Federal general Henry
Halleck, in November 1862, told Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton that the
Confederates had an advantage over the Federal armies. Due to the lack of
wagons in the Confederate army, Confederate soldiers “exhibited much more
mobility and activity than our own… Once accustomed to a certain amount of
transportation, an army is unwilling to do without the luxuries which it
supplies in the field.” (Official Records, vol. 19, pt. 1, 6) I’m sure
that Lee, at any part of the war, would have liked to have better amounts of
transportation.
At some point prior
to October 1, 1862, Lee had set the number of wagons for his army: three wagons
for division headquarters, two for brigade headquarters, and one for regimental
baggage. Each regiment also had one wagon for hospital stores, one for medical
stores, one regimental ordnance wagon, and one wagon for every one hundred men
in the regiment.
Lee, in this
October 1, 1862, letter to Jackson, tells us that D. H. Hill’s Division also contained
a division ordnance train of 22 wagons, division commissary train of 20 wagons,
and division forage train of 10 wagons. (Official Records vol. 19, pt.
2, 641) At the time of the battle of Sharpsburg, the Confederate army contained
nine infantry divisions. If the other infantry divisions were so equipped, then
division trains would have been composed of 198 ordnance wagons, 180 commissary
wagons, and 90 forage wagons. Lee believed that each infantry regiment averaged
300 men, so, that is 6 wagons per regiment. At Sharpsburg, there were 183
infantry regiments in the Army of Northern Virginia. That is 1,098 wagons, plus
94 more for brigade headquarters, 27 for division headquarter. That comes to
1,687 wagons, just for the infantry.
US Army wagon. (Library of Congress) |
On July 16, 1863,
Lee issued a general order reducing the army’s wagon train. Now, Division
headquarters had two wagons, and brigade headquarters, one wagon, plus one
wagon for medical stores. Regimental headquarters had one wagon for
headquarters, which included the surgeon, quartermaster, and commissary. If a
regiment had 300 men or less, one wagon, and over 300 men two wagons. (Official
Records vol. 27, pt. 3, p. 2015) As Lee was preparing for active
campaigning in April 1864, new guidance was being issued by army headquarters.
Division headquarters were authorized three wagons, plus three wagons for
forage, and one for medical supplies; brigade headquarters one wagon, plus
three wagons for forage, and one for medical supplies. Each regiment received
one wagon for headquarters and one wagon to haul cooking utensils. (Official
Records Vol. 33, 1263)
While these numbers
do not give us an exact number of wagons, they do supply us with an idea of the
numbers involved.
When the army was
in camp, a wagon would have visited the nearest depot to pick up rations for
the regiment or brigade. In the winter of 1862-63, it appears that the Army of
Northern Virginia was only issuing rations once a week. So a wagon would have gone
and picked up their week’s allotment, regimental and commissary sergeants would
have divided up the rations issued to the regiments, which would have been
further divided up and issued to the companies.
There is really not
a lot of information from the men who drove these wagons. One interesting
account comes from Nicholas B. Gibbon. Gibbon grew up in Charlotte, North
Carolina, served in the 1st North Carolina Volunteers, and from
October 1861 to September 1863, as assistant commissary of subsistence in the
28th North Carolina Troops. (At times it appears he was on brigade
staff as well.) Most readers might be more familiar with Gibbon’s older
brother, Federal Maj. Gen. John Gibbon. Nicholas Gibbon’s diary/memoirs
survives and is interesting in his details about being with the wagons.
During the Seven
Days battles, Gibbon writes that “each regimental commissary was ordered to
report at Division Headquarters with sufficient transportation for two days
rations and await orders, so that the part I took in the fight around Richmond
was to deliver rations of hard bread and bacon to my Regt but always waiting
orders before moving up. The Brigade train was altogether and generally moved
at night after the men had stopped fighting so that it was my luck to travel
nearly all night and arise early in the mornings.”
On August 6, Gibbon
was assigned as temporary brigade commissary, Branch’s brigade. They went into
camp that night near Madison Court House. “I assisted in driving my beef cattle
with the wagons and came up with the Infantry after they had gone into camp.”
Gibbon built a temporary pen for the cattle. The next morning, some of the cattle
were slaughtered and issued to the brigade. Gibbon was with the wagon train for
the next few days, missing the battle of Cedar Mountain. The day after the
battle, Gibbon found Branch and made arrangements to issue food to the brigade.
Since the men were not allowed a fire,
Gibbon selected a point behind the lines, and as the brigade moved by the next
morning, issued them fresh beef.
Right before the
battle of Second Manassas, Gibbon writes that the brigade was crossing the
Hazel River. The wagon train and beef on hoof “had to be driven higher up the
river and crossed over” at a different point, taking a roundabout way to reach
the camp. Once there, the brigade marched into the woods near the wagon park, “and
though the night was very dark I fed the men with flour and fresh beef.” Gibbon
moved with the troops to Maryland and back. While back at Hedgesville, charged
with destroying the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad, Gibbon reported that he “had
to subsist the Brigade from the surrounding country which had been drained of
nearly everything like commissary stores. But by constant riding and empressing
cattle and flour I managed to keep the men supplied with flour, beef, and salt.”
Gibbon returned to
the 28th North Carolina after five months detached duty. In April 1863,
the position of Assistant Commissary of Subsistence on the regimental level was
abolished by Congress. Gibbon would serve as assistant Commissary of
Subsistence to Cadmus Wilcox for the rest of the war.
If anyone is aware
of a diary or letters or reminisces by other Confederate commissaries, I’d love
to hear from them.
(Nicholas Gibbon's Diary is at UNC-Charlotte.)
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