From the Times-Dispatch, May 6, 1906.
PICKETT'S CHARGE AT GETTYSBURG.
Graphic Story Told by Late Colonel Joseph C. Mayo,
Third Virginia Regiment.
Why Don't They Support Us--Why the "Unknown
Private Beyond" Had to Be Killed That Day.
Richmond, Va., April 24, 1906.
Pickett's Charge |
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Pickett's Charge, July 3, 1863 |
Editor of The Times-Dispatch:
Sir,--I send you an account of Gettysburg by the late Col. Joseph Mayo, of
the Third Virginia Infantry, Kemper's brigade. This gallant officer was a Virginia Military Institute man, and like every
other field officer of Pickett's division, without a single exception, he was stricken in the dreadful assault. It has sometimes
been said that all of Pickett's field officers were wounded except Major Joseph C. Cabell, of Danville. This is a mistake.
He was also shot in the charge, though not severely.
It was stated that Col. Eppa Hunton, of the Eighth Virginia Infantry, Garnett's
brigade, rode his hose through the action until both he and his horse were shot. Having his painful wound attended, he turned
to ride forward again when his horse fell dead.
The account is a graphic one and bears the impress of truth.
Col. J.B. Batchelder, in his account of Gettysburg, states that Pickett's
men chased the enemy beyond the point where Armistead fell.
Col. Mayo's account tells the story of a private who fell twenty paces beyond
that point. Co. Mayo some years since passed over the river. His surviving comrades will read with interest the story of their
deeds from his pen.
Very truly yours,
Jno. W. Daniel.
PICKETT'S CHARGE AT GETTYSBURG.
The order of march into the enemy's country was left in front; first Ewell's,
then Hill's, and, lastly, Longstreet's corps, of which Armistead's, Garnett's and Kemper's brigades of Pickett's Division,
brought up the rear. The other two brigades, those of Corse and Jenkins, were absent on detached service. We reached Chambersburg
early on the evening of June 27th, and stayed there until hastily summoned to the scene of hostilities on the morning
of the 2d of July, having been employed in the meantime, in tearing up the railroad track and demolishing the depot and other
buildings. A forced march of twenty-five miles brought us, at about 3 o'clock in the afternoon, to the stone bridge on the
Cashtown and Gettysburg Turnpike, within cannon shot of the battle-field. Here General Pickett sent Col. Walter Harrison,
of his staff, to tell General Lee of our arrival and readiness for action.
THE POST OF HONOR, JULY 3rd.
The answer came to find a camp and await further orders. Before dawn the following
morning, we moved to our place in the line, our march being carefully concealed from the enemy's view. Soon after we got into
position, some two hundred yards in the rear of the batteries on Seminary Ridge, General Lee passed in front of us, coming
from the right, and a little while afterwards every man in the ranks was made to know exactly what was the work which had
been cut out for us. I remember perfectly well General Kemper's earnest injunction to me to be sure that the Third Virginia
was told that the commanding general had assigned our division the post of honor that day. He was a Virginian; so were they.
Then the arms were stacked and the men allowed to rest at will; but one thing was especially noticeable; from being unusually
merry and hilarious they on a sudden had become as still and thoughtful as Quakers at a love feast. Walking up the line to
where Colonel Patton was standing in front of the Seventh, I said to him, "This news has brought about an awful seriousness
with our fellows, Taz." "Yes," he replied, "and well they may be serious if they really know what is in store for them. I
have been up yonder where Dearing is, and looked across at the Yankees."
Then he told me a good joke he had on our dashing and debonair chief of artillery.
He had ridden out on the skirmish line to get a closer observation of the enemy's position, when a courier galloped up with
a message from General Lee. Naturally he supposed Mars Robert wished to ask him what he had seen of those people that was
worth reporting; but he was woefully mistaken. This was all the General had to say: "Major Dearing, I do not approve of young
officers needlessly exposing themselves; your place is with your batteries." While we were talking an order came to move up
nearer the artillery. This was done, and the final preparations made for the advance. Here let me say that General Kemper's
memory was at fault when he said in his letter to Judge David E. Johnston, dated February 4, 1886, that he and General Garnett
were the only officers of Pickett's Division who went into that battle mounted. He himself gave Col. Lewis B. Williams, of
the First, permission to keep his horse, as he was too unwell to walk, and after the General was shot down I saw two of his
staff, Captain William O. Fry and Orderly Walker, still on horseback.
THE TEMPEST AT 1 O'CLOCK.
Meantime the blazing sun had reached and passed the meridian, and the long,
painful interval of suspense is swallowed up in the excruciating reality. Where the Third and the greater part of the Seventh
lay there was a depression in the ridge, exposing them to the full fury of the tempest of shot and shell which soon came raining
down upon them. A faint conception of its indescribable horror may be gathered from a few incidents of which I retain to this
day a shuddering recollection. At the sound of the signal guns I went to the centre of the regiment in front of the flag,
and sat down upon a pile of blankets resembling a coil of rope; but the intolerable heat of the sun quickly drove me back
to the shelter of the apple tree, under which men and officers of both regiments were crowded together thick as herring in
a barrel, where I managed to squeeze in between Colonel Patton and Colonel Collcote.
PANDEMONIUM.
The first shot or two flew harmlessly over our heads; but soon they began
to get the range, and then came--well, what General Gibbon, on the other side, called "pandemonium." First there was an explosion
in the top of our friendly tree, sending a shower of limbs upon us. In a second there was another, followed by a piercing
shriek, which caused Patton to spring up and run to see what was the matter. Two killed outright and three frightfully wounded,
he said on his return. Immediately after a like cry came from another apple tree close by in the midst of the Third. Company
F had suffered terribly; First Lieutenant A.P. Gomer, legs shattered below the knee; of the Arthur brothers, second and third
lieutenants, one killed and the other badly hit; Orderly Sergeant Murray mortally wounded, and of the privates, one killed
and three wounded. Then, for more than an hour it went on. Nearly every minute the cry of mortal agony was heard above the
roar and rumble of the guns. In his modest book, "Four Years a Soldier," one who was left for dead under that apple tree describes
it in these feeling words: "Turn you where you would, there was to be seen at almost every moment of time guns, swords, haversacks,
human flesh and bones flying and dangling in the air or bouncing above the earth, which now trembled beneath us as shaken
by an earthquake. Over us, in front of us, behind us, in our midst and through our ranks, poured solid shot and bursting shell
dealing out death on every hand; yet the men stood bravely at their post in an open field with a blistering July sun beating
upon their unprotected heads." Doubtless there would have been some consolation to know, as we afterwards learned, that our
blue-coated friends over the way were in the same, if not a worse predicament. General Gibbon who with Hancock's Corps held
the position we were about to storm says of the execution done by our batteries that it exceeded anything he had dreamed of
in artillery warfare; and I believe it is now an admitted historical fact that from the time that the "nimble gunner with
limestock the devilish cannon touched," that awful din at Gettysburg was the most fearful sound that ever pealed from the
"red throat of roaring war." Colonel Patton called my attention to the gallant bearing of Major Dearing, as he galloped, flag
in hand, from gun to gun of his battalion and suggested that it would be safer for us to close up on the artillery; but I
told him he must not think of moving without orders and, besides, it was evident that the enemy's fire was rapidly abating,
and that the storm would soon be over. The words were barely spoken before it came again; our turn now. I thought at first
that it was my adjutant, John Stewart, as a handful of earth mixed with blood and brains struck my shoulder; but they were
two poor fellows belonging to Company D (one of them, I remember, had a flaming red head), and another, as we believed, mortally
hurt, Sergeant-Major Davy Johnston, of the Seventh, author of the book I have quoted. Strange to say, he was at the time lying
between Colonel Patton, and myself.
"REMEMBER OLD VIRGINIA."
Three days at the place known as Gettysburg |
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Longstreet's Grand Assault, more popularly known as Pickett's Charge, on 3 July, 1863 |
That was among the last shots fired, and as the terrific duel was drawing
to a close, General Pickett came riding briskly down the rear of the line, calling to the men to get up and prepare to advance,
and "Remember Old Virginia." Our dear old Third, it was a heart-rending sight which greeted me as I moved along your decimated
ranks!--while quickly, and without a word of command, the men fell into their places; especially to see our color-bearer,
Murden, as fine a type of true soldier-ship as ever stepped beneath the folds of the spotless stars and bars, now lying there
stark and stiff, a hideous hole sheer through his stalwart body, and his right hand closed in a death grip around the staff
of that beautiful new flag which to-day for the first and last time had braved the battle and the breeze. The devoted little
column moved to the assault, with Garnett, and Kemper in front, and Armistead behind in close supporting distance. Soon after
clearing our batteries it was found necessary to change direction to the left. While conducting the movement, which was made
in perfect order under a galling flank fire from the Round Top, General Pickett, for the second time, cautioned me to be sure
and keep the proper interval with General Garnett; Armistead was expected to catch up and extend the line to the left. Then
we swept onward again, straight for the Golgotha of Seminary Ridge, half a mile distant, across the open plain. As we neared
the Emmettsburg road, along which, behind piles of rails, the enemy's strong line of skirmishers was posted, General Kemper
called to me to give attention to matters on the left, while he went to see what troops those were coming up behind us. Glancing
after him, I caught a glimpse of a small body of men, compact and solid as a wedge, moving swiftly to the left oblique, as
if aiming to uncover Garnett's Brigade. They were Armistead's people, and as Kemper cantered down their front on his mettlesome
sorrel they greeted him with a rousing cheer, which I know made his gallant heart leap for joy. At the same moment I saw a
disorderly crowd of men breaking for the rear, and Pickett, with Stuart Symington, Ned Baird, and others, vainly trying to
stop the rout. And now the guns of Cushing and Abbott double-stocked by General Gibbon's express order, reinforced the terrific
fire of the infantry behind the stone fence, literally riddling the orchard on the left of the now famous Cordori house, through
which my regiment and some of the others passed.
"DON'T CROWD, BOYS"--"PRETTY HOT"--"PERFECTLY RIDICULOUS"
While clearing this obstruction, and as we were getting into shape again,
several things were impressed on my memory. First, the amusement it seemed to afford Orderly Waddy Forward, who might, if
he pleased, have stayed behind with the horses, to see me duck my head as a ball whizzed in an ace of my nose; next, to see
Captain Lewis, of Company C, looking as lazy and lackadaisical, and, if possible, more tired and bored than usual, carrying
his sword point foremost over his shoulder, and addressing his company in that invariable plaintive tone, half command, half
entreaty, "Don't crowd, boys; don't crowd." "Pretty hot, Captain," I said in passing. "It's redicklous, Colonel; perfectly
redicklous"-- which, in his vocabulary, meant as bad as bad could be; then Captain Tom Hodges directed my attention to a splendid
looking Federal officer, magnificently mounted, straining his horse at full speed along the crest of a hill a hundred yards
in our front, and both of us calling to the skirmishers, "Don't shoot him! don't shoot him!" and, lastly, the impetuous Kemper,
as rising in his stirrups and pointing to the left with his sword, he shouted, "There are the guns, boys, go for them." It
was an injudicious order; but they obeyed with a will, and mingled with Garnett's people pushed rapidly up the heights.
Within a few steps of the stone fence, while in the act of shaking hands with
General Garnett and congratulating him on being able to be with his men (he had been seriously ill a few days before), I heard
some one calling me, and turning my head, saw that it was Captain Fry. He was mounted, and blood streaming from his horse's
neck. Colonel Terry had sent him to stop the rush to left. The enemy in force (Stannard's Vermonters) had penetrated to our
rear. He told me that Kemper had been struck down, it was feared mortally. With the help of Colonel Carrington, of the Eighteenth,
and Major Bentley, of the Twenty-fourth, I hastily gathered a small band together and faced them to meet the new danger. After
that everything was a wild kaleidoscopic whirl. A man near me seemed to be keeping a tally of the dead for my especial benefit.
First it was Patton, then Collcote, then Phillips, and I know not how many more. Colonel Williams was knocked out of the saddle
by a ball in the shoulder near the brick-house, and in falling was killed by his sword. His little bay mare kept on with the
men in the charge. I can see her now as she came limping and sadly crippled down the hill. I saw her again at Williamsport
in care of his faithful man Harry, who asked me what I thought old master would say when she was all belonging to Mars Lewis
he had to take home. Seeing the men as they fired, throw down their guns and pick up others from the ground, I followed suit,
shooting into a flock of blue coats that were pouring down from the right, I noticed how close their flags were together.
Probably they were the same people whom Hood and McLaws had handled so roughly the day before. "Used up," as General Meade
said of them. Suddenly there was a hissing sound, like the hooded cobra's whisper of death, a deafening explosion, a sharp
pang of pain somewhere, a momentary blank, and when I got on my feet again there were splinters of bone and lumps of flesh
sticking to my clothes. Then I remembered seeing lank Tell Taliaferro, adjutant of the Twenty-fourth, jumping like a kangaroo
and rubbing his crazy bone and blessing the Yankees in a way that did credit to old Jube Early's one-time law partner, and
handsome Ocey White, the boy lieutenant of Company A, taking off his hat to show me where a ball had raised a whelk on his
scalp and carried away one of his pretty flaxen curls, and lastly, "Old Buck" Terry, with a peculiarly sad smile on his face,
standing with poor George and Val Harris and others, between the colors of the Eleventh and Twenty-fourth, near where now
is the pretty monument of colonel Ward, of Massachusetts. I could not hear what he said, but he was pointing rearwards with
his sword, and I knew what that meant.
As I gave one hurried glance over the field we had traversed, the thought
in my mind was repeated at my side, "Oh! Colonel, why don't they support us?" It was Walker, General Kemper's orderly, unhorsed,
but still unscathed and undaunted, awkward, ungainly, hard-featured, good-natured, simple-minded, stout-hearted Walker, one
of the Eleventh boys, I believe; only a private doing his duty with might and main and recking no more of glory than the ox
that has won the prize at a cattle show. At the storming of the Redan when Wyndham's forlorn hope tumbled into the ditch and
couldn't get out, owing to the scarcity of ladders, and the few they had were too short, the men huddled together dazed and
bewildered, and were mowed down like dumb beasts by the Muscovite rifles, because there were no officers left to lead them.
There was a notable exception, an Irishman, scrambling up the scrap, he shouted, "Come up, boys, follow the captain." The
captain fell, but Pat went on to immortality. It was not so that day at Gettysburg.
UNKNOWN PRIVATE WHO FELL BEYOND.
Twenty paces beyond the spot which is marked to tell where stout old Armistead
fell, the foremost hero of them all, a humble private, without a name, bit the dust. The man in blue who told the story had
a seam in his cheek. "I tried to save him, but he would not give up, so I had to kill him to save my own life." "What orders
do you leave us, my lord, if you are killed?" asked Hill of Wellington when the pounding was hardest on the famous plateau
at Waterloo. "Do as I am doing," he replied, and turning to the men, he said, "Boys, you can't think of giving way. Remember
old England." And well it was for old England that behind the Iron Duke was a wall of iron men. Calling to the group around
me to spread themselves, I led the way back to the woods in rear of our guns on Seminary Ridge. Realizing painfully our own
sad plight, we were, of course, anxiously concerned for the rest of our people. But soon Mars Robert came along, followed
by his faithful aides, the two Charleses --Venable and Marshall. How ineffably grand he appeared--a very anointed king of
command, posing for the chisel of a Phidias, and looking on him we knew that the army was safe.
So ended our part in the day's bloody work.
Pickett's Charge Map |
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Gettysburg Battlefield Map, July 1-3, 1863 |
(Source: Southern Historical Society Papers, Vol. 34, pp. 327-335)
Recommended Reading: Pickett's Charge,
by George Stewart. Description: The author has written
an eminently readable, thoroughly enjoyable, and well-researched book on the third day of the Gettysburg battle, July 3, 1863. An especially rewarding read if one has toured, or plans
to visit, the battlefield site. The author's unpretentious, conversational style of writing succeeds in putting the reader
on the ground occupied by both the Confederate and Union forces before, during and after
Pickett's and Pettigrew's famous assault on Meade's Second Corps. Continued below...
Interspersed
with humor and down-to-earth observations concerning battlefield conditions, the author conscientiously describes all aspects
of the battle, from massing of the assault columns and pre-assault artillery barrage to the last shots and the flight of the
surviving rebels back to the safety of their lines… Having visited Gettysburg several years ago, this superb volume makes me
want to go again.
Recommended Reading:
Pickett's Charge--The Last Attack at Gettysburg (Hardcover). Description: Pickett's Charge
is probably the best-known military engagement of the Civil War, widely regarded as the defining moment of the battle of Gettysburg and celebrated as the high-water mark of the Confederacy.
But as Earl Hess notes, the epic stature of Pickett's Charge has grown at the expense of reality, and the facts of the attack
have been obscured or distorted by the legend that surrounds them. With this book, Hess sweeps away the accumulated myths
about Pickett's Charge to provide the definitive history of the engagement.
Drawing on
exhaustive research, especially in unpublished personal accounts, he creates a moving narrative of the attack from both Union and Confederate perspectives,
analyzing its planning, execution, aftermath, and legacy. He also examines the history of the units involved, their state
of readiness, how they maneuvered under fire, and what the men who marched in the ranks thought about their participation
in the assault. Ultimately, Hess explains, such an approach reveals Pickett's Charge both as a case study in how soldiers
deal with combat and as a dramatic example of heroism, failure, and fate on the battlefield.
Recommended Reading: Pickett's
Charge in History and Memory. Description:
Pickett's Charge--the Confederates' desperate (and failed) attempt to break the Union lines on the third and final day of
the Battle of Gettysburg--is best remembered as the turning point of the U.S. Civil War. But Penn State historian Carol Reardon reveals
how hard it is to remember the past accurately, especially when an event such as this one so quickly slipped into myth. She
writes, "From the time the battle smoke cleared, Pickett's Charge took on this chameleon-like aspect and, through a variety
of carefully constructed nuances, adjusted superbly to satisfy the changing needs of Northerners, Southerners, and, finally,
the entire nation." Continued below.
With
care and detail, Reardon's fascinating book teaches a lesson in the uses and misuses of history.
Recommended Reading: Last Chance For Victory: Robert E. Lee And
The Gettysburg Campaign. Description: Long after
nearly fifty thousand soldiers shed their blood there, serious misunderstandings persist about Robert E. Lee's generalship
at Gettysburg. What were Lee's choices before, during, and
after the battle? What did he know that caused him to act as he did? Last Chance for Victory addresses these issues by studying
Lee's decisions and the military intelligence he possessed when each was made. Continued below...
Packed with
new information and original research, Last Chance for Victory draws alarming conclusions to complex issues with precision
and clarity. Readers will never look at Robert E. Lee and Gettysburg the same way again.
Recommended Reading: Pickett's
Charge: Eyewitness Accounts At The Battle Of Gettysburg
(Stackpole Military History Series). Description: On
the final day of the battle of Gettysburg, Robert E. Lee ordered
one of the most famous infantry assaults of all time: Pickett's Charge. Following a thundering artillery barrage, thousands
of Confederates launched a daring frontal attack on the Union line. From their entrenched positions, Federal soldiers decimated
the charging Rebels, leaving the field littered with the fallen and several Southern divisions in tatters. Written by generals,
officers, and enlisted men on both sides, these firsthand accounts offer an up-close look at Civil War combat and a panoramic
view of the carnage of July 3, 1863.
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