Many times, people ask where I get ideas. And to be honest, many of my ideas are connected. That first book on the 37th North Carolina led to my books on the battle of Hanover Court House, Watauga County and the Civil War, Charlotte and the Civil War, the book on the Branch-Lane brigade, Feeding the Army of Northern Virginia, and in an indirect way, my history of the 58th North Carolina Troops.
But at other times,
I come across little tidbits that make me just wonder what people or regiments
or events get left out of the historical narrative. A few days ago, I acquired
the two-volume Broadfoot reprint of Lindsley’s Military Annals of Tennessee.
These two volumes provide brief glimpses of Confederate regiments from
Tennessee. When finally tracking down McClung’s Battery, listed as Company A,
First Tennessee Light Artillery, we simply get that Company A was under Capt.
H. L. W. McClung. (870) A few pages over is a list of officers (877). But
unlike other infantry and cavalry regiments and artillery batteries, there is
no history of McClung’s command.
Crute, in his Units
of the Confederate States Army, goes into a little more detail. The battery
was organized in the fall of 1861 in Knoxville, Tennessee. It was involved in
the battles of Fishing Creek and Shiloh, and then in the summer of 1862, was
stationed at Vicksburg, then Port Hudson, then East Tennessee. In April 1864,
it was sent with no guns to Saltville, Virginia (I’m not sure why they didn’t
have guns). In August 1864, it was re-armed, only to lose its guns at the
battle of Morristown, Tennessee, on October 28, 1864. The seventeen men who
were left were transferred to Captain Lynch’s Battery and disbanded in April 1865.
(317)
McClung's Battery, Shiloh (NPS) |
By December 1862,
the battery was in East Tennessee – David’s brigade, Heth’s Division. For the
rest of the war, they bounced around between various posts – Loudon, Carter’s
Depot, Zollicoffer. They were engaged at the battle of Carter’s Depot in
September 1863, where they lost the carriages to their guns. In November, they
were reported as having no cannons. They were sent to Saltville, Virginia,
shortly thereafter. It does not appear that they were re-armed until August
1864, when it was reported they had four pieces of artillery. In an engagement
at Morristown, Tennessee, in October 1864, most of the battery was captured.
The seventeen who escaped were assigned to Lynch’s Battery. The battery was
disbanded in April 1865 at Christiansburg, Virginia.
Several months ago,
I was exploring Captain Hugh McClung’s service record. He was court martialed
in 1863. Many courts martial records were lost at the end of the war, but parts
of McClung’s survive. There were six charges against him – violating the 14th,
36th, 39th (twice), 45th articles of war, and “Conduct to the prejudice of good order and
military discipline.” Many of these charges concerned falsifying muster rolls, “misapplying
an artillery horse,” drunkenness while on duty, and permitting his men to break
into a train car. McClung pled not guilty. The court found him not guilt on
most of the charges, but he was guilty of trading artillery horses at Corinth
in May 1862; “Habitually failing to
restrain his men from trespassing and depredating private property”; and, “Habitually
drawing and appropriating to his own use, rations belonging to his men…” The
court found him guilty. His punishment was to “forfeit all pay due him from the
Confederate States, and that he be dismissed from the service.” However, when
Major General Simon B. Buckner reviewed the case, he disagreed, finding that
the charges were “utterly unfounded… the offences of the accused were rather
those of omission than commission.” Buckner recommended mercy. The general
added that during the attack on Knoxville, McClung, there under arrest, “offered
to serve in any capacity.” Buckner believed that “Such conduct was worthy of a
good soldier, and merits leniency.” Buckner remitted the findings of the court
and ordered McClung to report to his battery. McClung would go on to be
captured at the battle of Morristown and spent the rest of the war as a
prisoner at Johnson’s Island.
Can I say that this will be my next regimental history? No,
I can’t. But I find the story intriguing and the credible information in the greater
realms of Confederate histography lacking. Now you know how projects come to
me.