Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alabama. Show all posts

Sunday, September 19, 2021

Joined The Yanks


 I know they are nothing less,  It is treason, and those that sell to them will be dealt with as traitors to their country,  Yet I feel assured it was ignorance in some,  They couldn't deceive me in any such a manner,   how true the adage, 'The love of money is the root of all evils',  


Huntsville, Alabama, Garden


There were one hundred Alabamians Joined the Yanks, to day,  shame, shame on them,   Traitors to their country, how I detest them,  How true the expression, 'He who is a traitor to his country, is a serpent, which turns to bite the bosom that warms it,' I sincerely hope they will be Justly retributed,  Saturday 19,  Cheering news, The report of Mr Robinson's death all false, he is improving, hope he will continue so. (From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle).



Tuesday, August 17, 2021

Stationed At Larkinville


An excerpt from Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:


"A portion of Buell's Army were stationed at Larkinville a day or two.  Two of them came out here, made a more favorable impression than Michell division, because they conducted themselves better..". (July, 1862)



Michigan Historical Collections - Regarding The Michigan Thirteenth


Larkinsville, Alabama (LOC)

Sunday, January 31, 2021

Boarded At Mrs. Bradford's


From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

"'twas rumored over the river, That I and a Yanky Capt. were married, I have not been as angry before since the 31st of January, when I was at Mrs. Bradfords...".


1871 Huntsville, Alabama (LOC) - Randolph Street - Female College - Far Right

"In January 1862, Priscilla was a student at Huntsville Female College and boarded at the home of  *Mrs. J. B. Bradford on Randolph Avenue in Huntsville, Alabama." [Source]  *Probably Mrs. Joseph Bennett Bradford / (Martha (Patton) Smith Bradford)



Wednesday, October 14, 2020

An Author's Memories Of Old Cahaba




From Memories of old Cahaba:

At the foot of the picturesque Cahaba Hills, on the banks of the majestic Alabama, just above the mouth of the beautiful little Cahaba, where their waters glide into each other's embrace on their way to the sea. is located the old, historic town of Cahaba — a place replete with romantic interest, and in its mighty ruins a forceful reminder that man, proud man, cannot build against the destructive inroads of time, circumstance, and political influence.

Wednesday, August 26, 2020

The 10th Wisconsin In Alabama


From the diary of Miss Priscilla Larkin...:

"The 10th Wisconsin Regiment are at last stationed, in our little village, We received intelligence to day of a glorious victory at Richmond...".


Source - Map of middle and east Tennessee and parts of Alabama and Georgia


The 10th Wisconsin Infantry History:

"...the Tenth Regiment as rear guard, brought through the last trains from Huntsville to Stevenson.
We find the following in the table of casualties prepared by Adjutant General Gaylord:

Killed.—At Mud Creek, Ala., August 22.— Company J—Privates Thos. Denlan, G. W. Hancock and Henry Reed.  At Larkinsville, Ala.—Company F— Private Theo. Helgus.

At Stevenson, the rebels attempted to prevent the leaving of the trains; the Tenth Regiment bringing up the rear, secured the final departure of the troops, and arrived at Nashville on the 5th September.


Tuesday, July 7, 2020

Casualties In The Larkinville Guards



From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

'Tis rumored that, five of the Larkinville Guards were killed."  "...what sad afflictions upon the families, still, how consoling to know they fell in a noble and glorious cause...".

Wednesday [July] 16,  Shocking news, Can it be possible--Billie Robinson has died from the wound received at the battle of Richmond,  'Gone to that bourne from whence, no traveller returns.'

Saturday 19,  Cheering news, The report of Mr Robinson's death all false, he is improving, hope he will continue so.


Wednesday, July 1, 2020

Scattered From Natchez


"Somewhere along the way, probably whre the Natchez Trace turned more sharply north, the party (of revolt fugitives) divided. 


Scene In Alabama

One group, of which Colonel Hutchins was a member, went by Alabama and Georgia...finally arrved at Savanah, then in British control, in the later part of October, after traveling 131 days."  The other group...'had the bad luck of falling into the hands of American insurgents'." (Source: THE DEVIL'S BACKBONE The Story of the Natchez Trace...:)



Thursday, March 19, 2020

Met A Mr. Pat Ragland


Below is an excerpt from Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

"Frazier family and myself stayed at Bill's tonight-- there met a Mr. Pat Ragland, who is quite a curiosity to sit and listen to him talk about ornamenting "pipes" and Wednesday-- ."


There was a Patrick Ragland of Jackson County, Alabama, found in the Confederate Applications for Presidential Pardons, 1865-1867, papers (at Ancestry.com):




Included in Mr. Ragland's file was a Surgeon's Certificate of Incapacity for the Army of the Confederate States, completed in Huntsville, Alabama, on February 28, 1863.  It stated that Mr. Ragland, a lawyer, was born in Virginia, age 32, 5'10", with black hair and grey eyes.  A problem with his left joint was indicated.


Friday, December 20, 2019

One Of Washington's Surveying Tools



Displayed at Karl C. Harrison Museum Of George Washington In Columbiana, Alabama


"Washington...kept a diary not only of all surveys of the tracts and lots made, but also of many curious and interesting circumstances incident to the wild, romantic life which their business required." [Source]

Cross-posted at In Deeds


Monday, June 10, 2019

Bryce's Cross-Roads


Source
Narrative from Cahaba. A story of captive boys in blue:

"The leading regiment, the One Hundred and Fourteenth Illinois, reached the front almost breathless after its five-mile race, and was thrown at once into action without a solitary support, except the handful of Grierson's cavalry, already on the ground. These men had been hotly engaged for four hours, and their ammunition was about exhausted."

"The Ninety-third Indiana arrived on the scene some ten minutes later, having been delayed by the stragglers of the One Hundred and Fourteenth Illinois. Lest I should be misunderstood, let me say that these stragglers were falling behind, not on account of cowardice, but because overcome by heat and fatigue. Even in this breathless condition they were pressing on and doing the best they could to get to the front. A more gallant regiment was never enlisted."

"The Ninety-third Indiana reached the front with only a handful of men... . It was formed on the right of the One Hundred and Fourteenth Illinois, directly at the intersection of ' Brice's Cross-Roads,'... ."


Source





Friday, May 24, 2019

The Goodloes And The Alabama Waltz


From The Huntsville Historical Review:

"In her book, Loyalty and Loss — Alabama Unionists in the Civil War and Reconstruction, Margaret Storey describes many of the incidents of Alabama unionist espionage...".

"...Franklin County planter John C. Goodloe, considered by Federal commanders 'one of the best posted [men] on the south side of the river,’ crossed the river a few times in 1864 with news of Confederate activities."

"The family of John Calvin Goodloe...insisted, on the contrary, that he was a spy for the Confederacy, but had convinced the Yankees that he was a Union man... . The early evidence comes from [his] nephew...who published a book on his wartime experience, Confederate Echoes, in 1907."

"Happily, the research also afforded lagniappes:..."The sheet music, *Alabama Waltz (1835)...was found in an antique store in Huntsville, Alabama in 1991, and traced to its origin in Lexington, Kentucky, where the young Miss Turner [Mrs. John C. Goodloe] was apparently in attendance at a boarding school."

*See picture of the sheet music where the Alabama Waltz was dedicated to Miss Harriet Turner.



Saturday, May 11, 2019

Full Of Yankees


Statue Of Little Girl - Huntsville, Alabama, Gardens

Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

Friday 11th-- was aroused from my peaceful slumbers before day-light this morning by Martha Ann pulling me, saying "Get up-- the town is full of Yankees".  Devils are more appropriate names, I do detest the name,


Tuesday, February 26, 2019

Booker T. Washington's Idea Of Teaching And Sacrificing


Booker T. Washington (Source)


Source
Also referenced was The Black man's burdenby Holtzclaw, William Henry...with an introduction by Booker T. Washington.

Source (William Henry Holtzclaw)


Thursday, January 17, 2019

A Southern Belle's Diary And The Battle Of Mill Springs


From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

"Sad news this morning-- a battle at "Cumberland Gap" in which the Federals were victorious-- although we retreated-- yet they were greater losers.  We regret so much that Gen. Solicoffer fell--"


Battle of Mill Springs Sign

Notes added to the transcribed diary by a descendant of Miss Larkin:

Cumberland Gap (January 19) refers to the battle of Mill Springs, Ky., generally regarded as the first Confederate defeat of the War. Rebel troops under the command of General Zollicoffer (q.v.) advanced from Cumberland Gap to the Tennessee River but were driven back by  Union forces commanded by General George Thomas.

Gen. Solicoffer (January 19) is Brigadier General Felix Kirk Zollicoffer, C.S.A., killed at the battle of Mill Springs (q.v.).

Mill Springs Park in Kentucky


Thursday, June 28, 2018

Kerby Smith In Chattanooga


Civil War Cannon In Chattanooga, Tennessee


Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:


Thurs 17th-- Can scarcely content myself-- have nothing to employ my mind, will go to Cousin Williams to spend the night.
Friday 18th-- Good news, Cousin William saw a gentleman up town-- who walked from Chattanooga, by the by-- walked from Larkinville today,  He states-- though very confidentially-- That Kerby Smith is at Chattanooga with five thousand men, has four thousand between Bridgeport and C. and as soon as they rebuild the bridge between those places-- he will with thirty six engines proceed immediately to retake Murfrees. and Nashville, then come on here and whip the Yanks from this place,  I only hope it is reliable

See this post regarding Priscilla and her Diary

Report from General E. Kirby Smith:

Source


Saturday, September 2, 2017

Sad News For The Confederates


Also See Dear Diary: Visiting The Acklins


View Of Cumberland Gap


THE DIARY

Sad news this morning-- a battle at "Cumberland Gap" in which the Federals were victorious-- although we retreated-- yet they were greater losers.  We regret so much that Gen. Solicoffer fell-- [Source]


Cumberland Gap website at the National Park Service here.


Source



Sunday, March 26, 2017

Red Eagle



Red Eagle: And the Wars with the Creek Indians of Alabama, by George Cary Eggleston:



"...a man of whom Jackson said, 'He is fit to command armies.'" 



Thursday, June 9, 2016

The Sturgis Raid Or Guntown Disaster


An excerpt of a chapter in "Cahaba. A story of captive boys in blue"..."....The Wretched Criminal Managment Of [Samuel D.] Sturgis Insures Defeat," below:

The Union leaders felt it necessary to inflict some chastisement to the Confederate forces to counteract the moral effect of our defeats in the West, and another expedition was started out June 2d, 1864, this time from Memphis, under the command of General S. D. Sturgis...afterward known as " The Sturgis Raid," or " Guntown Diaster... [called Bryce's Cross-Roads by the Confederates].

Source

This command moved leisurely along until June 9th, when, at Ripley, Miss., a small town about twenty miles northwest of Guntown, General Grierson, who was in advance, reported that a few prisoners had been taken, and that in his judgment the main body of the enemy would be found the next day at or near the Mobile and Ohio Railroad.


Fold3: Military Records
General Grierson's Photo At Fold3

General Grierson, I am informed, advised General Sturgis to keep his men well in hand, as the enemy was " near and in force." 

The infantry and artillery had gone but a part of the way when another courier from General Grierson reached Sturgis bearing the information that the Confederates were receiving re-enforcements from the South by rail. They came from Mobile, and had been sent to the aid of Forrest when it was known that Sturgis was seeking him. The whistling of the locomotives could be plainly heard by Grierson.

[General Grierson]...suggested that Sturgis halt his command about three miles back, where it then was, form his infantry on a ridge, covered with high sedge grass, which would command nearly a mile of corduroy road, over which any troops would be compelled to pass should they follow him. Grierson would gradually fall back, and on nearing the point would stampede his cavalry, as if routed. He believed that Forrest would be drawn into such a trap. 

Had Forrest followed Grierson, as he probably would under the circumstances, his forces would have been swept from the face of the earth, for they could not have turned back, and to have gotten off the corduroy would have been to sink in the mire beyond hope of succor.

But General Sturgis was not in a frame of mind to listen to suggestions from a subordinate officer, much less a volunteer, and so "West Point" and whiskey asserted themselves. 

An order [by Sturgis]...compelled the large train of more than two hundred wagons to be taken over the long corduroy road and a narrow bridge, over which but one wagon at a time could pass, close up to the front; and there, in plain sight of the Confederates, and in easy range of their artillery, the train was parked! Should Sturgis be forced to retreat, it would be simply impossible to get his wagons back over this narrow bridge, and at no other place could they cross. It would have been impossible for them to cross the bottom over the deep morass. The only road was the corduroy leading to the bridge.

No sane person could excuse any officer who would push his train forward so rapidly, and near where an uncertain battle was in progress, over a road which precluded even a possibility of saving it in case he was defeated. 


Friday, January 29, 2016

Beuregard's Grand Marche


From Miss Priscilla Larkin: The Civil War Diary of a Southern Belle:

Received a piece of music this morning-- "Beauregard's Grand Marche"  How much more can I apreciate it-- knowing it comes from a member of the memorable "Fourth Ala Reg"--


Source