An anecdote is told
of James B. Wilson, of the Forty-first, during the late fight at Vicksburg,
which should have appeared in its proper connection.
The Yankees used to
deride our Tennessee boys while in prison, at Camp Morton, with the epithet of
"Butternuts," on account of their clothing. At the fight at Chickasaw
Bayou, one Tennessee regiment (the Third, I think) repulsed six or eight
Federal regiments, capturing five stands of colors and five hundred prisoners,
besides killing a great number. During the action the enemy's sharp-shooters
killed one of our field officers, of which fact they seemed to be aware. As
they were being brought in, Jim Wilson remarked, "You ran against the Butternuts,
did you?" "Yes," replied a saucy fellow, "yes; and we
picked out the kernels (colonels) too."
SOURCE: Edwin L.
Drake, Editor, The Annals of the Army of Tennessee and Early Western History,
Vol. 1, p. 22
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