Sunday, August 31, 2014

September 1, 1864---John Bell Hood abandons Atlanta



SEPTEMBER 1, 1864:        

The Battle of Jonesborough (Jonesboro) (Day Two): 
                  
After General Hardee’s resounding defeat of the previous day, General John Bell Hood C.S.A. is forced to engage all Confederate troops in Atlanta in a last-ditch effort to hold the city against Union encroachment. Fighting at Jonesboro starts late in the day and continues on into the night.  The Confederate line is smashed open, and Hood’s supply lines are all broken. The Yankees pour into Atlanta.

The citizens panic. Hood orders the military evacuation of Atlanta in the small hours. His men set fire to an ordnance train which erupts spectacularly firing shot and shell throughout downtown causing extensive damage and a spreading fire that is not brought under control (by Yankee soldiers) until after sunrise.


The next day ten year old Carrie Berry of Atlanta tells her diary:

We all woke up this morning without sleeping much last night. The Confederates had four engenes and a long train of box cars filled with amunition and set it on fire last night which caused a grate explosion which kept us all awake. It reminded us of the shells - of all the days of excitement we have had it to day. Every one has been trying to get all they could before the Federals come in the morning. They have ben running with saques of meal, salt and tobacco. They did act rediculous breaking open stores and robbing them. About twelve o'clock there were a few federals came in. They were all frightened. We were afraid they were going to treat us badly. It was not long till the Infantry came in. They were orderely and behaved very well. I think I shall like the Yankees very well.


Friday, August 29, 2014

August 31, 1864---The Battle of Jonesboro



AUGUST 31, 1864:    

The Battle of Jonesborough (Jonesboro) (Day One):
                 
General William Tecumseh Sherman U.S.A. digs his troops in along the Flint River which marks the municipal boundary of Atlanta in 1864. (The north-south running Flint River is also the fictional frontage of Tara in Gone With The Wind.) General William Hardee C.S.A., realizing that the next Union advance will bring Federal troops into Atlanta proper, tries to drive Billy Yank off at Jonesboro. Hardee’s troops break against the strong Union emplacements. Union losses are 178. Confederate losses are well over 2,000 (many captured). General John Bell Hood later described the apparent mass surrender of Hardee’s men as “disgraceful.”


August 30, 1864---The Battle of Dardanelle



AUGUST 30, 1864:            

The Battle of Dardanelle. Even as the Union rains shells down on besieged Atlanta and Petersburg, the Civil War continues on other fronts in hundreds of nearly-forgotten small-scale actions. A Union force, the Third Arkansas, near the town of Dardanelle, Arkansas surprises a Confederate force. The Confederates are soundly defeated and must escape with their lives leaving behind precious horses and supplies. The Southerners are forced to swim Beatty’s Mill Creek to avoid capture, leaving behind rifles and ammunition.


August 29, 1864---"'Little Mac' For President!"



AUGUST 29, 1864:    

The Democratic National Convention meets in Chicago, Illinois. Originally scheduled for the Fourth of July weekend, the Convention was delayed until August “in deference to the desire of a very large number of the leading members of the Conservative Union Democratic party throughout the country.” In fact, the Convention was so badly split between War Democrats (who wanted the war to continue until Union victory was achieved), Peace Democrats (who wanted a negotiated end to the war), and Copperheads (who wanted an immediate end to the war, recognition of the Confederacy, and the restoration of slavery) that the Convention had to be delayed in order to find some common ground for all the factions.


On the first day of the Convention, the Democratic Party adopted a Platform, the planks of which read:   

Resolved, That in the future, as in the past, we will adhere with unswerving fidelity to the Union under the Constitution as the only solid foundation of our strength, security, and happiness as a people, and as a framework of government equally conducive to the welfare and prosperity of all the States, both Northern and Southern.

Resolved, That this convention does explicitly declare, as the sense of the American people, that after four years of failure to restore the Union by the experiment of war, during which, under the pretense of a military necessity of war-power higher than the Constitution, the Constitution itself has been disregarded in every part, and public liberty and private right alike trodden down, and the material prosperity of the country essentially impaired, justice, humanity, liberty, and the public welfare demand that immediate efforts be made for a cessation of hostilities, with a view of an ultimate convention of the States, or other peaceable means, to the end that, at the earliest practicable moment, peace may be restored on the basis of the Federal Union of the States.

Resolved, That the direct interference of the military authorities of the United States in the recent elections held in Kentucky, Maryland, Missouri, and Delaware was a shameful violation of the Constitution, and a repetition of such acts in the approaching election will be held as revolutionary, and resisted with all the means and power under our control.

Resolved, That the aim and object of the Democratic party is to preserve the Federal Union and the rights of the States unimpaired, and they hereby declare that they consider that the administrative usurpation of extraordinary and dangerous powers not granted by the Constitution; the subversion of the civil by military law in States not in insurrection; the arbitrary military arrest, imprisonment, trial, and sentence of American citizens in States where civil law exists in full force; the suppression of freedom of speech and of the press; the denial of the right of asylum; the open and avowed disregard of State rights; the employment of unusual test-oaths; and the interference with and denial of the right of the people to bear arms in their defense is calculated to prevent a restoration of the Union and the perpetuation of a Government deriving its just powers from the consent of the governed.

Resolved, That the shameful disregard of the Administration to its duty in respect to our fellow-citizens who now are and long have been prisoners of war and in a suffering condition, deserves the severest reprobation on the score alike of public policy and common humanity.

Resolved, That the sympathy of the Democratic party is heartily and earnestly extended to the soldiery of our army and sailors of our navy, who are and have been in the field and on the sea under the flag of our country, and, in the events of its attaining power, they will receive all the care, protection, and regard that the brave soldiers and sailors of the republic have so nobly earned.

The Platform reflected all the weaknesses of the Democratic Party in 1864:

Most of the planks of the Platform were indictments of the Lincoln Administration, and relatively easily agreed upon.

Slavery and Emancipation, however, were pressing issues throughout the country that the Democrats could not reconcile among themselves, and so they simply ignored these issues despite the fact that any end to the war would bring them to the front and center of the national consciousness. 

The second plank was written solely by the Copperhead Clement Vallandigham who had previously been exiled to the South and who was the head of the Knights of The Golden Circle. Many Americans of all political stripes considered him a traitor. Thus, his prominence in writing a plank was divisive in and of itself.

As a result of Vallandigham’s prominent contribution, the War Democrats demanded the right to draft a plank. The sixth plank contradicted the second in spirit, and was challenged by Copperheads and Peace Democrats as being “coded” to continue the war.

On August 31st, the War Democrat and former Commanding General of the Union, General George B. McClellan, still a military officer, was chosen as the Democrats’ Presidential candidate after some intraparty wrangling. George Pendleton of Ohio, a Copperhead and a protégé of Vallandigham’s, was named as Vice-Presidential candidate in order to balance the ticket. McClellan was 37, Pendleton 39. Together, they made up (and remain) the youngest Presidential ticket in American history.

McClellan was (as was traditional for the time) not present in Chicago and not openly campaigning for himself. He all but doomed the Democratic cause by acting wholly in character. When telegraphed that he had won the nomination McClellan did what McClellan apparently always did best --- he prevaricated. It was not until September 8th that he wired back his acceptance of the nomination, along with his outright rejection of Vallandigham’s plank:

. . . [T]he Union must be preserved at all hazards.

I could not look in the face of my gallant comrades of the army and navy, who have survived so many bloody battles, and tell them that their labors and the sacrifice of so many of our slain and wounded brethren had been in vain; that we had abandoned that Union for which we had so often periled our lives.

A vast majority of our people, whether in the army and navy or at home, would, as I would, hail with unbounded joy the permanent restoration of peace, on the basis of the Union under the Constitution without the effusion of another drop of blood.  But no peace can be permanent without union.

As to the other subjects presented in the resolutions of the Convention, I need only say that I should seek, in the Constitution of the United States, and the laws framed in accordance therewith, the rule of my duty, and the limitations of Executive power; endeavor to restore economy in public expenditure, re-establish the supremacy of law, and by the operation of a more rigorous nationality, resume our commanding position among the nations of the earth . . .

Betrayed, the Copperheads and the Peace Democrats refused to actively support McClellan’s candidacy. Pendleton even spoke against him in Party circles. This, plus the unforeseen Autumn upswing in the Union’s fortunes of war, sank McClellan’s candidacy.


Wednesday, August 27, 2014

August 28, 1864---William Tecumseh Sherman: "A paltry villain, a churlish knave, the very Fawkes of society . . . a cheat and shame upon the name of soldier"



AUGUST 28, 1864:   

60,000 Union troops wait to enter Atlanta. The Augusta, Georgia Daily Constitutionalist, reporting from the besieged city, editorializes:

The vandals in front of us having failed to take the city by fair means, and in open combat are resorting to the last expedient of a baffled, unprincipled and disconsolate bully—that of its destruction by fire.  Within the past four and twenty hours as many as nine buildings have touched the ground, and are now visible only in smouldering walls and charred ruins.  During these conflagrations the Yankee batteries played vigorously among the fire battalion.  They obtained the range by the clouds of smoke and flame and had nothing more noble to do than to drop their shells in among the humane non-combatants at their work of charity, and the frightened and houseless women and children fleeing from the wrath of the two fierce and consuming enemies.  Can anything be more typical of the desperation of the ruffians who came here under the illusion of winning an easy victory, or the infamy of the universal Yankee nation?  It is a perfect symbal [sic] of the fear of the intolerable wretch who commands them.  Sherman, who said that the waistcoat of God Almighty was not big enough to make him a coat, supports his pretentions [sic] to the character indicated by this blasphemy in every conceivable way, and rolls up mountain upon mountains of guilt every hour that he inspires the breath of life.  Of all the Yankee Generals he is the poorest, the vainest, the meanest.  He is without honor as a man, or conscience as a human being.  His wit, by which he sets great store, is that of a Dutch dissenting class leader, his wisdom that of a circus clown, his temper that of Meg Merriles, his honesty that of Ananias and Sapphira, his ambition that of Beast Butler, and his appearance and manners those of Uriah Keep.  His fate will be upon the earth wreck and ruin, the exposure of his littleness and puppiness, the disgrace of his military pretensions and the discomfiture of all his schemes; in the world to come—though I judged not let I be judged—you can imagine what awards will be assigned to a villain, who not content with insulting the purity of womanhood and assailing the innocence of children, points his blasphemous tongue like a hissing adder in the face of his Maker.  Ugh!  what a disgust the things inspires [sic]!  A paltry villian [sic], a currish knave, the very Fawkes of society, the situs cates of war, a dull sharper, a cheat and shame upon the name of soldier, the very embodiment of an ill-begotten, ill-bred and destined caterpiller [sic], clinging only to sloth and milldew [sic], climbing no higher than the scum of a rank and putrid atmosphere.

Last night a shell, a forty-two pounder, struck the Presbyterian Church.  It passed through the pulpit and floor into the basement, or Sunday school room, where a number of citizens had sought refuge.  Here it exploded.  The scene which followed was frightful.  Several were hurt and one poor fellow had his arm shot off . . .