The original of this book is in the Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924030906451 Tite aate snows wnen this volume was taken. To renew this book copy the call No. and give to the.lumriaa. HOME USE RULES iks subject to Recall All borrowers must regis- ter in the library to borrow books for home u$e. All books must be re- turned at end ctf college year for inspection and repairs. Limited books must be re- turned within the four week limit and not renewed. Students must return all ' books before leaving town. Officers should arrange for the return of books wanted during their absence from town. Volumes of periodicals and of pamphlets are held in the library as much as X)Ossible. For special pur- poses they are given out for a limited time. ' Borrowers should not. use their library privileges for the benefit of other persons. Books of special value and gift books, when the giver wishes it, are not allowed to circulate. Readers are asked ttore- port all cases of books marked or mutilated. Do not deface books by marks and writing. E513.5 24th"'."R69™"">' '""'"'^ ^imm!lSllilSiiiiIi'iiii^i'"*"'l "assachusuet olin 3 1924 030 906 451 t:5^.^ -^tr--:. ^ ^ THE TWENTY-FOURTH REGIMENT MASSACHUSETTS VOLUNTEERS 1861-1866 "NEW ENGLAND GUARD REGIMENT" BY ALFRED S. £0E A VETERAN OF TIIE"^VIL_\VAR [" The Twenty-fourth was one of the best leKimeins, fver recruiter! in JfaSSHChllSettS.'" — Al>.Il'TANT-CiKNKRAL WlLTJA^I SCHorr.KR.] Regimental Committee on History Charges B. Amory John C. Cook George Hill PUBLISHED BY THE TWENTY-FOURTH VETERAN ASSOCIATION WORCESTER, MASS. 1907 A.3?f57a Copyright. Vxn, by Alfeed p. Roe PEEFACE. For the war to preserve the Union, Massachusetts sup- plied forty so-called "three years" regiments. Of this large number only one, the Thirtieth, saw longer service than that of the Twenty-fourth. Whether recruited earlier or later, every regiment, except these two, was at home before the end of September, 1865, yet the Twenty-fourth and the Thirtieth lingered on till January and July respectively, 1866. Perhaps no regiment from the Bay State went through regular campaigns in so many states as did the one whose record this volume embodies. Save for brief trips , into Maryland and Pennsylvania, as at Antietam and Gettj'^sburg, the Army of the Potomac fought entirely in Virginia; the Twenty-fourth, counting its service in Boston Harbor and at Annapolis, is justified in claiming no less than 'six states as its several theatres of operations, for, in addition to Massachusetts and Maryland, were the Burnside Expedition to North Carolina, the long siege of Charleston in South Carolina, the winter's cam- paign in Florida, and the crowning trial with the Army of the James in Virginia. The book itself is in no sense a history of the war, seldom generalizing, never moralizing nor discussing what might or what ought to have been, but always confining itself to what the ofiicers and men of this regiment saw, said, thought and, above all, did. For many years it had been a dream of the survivors of so many years of service that their history would be written, and one of their number was long ago designated as historian, but nothing came of waiting and watching till in January, 1906, Major Charles B. Amory, John C. Cook and George Hill were appointed a committee to take the matter in hand, and to them was 4 ■ Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. given power to act. After due consideration and inter- views, they employed as the writer of their story one who had had some experience in such work. Sending out, in the month at March, ] 906, circulars to all survivors, as far as they could be found, stating the purpose in hand and requesting contributions of everything that would add to the interest of the history, the work began. The answers from recip- ients of the circular were of the most satisfactory character, so much so that in preparing the story it has been to some extent a question of what must be left out' rather than of searching for material. Notwithstanding the excellent character of the officers and men of the regiment, very little had been put out in book or pamphlet form concerning it. The memorial volume of General Thomas G. Stevenson, printed soon after his deatii; "The Captured Scout," by Chaplain H. Clay Trum- bull of the Tenth Connecticut, published in 1869, ^detailing the adventures of Henry H. Planning, Company G, together with the privately printed sketch of his own military career by Major Chas. B. Amory, originally of Company F, and his Roster of Company I, of which he was subseqxiently Captain, constitute the entire list of such matter till the issuing, late in 1906, ■ of the proceedings incident to the dedication of the Stevenson broiize in the State House. Such scarcity of duly credited matter was not owing to lack of incident and collection, but rather to a widespread expectation that some other one would undertake and go ahead with the task. The franiework of the history is made from the diaries and letters of General Francis A. Osborn, who had the fortunate foresight to make regular records of the daily happenings of the several years of his service. These have proved invaluable in the compilation. Covering and orna- ment to this substantial skeleton structure have been found in the reports as madf to the proper authorities and are now published in the Official Records of the War of the Rebel- Preface. 5 lion, along with the incident and anecdote as jotted down at the time by the active participants, and on request were forwarded for use in these pages. Especially valuable in this connection were the diaries of John M. Spear, Jr., of D, of George H. Howard and John Thorne of G, and the sketches of active army life furnished by H. B. McLellan of A, C. P. Chase of B, G. T. Ford of D, Wm. E. Clark, A. H. Knowles and C. G. Robinson of F, James Armstrong of I. and E. B. Lyon of K. The thorough drill and discipline to which the regiment was subjected resulted in unusual demands upon it for officers to serve in a detached capacity, and for officers and ,men for promotion in other organizations. For the latter purpose the Twenty-fourth lost no less than ten commissioned officers and thirty enlisted men, very many of whom attained high rank in their new organizations. The quality of the regi- ment's personnel is indicated by the fact that the following- names, borne on the list of brigadier-generals from Massa- chusetts, were at first on the rolls of the Twenty -fourth : Thomas G. Stevenson, Colonel; Brigadier-general, December 26, 1862. Francis A. Osborn, Colonel; Brevet Brigadier-general, March 13, 1865. Robert H. Stevenson, Lieutenant-colonel; Brevet Brig- adier-gpneral, March 13, 1865. Albert Ordway, Lieutenant-colonel; Brevet Brigadier- . general, March 13, 1865. John F. Anderson, Adjutant; Brevet Brigadier-gen- eral, April 2, 1865. J. Cushing Edmands, First Sergeant Company K, Colonel Thirty-second Massachusetts; Brevet Brig- adier-general, March 13, 1865. Samuel A. Green, Surgeon, who ranked as Major during his service, was brevfitted Lieutenant-colonel March 13, 1865, an honor conferred on only two other Bay State surgeons, 6 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Reuiment. according to Colonel T. W. Higginson in his "Massachusetts in the Army and Navy." In addition to thes^ instances of preferment during the war, it should be stated that others remaining in the State military service enjoyed recognition for many a year. Thomas F. Edmands, whom many have called the beau ideal of soldiers, and who came home in 1866, command- ing what was left of the regiment, was the commander of the First Corps of Cadets till within a very few weeks of his death in August^ 1906. Nathaniel Wales, who was the First Sergeant of Company G, gained the position of Major in the Thirty-fifth Massachusetts, and the brevet rank of Lieutenant-colonel and Colonel, becoming Brigadier-general subsequently in the State Militia. Captain John N. Partridge in 1868 entered the Twenty-third Regiment, N. Y. N. G., and, after successive promotions, became Colonel, holding the position some eight or nine years, resigning in 1894 after more than twenty-five years of service. The rank and file that followed such officers were worthy of their leaders ; confident in them and above all in them- selves, they never lost a standard nor showed the white fea- ther for an instant. They were always ready for any exac- tion ; forlorn hopes never lacked volunteers, and when they fought side by side with other regiments, the latter had a sense of security in such proximity. The fatalities of the Twenty-fourth in the field did not reach the arbitrary num- ber, one hundred and thirty, established by Colonel Wm. F. Fox, in compiling his famous "Three Hundred Fighting Regiments," an invaluable volume, productive, however, of more heart-burn than any other compilation of statistics extant. Yet, if the reader carefully follows the record as given by the Colonel, he may spare himself some bitter reflections, for it is distinctly stated there that many regi- ments not included in the list may have been better fighting organizations than some of those mentioned, for, through their careful handling or other adventitious circum- Preface. 7 stance, the lives of the men were spared to continue the fight on other occasions. The extreme discipline to which the Twenty-fourth was accustomed was an absolute pre- ventive of panic or confusion of any sort, and with an array of officers possessing unusually cool heads and excellent judgment, and a most faithful and effective medical stafE to repair the casualties of combat, there was no needless loss of life, hence the result, just a little under the aggregate assumed in the book as the standard of admission to the thrice one hundred, selected from the more than two thousand regiments in the Union Army during the great struggle. At this period of time, more than forty-two years beyond Appomattox, the great majority of those who made the splendid record of the regiment are afar from earthly interests, but the minority yet this side the final camping- ground, their friends and families as well as those of the many who have ceased from this life, are desirous of seeing in book form the story of the camps, marches and battles of long ago. Fortunately the liberal and patriotic policy of the Commonwealth renders this possible, even though the day be far spent and the crossing is near. In sending out the result of much comparing of notes, reading of letters, diaries and contemporary written and printed matter, the • compiler has had the efficient aid of Generals Osborn and Stevenson, Majors Richardson and Amory and Surgeon Green in a supervisory capacity, so that only wellrproven facts should find place in the volume, and to them for their painstaking services thanks are hereby rendered. Grateful acknowledgment is also made to all those who by the lending of portraits, views and pictures of men and places rendered the illustrating of the history possible. Among the many thus helpful should be mentioned those already assisting in other ways, with Captains R. F. Clark, James Thompson, Jas. M. Barnard, J. N. Partridge, Robt. Carruthers, Wm. F. Wiley, Lieutenants P. E. Wheeler and Geo. A. Higgins, S Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Kbgiment. together Avith iliss Louisa M., daughter of Lieutenant- colonel Chas. H. Hooper, and Adjutant-general J. C. R. Foster of Tallahassee, Florida, son of Major Davis Foster. In the same list should be included the names of Wm. H. Cundy of Gilmore's Band; Sewell S. Ingraham and J. H. Atwood of the regimental band ; John C. Cook, long Secre- tary of the Veteran Association; E. H. Gilford and Samuel Willis of C; Thos. Fanning and C. A. Fitch of D; D. H. Cunningham and S. A. Edgerly of B ;. B. Pettee and F. H. BuUard of G ; W. H. Austin, Peter DeLane, Wm. H. King and E. M. Tucker of I; Chas. E. Grant and A. J. Vining of K. Geo. AA'. Dickinson of Worcester has kindly lent data pertain- ing to his father and brother; Mrs. 51. E. O'Brien of Boston, photograph and facts concerning her husband, the late Sheriff J. B. O'Brien; Miss Annie R. Spear, portraits and views ; while outside of the regiment and immediate friends, acknowledgments are due for favors to Captain Daniel El- dredge of the Third New Hampshire Regiment, Jlr. James B. Gardner, Forty-fourth iMassachusetts ; John Gray, Twenty- third Massachusetts, and Captain A. F. Slate of the Tenth Connecticut. C. B. Tillinghast. S. A. Green and S. S. Green, librarians respectively of the State, ^Massachusetts Historical, and the Worcester Public Libraries, have kindly aided in granting the use of said collections, and the uniformly kind and courteous usage in the Adjutant-general's Department at the State House is gratefully remembered. ALFRED S. ROE. Worcester, Massaehiasetts, November; 1907. JiJfRATA. I'agu 14;j. For steamer "Guide, "' reafi "Vidette." l'aj?e -411. Ffyy A. .1. A'amey, rrnd A. J. Vining. Piises 4S7, 4s'.i, 4'.B. /'.«■ Wm. A. C'outhony. rend Wni. A. Conthouy. NEW ENGLAND GUARD AND FORT ' INDEPENDENCE. In 1861 the New England Guard, a Boston military organ- ization, was nearing its half-century mark. Organized in 1812, for almost fifty years it had been one of the best drilled companies in the Commonwealth. From the beginning its personnel consisted of the very finest material afforded by the foremost city in New England, men who were capable of appreciating and, if need be, exemplifying its motto, viz.: "our nation's honor the bond op union." When 1861 began, the Guards, under the command of Captain Harrison Ritchie, constituted Company B of the Sec- ond Battalion of Infantrj'. In those days military spirit ran high, for war between North and South seemed imminent. Captain Ritchie having resigned to accept a position on the staff of Governor John A. Andrew, George H. Gordon, a graduate of West Point and an officer in the Mexican War, was made his successor. March 11 of the same year the Guards became Company A of the Fourth Battalion and a new Company B was raised. Captain Gordon being promoted Major in command. Thomas G. Stevenson, who had been First Sergeant in the 9]d company, was elected Captain of the new one, and Francis A. Osborn, Gordon's First Lieutenant, succeeded to the command of Company A. By this time the fray had begun and volunteer regiments were forming or, at any rate, were in contemplation. The Sixth Regiment was on its way to Baltimore when Major Gordon, mindful of his military training received from the government, on the 18th of 10 Twenty-fourth ■Massachusetts Regiment. April tendered his services to the Governor and at the same time resigned his command of the Fourth Battalion. It is claimed that this proffer of the subsequent Colonel of the Secdnd Regiment was the very first received by Governor Andrew. Toward the last of April, it became apparent to the authorities that Fort Independence in Boston Harbor, then guarded only by an ordnance sergeant, should not be allowed to continue in an unprotected state. The patriotism of the Fourth Battalion wa6 appealed to in a request that it should garrison the fort without pay, being furnished rations by the State. The battalion promptly and cheerfully assented, and on the 25th of April proceeded to the fort and took charge of it. As senior officer. Captain Stevenson was in command, and on the 4th of May he was unanimously elected Major, his brother, Robert H. Stevenson, succeeding to the captaincy of Company- B. This promotion, by no means sought by Major Stevenson, was accepted with reluctance, but his associates had sensed, as perhaps he did not himself, the preeminent military genius already indicated. How well he continued the excellent work begun by Captain Gordon was early shown in the proficiency exhibited by his command in all its work. Nor did the merit of R. H. Stevenson, the youthful Captain of Company B, pass unrecognized, for his followers procured for him an elegant sword, which they duly presented, but it was surmised that the gratitude of the officer was considerably alloyed by the fact that he had to make a speech of acceptance, and while he acquitted himself with credit, as he always did everywhere, his admiring friends were all agog to hear what he might have to say, as action rather than words was known to be the Captain's forte. So far as known the unrequited services of the battalion in thus garrisoning the fort were unique, and really only such an organization as this could afford to serve for nothing, get- ting only its board in return. As a visitor remarked, "These young men are for the most part the sons of wealthy mer- New England Guard and Fort Independence. 11 chants in Boston, and on this account are inclined to be sensi- tive, fearing that the peculiar service to which they have been called will be construed as an indication of their desire to play the gentleman soldier and an unwillingness to be called into the field, which is far from the case. * *, * These soldiers at Fort Independence are by strict discipline perfecting and inuring themselves in preparation for the real hardships of war and active service into which they may soon be called." Many observers at the fort, during the single month of the battalion's stay, commented on the rare spirit of the soldiers, their evident desire to acquire all that could be given and the masterly manner in which they were taught by those who, led. At the same time it would be unfair to these patriots, many of them still in school or college, to think that they were prematurely old or that they did not have their quantuni of fun. This excellent story is told of a young Harvard man, in later life to adorn the bench of the U. S. Supreme Court, and whom his father was to seek, after Antietam, in "My Hunt after the Captain." It appears that his fellows were giving him a butcher-boy cut of his hair and had clipped the locks closely from one side of his head when some one sang out, "Here comes the Doctor." Whereupon the man with the shears refused to work further. The greeting of " Boy" and his merry ' ' Dad ' ' may be imagined by those who have read of the Holmeses, father and son. That Thomas G. Stevenson's was the master mind in this preparatory period no one ever' questioned for a moment. Said a writer of these days, " He was fairly idolized by his men , and it is doubtful if any one less peculiarly fitted for the position could have maintained as strict discipline." So strict and thorough were discipline and drill and so loyal the spirit of the men that out of the one hundred and sixty-one who were on duty at Fort Independ- ence in the spring of 1861, before the close, of the year one hundred and sixteen had been commissioned and several had enlisted in the ranks. Out of the entire number, as stated by one of the members, all but fifteen went into the army. 12 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. From what stock these soldiers came appears when it is learned that on the very day that Captain George H. Gordon resigned one position and offered himself for another, Miss Hannah E. Stevenson, aunt of the subsequent Brigadier Gen- eral, Thomas G. Stevenson, in behalf of three hundred Boston ladies, called on (Tovernor Andrew and expressed their will- ingness to go to the front as nurses if needed. Miss Steven- son afterwards went to the front and did good service in the hospitals. The stay at Fort Independence, though of infinite utility, was brief, for on the 2.5th day of May the battalion was re- lieved and returned to the city. At this time comes the first mention of Patrick S. Gilmore in connection with the men before so many of whom his delightful strains were to sound in coming months, since on this day was heard for the first time the'Tourth Battalion Quickstep, "arranged by this prince of musicians and to whose enlivening air these men in the future were to march many a mile. Comments by the Boston press on the appearance of the returning soldiers were of the most flattering character. It was generally asserted at the time that no other military organization had made so credit- able a display, and this was less than two years after the visit of Colonel Ellsworth and his inimitable Fire Zouaves from Chicago. The men could hardly have been accorded a more enthusiastic reception if they had been returning victorious from the field of battle. The streets through which they marched were lined with a dense throng, which manifested the utmost entliusiasm, applauding and cheering at every step. To the great credit of the discipline of the men it is recorded that all this excitement did not in the least shake their steadi- ness, nor cause an>- turning of the heads from side to side in recognition of friends. The Common was densely packed with crowds of people, consisting largely of friends of the men themselves, and here the enthusiasm was in no way less ardent than that accorded the battalion in the streets. Could the thousands who applauded the return of these Regiment Projected. 13 embryonic soldiers have turned their sight to the future and there beheld what was in store for many of these gallant men, tears had blinded eyes that then rejoiced at the exhibi- tion of manly excellence. The shadow of a hundrt^d battles was over that devoted band, yet neither man nor friend beheld it. Names of combats, fierce and bloody, as yet unknown to fame, through the deeds of these and others like them will become hoiisehold words for a thdusand years. That ideal soldier who is the cynosure of all beholders, the leader, in so short a time will fall, star- bedecked, in the battle-whirl of Spottsylvania.. Antietam, Gettysburg, Wauhatchie and Fort Wagner are also there. In the ranks is marching a col- lege boy, on leave of absence, who, often wounded in coming years, will be in the thick of the fight at Ball's Bluff, York- town where he loses a leg, at Port Hudson, the Wilderness, at the Mine in front of Petersburg; always the bravest of the brave, he will come home to a few brief years of feebleness and an early death. How that great company had shouted had they foreseen all this as Wm. F. Bartlett passed! And he with characteristic frankness said this of his one month's experience at Fort Independence, "What have I gained during the last month? I have learned more military than I could have learned in a year in the Arnlory or from books. * * I value the knowledge acquired in the last month more highly than all the Greek and Latin I have learned in the last year. * * i look back on the past month as one of the pleasantest and most useful that I remember." THE REGIMENT PROJECTED. Amid such scenes and labors were evolved the plans which resulted in the Twenty-fourth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers. A significant name for the birthplace of a regiment is Fort Independence. No sooner had the New England Guard returned to Boston than :\Iajor Stevenson, 14 ■ TWENTY-FOUETH MASSACHUSETTS REGIMENT. the commander of the battalion, and Captain Osbom of Company A called upon Governor Andrew and offered their services as officers of volunteers, expressing the wish that, if he thought them worthy, he would commission them respec- tively as Colonel and Lieutenant Colonel of one of the Massa^ chusetts regiments. Profiting by the experience of some of the organizations already effected, they explained to the Governor the plan by which they thought they could raise a regiment which, in point of efficiency, should be second to none that the State might send out. They represented that there were in the Fourth Battalion from one hundred and sixty to one hundred and seventy young men of education, intelligence, ability and courage whom they had known for a loug time, and whose capacity they had had a most admirable opportunity to study through the month's serious military work at Fort Independence. They were certain that from this body of gallant young men, they could pick out a select list of officers and that, in this way, they could form the cadre or framework of a regiment, leaving the officers thus selected to fill up their respective companies. In this manner there would be secured a homogeneous body of officers, all trained in the same school, who would be on the best of terms with each other and, for this reason, would work harmoniously together for a common purpose. Such a corps would have the further advantage of occupying a position which from the very beginning of acquaintance with their men would be one of superiority and would not be embarrassed by any previous relations of friendship or comradeship: relations which might make the officer reluctant to assume the strict attitude of command which his duty required and might lead the man to be impatient of the control to which he was bound to submit. Governor Andrew acknowledged the superiority of the plan and .said he should be very glad to conunission the officers at once and give them the authority asked, but he added that Regiment Projected. 15 the general government was calling for troops, that Massa- chusetts must fill her quota with the utmost dispatch, for which reeisons he could not then wait for a process so slow as the one proposed would naturally be. He did, however, offer the positions of Colonel and Lieutenant-colonel in a regi- ment which was nearly recruited up to the full number re- quired by law, but this was not satisfactory to the would-be officers. The regiment designated was made up of companies which had been gathered together, one in one town, another in another, the officers having been elected by the men. It thus stood in that very relation which was thought desirable to avoid, the officers already commissioned being, for the most part, persons who had had no military training and had secured their positions, probably, from the fact of their being sons of the leading men in their respective towns. As a result of the interview, the Guardsmen retired, having thanked His Excellency for giving them the opportunity to decline com- missions thus tendered, and professing their preference to wait till the time should come when they might be able to ■ carry out the scheme, on which so much time had already been spent and in which they had so much confidence. Governor Andrew took the declinations very kindly and was profuse in his expressions of good will and his willing- ness to comply with the wishes of his visitors, whenever the exigencies of the service would warrant. During the fol- lowing months he received many calls from these young men with ideas; indeed one of them said, "We haunted the State House," always finding a hearty welcome from the Governor a^nd from his staff officers, especially from Colonel Henry Lee, Jr., of Brookline, ever the truest of friends, who entered into the proposed variation in the forming of a regi- ment with generous enthusiasm. Then came the offers of two more regiments, rare tributes to the worth of the gentlemen themselves, but stiU far from realizing the ideals which they had conceived; so again and again they declined the proffers. 16 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. Their friend of the staflf, Colonel Lee, recounted to them the fable of the man who,- seeking a straight stick, went quite through the woods and was^ obliged to pick up a crooked one at last. THE REGIMENT OUTLINED. However, there came a day when Fortune smiled upon them. The Commonwealth had filled her quota and no longer was in such haste for troops that she must scoop them up by the handful without regard to the best system of re- cruiting, and had reached the time when there was no call pend- ing which required haste, though it was evident that more troops would be required. It was August 31, 1861, that Governor Andrew gave the long-sought authority, and com- missioned Major Stevenson colonel and Captain Osborn lieutenant-colonel of a possible Twenty-fourth Regiment, Massachusetts Volunteers, giving them full power to select their officers, to name their positions and their respective ranks among themselves, and agreeing to commission thejn as they were designated. Though the day was Saturday, the news of the Governor's action spread like wildfire, and that night the Armory was crowded with members of the Guard seek- ing appointments. Already many of them had been men- tally chosen. Accordingly they were informed of the places they were expected to fill, and were instructed to lose no time in establishing recruiting stations wherever they thought they could get the most and the best men, that the regiment might be filled at the earliest possible day. jMonday about a dozen of these officers scattered to the different points of the compass and began recruiting all over the State. It is noteworthy that after the first two com- missioned officers and the Chaplain, every commission was dated September 2, thus rendering the question of priority a difficult one in ensuing years. Also, while the men will be Sept. '61. Regiment Outlined. 17 drawn from all parts of the Commonwealth, almost every ofScer is a Boston man. The Chaplain and the Quarter- master are from Gloucester ; no other comes from any place farther from Boston thaji Salem. Out of thirty-eight com- missioned officers twenty-eight are drawn from the rajiks of the New England Guards. The original roster of the officers follows : — (The starred names are those of former New England Guardsmen.) Colonel, *Thomas G. Stevenson, Boston. Lieut. Colonel, *Francis A. Oseoen, Boston. Major, *RoBEET H. Stevenson, Boston. Surgeon, Samuel A. Green, Boston. Assistant Surgeon, *Hall Curtis, Boston. Chaplain, Wm. R. G. Mellen, Gloucester. Adjutant, *John F. Anderson, Boston. Quartermaster, *Wm. V. Hutchings, Gloucester. Company. Captains. First Lieutenants. Second Lieutenants. A, *Wm. F. Redding, James H. Turner, Horatio D. Jarves, East Boston. Medford. Boston. B, George F. Austin, Georgd W. Gardner, *Deming Jarves, Jr., Salem. Salem. Boston. C, *William Pratt, *James B. Bell, *Nathaniel S. Barstow, Boston. Cambridge. Boston. D, *John T. Prince, Jr., *John N. Partridge, *Thomas M. Sweet, Boston. Boston. Boston. E, *Cbarles H. Hooper, *Charles A. Folsom, *Daniel T. Sargent, Boston. Boston. Boston. F, 'Robert F. Clark, *Chas. B. Amory, *John C. Jones, Jr., Boston. Jamaica Plain. Jamaica Plain. G, *Edw. C. Richardson, *Albert Ordway, *James M. Barnard, Boston. Boston. Boston. H, John Daland, Jas. B. Nichols, Chas. G. Ward, Salem. Salem. Boston. I, *J. Lewis Stackpole, James A. Perkins, William L. Horton, Cambridge. Boston. Boston. K, *J. Crosby Maker, *Mason A. Rea, *Thomas F. Edmands, Boston. Boston. Boston. Any one at all conversant with the story of the Twenty-fourth Regiment will not escape the interesting thought, as he reads the foregoing list, that he who bore the very last name 2 18 Twenty- FOURTH Massachusetts Regiment. 20 lEH WMTEB! lor to. li, Zlth Reii;*t. "iilcw (l;]U|land OdUiuri >:./'■ c f0 r. .s Tie 1^* #^\%vv f>*iv '' ' i':ii h 111 ^ ;i I'- ^' <':\ .i- (•'■ ;- - v\ i-.rii in,- 11^ liccruiting Agents Wfinted'"Also. .|:J! , . Many times reduced. WAR-TIME POSTER. Sept. '61. Regiment Outlined. 19 in the array, viz., 2d Lieut. Thos. F. Edmands, came home in command of the regiment. Every name before his had been erased through resignation, expiration of service, or death. "While Scriptural truth was verified in that the last had become first, there was also a suggestion of a later theory as to the survival of the fittest, with no reflection whatever on ^ose who had gone before him. Other thoughts also were possible, viz. : that these officers, with the exception of five, were all under thirty years of age, so many of them in their teens or early twenties, that they came near reaching the minimum average of such organizations. Again, so well acquainted were they that the bickerings and dissensions too frequently characteristic of regiments in those days were practically unknown. They constituted a happy family, each one emulous of the other's good and, in a sense, each pre- ferring one another. Those classmates, "Bill" and "Joe," creations of Dr. Holmes's happy fancy, were not freer with each other's Christian names than were these young men, cherishing a common purpose, intent on advanc- ing their country's cause. However exacting and punctil- ious they might be when on duty, in their hours of relaxa- tion "Tom," "Prank," "Bob," "Will" and "Charlie" and other familiar appellations were far more commonly heard than the more stately terms to which their stations entitled them. When promotions came they invariably rose from the ranks of the Twenty-fourth, In only one or two instances did new men come to the regiment with commissions, and these were some time after the war ended. No dismissal, no court martial and no dishonorable act appear in the long record of these young Massachusetts men. Though they had no horoscope, the words of Private Miles O'Reilly, yet to be written, might fittingly apply: — . "Comrades known by faith the clearest, Tried when death was near and nearest. Bound we are by ties the dearest, Brothers evermore to be." 20 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. Though the officers, as indicated, were drawn almost entire- ly from Boston, the enlisted men represented the widest range possible. Perhaps no regiment, through the entire four years of the war, drew its membership from a wider territory than did the Twenty-fourth. Even a casual scrutiny of the rolls will show all of the counties and a very large part of the towns given as the residences of the men. From the start, the character of the officers gave the new organization a high standing in the minds of the eligible young men of the Com- monwealth and, at no time in the ensuing years, was it ever shown that their confidence was misplaced. In this year of grace, 1907, it is not unusual to hear officers of other regi- ments associated with the Twenty-fourth in its long service remark, "It was a fine sight when that regiment came out on parade or drill ; I never saw a nattier array of officers than those of the Twenty-fourth; they knew their business and every one was a gentleman." Recruiting stations were opened in various places, but a considerable part of the enlisting was done through young men to whom was held out the inducement of non-commis- sioned positions in the respective companies, though Lieut. Amory of Company F went down to Augusta, in the Pine Tree State, and actually enlisted a number of men from that former Massachusetts territory. Indeed, throughout the ros- ter, it is not unusual to find a name whose owner claimed Dirigo as his favorite motto. The seaboard gave up its sons in liberal numbers, and nothing in the sailing, rowing or fishing line ever lacked for help as the years advanced. Cape Cod was well represented, and jewelry-making Attleboro sent many ingenious sons, while the agricultural portions of Wor- cester and the western counties had an abiding interest in the fortunes of the regiment. In addition to the twenty-eight commissioned officers, there were nine other New England Guardsmen who accepted non-commissioned office in the Twenty-fourth, and nearly all afterwards attained commis- sions in the regiment or were discharged for promotion in Sept. '61. Recruiting and Readville. 21 other organizations. Some of these sergeants were especially useful in the recruiting way, and did much to hasten the filling of the ranks. Nor was all the good material exhausted thus, since potential officers never wore a strap or chevron. As private soldiers they did their duty, fought, suffered and, in many cases, gave their lives, quite unknown to the public. Men were here who had left the pupil's desk for the varia- tion of war, and Surgeon Green delights in telling of his tour of duty, through the hospital, revealing one of his boys with a Greek Testament in his hand and on the Doctor's expressing surprise, the lad said, " Why, I was in the Boston Latin School when I enlisted." Though the young man did not turn out to be a Dick Steel, yet he did make a good soldier and was one of many such who gave up their public school for that of the army. RECRUITING AND READVILLE. "Within a few days recruits began to arrive. They were sent first to the armory of the Fourth Battalion in the Boyls- ton Market building, then standing on the corner of Boylston and Washington Streets, and which was torn down in 1888. It had been a rendezvous for troops from the 16th of April preceding, when militia, responding to the very first call, were assembled here after the filling of Faneuil Hall. Here they were examined by the surgeon, and if passed as suitable men for the service, they were sent across the street to a bathing establishment, where they had a warm bath and were given a uniform and a complete suit of new underclothing. Their hair was cropped short, and they returned to the armory already beginning to look somethin,g like soldiers. The old adage about everything being fair in war applies even to enlistments, for many a man, in his anxiety to get in, told untruths as to his age, those too young evening up with the old men who lied their ages down, and men with defective eyes found means of deceiving the examining- officer. A cer- 22 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. tain private tells the story of his rejection, several months before, When he essayed the First Regiment, being rejected on- account of his eyes. However, vi^hen the Twenty-fourth was forming he met Capt. J. T. Prince, by whom he was intro- duced to Surgeon Green. When it came to the eye-test. Hospital Steward McGreggor asked him to read a sign across the way from Boylston Hall, which he did readily, for as he said, "I knew all the signs in that part of the city by heart." Kiiw liiiaMs mmB mmmm. • HASSASOIT, READVILLEJIASS. ^o^ti^eeM, and ^eU m/ waa owov!^ tyfam^ acz^ice/ o/ Me/ ^CMU (^Me^ cTi/ ' ''-•'^^^■JHfl^^HB .^i* ^ ■ if^ B&L.^'ll!!..i ■""^l^^'j^^M!!! ^^ ^H^^ ^^^g^ggp^*\gy»^^^[|pMpr^'" vfflip%jfc&r^^ ■■"■- '■'-■ - ■^-'- -'•'■ ''I Com. Sergt. Wheeler. Sergt. Maj.Loring. NON-COMMISSIONED STAFF. Q. M. Sergt. Thompson. their breakfast was bread, cold meat and coffee, without milk ; dinner practically the same except that the meat is warm; supper brings tea instead of coffee with other items as before. Mothers' boys, however, miss the cakes and goodies which 38 T'W'ENTY-FOURTH MASSACHUSETTS REGIMENT. formerly they had enjoyed. The colored people of the vicini- ty try to turn an honest penny by bringing in "snacks," which include pies, cakes, apples, oysters, roasted chickens at twenty-five cents each, and find ready market as long as there is money in sight. The sutler arrived December 20 with an array of wares calculated to wheedle the last cent from the soldier's pocket, and he too often succeeded. The writer, however, was not the only one who strongly resolved that he would not get much of his, the private 's money. Notwithstanding all the work incident to the laying out of the camp, drill was had every day, lots of it.. The scheme for the day was as follows : roll-call, 6 a.m. ; breakfast, 6.30 ; drill, 9 o'clock, and 10; dinner, 12 ; drill, 2 p.m. ; parade, 5.30 ; supper, 6; evening roll-call, 9 o'clock; taps, 9.15, with all lights out. Considering its origin and work heretofore, much is expected of the regiment and in no respect has the organization failed thus far. Naturally, the officers are jealous of the reputation of the Twenty-fourth and listen anxiously for any criticism which may reflect upon them, but they hear only the best of reports about it. As early as the 18th of the month, the regi- mental band, under the direction of Colonel Stevenson and certain of his staff officers, went down to the city to give a serenade to Governor Hicks, who had rendered conspicuous aid to the Union cause. Owing to pleasant weather and care, in every respect, the men enjoy a high degree of health. The first death was that of John Irwin, of Company I, who died December 18, after a short illness from congestion of the lungs. With the usual escort his body was taken to the sta- tion and, after a volley over the coffin, it was sent home to Boston, where it was received with military honors. Christ- mas eve, a colored servant of one of the officers was accident- ally shot in Annapolis with no blame, save that of careless- ness, attaching to any one. Christmas in camp was a favorite theme with the corre- spondent and artist in the days of war. In the Twenty-fourth, Jan. '62. Annapolis and Camp Foster. 39 there were camp duties as usual, and maoiy of the boys had boxes from home whose contents they made go as far as pos- sible among the numerous occupants of the tent. It had to be a pretty large receptacle to make much of an impression on the more than twenty comrades who sometimes crowded the shelter. Christmas puddings, mince pies, pickles, wine- sauce, and other tid-bits are recorded, but the general ver- dict was that camp was not home by any means. The field and staflf officers, however, made the day conspicuous in their annals by giving a dinner to a large number of distinguished guests, viz. : General Ambrose E. Bumside, General Jgsse L. Eeno, commanding the Second Brigade; Colonel Scott and Sweitzer of McClellan's staff; Colonel Lee of the Twenty- seventh Massachusetts; Colonel Kurtz of the Twenty-third and Capt. Messenger of General Foster's Staff. General Foster himself was invited, but his necessary presence in Baltimore prevented his acceptance. The bill of fare would have satis- fied the veriest epicure, and there is little wonder that General Bumside proclaimed it the best dinner he ever ate in camp. 1862. The year 1862 opens with the regiment's taking its part in a brigade drill under the command of General Foster, who put the men through a thorough course, as some of the par- ticipants said, and at the same time many were impressed with the sight of five thousand men acting under one guiding mind and all acquiring the precision that would serve them weU in coming days. One careful writer puts down the menu for New Year's and says he had four hard- tacks, a slice of cold meat and cofEee for breakfast ; soft bread and cold fresh beef for dinner; boiled rice, molasses, soft bread and tea for supper; this food with a share from a friend's home- box containing cake, mince pie and pudding, enabled the young man to get through the day comfortably. Friends also send books and papers and the chaplain lends many to 40 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Eegiment. those who wish. Target practice is popular and some of the soldiers for the first time in their lives fire a gun. The mark is discreetly set up at the foot of a hill, yet so wild is some of the shooting that the officer in charge remarks that he hopes no one lives on the other side of the hiU. It is recorded that in this practice one man, accidentally or otherwise, shot a pig and that he and comrades enjoyed roast pork as a consequence. With such opportunities, the exercise should have been popu- lar. Of the stay in Annapolis, some recall the most impor- tant event, as the drumming out of camp of a woman who had brougljt in twenty-five cans of whiskey; quite likely the be- holders had varying emotions. In startling contrast with the decorum and quiet of the Massachusetts regiments is the riot in a neighboring body from the Empire State, where the inen in three companies rebelled, seized, gagged and placed in the guard house their officers, who were rescued by the men from another regiment who came to their help, all because the men had not been paid, a fault for which the officers were in no way responsible. January 3d brought pay-day and many of the men sent the major part of their receipts home to those who needed it there. One man, who got only $11.26, sent ten doUars of the amount to his wife and child, and in the accompam-ing letter remarks that many of the men are fooling away money which should go home to their families. Indeed, there is the record of several sneaking over the lines and securing a quan- tity of liquors, by means of which they and some others fetched up in the guard-house, as a rule the terminal of those who had much to do with strong drink. :\Ien get passes to the city, and with money burning in their pockets do their best to clean out the stores, and several thousand men m an old, sedate town like Annapolis came pretty near succeeding' though some of the soldiers complained at the prevalence of the Provost Marshal and the frequency with which they were obliged to show their passes. Some of the cheaper luxuries which the black people bring to the camp, our Bay State bovs Jan. '62. Annapolis and Camp Foster. 41 are learning to like, and they sing the praises of hoeeake, the size of pies, which seems to fit their stomachs admirably. It was in Camp Foster that a certain lad had his first experience at standing guard, and he remembers the day yet. Having his instructions, as he thought, he paced his beat most regularly. Ere long two officers approached and passed him and, as he had been told to allow officers to pass, he made no objection. The officers came back and still no recognition on the part of the sentinel. Then both of the officers came up to him and asked what his instructions were. Being told as above, he was asked if nothing was said about saluting officers . ' ' Xot a word, ' ' was the reply. Colonel T. G. Steven- son, for he was the leading one, his brother, the ilajor, the other, took the private's weapon and gave him his first lesson in the art of military decorum, a lesson whose refrain is still ringing in the ears of the soldier. By the 5th of the month everybody is astir over the pros- pect of immediate departure. While all know that they are a part of Burnside's Expedition, of its ultimate destination not even officers high in rank have the slightest inkling, and some of them in their home letters made prophe- cies which proved to be very far wide of the mark. Never was Pope's aphorism as to Heaven's hiding from all crea- tures, the book of Fate, better exemplified than in this case. There was a vast array of vessels, and a large army of men, who were to fill those same crafts, which are to sail away some day, somewhere, but who can teU where they are to land these same warriors? It was on the 6th, while having a battalion driU, and men were firing blank cartridges, that the orders came to pack up and march to the city in quick time. This was at 2 p.m., and at 5 o 'clock, tents had been struck, baggage packed and the regiment was in Annapolis. In striking tents, etc., everything was done at the tap of the drum, and the men left the ruins of cook and store houses and stables, which were burned. Seven of the companies went on board the Admiral, now the Guide, at once, leaving the other three 42 TWENTY-FOUETH MASSACHUSETTS EeGIMENT. companies, A, C and F, in the dock-yard waiting. There was snow on the ground, the air was icy and the men were suffering from the cold. Lieutenant Colonel Osbom, who had this detachment in charge, seized a load of wood, which he found near, and had fires built for the comfort and health of his men. Here all had to wait till 10.30 p.m., when a barge was secured to take the soldiers aboard the Vidette, which was found after a long, cold search in the darkness, and where all at last were placed at midnight, and glad they were for the shelter afforded. The men are quartered in better shape than the officers, who are not so weU off as those who took the Guide. For the Twenty-fourth Regiment, it may be safe to call the beginning of the Bumside Expedi- tion this 6th day of January, when the ships were boarded. THE BUENSIDE EXPEDITION. Even on shipboard, officers are still querying as to where they are to go, and still are guessing wildly. As the regiment is divided, the Guide and Vidette will have to be considered separately. It is one thing to embark and quite another af- fair to start. The Guide had more companies than in the trip from New York, besides the band with Colonel Steven- son and Staff. During the next two days the time is given to storing the baggage and waiting for other organizations. At last on the 9th, at 8 a.m. the anchor was hoisted and, at a given signal, in three squadrons, the vessels started down the Chesapeake, a magnificent sight. The weather is heavy and, on account of the fog, the vessel came to anchor at 11 o'clock that night. ■ The next day, or the 10th, the steamer proceeded to Fortress Monroe, where the vessels in waiting accorded the new comers a hearty welcome, and at night General Bum- side came aboard. The Vidette had towed, all the way down, a canal boat (by courtesy, a "gunboat"), whose captain on arriving at the Fortress declared his unwillingness to go any further. He was put in irons and the crew, consisting of Jan. '62. Buenside Expedition. 43 four men, was taken off. She was laden with hay and grain, and, if taken to her destination at all, must be towed, having no means of propulsion of her own. January 6th the commanding officers on board transports received orders to the effect that a guard should be placed over the water, and that it should be used for cooking and drinking only, every one being expected to use salt water for washing purposes. A guard also must be placed over the galley to enforce orders and to see that the companies take their proper turn in cooking. ' ' A guard, under the orders of the captain of the vessel, shall be placed over the magazine. ' ' No lights are to be allowed between decks except by special order of the commanding officer and the captain of the ves- sel, and there shall be a general police guard under a commis- sioned officer for the preservation of order and discipline aboard. Commanding officers also received sealed orders, not to be opened till after leaving Old Point Comfort. The Vidette was slow in loading, and the Lieutenant-colonel of the Twenty-fourth had many a weary hour in his efforts to get everything shipshape. According to orders, issued on the 8th, the Vidette was to close the line of departing vessels in the brigade. Lieutenant Colonel Osbom comments that patience is as necessary a virtue in a soldier as bravery, and it is much oftener tried. "It is no small job to embark 16,000 men, and we have met no more obstacles than I ex- pected. We are now lying in Annapolis Harbor, right abreast the Naval Academy, and are surrounded by steamers and sailing vessels belonging to the expedition." In gen- eral men and officers of whatever rank are not averse to leav- ing the capital of Maryland, which they proclaim a tumble- down old place, very aristocratic in its way, having no energy, enterprise nor signs of life save those imparted by the sol- diers. "One of the shop-keepers told me that the army had made Annapolis, and my only difficulty in believing him arose from my wondering in what a condition of wretched- 44 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. ness it must have been before 'it was made.' " * * "Slavery has brought its curse here and the beautiful land is blighted by its presence." The Vidette reached the fortress at 1 a.m. of the 11th, and took her place in the line of waiters for the final departure. Colonels Stevenson and Osborn improved the opportunity to inspect the grim old fortification, and then the Lieutenant Colonel with Major Stevenson and Assistant Surgeon Curtis visited the frigate Minnesota, and remained to dine. At 11 p.m., under sealed orders, the fleet proceeds to sea, on the 11th day of January, still wondering what chapter of history is to be written by the men thus borne away from their homes. After the leaving of the pilot, it is proper to open and read the orders, till now unknown. The officers then learned what all the world has known for the last nearly forty-five years, that the destination is Hatteras Inlet, that on arrival a pilot is to be summoned and, on entering, the vessel is to be anchored as far from the channel as possible. The versa- tile character of the Union soldiers appeared in the fact that many of those who manned the vessels were enlisted men of the Twenty-fourth Regiment. It was a motley array of sea- going craft that sailed out between the capes on that Jan- uary night, perhaps till then the most considerable armada that America had ever seen. There were more than one hun- dred vessels of all descriptions, inchiding steam and sailing crafts, canal boats, ferry boats, coasting schooners and some passenger steamers. Few of them were in seaworthy con- dition, yet they were starting out to encouiiter the storms of Hatteras, the most trying portion of the American coast. Then, too, it was that time of the year when the worst storms might be expected, and they came, ilany columns have been written descriptive of those trying hours between Capes Henry and Hatteras, but no description was ever able to do justice to the tribulation through which the cooped-up sol- diers on board those creaking vessels had to pass. How the steamers were obliged to part from the crafts in tow, how Jan. '62. Buknside Expedition. 45 some of the vessels put out to sea for safety, and how others tried to ride out the storms while at anchor, — all this has been told many a time; and if officers and men had concluded that Neptune himself had made a hard and fast contract with the Confederacy to do all in his power to render useless the efforts of General Burnside and' his followers, it would seem that there was reason in their thoughts. Vessels were de- stroyed, cargoes lost, collisions crippled many ships, and the landing did not prove to be the simple affair thaj many had pictured it. Among the many incidents of the trip men of Company B recall with pride the fact that when it was proposed to cut adrift the oats-laden tow of the Guide and the men on board, hand over hand, along the hawser, had reached the deck of the transport, they volunteered to go back and try to keep her in line during the night. This they did, and it is said that Burnside gave them $25 apiece for their deed: they were Privates Bly, Oldham and Perry. From the 13th to the 17th of January there was little doing save trying to find room for anchorage, and to supply the men with the necessaries of life. As one writer puts it, "there are three times as many vessels in this harbor as ever ought to be," but the difficulty in getting heavy draft ships over the "Swash" delayed the massing in Pamlico Sound. General Burnside was as nearly ubiquitous as any one at sea could be. On the little gunboat, the Picket, the smallest in the fleet, he was off and away constantly doing his best to bring order out of chaos. It was the sincere solicitude of the Commander, as manifested in a thousand ways to help all in distress, that made "Burnside" a name to conjure with among all those who participated in this expedition. In three days, the ships of the navy were safely over the Swash, but much more time was required to bring all of the trans- ports into the waters of Pamlico. By the time that the storm finally broke, or the 25th of January, nearly all the vessels 46 TWENTY-FOUETH MASSACHUSETTS EeGIMENT. that had out-ridden the tempest were over the bar and ready for the real business before them. Meanwhile life on the Guide might be taken as a sample of what was passing on other transports, except that men of the Twenty-fourth were possibly a little better off than those on some other boats. General Bumside had chosen this as his flag-ship, and his wife was here, as was the General himself, when not cruising around the waters on his swift little "Pick- et." The Drospect ashore is not attractive, only vast areas of desert sand-wastes with the two small forts, Hatteras and Clarke, captured by General Butler and men in the preceding August. Guard-duty is kept up and, as far as possible, the formalities of camp life are maintained. Guard-mount is at 9 a.m. There are three reliefs, each of which has two hours on and four off. Long tarrying on shipboard does not make the men like it any better, and they are anxious to set foot on the earth even if it be shifting sand. In spite of the apparent desolation there are people on the shore, and of them, a writer says, "Queer folks in this region! Several hundred are scattered along the bar, who get their living by fishing, gathering oysters, wrecking and piloting. Most of them were born here, never saw any other locality and all are happy. There are women here who never wore shoes. The people seldom see money, indeed they have no use for it." For the first time in their lives, the men are conscious of the paramount value of fresh water. They are not stinted on drinking water, but they have to steal it for washing if they get it at all. The water-guard is kept at his station and is faithful. After all, the liquid is a distilled product and is almost nauseating to many. The capacity of the machinery of the Guide is 3000 gallons daily and she has to supply other vessels as well. They are out of range of fresh meat, and boys who never ate fat salt pork at home have to eat it here or cease to be carnivors. Hardtack is palatable, tiiough soft bread is not refused if General Burnside's cook hands out a bit. Jan. '62. Burnside Expedition. 47 The fact that the Guide had to furnish water for other vessels rendered the ship itself in some respects an uncom- fortable place for those quartered there. The main tank for the reception of the distilled product was in the gentlemen's cabin, and the steam incident to the process so filled the room that it was impossible at times to see across the cabin. The ration for each man per day was one quart, but this quantity was increased occasionally, through the services of a boy whose bunk was near the tank and who, by skillfully using his dipper, could fill canteens which were held over the sides of the steamer, to be cooled off in the waters of the sea. Some of the men were detected in stealing sugar and coffee from the quartermaster's boat, which lay alongside the Guide, and, as a penalty, were sentenced to go without coffee for two weeks ; but again the boy with the dipper and the boiling water in the tank came in, enabling the delinquents to get their coffee without the services of the cook. All readers may not know that schooners sent down from Fortress Monroe laden with fresh water had been kept back by the storm. The Vidette undertook the trip across the Swash, Sunday, the 19th, and expected to go over easy, since she drew half a foot less water than the stipulated eight feet, having thrown overboard a large part of her coal, but she was soon caught like the rest and lay there all day. In the evening, with a high tide, she got off and was nearly over when she grounded again. In the morning another trial was made and she finally pulled through, anchoring in Pamlico Sound, Monday fore- noon. The Guide was a larger vessel and did not fare so well, though to lighten her she had thrown overboard all of her coal, drawn the water from her boilers, and her men had been sent on shore. She lay on the bar two days and did not reach her consort till the 26th. Had not the enemy been stupid or blind, they might have rendered their defenses at Roanoke during this delay quite impregnable. Though the wind was not tempered to the shorn Union lamb, it seemed to blow no good to the Confederate foe, for in due time it appeared the 48 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. enemy had in no way profited by the mishaps of the fleet off Hatteras and within. Following the divergent experiences of the two vessels, it should be stated that the passengers of the Guide landed, Jan. 21, and their- adventures were novel enough to merit a special story. Naturally when the men were off the ship they im- proved the chance to pretty thoroughly inspect the sand bar- rens and the forts which had formed the objective point of Butler in August preceding. They found the fortifications small affairs, in charge of a small detachment of regular sol- diers, but the shells upon the beach were more lovely than any the men had seen before. One admirer wished he might pick up a ton of them, but he realized how impracticable shell gathering was to a soldier with a knapsack. Tents were duly pitched, but these soldiers were doomed to dampness, for, in the night, they were awakened to find themselves lying in the water, which was constantly rising, the hay and grass they had collected as beds affording them no protection. Again they were compelled to move after erecting their tents. The wind was blowing a gale, and getting tents up was no trifling matter. The wind forced the water stiU higher, so that at last, with water to their knees, the men marched into Fort Clarke in a half-dro^^Tied condition, and found refuge in an old shanty there. It was in these troublous days that, notwithstanding strict rules concerning foraging, certain hungry men, under the lead of their Orderly Sergeant, went out after food and suc- ceeded in finding some starveling sheep which they killed and brought in. Others captured some geese. When Colonel Stevenson heard of the event, he hastened over to the scene and reproached the offenders for their violation of orders, but his gravity was quite upset and his censure rendered futile by one of the men saying, "Colonel Stevenson, it was not wrong for us to kill this animal. " " How is that ? " re- plied the officer. "Why," answers the wag, "he was so poor we had to kill him to save his life. ' ' On the 27th there was Jan. '62. Bubnside Expedition. 49 an inspection of the men ashore and three of the companies, under Captain Richardson, were drilled as a battalion. The subsidence of the water had left in a hollow of the sand twenty fish, which the men readily caught, and thus had a new kind of food. On Sunday, the 25th, there was a movement toward the first landing-place. On the 28th the band went up to escort the remoter companies down to a union with the' other men of the Guide, some of whom had already gone on board, and this day, by means of the Pilot Boy, the Guide received again her complement of passengers. The remaining days of January were spent on shipboard with such drills, inspections and other routine as the nature of the case Ad- mitted. The weather having moderated, and supplies from Fortress Monroe having begun to appear, life was more endurable. During that week on the barrens of Hatteras one of the most serious discomforts arose from the presence of sand in whatever the men had to eat or drink. Everybody expects to eat his peck of dirt before he dies, but no one thinks to get it all in one short sennight, but all went on board the Guide with the thought that they ought to be exempt from any more suffering in this direction. The cooks, when they made coffee for the companies, would find two or three inches of sand in the bottom of their kettles, blown there while the water was boiling. Baked beans could not be chewed, they were swal- lowed as they entered the mouth, too gritty for chewing. Even the much prized mutton, slain "to save its life," proved to be only another method of inflicting sand on the stomachs of the consumers. No one of that battalion ever thought himself lacking in "sand" after that week of Hatteras experience. Possibly no better picture, in brief, of the trip can be had than that given by one of the officers in a letter to his home : "Sunday, the 12th, was a pleasant day and we amused our- selves by watching the barren shores of North Carolina, and striving to discover some signs of life, but without success. Nothing but a view of a waste of sand, relieved occasionally 50 TWENTY-FOUBTH MASSACHUSETTS REGIMENT. by a background of pine barrens, with now and then a tumble- down, deserted house or cattle-shed, rewarded our efforts. Towards night, the wind became more fresh and the sea grew rougher. The captain did not dare to pass Cape Hatteras, which is always a dangerous point in the night, so he came C 'IL i^ ^ NORTH CAROLINA'S THEATRE OF WAR. Jan. '62. Burnside Expedition. 51 to anchor. At daylight, we got under way again. In cross- ing Diamond Shoal, which lies off Hatteras Inlet, the wind blew a gale and the sea was so rough that I found my berth was my only refuge from sea-sickness. At first we thought it blew so hard we would not run into the inlet, but by follow- ing a tug that was placed there to pilot us, we (Vidette) reached in and anchored off the fort at one o'clock. ' This was Monday, the 15th. Other vessels arrived in rapid suc- cession till the little harbor was thoroughly choked up. That would have done no harm had there been no wind and no tide, but the wind was a gale and the tide a mill-sluice. Accord- ingly when the tide turned and began to run in with the same velocity, all the vessels swung round with it and collided in all directions. We were near the steamer New York, nearly twice our size, which at every turn of the tide threshed against us as if to beat us to pieces, and succeeded in twisting its chain cable so completely around ours that it baffled all our efforts to clear them for two days, until the weather moderated. At one time, when the New York was beating us on one side, a gunboat of about our own size came into us on the other and when at last she managed to haul away, another promptly took her place until we believed that we were destined to be crushed flat before they were done with us. * * * * "In the meantime, our water began to run low, and I was obliged to put everybody on short allowance, which produced much discomfort and some grumbling among the men; quite natural this when it is remembered that the food of the same consisted chiefly of salt beef, salt pork, hard bread, potatoes, rice and hominy, all calculated to excite thirst. However, the securing of distilled water from the Guide and the getting of some fresh beef from a newly arrived steamer did much toward restoring good humor. The quarters for the officers are ridiculously cramped, so small are they that at the onset no one thought it possible to get along in them, but under the prompting of necessity they have been found passable and even comfortable. Before leaving the fortress, a goodly 52 Twenty-fourth ]\Iassachusetts Regiment. stock of provisions was laid in by the officers, consisting of bread, butter, chickens, eggs, pickles, tea, etc., but the hard weather ran them down to short commons with the men. At one time butter gave out, and they were near despair tiU the timely arrival of a sutler's boat saved them from complete collapse. Subsequent months taught them how many seem- ing necessities could be dispensed with easily. * * We have been obliged to wash in salt water all the time, except when we could get from the engineer a little fresh, condensed in the cocks of his boiler, and, as we had no salt-water soap, we might as well have used sand. I should be sorry to pre- sent myself with the hands I am carrying about with me all the time. Only severe thirst forces us to drink the distilled water. Chess and whist serve to while alway many otherwiss tedious hours." On the 29th General Foster issued a general order con- taining minute directions as to the equipment and care of the row-boats with reference to landing; as to the armament and attitudes of the men themselves; as to the signals and their import and, finally, as to the prompt obedience every man was to render. The men were to carry three days' cooked rations and their canteens were to be filled with fresh water. On the morning of February 1, Companies A, C and F on board the Vidette reported present ten commissioned officers with 228 non-commissioned officers and men. One officer and fifty-four men were absent. Of those reported present and ready for duty, twenty-four were serving under Colonel Howard of the Marine Artillery for the manning of his boat and Mountain howitzers. February 3d come orders from General Burnside to the effect that on landing, care must be taken that loyal citizens are not annoyed, that their property shall be protected, that wounded soldiers of the enemy and prisoners shall receive every care and attention, and that all the laws and usages of civilized warfare shall be strictly observed. The fleet is lying at anchor about thirty miles from Roanoke Island, the object Jan. '62. Burnside Expedition. 53 of their first attack, and all are anxiously expecting the signal for an advance. Only a few days before a schooner, loaded with wood and manned by seven men, came down from Wash- ington, N. C, and gave herself up to one of the gunboats. They report arduous efforts on the part of the people of the mainland to fill their military organization. One of the men had been in the army under Burnside when he was a lieu- tenant of artillery. The General recognized him and ap- peared to believe his story. On the 3d, a sailboat was dis- covered, evidently trying to reconnoitre the fleet. A gunboat started for the stranger, which at once made off in all haste, but was finally captured. February 4th comes General Order No. 4 from General Poster, with directions as to the time of starting of the fleet, viz., 8 a.m. of the 5th, and the vessels of the First Brigade are to move in line, the Guide to be No. 4, and the Vidette seventh and last, a somewhat absurd location for a vidette. Extended directions are given as to the order of vessels after reaching Croatan Sound, the observance of signals, the an- chorage of vessels and the landing of the men, the formation after reaching land and injunctions against throwing away any part of arms or equipments. • ROANOKE. In the earlier days of the war, when Union victories were none too numerous, the name of this North Carolina island was a pleasant sound to Northern ears. It had associations with early American history, for every school boy knows that on this island, in 1387 was born Virginia Dare, the first child of English parentage born in America, but in these troublous days of February, '62, Yankee boys were intent not so much on studying history as in making it, and the results of their two days' efforts became choice reading to their friends at home. They had waited long, and with more or less patience, for the command which should send them against this for- tified portion of the Confederacy. Its importance to the 54 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. enemy, and thereby its value to the Union cause, is well ex- pressed in the following extract from John S. "Wise's "End of an Era:" The island commanded the passage by water through Hatteras Inlet and Pamlico Sound to Albemarle and Curri- tuck sounds. It was a most important strategic point, for a force of Union troops, passing it, had at their mercy several towns upon the North Carolina coast, could cut off the sup- plies and railroad and canal communications of Norfolk, and were in position to attack that city in rear. The writer proceeds to state that his father, Henry A. Wise, former Governor of Virginia, had been assigned to the com- mand and defense of the island. The commander of the department, embracing the island, was Benj. Huger, a West Pointer of many years before (classmate, 1825, of Maj. Robert Anderson), one whom Wise characterizes as a sort of barnacle on the 'Confederacy, being far more a hindrance than a help in the progress of events. The Ex-governor and General, Wise, had done his best to render the island strong against the im- pending attack, but all his efforts were unavailing in over- coming the indifference of the Richmond authorities, who evidently took their cue from the ancient Huger. Through his arduous labors and exposures incident to his position. General Wise was, at the time of the attack, confined to his bed at Nag's Head, suffering from a severe attack of pneu- monia. No better description of the island itself can be found than that also given by John S. Wise : — Roanoke Island is shaped something like an hour-glass. Its northernmost half is higher ground than its southernmost, and the waters .and wet marshes almost intersect it at its middle part. The engineers who planned its defenses placed all its fortifications upon the upper half, bearing upon the channel of Croatan Sound to the westward. Not a work was erected to prevent a debarkation upon its lower portion. An attacking force, landing there, was absolutely saie from the water batteries, both while landing and afterwards. At the narrow neck of land which connected the upper and lower Feb. '62. Roanoke. 55 half of the island was a fortification, not one hundred feet in length and only four and a half feet high, mounting three field pieces. This captured, every other artillery defense of the island was at the mercy of the enemy, who by that ma- noeiivre were in their rear — so emphatically in their rear that the vessels attacking the water batteries could not fire after the Union forces assaulted the redoubt, for their shot would have fallen into the ranks of their own troops. * * The command of the troops devolved upon Colonel A. M. Shaw* of the Eighth North Carolina, although my father continued to give general directions from his sick-bed. Such was the object of attack and such were the interests at stake in the movement now reaching a culminating moment. Many times has the story of Roanoke been told by officer and man. No two men saw the battle and its incidents in just the same manner. To each description there should be added the garnishing of the individual, but naturally an officer high in command, writing for his own men, would be likely to set the event forth in proper light. This appears in the recital of Lieutenant-colonel Osborn in a home letter written soon after the stirring days themselves : "On Wednesday, February 5, we sailed at 9 a.m. and pro- ceeded slowly northward, the fleet in regular order, the first brigade leading the way. Just before sunset we anchored. At that time Roanoke Island could be dimly discerned on the horizon, about ten miles distant. The next morning we got under way again and moved up to within a few miles of Croatan Sound, which lies between the island and the main- land, and anchored again. Here General Foster came with orders for me to leave one company on board the Vidette and to go with the other two on board the Guide to join the rest of the regiment ( Company C was left) . After that was done the Vidette went on ahead two or three miles with the gunboats. In this position we lay all night. Friday morning, the 7th, the gunboats went into Croatan Sound and engaged a bat- tery called Pork Point Battery, or Fort Bartow. At the same *Colonel Shaw was killed February Ist, '64, at Bachelder's Creek, N. C. 56 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. time we received orders to lead off the rest of the fleet, fol- lowing the gunboats. We accordingly started, but as we had a schooner and a large raft in tow, we could not manage the vessel and soon got abound. All efforts to get her off being unavailing, we had the mortification of seeing the entire fleet pass us and go into the sound and anchor at a safe distance from the battery. We lay in that place all day watching the bombardment through our glasses with the utmost anxiety, but? we were so far off that we could only see the flash of the guns and the explosion of the shells, without being able to judge of the damage inflicted on either side." Wd,r was a new game to these northern boys, and when, on one of the vessels, they saw an old man-of-war's man, scatter- ing sawdust plentifully about the deck during the bombard- ment, anon adding a portion of tobacco-laden saliva to the ocean, they made bold to ask him what he was throwing that stuff around for. With a contemptuous glance at the ques- tioners and an extra roll to his quid, he grunted out, ' ' Some 'er you fellers '11 be gettin' yer bloomin' heads knocked off an' Feb. '62. Roanoke. 57 we don't wanter be slippin' 'round in the blood." His grewsome reply satisfied even Yankee curiosity. Again, the Lieutenant-colonel: "In the afternoon our impatience became unbearable, for we could see the troops landing in boats covered by the fire of our gunboats. A tug- boat came down to us just then, and the Colonel sent me up to the fleet to obtain means of transportation for our regiment to the shore. Lieutenant John Anderson, adjutant of the Twenty-fourth, though a member of General Foster's staff, accompanied me to aid my efforts. This brought me much nearer the bombardment and would have given me an excel- lent view of it, but unfortunately it had grown dark and both sides ceased firing. We procured two boats to go down in the morning, and Anderson and I slept on board of one of them. Early in the morning of the 8th, we started, went to the Guide, put seven companies on board one of the boats with the Colonel, while I took the remaining two on the other. The Colonel's boat being of light draft, proceeded up through the inlet and directly to the shore. My boat could approach no nearer than two miles to the shore, but anchored and waited for the other to take us in. "The regiment, as I will call the Colonel's portion, was met at the landing by an aide and ordered to advance immediately. They marched on, hearing volleys of musketry and cheering before them as they advanced, but before they arrived at the battle-ground, they were ordered to halt and remain in reserve. Immediately they were ordered to advance again, and soon heard the cheers of our men, and came in sight of a battery across the road which had just been taken. They passed through this and halted some distance beyond. It was then supposed that there were more batteries beyond, and General Foster ordered the Twenty-fourth, as the men were fresh, to move forward and take those batteries. They ad- vanced some three miles through a thickly wooded country, expecting every moment to meet the enemy, especially as -there were half a dozen places where they might have made 58 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. a decided stand. But the foe was thoroughly frightened and completely demoralized and ran for their lives, throwing away their arms, equipment and clothing as they went. At last the regiment began to receive prisoners, who ciame in and gave themselves up, saying that their regiments were entirely scattered. Hearing that many were escaping from the island in boats, across Roanoke Sound, the Colonel sent two com- panies down to different parts of the beach to head them off. ' ' They found a great many boats at some distance from the shore, rowing for dear life, and brought them back by firing . a few rifle shots, and secured 150 prisoners. While they were away a flag of truce met our advancing column, asking for a suspension of hostilities for the night. General Foster replied that he would listen to no terms but an unconditional sur- render, and a speedy one, and called for me to go to the rebel camp and receive the answer. As I was not there, Major R. H. Stevenson was sent in my place. He was absent a long time, and General Foster at last said to Colonel Steven- son, 'He is gone too long; move your column forward.' When the Major i:eturned announcing the surrender, Colonel Stevenson marched the remaining companies into the rebel camp and took possession of it, with about two thousand prisoners, their arms and ammimition. Although our regi- ment was not under fire, it is entitled to no less credit, for it marched forward at least two miles in advance of the rest of the army, expecting at every turn of the road to come upon the rebels in full force, and behind batteries which General Foster had been told they had built, and though no such bat- teries existed, it does not Jessen the merit of our men in going to the intended attack. "Had the rebels chosen to dispute our passage up the isl- and, they would have been conquered ultimately, it is true, but with a proper display of courage and military skill, they would have caused us a fearful loss and made us pay dearly for our victory, crippling us completely for future action, till we could receive reinforcements from the North. But to Feb. '62. Roanoke. 59 return to my own movements! The same boat which took the Colonel and his part of the regiment to the shore landed me and mine afterwards. The landing place was very swampy and we were obliged to march about two hundred" yards, through mud and water, at times up to the knees before get- ting to dry ground. Just then General Burnside came along and told me to take my companies back to the landing and get boxes of ammunition to be carried to the head of the column, then about two miles off. This was a grievous disappointment to tne, for I could hear volleys of musketry and cheers, and I thought that the Twenty-fourth was, or soop would be en- gaged, and I could not bear the idea that the regiment should get into action in my absence. We were delayed two hours before rebeginning the march and, in the meantime, the troops had taken the battery and gone forward. We marched slow- ly, as the boxes were very heavy, and we were a long time in getting to the battery, which was found filled with our troops and the killed and wounded of the enemy. We were told here that our regiment had pressed forward to take more batteries which were beyond, and we followed on, hearing of them con- stantly from stragglers on the road and hoping to overtake them at every turn. But they were marching rapidly, and our progress, was necessarily slow, so that we never caught them." Ammunition carrying on that day at Roanoke will never flee the memory of those who had a part in it. One veteran of E, after all these days, says the energy absorbed in his nine miles' carry he still laments. "Just think of a box with 1000 rounds, 100 pounds for two of us to tote, suspended by our gun straps and from the guns themselves, one bearer walking before the other, we trudged along, the load growing heavier every step. Then, too, we let ^o by us a negro boy and his cow which we might have used to bear the burden and have eaten her for supper had we not been appalled by the order read off in our hearing threatening those who even looked at live stock in the enemy's possession, but we got better of that after a while. When we reached the lines the rebels had sur- 60 Twenty-fourth ^Massachusetts Eegiment. rendered and the cartridges were not needed after all. Private Harrison Currier, Company F, never over strong, was so weakened by this day's work that he never recovered and, though 'he kept about for a time, when tie start for Newbern was made, he was put aboard the Vidette, not to leave her in life, for when the attack began on the fortifications, his spirit passed. Lieut.-colonel Osborn continues: "Towards night we met General Foster returning, who told us that the rebels had surrendered and that the island is ours. This was glorious news, and we welcomed it with rousing cheers. 'Sly party by this time had straggled badly, and when we reached the camp long after dark, I had only a few with me. Some came in afterwards, but most got quarters on the road, and came in the next day. We were fearfully tired from the march, hav- ing been on shipboard without exercise for the five preceding weeks, and we were not sustained by the excitement which animated those who expected to meet the enemy. Our men were found in possession of very good wooden barracks^ built by the Seeesh, and making themselves as comfortable as pos- sible. The Twenty-fourth was on guard, as the others had been up all the preceding night while ours were on shipboard. Besides the prisoners we had taken, the Second Brigade under General Reno had taken some shore batteries in the rear and a thousand men, making, on an accurate count, 2800 men, including 180 commissioned officers. This will be enough in an exchange to release all that the enemy have taken and hold of our men, including Colonel William R. Lee, and the other oflScers of the Twentieth Massachusetts captured at Ball's Bluff. Thus we have realized one of our dearest wishes that the Twenty-fourth might be instrumental in releasing our own friends. ' ' EEPOET OF COLONEL STEVENSON ON THE EOANOKE ENGAGEMENT. The steamer Admiral, Mith the Twenty-fourth Regiment on board, having got aground on the afternoon of February Feb. '62. Roanoke. 61 7, the regiment was not landed till the morning of the 8th. At 7 o'clock in the morning, the steamers Union and Eagle came alongside the Admiral and took the troops on board. Two companies, A, Captain Reeding, and E, Captain Hooper, were put on board the Eagle, under command of Lieutenant- colonel Osborn, and seven companies on the Union under com- mand of myself. Company C, Captain Pratt, had been de- tailed for service on the gunboat Vidette, where it remained during the -action. The Union landed the troops' on board at the same place the troops had been landed the night previous, and about two miles below where the action was taking place. After landing I was ordered by General Burnside'to advance as rapidly as possible. T accordingly marched the regiment forward, but unfortunately arrived after the battery had been carried. On arriving at the captured fort, I reported to General Foster, who ordered us to the front to follow up the enemy. After marching some distance, we met the Fifty-first New York and continued with them, till we were halted at the sand hills. From this point we were ordered forward alone to take what prisoners we could, as many were reported to be leaving in small boats. We were accompanied by Gen- eral Foster. After marching about three miles we were met by a flag of truce from the enemy, proposing a suspension of hostilities till the following morning. The reply was given by General Foster, "Unconditional surrender," and time enough given to return to their camp and send back an answer. Major Stevenson* of the Twenty-fourth was ordered to return *After Major Stevenson's interview with Colonel Shaw, the command- er, he started on his return, passing through a company of Confederate officers who were standing near Shaw's quarters. One of them, Major George Williamson of the 8th N. C, asked Major S. to take his horse to ride back. This he did and after the formal surrender, the Confederate was looked up and his steed returned, but the officer said he could not keep him, under the circumstances, and requested Major Stevenson to retain him, as he was a well-bred animal, one of his own rearing and he would like to feel that he was well treated. At first the Major was un- certain as to the propriety of his accepting such a gift and bore the mat- ter to General Burnside, who assured him that as the proffer was, in ef- fect, made before the surrender, there could be no fault in his accepting the gift. Thus acquired, the horse was used by the officer till the end of his service, and when the war was over, he thought it would be a proper thing for him to look up his Confederate friend and offer the animal back again. Through the Governor of North Carolina the address of the Major was secured and the proffer made. Very soon there came back a letter from the southern gentleman indicating his gratitude for the generous 62 TWENTY-FOUETH MASSACHUSETTS REGIMENT. with the' flag and to bring back the reply. After some time he returned with the reply that they surrendered. I was then ordered by General Foster to advance and take posses- sion of their camp. On the way, Company H, Captain Da- land, and Company B, Captain Austin, were detached and ordered to proceed along the shore and to stop any boats that might be leaving with rebels. The remaining five companies, numbering about 300 men, entered their camp, where Colonel Shaw, commanding, delivered up his sword to General Foster, who ordered me to take command. I then ordered the pris- oners to be mustered and their arms to be taken possession of. All the muskets were placed in the quartermaster's building and a guard put over them. While this was being done, Pri- vate Sanborn, Company K, was wounded in the arm by the accidental discharge of one of the muskets. The officers were allowed to retain theif sidearms by order of General Foster. The prisoners were then placed in quarters and a large guard placed over them. Company B returned from their scouting,/ having fired upon and brought to, a boat containing ten rebels, including three officers. Company H also returned, having captured two boats containing nine men and two officers. They also brought in about 150 prisoners captured in the woods and on the shore. The regiment was joined during the evening by the two companies under Lieutenant-colonel Osborn. They had been employed in bringing ammunition forward from the landing. (R. R. Vol. IX, p. 94.) Such were the impressions and observations of men who had the responsibility of command. It is equally interesting to turn to the words of those who followed or went as they were bidden. Happily some of the letters have also been pre- served, and from those of Private Edgar B. Lyon of Company K, the following passages are taken ; the first letter, addressed to father and mother, bears date February 12: — proposition, but saying that the war liad ruined him and he was too poor to maintain tlie horse, much as he valued him. He suggested that the steed be sold and the proceeds sent to him. In liis letter he expressed a wish that he might publish Major Stevenson's letter as a means to sooner bring about the peaceful sentiment which he desired between North and South. Our northern officer acted on the suggestion of the southern and remitted to him the sum resulting from the sale of the horse. Need the world wonder that the bloody chasm twixt North and South was at last healed when such acts of kindness were possible? Feb. '62. Roanoke. 63 I suppose you have heard of our great success, and are anxious to hear from me. All the men left their knapsacks aboard the boat and my paper is in my knapsack, or I should have -written you a long letter. I borrowed this paper and thought I would write you a few lines, that you might know that I am alive and well. I haven't time to write all the particulars, and it would take three or four sheets of paper. We have captured more prisoners with less fighting than any engagement yet. * * * "When we got within one half mile of the rebel camp we were met by a flag of truce asking for terms of surrender. Our Colonel Stevenson would hear to nothing but unconditional surrender or fight, and the rebel Colonel Shaw wisely consented to the former. There were from 2500 to 3000 prisoners, with all their arms and ammuni- tion, and two large camps with a large amount of provisions, and the whole island with all its forts, surrendered to the Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Volimteers without the loss of a single life from our regiment. Was not that a big thing? * * * The mail is expected to go aboard the steamer any minute, so I will close to make sure that this goes by the first mail. From your affectionate son. On Sunday, February 16th, Private Lyon, filially inclined, again writes to the folks at home, giving mor^ particulars: — I have just returned from services, and as I have no better business, I thought I could do no better than write to you the particulars of what the Burnside Expedition has done and why we did it, etc. * * * I have got my knapsack from the boat, so I have paper enough to write all about our adventures. We are pleasantly situated in one of the rebel camps; there are two near each other, the Twenty-third and the Twenty-fifth Massachusetts are in the same camp with us. There are about fifty buildings, in all, in this camp, including officers' quarters, barracks, stables, cookhouses, etc. The other camp is about as large with 800 prisoners in it. We have in our camp 3000 prisoners. There are about 200 fam- ilies on the island, but most of the men folks are taken pris- oners-; most of the prisoners are North Carolina men. There is one company of McCuUoch Rangers and another of Rich- mond Blues, that are well uniformed ; the others wear all sorts of clothes. It doesn't seem as though they were prisoners, for they are around amongst us and we among them, talking to- 64 TWENTY-FOUETH ]\IaSSACHUSETTS ReGIMENT. gether and entering into different kinds of amusements, such as leap-frog, boxing, wrestling, etc., just as though we were all one. They are very sociable, and say we are a different people from what 'they thought we were. Thy had an idea that we were a set of cut throats and robbers, and they ex- pected to be treated very badly, but they now say they are used better than they were before they were taken. They have the same fare that we do. The Virginia soldiers talk hard of the North and would go to fighting again if exchanged, but the North Carolina men are as contented as they could wish. They are now signing a parole, agreeing not to take up arms against the government unless exchanged. They are glad that they are going home and a number told me to-day they should not fight again, ilost of the rebs were armed to the teeth with dirks, revolvers, everything else that could injure a person. Many of them threw away these weapons or buried them, but we have found a large quantity of them. I found an old dirk, not good for much, but I keep it as a rebel trophy. The rebs had been encamped here about six months, and they had everything complete in the shape of cooking utensils, so we boys got a lot of spiders, pans, plates, pails, etc. I think I am getting fat. While the rebel provisions lasted, we lived on griddle-cakes and floiir bread, salt pork, boiled rice with plenty of sugar. Continuing the same letter on the 19th, Private Lyon says: "Yesterday about noon, our regiment was ordered to fall in to escort the rest of the prisoners down to the landing, to go aboard the boat. It was about four miles and very hard walking. We had to wait all the afternoon for the boat, so we did not get back to camp till about 6 o'clock. There was much shak- ing of hands and many goodbys and 'take care of yourself between us and the prisoners, just as if they were another Massachusetts regiment." Concerning the part taken by the Twenty-fourth in the battle the narrator says, "The place where we landed was all swampy, so we had to walk in mud and water up to our knees. We were a muddy set when we were brought ui) in line on dry land. Our Colonel hurried us as fast as he could, but we had to march through such swamps that we had to hold up our cartridge boxes to keep them dry. Feb. '62. Roanoke. 65 * * * * Then we traveled on without any rest till we were met by a rebel officer (Lieutenant-Colonel Poore, North Carolina) with a flag of truce within half a mile of the rebel camp. On the 20th, describing other regiments in the fray, Private Lyon continues: "Our regiment had a howitzer that we brought off the boat. The men had managed to draw it part way, when they came across a mule, which the rebels had left behind aU harnessed, s& our boys hitched it on. You would have laughed to see it. The mule was not much larger than the gun, and looked curious enough. The boys have picked up a lot of queer things on the march. I got an old flintlock musket, but I could not carry it, for I was about tuckerpd out. The most of our regiment have just been down swimming, but the water was too cold and muddy for me. * * * * We had a dress-parade on the 13th, and an order from General Burnside was read complimenting the officers and men for their coolness and bravery during the engage- ment. ' ' Before the result of the fight was knoT^Ti at Fort Huger, a schooner from Elizabeth City had brought over to the island and landed near Wier's Point 500 men belonging to the Sec- ond North Carolina Battalion, commanded byLieut.-Col. Whar- ton J. Green, and the Captain, learning of the Confederate defeat, departed without giving his late passengers a chance to go back with him. Having no other recourse, the newcomers surrendered also, and Company D of the Twenty- fourth was sent with them to get their baggage that had been left on the shore. Returning at 7 p.m., the boys thought it rather hard to have to go on guard after all their travels, but such is the variety of a soldier's life. It was amusing to hear the officers caU out to their respective commands, 'Fall in. Wise Legion, faU in, Ben McCuUoch Rangers; fall in, Johnson's Sharp- shooters, Hilton Guards, Richmond Blues,' etc. The long, heavy knives that many of them had carried bore the words stamped on the blade, 'Yankee Slayer.' 5 66 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Regiment. Our men went out foraging early and brought back pigs, chickens and many other things. Each one of the three regiments has to be on guard every third day. We suffer from the cold at night, as our blankets are on the boat. We wonder at the way the fort was built, for all the guns are mounted to repel attacks from an entirely different direction from that in which we came. The rebs say they had to furnish their own clothing, hence its lack of uniformity. They can't driU a little bit. . With our fine discipline, drill, uniform and band we made their eyes stick out a foot. In the main, they were very ignorant and had little idea of what the war was about. ' ' Another particularly observing man in G Company found time to go about the jiew location and, behind the officers' quarters, he saw a bottle standing on a window-sill. Having a mind to be sociable, he appropriated the flask and went among the Texas Rangers and, holding up the bottle, a^ed them what was in it. "Red eye" was the immediate and general response. "Take it, drink and pass around," is the comment of the generous Yankee. It was a good introduction and what he didn't know about those same Confeds. before he had finished the interview was not worth knowing. They said they carried their big cutlasses or knives for the purpose of carving up Tanks, "But you've got us, and we eain't," is the plaintive remark. ' ' We was goin ' to pay you 'uns back for the way you cut up the Black Hoss Cavalry at Bull Run, but when the Blue Coats come in on us we 'uns had to right smart git. ' ' One of the murderous weapons, carried by the rebels, was taken from the body of a dead foeman, fully six feet tall, belonging to the "Mississippi Wildcats," by A. J. Vining, a diminutive drummer boy of K, scarely more than five feet in stature. He still retains it, in his San Francisco home, as a priceless war-relic. For the sake of readers not members of the Twenty-fourth, it should be stated that the Massachusetts regiments, viz., the 23d, 24th, 25th and 27th, were all in the First Brigade, and with them was the Tenth Connecticut, Feb. '62. Roanoke. 67 with which organization the men of the Twenty-fourth were specially intimate; the Second and Third Brig- ades had five and six regiments respectively. The naval force had twenty vessels of varying size all under the qommand of Flag Officer L. M. Goldsborough, and on the 7th, when the attack began, he paraphrased the famous signal of Nelson with, ' ' Our country expects every man to do his duty. ' ' Opposed to them upon the water was only an insignificant array of seven tugs and river steamers by some one dubbed "mosquito fleet," under Commander Lynch, but really of so little consequence that the Federal commander gave it very little attention. The forces of Bumside are said to have been piloted to Hammond's or Ashby's landing by a negro, and the thousands of Union soldiers who, through water and mud, waded in and pressed their way up the island towards the enemy's fortifications were filled with a disposition to make ample amends for the long delays they had suffered. At the cost of many killed and wounded men, the island was won and the first act in the expedition was ended. Where so many generous souls went out into the infinite it might be deemed unfair to make special mention of indi- viduals, but the case of Lieut.-Col.Vignier de Monteil of the Fifty -third New York or the d'Bpineuil Zouaves should be sitated. His own regiment had been sent back to Annapolis because of the excessive draft of the vessel carrying it, but for some reason the officer found himself, as it were, stranded on Hatteras. He was every inch a soldier, and when there was a fight in progress he wished to have a part. He asked the privilege of serving in the ranks, and with a carbine in hand he advanced along with 'and a little to the right of the Ninth or Hawkins' Zouaves of New York. He had done effective service when, well along in the second day, whether by a sharpshooter or not, may never be known, the gallant officer fell. A brave and heroic life went out when he died. Among the Confederate dead, the loss of no one man gave rise to more regret and remark than that of 68 Twenty-fourth Massachusetts Eegiment. Capt. 0. Jennings Wise, captain of the Richmond Blues, the crack company of that city, and then known as Company A of the Forty-sixth Virginia. To him, his older brother, John S. Wise ascribed qualities rivaling those of the admirable Crichton, and, without doubt, he was entitled to a deal of praise for the gallant manner in which he discharged all the duties laid upon him. He was, however, mortally wounded before he undertook the trip across the sound to Nag's Head, and his friends realized that war "ever plants its fangs in the bravest and tenderest hearts."* Nearly forty years after the' engagement at Roanoke the publication of "North Carolina Troops, 1861-1865," enables those who desire to learn somewhat the estimate of the fight by those who were beaten. That same Lieut.-Col. Wharton J. Green, who came on the field too late for any considerable part in the fray, in his report to Col. H. M. Shaw, who was in com- mand, says he landed on the island at 10 a.m. of the 8th, but it was 12 o'clock before he could get under way. On his march towards the Union lines he met many stragglers who assured him that it was all up, yet he persisted in advancing. His men did meet the Twenty-first Massachusetts and had a brief tilt, resulting in the death of three of his men and the wounding of five, and he was ready to continue the struggle, but was assured that he would do so at his peril. In his story of the Second Battalion the Lieutenant-Colonel enlarges on his admiration for General Bumside, who merited "the grand *In the spring of '65, while the 2-tth was doing guard duty in Rich- mond, a member of Co. B was sitting in Capitol Square, when a man, evidently along in years, came and sat down by the soldier and at once began a conversation. He proved to be Henry A. Wise, ex-governoi', and the father of Capt. O. Jennings Wise. H