August 19, 1864
To-day I have been with the General to General Warren, who
with the 5th Corps seized the Weldon railroad yesterday. It is touching a
tiger's cubs to get on that road! They will not stand it. Warren had a severe
fight yesterday at midday, but they could not get him off. All was quiet this
morning towards the railroad. Mott1 got in, through the mud, about
seven, and began at once to relieve the 9th Corps, which was not an easy
matter, for the covered way was, in many places, waist-deep in water, so the
troops had to march up as well as they could, keeping behind hills, etc. The
enemy opened on them with artillery but it was rather too late, and the columns
were already pretty well out of reach. At noon the General started to go out to
visit the scene of action. It was raining steadily, and we went slop, slop along.
Near the Cheever house was a damp brigade of Potter's division, halted. The
General ordered me to tell it to move on, as it might be needed. General Potter
himself was near by at General White's Headquarters. . . . After which I was fain to gallop briskly
to catch up with the Staff, which was jogging along the Williams house road. . . . Cutting through a skirt of wood, we came
on a very large, flat, open farm, on which is the Globe Tavern,2 and
through which runs the railroad. . . .
General Warren had a narrow escape in the fight of yesterday. His horse was
struck directly between the eyes by a minie ball. If his head had been down,
there would have been nothing to save the General's body. The Corps [Warren's]
was then formed in form of two sides of a rectangle, the longer arm lying
across the railroad, the shorter parallel to it. It could scarcely fail to
strike me that, while his left flank was well protected, his right was “in the
air,” having nothing in connection with it but the picket line. However, as I
am not a military critic, I thought no more of it. The enemy did think a
good deal of it. In front of the position were dense woods, on its left a fine
open tract, and, on the right, a wood separated it from the open farm of the
Aiken house. We left at 3.30, and returned by the way we came. Both going and coming
I quite expected to see the picket line tumbling in on top of us, and was not
surprised, as we rode along near the Aiken house, to hear a number of dropping
shots to our left. Just after we got to the plank road, we could hear the
cannon opening, which continued a short time and then ceased. During the said
short time was enacted one of those disgraceful surprises which we have in such
perfection. The enemy, making a front attack, at the same moment threw a strong
column down a road leading past the Linear house and outside our right flank.
They smashed through the picket line, passed down the road, faced to their
right, and rushed, yelling and firing, into the open fields, in rear of our
right wing. Met here by a fire of artillery and reserve troops, they themselves
fell into confusion, and rushing back through our lines, like a great tide,
carried out to sea at least 2000 of our men, including most of our gallant
little regular brigade with its commander, General Hayes. To be sure we drove
them off and held the railroad, but we ought to have taken all that
flanking column.3
_______________
1 Ordered back from Deep Bottom.
2 Where they found Warren.
3 “The position was faulty! Warren should have corrected
it, and Meade should have known it!” — Lyman's Journal.
SOURCE: George R. Agassiz, Editor, Meade’s
Headquarters, 1863-1865: Letters of Colonel Theodore Lyman from the Wilderness
to Appomattox, p. 217-20
No comments:
Post a Comment