Gettysburg (94 page)

Read Gettysburg Online

Authors: Noah Andre Trudeau

181 “heavy firing”/“’Come quite up to Gettysburg’”: Hall Letter.

181 Howard quotations/exchange with Meysenburg: Howard,
Autobiography
, 409-10.

181 “nearly at the extreme advance”/“told me to inform you”: Hall Letter.

182 “‘Tell General Sickles I think”: Tremain, “Two Days,” 14.

182 “I … received instructions to hurry forward”: Halstead, “First Day,” 4.

182 “‘Tell Doubleday’”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 130.

182 “to charge as fast as they arrived”: Rosengarten, “Admiral and General Reynolds,” 629.

183 “You have not a second”/“form his regiment”/“in his immediate front”:
Missouri Republican
, December 4, 1886.

184 “We were immediately thrown”: Wheeler Letters (SHSWI).

184 “cut down 30 per cent”: Hughes Journal (SHSWI).

184 “officers and men fell killed”: Fairchild Papers (SHSWI).

184 “We held our fire”: Stevens, ed.,
As If It Were Glory
, 72.

184 “‘Forward men, forward’”/“a Minnie ball struck him”: Veil Letter (PHMC).

(10:45
A.M.
-11:15
A.M.
)

185 “there were 20,000 Yanks”: Boland, “Beginning,” 308.

185 “the feet and legs”: Turney, “First Tennessee,” 308.

186 “Come back with that flag!”: Marsh Papers (ISL).

186 “We went down at them”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 2:937.

187 “Could see the fighting”: Fahnestock, “Recollections” (ACHS).

187 “awe-inspiring scene”/“that all the family”: Clare, “A Gettysburg Girl’s” (ACHS).

187 “a large hotel”:
National Tribune
, August 13, 1885.

187 Skelly quotations: Skelly,
Boy’s Experiences
, 12.

188 Howard material: Howard,
Autobiography
, 412-13.

188 “‘General Doubleday is now in command’”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 22, 1888.

188 “great responsibilities”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 132.

190 “It was a hot place”:
National Tribune
, November 1, 1888.

190 “The scourge of lead”:
National Tribune
, July 15, 1915.

190 “The fighting was at very short range”: Fox, ed.,
New York at Gettysburg
, 3:1001.

190 “ordered the battery”:
OR
, 27/1: 359.

190 “In retreat, double quick, run”: Fox,
New York at Gettysburg
, 3:1002.

190 “We was ordered to retreat”: Snyder,
Oswego County
, 63.

191 “to lose no time”:
OR
, 27/1: 359.

191 “to fall back to the town”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 1: 205.

191 “I went, and very soon”: Quoted in Kross, “Attack from the West,” 19.

192 “Is it confessing weakness?”/“’God helping us’”: Howard,
Autobiography
, 413.

192 “The sound [of firing coming]”: Long,
Memoirs
, 275.

192 “to ascertain what force”: Taylor,
Four Years
, 92-93.

192 “‘I cannot think’”: Longstreet,
From Manassas
, 357.

192 “‘General Doubleday’”/“’Go like hell’”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 1: 323.

193 “The guns of Hall’s battery”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 27, 1890.

193 “flying before the enemy”: Fairfield Diaries (SHSWI).

193 “parallel to the turnpike”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 27, 1890.

194 “‘I am all right’”/“‘Fire by file’”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 27, 1890.

194 “the enemy discovered us coming”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, March 22, 1885.

194 “all the men”:
OR
, 27/1: 275-76.

194 “they opened a tremendous fire”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, December 20, 1884.

194 Dawes-Pye exchange: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 1:324.

195 “Men were being shot by twenties”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 27, 1890.

195 “seemed to be trying to see”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, July 28, 1883.

195 “V-shaped crowd of men”:
Milwaukee (Sunday) Telegraph
, April 27, 1890.

195 “The volley had been so fatal”: Fairchild Papers (SHSWI).

195 “The men [were] black and grimy”: Rogers Letter (SHSWI).

195 Dawes-Blair exchange: Dawes,
Service with the 6th Wisconsin
, 169.

196 “This success … enabled us”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 133.

(11:55
A.M.
-2:45
A.M.
)

197 Weld-Meade exchange: Weld,
War Diary
, 230; Meade,
Life and Letters
, 36.

198 “to hurry my command”/“’Hard times’”/“First and Third Divisions”: Schurz,
Reminiscences
, 5-7.

198 “‘We must hold’”: Howard, “First Day,” 249.

198 “By keeping along the wooded ridge”:
OR
, 27/2: 552.

198 “would be a weak reed”: Nevins, ed.,
Diary of Battle
, 233.

200 “directed … to station his division”:
OR
, 27/1: 247.

201 “I was not aware”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 134;
CCW
, 307.

201 “enemy had now been felt”/“that it might collect”:
OR
, 27/2: 638.

202 “This was the first intimation”: Heth, “Letter to Jones,” 158.

203 “How shall I describe”:
Star and Sentinel
, July 2, 1913.

203 “warning all women”:
Philadelphia Weekly Times
, March 29, 1884.

203 “to go into the side streets”: McCurdy,
Gettysburg
, 16-17.

203 “a bell-crowned hat”: Quoted in Martin,
Gettysburg July 1
, 373.

205 “that Hill had blundered”: Blackford Memoir (MHI).

205 “It was too late”:
OR
, 27/2: 444.

205 “panting and out of breath”: Fox, ed.,
New York at Gettysburg
, 1:378.

205 “much fatigued with a rapid march”: Applegate, ed.,
Reminiscences
, 211.

206 “to fall back without orders”:
OR
, 27/1: 246.

206 “first indication I had”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 139.

206 “‘You stand alone’”: Thomas,
Boys in Blue
, 148.

207 “The moment I received”:
CCW
, 330.

207 “in case of the truth of General Reynolds’s death”: Meade,
Life and Letters
, 64.

207 “It was impossible for Meade”: Pennypacker,
General Meade
, 149.

207 “understood and could carry out”:
CCW
, 348.

208 “one of the bravest”: Howard, “First Day,” 254.

208 “its cannoniers bouncing”/“The first shot”: Applegate, ed.,
Reminiscences
, 211-12.

209 “It seemed like some grand panorama”: Hoole, ed.,
Reminiscences
, 7.

209 “the whole of that portion”/“that the Enemy was rash enough”:
OR
, 27/2: 553.

211 “when we were in point blank range”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 2: 235.

211 “sprayed by the brains”: Quoted in Kross, “That One Error,” 50.

211 “staggered, halted, and was swept”:
National Tribune
, June 26, 1884.

211 “I believe every man”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 2: 119.

212 “and became unfit for further command”: Quoted in Martin,
Gettysburg July 1
, 238.

212 Brown quotations: Brown Papers (TSL).

212 Heth-Lee exchange: Heth, “Letter to Jones,” 158.

213 “It would of course”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 139.

214 “We were wet as cats”: Quoted in Pula,
Sigel Regiment
, 161.

214 “The fate of the nation”: Pula, ed.,
Memoirs
, 36.

215 “had a few words with Wadsworth”: Howard,
Autobiography
, 414.

215 “gave orders, in case I was forced”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 141.

215 “feeling exceedingly anxious”: Howard,
Autobiography
, 414.

215 “there are enough soldiers here”: McCreary, “Gettysburg.”

215 “They kept the pace”: Jacobs, “How an Eye-Witness.”

215 “there was no time to drink”: Quoted in Bennett,
Days of

Uncertainty and Dread
,” 28.

215 “I didn’t know what in the world”:
Philadelphia Inquirer
, June 26, 1930.

216 “Maj. Venable of Jeb Stuart’s staff”: Brown Papers (TSL).

216 “some were shot”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 2: 830.

217 “always been down on the ‘Dutch’”/“miserable creatures”: Barlow Papers.

217 “shoot down stragglers”: Butts, ed.,
Gallant Captain
, 79.

218 “still thinner a line already too thin”: Schurz,
Reminiscences
, 9.

218 “I … formed my line”:
OR
, 27/2: 468.

218 “I saw the enemy”: Schurz,
Reminiscences
, 9.

219 “I received a dispatch”:
OR
, 27/2: 697.

219 “General Wadsworth reported half his men”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 146.

220 “were withdrawing troops”/“’Wait a while’”: Morrison, ed.,
Memoirs
, 175.

(2:45
P.M.
-5:45
P.M.
)

221 Sickles communications:
OR
, 27/3: 464.

221 “The people all along the road”: Quaife, ed.,
From the Cannon’s Mouth
, 224.

222 “As we had heard that Buford”/“that the action was more serious”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 1:290.

222 “My orders were to march”: Cooke, “First Day,” 286.

223 “We advanced with our accustomed yell”: Nichols,
Soldier’s Story
, 116.

224 “Everybody was then running”: Barlow Papers.

224 Lane-Burgwyn exchange: Quoted in Gragg,
Covered with Glory
, 97-98.

225 “the whole [Rebel] army in our front”: Dudley,
Iron Brigade
, 11.

225 “when he was shot”: Hodnett Family Collection (Duke).

225 “The Yankees … fought”: William S. Evans, “Letter.”

225 “I thought we would have to use the bayonet”: Shivers, “An Account.”

225 “There was no alternative”: Gordon,
Reminiscences
, 151.

225 “So the horrible, screaming”:
National Tribune
, August 19, 1897.

225 “The troops taking part”: Pula, ed.,
Memoirs
, 37.

226 “stepped off”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 2: 351.

226 “advanced in two lines”:
OR
, 27/1: 268.

226 “Their bearing was magnificent”: Otis,
Second Wisconsin
, 277.

228 “total annihilation stared”:
Winchester Journal
, July 13, 1863.

228 “deadly missiles [that] were sent”:
Lenoir News Topic
, April 8, 1896.

228 “The Yanks took advantage of that”: Dorsett, “Fourteenth Color-Bearer,” 5.

228 “no Rebel crossed the stream”: Gaff,
On Many a Bloody Field
, 260.

228 “with recklessness upon our walls”: Otis,
Second Wisconsin
, 85.

228 “The slaughter in our ranks”: Orr Family Papers (ISL).

229 “The men were falling rapidly”: Applegate, ed.,
Reminiscences
, 211.

229 “Their officers were cheering”/“We drove them”: Nichols,
Soldier’s Story
, 116.

229 “whole division was falling back”:
OR
, 27/1: 712.

230 “far down the line”: Gordon,
Reminiscences
, 153.

230 “The struggle grows hotter”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 2: 106.

231 “Lots of men near me”: Dorsett, “Fourteenth Color-Bearer,” 5.

231 “Go and get it”/“Go to hell”:
Richmond Palladium
, September 11, 1863.

231 “[The] men had difficulty”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 3: 84.

231 “Although they knew it was certain death”:
Charlotte Observer
, December 22, 1895.

231 “covered itself with glory”: Burgwyn Papers
(NCDHA).

231 “‘Dress on the colors’”: Quoted in Gragg,
Covered with Glory
, 129.

232 “the first sight I had”:
National Tribune
, April 13, 1899.

232 “coolly waited until they saw”: Nicholson, ed.,
Pennsylvania at Gettysburg
, 2: 762.

233 “‘Adjutant, it is all damned cowardice’”: Chamberlin,
History of the 150th Pennsylvania
, 134.

233 “fought for some time”/“turning round every now and then”: Fremantle,
Three Months
, 204.

234 “set a corporal’s guard”/“Hold at any cost”: Small, ed.,
Road to Richmond
, 101.

235 “They swarmed down upon us”:
Maine at Gettysburg
, 47.

235 “every man commenced”: Bisbee, “Three Years,” 9.

236 “I feared the consequences”: Howard,
Autobiography
, 416.

236 “What was left of the First Corps”: Doubleday,
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg
, 147.

236 “I thought it was the
Seminary
Hill”: Nevins, ed.,
Diary of Battle
, 235.

237 “pass Genl Heth’s division”:
OR
, 27/2: 657.

237 “did not halt”/“would all be killed”: Littlejohn, “Recollections.”

237 “could scarcely raise”: Bonham, “A Little More Light,” 521.

237 “The field was thick”: Caldwell,
History of … “McGowan’s Brigade,”
138.

237 “lying down”: Ladd, ed.,
Bachelder Papers
, 3: 1697.

237 “His round shot”: Nevins, ed.,
Diary of Battle
, 235-36.

239 “Every discharge made sad loss”: Clark, ed.,
Histories
, 2: 693.

239 “The rebels came half-way”: Dawes,
Service with the 6th Wisconsin
, 175.

Other books

Hourglass Squared by K. S., Megan C. Smith
Niubi! by Eveline Chao
That's Amore by McCarthy, Erin
Midnight Heat by Donna Kauffman
Loving an Ugly Beast by Monsch, Danielle
Rebels of Babylon by Parry, Owen, Peters, Ralph