Any time someone mentions the killing of prisoners during the war, names like Fort Pillow, Saltville, Plymouth, and Champ Ferguson come to mind. In these events, it is always the Confederates killing their prisoners. It is rare to hear about similar atrocities being committed by Federal forces. Yet it apparently happened at the battle of Fort Gregg on April 2, 1865.
"Shoot and be Damned!" |
Following the debacle at Five Forks, southwest of Peterburg, Virginia, on April 1, 1865, U.S. Grant ordered the Federal forces to launch an assault on Confederate lines. Grant believed that given the amount of Confederates his forces faced at Five Forks, Confederate lines had to be weak some place. That assault, early on the morning of April 2, resulted in the breakthrough, most notably along Arthur’s Swamp, held by four regiments of Brig. Gen. James H. Lane’s North Carolina brigade. (There were, of course, other breakthroughs of the line.) Many of Lane’s men not gobbled up in the ensuing early morning breakthrough, or the ensuing counterattack, drifted back towards Battery 45 and the inner Confederate lines. A portion of Lane’s men, along with some men from Harris’s Mississippi brigade and Thomas’s Georgia brigade, were assigned to the defense of Fort Gregg.
Fort Gregg, and its
sister fort, Fort Whitworth, were the idea of Wade Hampton. Hampton proposed
the idea of a series of fortifications between the main Confederate line and
the inner Confederate line in a letter to Lee in September 1864.[1]
Fort Gregg was a crescent-shaped earthen fort. The fort had four cannon
emplacements and a palisade fence across the back. Fort Whitworth was an
enclosed earthen fortification. Fort Whitworth is sometimes referred to as Fort
Baldwin. Both forts were named for local families and both situated in between
the two Confederate lines, designed to slow down a Federal advance if the first
line of fortifications were breached. As a permanent garrison Fort Gregg had a
detachment of 100 artillerymen, mostly drivers, from several different
batteries, along with two guns belonging to Chew’s 4th Maryland
Artillery. Fort Whitworth had a contingent of the Washington Artillery from
Louisiana, along with the 18th and 48th Mississippi from
Harris’s brigade.
Crowding into Fort
Gregg were members of the 12th and 16th Mississippi, 18th,
28th, 33rd, and 37th North Carolina, and the
14th, 35th, 45th, and 49th Georgia
Infantry regiments, plus the artillerymen, and an estimated 334 Confederate
soldiers.[2]
The Federal attack commenced about noon, and there were at least three
different waves of Federal attackers. The final wave was able to break through
the back entrance to Fort Gregg, while at the same time, use the embankment
created by an unfinished line of breastworks connecting the two forts.
Confederates inside Fort Gregg were running low on ammunition, some resorting
to hurling rocks and bricks at the attackers. On the third attempt, the
Federals were able to break through. Some Confederates continued to fight on.
Lawrence Barry, 3rd Company, Washington Artillery, had the lanyard
of his cannon in his hand as Federals came over the works. An officer told him
to drop the lanyard or they would fire. “Shoot and be damned!” he told the
Federal, pulling the lanyard and obliterating several Federal soldiers. Those
remaining opened fire, killing Barry.[3]
Many Confederates
surrendered. Yet there were several stories that emerged that the surrender of
some were not accepted. In 1867, Lt. Dallas Rigler, 37th North
Carolina, wrote to James H. Lane about the attack. He mentioned running low on
ammunition, using “bats and rocks,” and then the Federals scaling the wall. They
entered Fort Gregg’s “walls and after a short struggle they took the fort and
some few did fire on after they got possession but their officers tried to stop
them.”[4]
Captain A. K. Jones, 12th Mississippi, believed that the Federals
“were under the influence of whiskey,” and because of the stiff resistance
offered by the Confederate defenders, which had produced “a bloody massacre” on
Federal attackers, were planning to kill everyone within the Fort. It was the
Federal officers “who with cocked pistols made the men desist. . . We lost
about forty men killed in the fort after its capture. . . It was ten minutes
before the shooting could be suppressed.”[5]
George W. Richards, a surgeon attached to Fort Gregg, wrote that as the
Federals swarmed into the fort, they “showed us no quarter.” Richards disagreed
with Rigler and Jones as to why the Federals stopped killing the Confederates who
had surrendered. “It was not so much their officers who caused them to desist
from shooting us,” he wrote. Instead, it was when General Lee ordered Poague’s
artillery to open fire on the Fort. “one shot after another in rapid succession
drove all the enemy on the opposite side of the fort for shelter. Had it not
been for Colonel Poague’s guns I believe they would have killed every one of
us.”[6]
Maj. Gen. John Gibbon,
commanding the attacking force – the XXIV Corps, agreed that the defenders of
the fort held on to the very last, writing that the assault was “one of the
most desperate of the war” and that fort was only taken “by the last of several
determined dashes with the bayonet.”[7]
Brig Gen. Robert S. Foster agreed with Gibbon: “The fighting on both sides at
this point was the most desperate I ever witnessed, being a hand to hand
struggle for twenty-five minutes” after the Federals gained the parapet.[8]
Some of the rank-and-file
Federals echoed the Confederates. In an 1889 history of the 39th
Illinois can be found a letter about the assault, a Federal officer wrote that
he was one of the first over the walls, witnessing the carnage inside. It “was
with the greatest difficulty that we could prevent our infuriated soldiers from
shooting down and braining all who survived of the stubborn foe.”[9]
A member of the 12th West Virginia recalled that on the order to
charge, “in they went, with an irresistible rush, maddened at the slaughter of
their late comrades, and determined to avenge their deaths. That onslaught
could not be checked…”[10]
In the end, the
assault cost the Federals, according to John Gibbon’s report, 122 men killed,
and 592 wounded. Confederate losses are placed at 57 killed, 243 wounded and
captured, with 33 more unwounded captured. All of this to capture two forts
that would have abandoned overnight regardless of any other Federal advances.
The killing of Confederate soldiers after they had surrendered was quietly
chalked up to “maddened” or “infuriated soldiers,” and quietly forgotten. The
war in Virginia would all be over in about a week’s time.[11]
[1]
Fox, The Confederate Alamo, 15.
[2]
Fox, The Confederate Alamo, 234.
[3] Fox,
The Confederate Alamo, 182.
[4]
Dallas Rigler to James H. Lane, June 17, 1867, Lane Papers, AU.
[5]
Jones, “The Battle of Fort Gregg,” SHSP, Vol. 31, 56-60.
[6]
“Fort Gregg Again,” SHSP, Vol. 31, 370-372. More accounts can be found
in Fox, The Confederate Alamo, 183-188.
[7]
ORs., Vol. 46, 1:1174.
[8] ORs.,
Vol. 46, 1:1177.
[9]
Clark, The History of the Thirty-Ninth Regiment Illinois Volunteer Veteran
Infantry, 255.
[10]
Egan, The Flying, Gray-haired Yank, 391.
[11] ORs,
Vol. 46, 1:1174; Fox, The Confederate Alamo, 229.
The victors always write a sanitized version of History, when it comes to themselves.
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