Headquarters 1st Div. Reno's Command,
Near Alexandria, Sept. 4th, 1862.
Dear Mother:
Once more, after a lapse of nearly five weeks, am I able to
write you again. During this time we have been cut off from all communication
with our friends, we have been busily employed, and have suffered much. I have
lost my good friend, Genl. Stevens, who has been sacrificed by little men who
can poorly fill his place. Whenever anything desperate was to be performed,
Stevens and Kearny were always selected, with this difference though, that
Stevens rarely was credited with what he did, while Kearny's praises were
properly published. On Monday's fight, the General's son and I were walking
together in the rear of the 79th Regiment, when Capt. Stevens was wounded.
Finding that young Stevens was able to move off without assistance, I continued
to follow the Regiment. Soon the General came up on foot. “Have you seen your
son?” I asked him. “Yes,” said he, “I know he is wounded,” and then added, “Capt.
Lusk, I wish you would pass to the left of the line, and push the men forward
in that direction.” I did as I was ordered, and on my return, found the General
had been killed, and the troops badly slaughtered. The General you have read
was shot while holding the flag of the 79th Regiment in his hand.
There were five shot holding the same flag in about twenty
minutes time. I found the sixth man standing almost alone at the edge of some
woods still clinging hopelessly to the colors. I drew him back to the crest of
a hill a couple of hundred yards back and gathered a few of the 79th about it.
Kearny then came riding up, and asked the name of the little band. On being
told, he said, “Scotchmen, you must follow me.” They told him they had not a
round of ammunition left. “Well,” said he then, “stand where you are and it may
be you will be able to assist my men with the bayonet.” The soldierly form
moved on, and it too soon was dust. Stevens was a great man and Kearny a
courageous soldier. It is not every man of whom this last can be said, though
the country may have placed him high in power. I suppose I must not tell all I
have seen in the last few days fighting, but I have seen enough to make it no
matter of wonder at the extent of our disaster. I have read little truth as yet
in the papers, though I see the people are beginning to feel the truth. So long
as the interests of our country are entrusted to a lying braggart like Pope, or
a foolish little Dutchman like Sigel, we have little reason to hope
successfully to compete with an army led by Lee, Johnston and old
"Stonewall" Jackson. Carl Schurz, our lately returned minister to
Spain, I found blundering horribly. Schenck was a laughable instance of
incompetence, and so with others. You must be careful to whom you repeat these
things, and yet there is much which it were better were known, for our soldiers
are not deceived by lying reports. They feel whom they can trust, and are not willing
to fight for men like McDowell and that ilk. McClellan's reappointment
gives great satisfaction to the soldiers. Whether right or wrong they believe
in him.
I expect to get my back letters to-day, and then what a
treat. I am still very much fatigued by the last month, and like to rest all I
can.
Good-bye. Kisses and love to all.
Affec'y.,
Will.
SOURCE: William Chittenden Lusk, Editor, War Letters
of William Thompson Lusk, p. 180-1
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