised to finish after dinner. In the meantime he saw Wm. G. Brown, member of congress-elect of King- wood. He told Brown that he did not care about speaking, but he wanted to wear out the convention so as to get in some practical resolu- tions; that after dinner he would resume his remarks, but he knew he would get hoarse in a short time, and would call upon him to finish, he being fully in possession of his, Pierpont's, views. This line was fol- lowed. After Brown had been speaking some time, Pierpont left the platform and went down one aisle of the hall, and met Carlisle. He took the resolutions out of his pocket, and said to Carlisle, "here is what you want." Carlisle read them carefully and said "that suits me exactly. Why did you not show them to me before?" Pierpont said it was not time. Carlisle addressed the President with a motion to refer all resolutions back to the General Committee with instructions to report as soon as possible. The committee retired, Pierpont's resolu- tions were presented, and the sub-committee was instructed to report them.


The convention reassembled just before sun-down. News had gone out that all disagreements were settled. A number of ladies and gentle- men were on the large platform. The convention was called to order. the resolutions were read, and unanimously adopted with great enthu- siasm. The chairman then announced the committee of safety. Im- mediately a clerical gentleman stepped forward and struck up the star spangled banner, in which the band and all on the platform joined, the ladies acquitting themselves with great honor. Then another and an- other patriotic song, then the doxology, "Praise God, &c.," and the convention adjourned amid ringing cheers. This meeting was of na- tional importance. The great daily papers of Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Pittsburg, Cleveland, Columbus, Cincinnati and Chicago had their reporters there. An intense union feeling was developed and it greatly encouraged the sentiment in the North.


13


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


The next day the committee of safety organized. The committee ap- pointed a sub-committee to remain at Wheeling and take charge of af- fairs. Then the next day when the sub-committee met, some one who had heard that Pierpont had a plan of action asked him to explain it. He admitted that he had; and that it was this: "On principle the loyal people of the state are entitled to the protection of the laws of the state and United States. When our convention assembles I have no doubt we will know that the Governor of the state has joined the Southern Con- federacy. The convention will pass resolutions declaring, in the language of the declaration of independence, that 'he has abdicated his office by joining a foreign state,' and that it is the right of this conven- tion to appoint a Governor and Lieutenant-governor, and pass such other ordinances as are necessary to turn out of office all disloyal men and to fill them by loyal men, and do anything else that may be necessary. Our actions must go to the whole state. We will call the legislature together immediately if necessary. You observe the convention is com- posed of double the number of delegates of the lower house. It may be we will need a legislature and convention both at once. We will elect Senators to fill the places made vacant by resignation of Hunter and Mason. We will commission our members elected and send them to Congress. The Governor will call upon the President for mili- tary aid to suppress the rebellion. In the meantime, we will get the United States Army to occupy the Monongahela and Kanawha valleys, drive the rebels beyond the mountains, and we will organize below. Now if we carry out this program, we will represent the State of Vir- ginia, and divide the State by the consent of Congress and the consent of the Legislature of Virginia." The committee unanimously assented, and worked diligently, attending to all the details necessary to strengthen the union cause.


On Saturday before the fourth Thursday in May, election day, Pier- pont's friends at Fairmont thought it safe for him to come home and stay until the election. There was great commotion, on the day before the election, and a regiment from Georgia and the Valley of Virginia arrived at Phillippi and Grafton. A large rebel meeting was held in Fairmont the same evening. Threats were freely made. AAbout 2 o'clock at night, a lady living near called to Pierpont and told him that she had been watching all night, that she heard of threats, and feared that he would be killed or his house burned that night. He told her not to be alarmed, they would not hurt him, but he watched from that to daylight, got an early breakfast, and went to his office. A friend came in excit- edly and declared there was present danger, and insisted on his leaving at once on the train for Wheeling. He went and got to the office of the committee at Wheeling at half past 3 p. m. The committee was there. They gibed him about not being at home voting. He replied, "The time of voting is past. I move that Mr. Carlisle be sent, at once, to


I4


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


Washington, to demand troops to drive the Rebels out of Western Vir- ginia." Carlisle readily consented to go on the next train, at 8 o'clock that night. He had to go by Harrisburg and Baltimore. He got to Washington at 3 p. m. next day. He told the hackman to drive him to the White House as quick as his horses could go, got there and inquired for the President; was informed he could not see the President, as all the Cabinet were there in cabinet meeting. Carlisle said he wanted to see all the Cabinet and President together, and demanded that his card be taken in. The President called him in. "Well," said the President, "Mr. Carlisle, what is the best news in Western Virginia." Carlisle, without answering that question, said. "Sir, we want to fight. We have one regiment ready, and if the Federal Government is going to assist us we want it at once." "You shall have assistance," said the President. This was on Friday afternoon. On Sunday morning, United States troops, from Ohio and Indiana, crossed the river at Wheeling and Park- ersburg, and on the third of June the first fight in the State came off at Phillippi.


Before the assembling of the convention, a number of union gentle- men in Wheeling, held a kind of informal caucus, and discussed the men who would likely be prominent for governor. They finally agreed on Pierpont and appointed a gentleman to see him and ascertain if he would accept; if so they would work to that end. Pierpont was seen, the matter submitted. he declared "that he had never thought of oc- cupying the place. He had been looking to older men." After hear- ing all his friend had to say, he replied: "I am in for the war to lead or drive, and if the convention so orders I will do the best I can." Two days before the meeting of the convention. the members began to arrive in Wheeling. The first question to leading union men was, "What are we going to do?" They were told to see Pierpont, he had worked up a plan of action. So they went to him singly and by num- bers. He explained the proposed action in detail. All inquired, "Have you consulted the President or any of his cabinet?" He an- swered “No. We don't want to consult them. This action by our enemies will be called revolutionary. The government of the United States is watched in this country and Europe, and we don't want to com- promise it in any way. But we will submit our work and I will guaran- tee its acceptance."


The convention assembled on the 13th of June 1861. It was agreed that all the members before taking their seats, should take an oath to support the constitution of the United States, as the supreme law of the land, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the ordinance of seces- sion passed at Richmond on the 17th of April 1861. About thirty-five counties were represented, and every delegate elected but one, took his seat. Hon. A. I. Boreman was elected President of the convention. Appropriate committees were appointed on fundamental principles and


.72


HON. FRANCIS H. PIERPONT.


15


LOYAL WESTERN VIRGINIA.


plan for reorganizing the state. The committees went to work in earnest. and in a few days they reported in substance that the loyal people of the state were entitled to the benefit of state and national government; that the offices of Governor and Lieutenant-governor were vacant by reason of the officers who were elected to their places having joined a foreign government; and that it was the duty of the convention to elect a Gov- ernor and Lieutenant-governor for six months until the offices could be filled by an election of the people. They made it the duty of the Gov- ernor to require all the officers in the state to take the oath to support the constitution of the United States, as the supreme law of the land; and the restored government of Virginia as vindicated by the convention assembled at Wheeling on the 13th of June 1861, notwithstanding any- thing to the contrary in the ordinance passed at Richmond on the 17th of April 1861. It was made the duty of the Governor on the refusal of any office-holder of a state or county office to take this oath, to declare the office vacant, and order an election to fill the vacancy with a loyal man. By the 21st, all the preliminaries were completed, speeches of explanation made and election of Governor ordered for that day. Pier- pont was asked privately to leave the hall.


Daniel Lamb, Esq., nominated him, in a short speech, for Governor of the Restored Government of Virginia. No other nomination was made, and the vote was unanimous. Pierpont was sent for, and in- formed of the action of the convention by the President, who asked him if he was ready to take the oath of office. He said he was. The oath was then administered on the President's platform, in the presence of the convention. Pierpont turned to the convention and said he thanked them for this expression of their confidence, and would serve them to the best of his ability.




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