[From the Times-Dispatch, April 10,
1904.]
THE BATTLE OF GETTYSBURG,
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And the Charge of Pickett's Division.
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ACCOUNTS OF COLONEL RAWLEY MARTIN AND CAPTAIN
JOHN HOLMES SMITH.
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With Prefatory Note by U. S. Senator John W. Daniel.
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[Very much has been published regarding the
momentous battle of Gettysburg, but the following
additions can but be welcome to our readers. Reference
may be made to ante p. 33 and preceding
volumes of the Southern Historical Society Papers,
particularly the early volumes, II-X
inclusive.--Editor.]
Washington, D. C., March 30, 1904
Editor of The Times-Dispatch:
Sir,--Enclosed are accounts of the charge at Gettysburg by two officers of Pickett's Division of high reputation for courage an reliability--the one being Lieutenant-Colonel Rawley W. Martin, then of the 53d Virginia Infantry, Armistead's Brigade, and the other Captain John Holmes Smith, of the Lynchburg Home Guard, who, after Lieutenant-Colonel Kirkwood Otey, and Major Risque Hutter, were wounded in that battle, commanded the 11th Virginia Infantry.
In 1897 Commander Sylvester Chamberlain, of an
Association of United States Naval Veterans, of
Buffalo, New York, wrote to Colonel Martin (now Dr.
Martin, of Lynchburg, Va.), asking him to recount the
charge, saying:
"The charge of Pickett's Division outrivals the
storied heroism of the Old Guard of Napoleon. They knew
no such battle as that of Gettysburg, and, I believe,
the old First Confederate Army Corps could have whipped
the best two corps in Napoleon's army, taken in the
zenith of his fame."
Dr. Martin wrote this paper under the call from a Northern camp commander.
Captain John Holmes Smith was with his regiment on the right wing of Pickett's charge, under Kemper, and struck the Federal line to the right of where General Armistead made the break. The soldiers of Kemper there took the Federal entrenchments, and remained about twenty minutes in possession of them. Twice couriers were sent back for reinforcements. Slowly, but surely, the details of this magnificent exploit of war come to light; and the more brilliant does it appear. Slowly, and surely, also do the evidences gather that point toward the responsible agents of the failure that ensued.
Respectfully,
Jno. W. Daniel.
COLONEL RAWLEY MARTIN'S ACCOUNT.
Lynchburg Va., August 11, 1897.
Commander Sylvester Chamberlain, Buffalo, N. Y.:
My dear Sir,--In the effort to comply with your request to describe Pickett's charge at Gettysburg, I may unavoidably repeat what has often been told before, as the position of troops, the cannonade, the advance, and the final disaster are familiar to all who have the interest or the curiosity to read. My story will be short, for I shall only attempt to describe what fell under my own observation.
You ask for a description of the "feelings of
the brave Virginians who passed through that hell of
fire in their heroic charge on Cemetery Ridge."
The esprit du corps could not have been
better; the men were in good physical condition, self
reliant and determined. They felt the gravity of the
situation, for they knew well the metal of the foe in
their front; they were serious and resolute, but not
disheartened. None of the usual jokes, common on the
eve of battle, were indulged in, for every man felt his
individual responsibility, and realized that he had the
most stupendous work of his life before him; officers
and men knew at what cost and at what risk the advance
was to be made, but they had deliberately made up their
minds to attempt it. I believe the general sentiment of
the division was that they would succeed in driving the
Federal line from what was their objective point; they
knew that many, very many, would go down under the
storm of shot and shell which would greet them when
their gray ranks were spread out to view, but it never
occurred to them that disaster would come after they
once placed their tattered banners upon the crest of
Seminary Ridge.
THEIR NERVE.
I believe if those men had been told: "This day
your lives will pay the penalty of your attack upon the
Federal lines," they would have made the charge
just as it was made. There was no straggling, no
feigned sickness, no pretense of being overcome by the
intense heat; every man felt that it was his duty to
make that fight; that he was his own commander, and
they would have made the charge without an officer of
any description; they only needed to be told what they
were expected to do. This is as near the feeling of the
men of Pickett's Division on the morning of the battle
as I can give, and with this feeling they went to their
work. Many of them were veteran soldiers, who had
followed the little cross of stars from Big Bethel to
Gettysburg; they knew their own power, and they knew
the temper of their adversary; they had often met
before, and they knew the meeting before them would be
desperate and deadly.
THE ALIGNMENT.
Pickett's three little Virginia brigades were drawn
up in two lines, Kemper on the right (1st, 3d, 7th,
11th and 24), Garnett on the left (8th, 18th, 19th,
28th and 56th), and Armistead in the rear and center
(9th, 14th, 38th, 53d and 57th) Virginia Regiments,
covering the space between Kemper's left and Garnett's
right flanks. This position was assigned Armistead, I
suppose, that he might at the critical moment rush to
the assistance of the two leading brigades, and if
possible, put the capstone upon their work. We will see
presently how he succeeded. The Confederate artillery
was on the crest of Seminary Ridge, nearly in front of
Pickett; only a part of the division had the friendly
shelter of the woods; the rest endured the scorching
rays of the July sun until the opening of the
cannonade, when the dangers from the Federal batteries
were added to their discomfort. About 1 o'clock two
signal guns were fired by the Washington Artillery, and
instantly a terrific cannonade was commenced, which
lasted for more than an hour, when suddenly everything
was silent. Every man knew what that silence portended.
The grim blue battle line on Seminary Ridge began at
once to prepare for the advance of its antagonists;
both sides felt that the tug of war was about to come,
and that Greek must meet Greek as they had never met
before.
A SOLEMN MOMENT.
From this point, I shall confine my description to
events connected with Armistead's brigade, with which I
served. Soon after the cannonade ceased, a courier
dashed up to General Armistead, who was pacing up and
down in front of the 53d Virginia Regiment, his
battalion of direction (which I commanded in the charge
and at the head of which Armistead marched), and gave
him the order from General Pickett to prepare for the
advance. At once the command "Attention,
battalion!" rang out clear and distinct. Instantly
every man was on his feet and in his place; the
alignment was made with as much coolness and precision
as if preparing for dress parade. Then Armistead went
up to the color sergeant of the 53d Virginia Regiment
and said: "Sergeant, are you going to put those
colors on the enemy's works to-day?" The gallant
fellow replied: "I will try, sir, and if mortal
man can do it, it shall be done." It was done, but
not until this brave man, and many others like him, had
fallen with their faces to the foe; bur never once did
that banner trail in the dust, for some brave fellow
invariably caught it as it was going down, and again
bore it aloft, until Armistead saw its tattered folds
unfurled on the very crest of Seminary Ridge.
THE ADVANCE.
After this exchange of confidence between the
general and the color-bearer, Armistead commanded:
"Right shoulder, shift arms. Forward, march."
They stepped out at quick time, in perfect order and
alignment--tramp, tramp, up to the Emmittsburg road;
then the advancing Confederates saw the long line of
blue, nearly a mile distant, ready and awaiting their
coming. The scene was grand and terrible, and well
calculated to demoralize the stoutest heart; but not a
step faltered, not an elbow lost the touch of its
neighbor, not a face blanched, for these men had
determined to do their whole duty, and reckoned not the
cost. On they go; at about 1,100 yards the Federal
batteries opened fire; the advancing Confederates
encounter and sweep before them the Federal skirmish
line. Still forward they go; hissing, screaming shells
break in their front, rear, on their flanks, all about
them, but the devoted band, with the blue line in their
front as their objective point, press forward, keeping
step to the music of the battle. The distance between
the opposing forces grows less and less, until suddenly
the infantry behind the rock fence poured volley after
volley into the advancing ranks. The men fell like
stalks of grain before the reaper, but still they
closed the gaps and pressed forward through that
pitiless storm. The two advance brigades have thus far
done the fighting. Armistead has endured the terrible
ordeal without firing a gun; his brave followers have
not changed their guns from the right shoulder. Great
gaps have been torn in their ranks; their field and
company officers have fallen; color-bearer after
color-bearer has been shot down, but still they never
faltered.
THE CRITICAL MOMENT.
At the critical moment, in response to a request
from Kemper, Armistead, bracing himself to the
desperate blow, rushed forward to Kemper's and
Garnett's line, delivered his fire, and with one
supreme effort planted his colors on the famous rock
fence. Armistead himself, with his hat on the point of
his sword, that his men might see it through the smoke
of battle, rushed forward, scaled the wall, and cried:
"Boys, give them the cold steel!" By this
time, the Federal hosts lapped around both flanks and
made a counter advance in their front, and the remnant
of those three little brigades melted away. Armistead
himself had fallen, mortally wounded, under the guns he
had captured, while the few who followed him over the
fence were either dead or wounded. The charge was over,
the sacrifice had been made, but, in the words of a
Federal officer: "Banks of heroes they were; they
fled not, but amidst that still continuous and terrible
fire they slowly, sullenly recrossed the plain--all
that was left of them--but few of the five
thousand."
WHERE WAS PICKETT.
When the advance commenced General Pickett rode up and down in rear of Kemper and Garnett, and in this position he continued as long as there was opportunity of observing him. When the assault became so fierce that he had to superintend the whole line, I am sure he was in his proper place. A few years ago Pickett's staff held a meeting in the city of Richmond, Va., and after comparing recollections, they published a statement to the effect that he was with the division throughout the charge; that he made an effort to secure reinforcements when he saw his flanks were being turned, and one of General Garnett's couriers testified that he carried orders from him almost to the rock fence. From my knowledge of General Pickett I am sure he was where his duty called him throughout the engagement. He was too fine a soldier, and had fought too many battles not to be where he was most needed on that supreme occasion of his military life.
The ground over which the charge was made was an
open terrene, with slight depressions and elevations,
but insufficient to be serviceable to the advancing
column. At the Emmettsburg road, where the parallel
fences impeded the onward march, large numbers were
shot down on account of the crowding at the openings
where the fences had been thrown down, and on account
of the halt in order to climb the fences. After passing
these obstacles, the advancing column deliberately
rearranged its lines and moved forward. Great gaps were
made in their ranks as they moved on, but they were
closed up as deliberately and promptly as if on the
parade ground; the touch of elbows was always to the
centre, the men keeping constantly in view the little
emblem which was their beacon light to guide them to
glory and to death.
INSTANCES OF COURAGE.
I will mention a few instances of individual
coolness and bravery exhibited in the charge. In the
53d Virginia Regiment, I saw every man of Company F
(Captain Henry Edmunds, now a distinguished member of
the Virginia bar) thrown flat to the earth by the
explosion of a shell from Round Top, but every man who
was not killed or desperately wounded sprang to his
feet, collected himself and moved forward to close the
gap made in the regimental front. A soldier from the
same regiment was shot on the shin; he stopped in the
midst of that terrific fire, rolled up his trousers
leg, examined his wound, and went forward even to the
rock fence. He escaped further injury, and was one of
the few who returned to his friends, but so bad was his
wound that it was nearly a year before he was fit for
duty. When Kemper was riding off, after asking
Armistead to move up to his support, Armistead called
him, and, pointing to his brigade, said: "Did you
ever see a more perfect line than that on dress
parade?" It was, indeed, a lance head of steel,
whose metal had been tempered in the furnace of
conflict. As they were about to enter upon their work,
Armistead, as was invariably his custom on going into
battle, said: "Men, remember your wives, your
mothers, your sisters and you sweethearts." Such
an appeal would have made those men assault the
ramparts of the infernal regions.
AFTER THE CHARGE.
You asked me to tell how the field looked after the charge, and how the men went back. This I am unable to do, as I was disabled at Armistead's side a moment after he had fallen, and left on the Federal side of the stone fence. I was picked up by the Union forces after their lines were reformed, and I take this occasion to express my grateful recollection of the attention I received on the field, particularly from Colonel Hess, of the 72d Pennsylvania (I think). If he still lives, I hope yet to have the pleasure of grasping his hand and expressing to him my gratitude for his kindness to me. Only the brave know how to treat a fallen foe.
I cannot close this letter without reference to the Confederate chief, General R. E. Lee. Somebody blundered at Gettysburg but not Lee. He was too great a master of the art of war to have hurled a handful of men against an army. It has been abundantly shown that the fault lay not with him, but with others, who failed to execute his orders.
This has been written amid interruptions, and is an imperfect attempt to describe the great charge, but I have made the effort to comply with your request because of your very kind and friendly letter, and because there is no reason why those who once were foes should not now be friends. The quarrel was not personal, but sectional, and although we tried to destroy each other thirty-odd years ago, there is no reason why we should cherish resentment against each other now.
I should be very glad to meet you in Lynchburg if your business or pleasure should ever bring you to Virginia.
With great respect,
Yours most truly,
Rawley W. Martin.
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CAPTAIN JOHN HOLMES SMITH'S
ACCOUNT.
Lynchburg, Va., Feb. 4th and 5th.
John Holmes Smith, formerly Captain of Company G
(the Home Guard), of Lynchburg, Va., and part of the
11th Virginia Infantry, Kemper's Brigade, Pickett's
Division, 1st Corps (Longstreet), C. S. A., commanded
that company, and then the regiment for a time in the
battle of Gettysburg. He says as follows, concerning
that battle:
The 11th Virginia Infantry arrived near Gettysburg, marching from Chambersburg on the afternoon of July 2d, 1863. We halted in sight of shells bursting in the front.
Very early on the morning of the 3d July we formed in rear of the Confederate artillery near Spurgeon's woods, where we lay for many hours. I noticed on the early morning as we were taking positions the long shadows cast by the figures of the men, their legs appearing to lengthen immediately as the shadows fell.
The 11th Virginia was the right regiment of Kemper's
Brigade and of Pickett's Division. No notable event
occurred in the morning, nor was there any firing of
note near us that specially attracted my attention.
SIGNAL GUNS.
About 1 o'clock there was the fire of signal guns, and there were outbursts of artillery on both sides. Our artillery on the immediate front of the regiment was on the crest of the ridge, and our infantry line was from one to 250 yards in rear of it.
We suffered considerable loss before we moved. I had
twenty-nine men in my company for duty that morning.
Edward Valentine and two Jennings brothers (William
Jennings) of my company were killed; De Witt Guy,
sergeant, was wounded, and some of the men--a man now
and a man then--were also struck and sent to the rear
before we moved forward--I think about ten killed and
wounded in that position. Company E, on my right, lost
more seriously than Company G, and was larger in
number.
LONGSTREET'S PRESENCE.
Just before the artillery fire ceased General Longstreet rode in a walk between the artillery and the infantry, in front of the regiment toward the left and disappeared down the line. He was as quiet as an old farmer riding over his plantation on a Sunday morning, and looked neither to the right or left.
It had been known for hours that we were to assail the enemy's lines in front. We fully expected to take them.
Presently the artillery ceased firing. Attention ! was the command. Our skirmishers were thrown to the front, and "forward, quick time, march," was the word given. We were ordered not to fire until so commanded. Lieutenant-Colonel Kirkwood Otey was thus in command of the regiment when we passed over the crest of the ridge, through our guns there planted, and had advanced some distance down the slope in our front. I was surprised before that our skirmishers had been brought to a stand by those of the enemy; and the latter only gave ground when our line of battle had closed up well inside of a hundred yards of our own skirmishers. The enemy's skirmishers then retreated in perfect order, firing as they fell back.
The enemy's artillery, front and flank, fired upon
us, and many of the regiment were struck.
UP THE HILL.
Having descended the slope and commenced to ascend the opposite slope that rises toward the enemy's works, the Federal skirmishers kept up their fire until we were some four hundred yards from the works. They thus being between two fires--for infantry fire broke out from the works--threw down their arms, rushed into our lines, and then sought refuge in the depression, waterway or gully between the slopes.
There was no distinct change of front; but "close and dress to the left" was the command, and this gave us an oblique movement to the left as we pressed ranks in that direction.
Our colors were knocked down several times as we
descended the slope on our side. Twice I saw the
color-bearer stagger and the next man seize the staff
and go ahead; the third time the colors struck the
ground as we were still on the down slope. The
artillery had opened upon us with canister. H. V.
Harris, adjutant of the regiment, rushed to them and
seized them, and, I think, carried them to the enemy's
works.
AT THE WORKS.
When the enemy's infantry opened fire on us--and we were several hundred yards distant from them as yet--we rushed towards the works, running, I may say, almost at top speed, and as we neared the works I could see a good line of battle, thick and substantial, firing upon us. When inside of a hundred yards of them I could see, first, a few, and then more and more, and presently, to my surprise and disgust, the whole line break away in flight. When we got to the works, which were a hasty trench and embankment, and not a stone wall at the point we struck, our regiment was a mass or ball, all mixed together, without company organization. Some of the 24th and 3d seemed to be coming with us, and it may be others. Not a man could I see in the enemy's works, but on account of the small timber and the lay of the ground, I could not see very far along the line, either right or left, of the position we occupied.
There were, as I thought at the time I viewed the
situation, about three hundred men in the party with
me, or maybe less. Adjutant H. V. Harris, of the
regimental staff, was there dismounted. Captain Fry,
Assistant Adjutant-General of General Kemper, was also
there on foot, with a courier, who was a long-legged,
big-footed fellow, whom we called "Big Foot
Walker," also afoot. Captain R. W. Douthat, of
Company F, I also noticed, and there were some other
regimental officers whom I cannot now recall.
BIG FOOT WALKER.
We thought our work was done, and that the day was over, for the last enemy in sight we had seen disappear over the hill in front; and I expected to see General Lee's army marching up to take possession of the field. As I looked over the work of our advance with this expectation, I could see nothing but dead and wounded men and horses in the field beyond us, and my heart never in my life sank as it did then. It was a grievous disappointment.
Instantly men turned to each other with anxious inquiries what to do, and a number of officers grouped together in consultation, Captain Fry, Captain Douthat, Adjutant Harris, and myself, who are above noted, amongst them. No field officer appeared at this point that I could discover. We promptly decided to send a courier for reinforcements. No mounted man was there. "Big Foot Walker" was dispatched on that errand. Fearing some mishap to him, for shots from the artillery on our right, from the enemy's left, were still sweeping the field, we in a few moments sent another courier for reinforcements.
We were so anxious to maintain the position we had
gained, that we watched the two men we had sent to our
rear across the field, and saw them both, the one after
the other, disappear over the ridge from which we had
marched forward.
WAIT FOR TWENTY MINUTES.
Unmolested from the front or on either side, and with nothing to indicate that we would be assailed, we thus remained for fully twenty minutes after Walker had been sent for reinforcements--waited long after he had disappeared on his mission over the ridge in our rear.
Seeing no sign of coming help, anticipating that we would soon be attacked, and being in no condition of numbers or power to resist any serious assault, we soon concluded--that is, the officers above referred to--to send the men back to our lines, and we so ordered.
Lest they might attract the fire of the guns that still kept up a cannonade from the enemy's left, we told the men to scatter as they retired, and they did fall back singly and in small groups, the officers before named retiring also. Only Captain Ro. W. Douthat and myself remained at the works, while the rest of the party we were with, retired. I remained to dress a wound on my right leg, which was bleeding freely, and Douthat, I suppose, just to be with me. I dropped to the ground under the shade of the timber after the men left, pulled out a towel from my haversack, cut it into strips, and bandaged my thigh, through which a bullet had passed.
This wound had been received as we approached the
enemy's skirmishers on the descending slope, one of
them having shot me. I thought at the time I was
knocked out, but did not fall, and I said to James R.
Kent, sergeant: "Take charge of the company, I am
shot." But soon finding I could move my leg and
that I could go on, no bones being broken, I went to
the end of the charge.
GETTING AWAY.
While I was still bandaging my leg at the works, my companion, Captain Robert W. Douthat, who had picked up a musket, commenced firing and fired several shots. Thinking he had spied an enemy in the distance, I continued bandaging my leg, and completed the operation.
When raising myself on my elbow I saw the head of a
column of Federal troops about seventy-five yards
toward our right front, advancing obliquely toward us.
I was horrified, jumped up and exclaimed to Douthat:
"What are you doing?" as he faced in their
direction. He dropped his gun and answered: "It's
time to get away from here," and I started on the
run behind him, as we both rapidly retired from the
advancing foes. We made good time getting away, and got
some distance before they opened fire on us--perhaps
100 or 150 yards. We ran out of range, shot after shot
falling around us, until we got over the Emmettsburg
road toward our lines. After we had got over the fences
along the road the fire didn't disturb us. No organized
body of troops did I meet in going back. I wondered how
few I saw in this retreat from the hill top. I reached
ere long the tent of a friend, Captain Charles M.
Blackford, judge advocate of our Second Corps, at
Longstreet's headquarters, and this was the last of the
battle of Gettysburg time. I didn't hear of
Lieutenant-Colonel Otey being wounded until after the
battle was over, though I have since understood it was
shortly after the advance commenced. I, the Captain of
Company G, was the only commissioned officer with the
company that day. I may properly mention an incident or
two.
WOUNDED.
Now the battery of the descending slope was advanced. Sergeant James R. Kent, of my company, suddenly plunged forward in a ditch, and I asked of him: "How are you hurt, Kent?" for I knew he was hit. He answered: "Shot through the leg." About the time we sent "Big
BACK