This coming Saturday and Sunday mark the 152nd anniversary
of one of the bloodiest battles of the Civil War for the Confederate military
unit from Conecuh County.
On Sept. 19-20, 1863, Confederate forces under the command
of Braxton Bragg clashed with U.S. forces under the command of William
Rosecrans at the Battle of Chickamauga in northwest Georgia. This battle
resulted in a Confederate victory but was costly for Co. E of the 4th Alabama
Infantry Regiment. Also known as the “Conecuh Guards,” this unit was organized
at Sparta on April 1, 1861.
At the Battle of Chickamauga, a total of 3,969 men on both
sides of the fight were killed and another 24,430 were wounded. More than a few
members of the Conecuh Guards were among those numbers.
According to B.F. Riley’s 1881 book, “The History of Conecuh
County, Alabama,” four members of the Conecuh Guards were killed at the Battle
of Chickamauga – George Downs, Thomas Briley, James Dubose and John D. Shaver.
Frank Kirk, a former member of the Conecuh Guards, was also killed that day
while serving with the 38th Alabama Regiment.
Five other members of the Conecuh Guards were wounded at the
Battle of Chickamauga, but all of them would live to see the end of the war.
Among the wounded were First Sergeant Andrew J. Mosley, Color Sergeant G.R.
Boulware, Sgt. John Q. Dunham, W.D. Booker and John D. Hyde.
Mosley must have been one tough character because his wounds
at Chickamauga were among many he received throughout the war. During the First
Battle of Bull Run on July 21, 1861, he was wounded in the head and arm. Almost
two years later, on July 2, 1863, on the second day of the Battle of
Gettysburg, he was again wounded. Almost a year later, on May 9, 1864, at the
Battle of Spotsylvania, he was wounded again. Despite his many wounds, he did
survive the war and eventually moved to Falls County, Texas.
Boulware was wounded in the side and arm and had his left
arm amputated at Chickamauga. Boulware returned to Conecuh County to recover
from his wounds. Many men would have put up their marching boots at that point,
but instead, records show that Boulware joined the Confederate Secret Service
on Dec. 1, 1863 (some sources say Jan. 11, 1864), and he served with that
clandestine organization all the way through the end of the war in April 1865.
He died on Sept. 28, 1922 and is buried in the Brooklyn Baptist Church
Cemetery.
Booker’s wounds from Chickamauga were severe and disabled
him for life. He was able to eventually return to Conecuh County.
Hyde, who’d been wounded in June 1862 at the Battle of
Gaines’s Mill and would again be wounded in 1864 during a skirmish near
Richmond, Va., also returned to Conecuh County after the war. Dunham survived
the war and died in Madison County, Fla. in 1878.
Also during the Battle of Chickamauga, 1,468 Confederates
were listed as captured or missing. Among their number was Isadore Goldstein of
the Conecuh Guards, who was taken prisoner and remained in prison until after
the war. Once the war was over, he moved to Pennsylvania.
Also at the Battle of Chickamauga was Lewis Lavon Peacock of
Rocky Head in Dale County, who turned 19 years old on the second day of the
battle. Serving with Hilliard’s Legion, which lost more than half of its number
at Chickamauga, he survived the battle without a scratch. (If he’d been killed
that day, someone other than his great-great-great-grandson would have written
this column.)
In the end, if you’ve got any other information about the
men mentioned above, I’d like to hear about it. You can contact me at The
Courant at 578-1492 or e-mail me at courantsports@earthlink.net. You can reach
me by mail at The Evergreen Courant, ATTN: Lee Peacock, P.O. Box 440,
Evergreen, AL 36401.
Warfare is a fascinating subject. Despite the dubious morality of using violence to achieve personal or political aims. It remains that conflict has been used to do just that throughout recorded history.
ReplyDeleteYour article is very well done, a good read.