Pinckney D. Bowles |
(In 1982, The Evergreen Courant newspaper published a
six-part series called "A History of Brooklyn," which was originally
written by the late R.G. (Bob) Kendall Jr. The fourth installment in the
series, which you'll find reprinted below, was originally published in the
April 22, 1982 edition of The Courant. Other installments of the article can be
found in the April 1, April 8, April 15, April 29 and May 6 editions of The
Courant from 1982. I plan to post those installments on this blog in the coming
weeks, so if you enjoy reading Part IV, keep you eyes open for the other
installments in the near future. Without further ado, here's Part IV.)
“A History of Brooklyn: Part IV” by the late R.G. (Bob)
Kendall Jr.
One of the area’s early and interesting small industries was
a leather tanyard built in the Pea Ridge area by Julius G. Robinson, son of
Edwin, the founder of Brooklyn, in the late 1850s. Robinson constructed 24
small wooden vats, as well as a number of larger ones, all served by branch
water. By 1860, this operation had become substantial with some 30 employees
working at the tanyard and factory that was added to make boots and shoes. A
contract to supply the Confederate Army was in effect during the Civil War.
During the years immediately prior to the Civil War,
Brooklyn along with the remainder of Conecuh County was engrossed in two public
questions, the sectional conflict over slavery and the desire for a railroad to
serve an area that was starved for transportation. Brooklyn did her part in
both endeavors. Many of her sons perished in the great conflict that began in
1861, incidentally, the year that the Montgomery and Pensacola Railroad began
service through the county.
Brooklyn citizens took an interest in the project and Asa
Johnston, Caleb Johnston and Wilson Ashley were among the early large
subscribers to the project. The story is told that the railroad was constructed
simultaneously from both ends, but final completion was held up by an extensive
cut necessary in the Garland area at Dilly Hill and a shortage of funds for the
work. The final work on the cut was said to have been done by farmers who
donated their own efforts in order to finally get a reliable way to market.
Brooklyn community doubtless did its part.
With the coming of the Civil War, the Brooklyn area gave of
its blood and its treasure, along with most of the rest of the South. For
reasons not understood today looking back over 105 years, the Convention called
in Conecuh to elect and instruct a delegate to the Alabama Secession Convention
reversed its earlier vote in which Wilson Ashley, who favored immediate
secession, was elected, and chose instead John Greene of Burnt Corn, a highly
respected citizen who was a cooperationist. This implied that all efforts
toward conciliation should be exhausted before secession was resorted to. As a
result, Conecuh was the only South Alabama county not voting for secession.
Once the die was cast, however, the county was in the
forefront of the action, and the Brooklyn area supplied many men for the
Confederate forces. Among the Conecuh units were:
Co. E, 4th Alabama Infantry Regiment (The Conecuh Guards
commanded by Col. Pinckney D. Bowles, long time Probate Judge, who commanded a
brigade at war’s end.
Co. D, 16th Alabama Infantry Regiment.
Co. D, 23rd Alabama Infantry Regiment (Cary Rifles).
C. H, 23rd Alabama
Infantry Regiment.
Co. I, 29th Alabama Infantry Regiment.
Co. E, 38th Alabama Infantry Regiment (Miller Guards).
Co. E, 42nd Alabama Infantry Regiment (The McCullach
Avengers).
Co. F, 65th Alabama Infantry Regiment (Conecuh Reserves).
Co. F, 23rd Battalion Alabama Sharpshooters.
Co. F, First Battalion Hilliard’s Legions.
Although no cavalry units were formed in Conecuh, a number
of county men served in units raised in other counties.
The war did not bring an actual Federal incursion into the
Brooklyn area until March 21-26, 1865, in the closing days of the conflict,
Col. Andrew B. Spurling advanced at the head of a regiment of cavalry from
Milton, Fla. to Andalusia, Ala., using a line of march slightly to the east of
Brooklyn. He then moved westward to Gravella, now Owassa, just north of
Evergreen, captured a train and cut the railroad. Advancing southward through
Evergreen to Sparta, the depot at Sparta Station and the jail at Sparta were
burned.
Spurling’s movements from Sparta on his way southward are
not well documented. However, it is well established from the stories told by
those living at the time that a portion of Spurling’s command went into the
Brooklyn area by way of the Wilson Ashley plantation, now owned by the Horton
family. My grandfather told me of the cavalry raid in the Johnstonville area
just west of Brooklyn when the Federals raided the cribs and the smokehouses
and drove off the stock that had not been hidden in time.
An interesting anecdote of the war years concerns Amanda
Floyd who married Alexander Travis Henderson at Brooklyn in the early days of
the Civil War conflict. She was notified shortly after her husband’s death on
Dec. 17, 1863 that he had been killed in action near Claiborne, Ala. She
immediately set out for Claiborne with her infant daughter, Mary, with her
trusted slaves by wagon drawn by two mules and taking with her several shovels.
Upon arriving in Claiborne she inquired of the burial place
of the soldiers who were killed in the battle. It is said that “she dug until
she discovered his body,” then brought his body back to Brooklyn for burial.
Later, Mrs. Amanda Floyd Henderson married William T. Sills and ran a boarding
house at Brooklyn, which was famous for its good meals.
All the drummers and traveling men would endeavor to get to
Brooklyn late in the afternoon, so that they could have supper and breakfast at
The Sills Hotel. After Mrs. Sills’ death, her daughter, Mrs. Tom (Mary) Liles
operated the hotel, and after her Mrs. Bessie Cary, all of who were always
careful to maintain the reputation established by Mrs. Sills.
(To be continued)
(If you’d like to
go back and read Part I, Part II and Part III of Kendall’s “History of Brooklyn,”
visit http://leepeacock2010.blogspot.com/2014/04/part-i-of-rg-bob-kendall-jrs-history-of.html, http://leepeacock2010.blogspot.com/2014/04/part-ii-of-kendalls-history-of-brooklyn.html
and http://leepeacock2010.blogspot.com/2014/04/a-history-of-brooklyn-describes-sinking.html.)
Amazing - the dertermination of that woman to go to the site where her husband had been killed in the war, dig him up, and take him home to Brooklyn to be buried in a family plot.
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