The Battle of First Manassas was fought near Manassas,
Virginia on July 21, 1861 and is considered the first major battle of the War
Between the States. This battle, which was considered a Confederate victory,
resulted in 4,690 casualties, including 387 dead Confederates. Among those dead
was 17-year-old Private John D. Robbins who apparently had strong ties to
Wilcox County.
What’s somewhat unusual about Robbins is that he was a
member of Co. E of the 4th Alabama Infantry Regiment. This company
was known as the Conecuh Guards and was organized at Sparta, which at that time
was the county seat of Conecuh County. This unit was organized in April 1861
and was mustered into the Confederate army at Lynchburg, Virginia on May 7,
1861, about two months before the battle that claimed Robbins.
Records reflect that Robbins and the Conecuh Guards fought
as part of what was then called the Army of the Shenandoah, which was under the
command of General Joseph E. Johnston. This army was divided into four large
brigades and the 4th Alabama was part of the Third Brigade, under
the command of Brigadier General Barnard E. Bee. The 4th Alabama was
under the command of Col. E.J. Jones and Col. S.R. Gist.
According to noted Alabama historian Steve Stacey of Frisco
City, Robbins was killed during the heavy fighting, and he was likely buried in
a mass grave at the battlefield. However, at some point in the past, a memorial
headstone for Robbins was placed in the Ebenezer Methodist Cemetery at Oak
Hill. This simple grave marker reads as follows: In Memory Of John D. Robbins,
Pvt. Co. E, 4th Ala. Inf., Confederate States Army, Dec. 1,
1843-July 21, 1861, Killed at 1st Manassas.
One of the best sources of information about the Conecuh
Guards is a book called “History of Conecuh County, Alabama” by the Rev. Benjamin
Franklin Riley. This book was published in 1881 and contains a complete roster
of the Conecuh Guards from when they were organized at Sparta. This roster
notes that John Robbins was killed at the First Battle of Manassas, and it also
notes that a soldier named Thomas Robbins “died from wounds received at Gaines’
Farm, July 1862.”
Interestingly, the Ebenezer Methodist Cemetery also contains
a memorial gravestone for Private Thomas Elijah Robbins. The conflict at
Gaines’ Farm is more commonly known as the Battle of Gaines’ Mill, which was
fought on June 27, 1862 in Hanover County, Virginia. Records indicate that
Thomas Robbins was 20 years old at the time of his death.
In the end, these two soldiers, even though they were in a
Conecuh County unit, obviously had ties to the Oak Hill area. If anyone knows
any additional details regarding why they had memorials placed in the Ebenezer
Methodist Cemetery, please let me know. It would be interesting to know what
their connection is to Oak Hill, which is many miles from where the Conecuh
Guards were formed in April 1861.
(Got a comment or question? E-mail Lee Peacock at
leepeacock2002@hotmail.com.)
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