E r54 The Numbers and Rosters of the Two Armies in the Civil War BY GEN. GATES P. THRUSTON OF NASHVILLE, TENN. Class LAAL Book T^ t 7 The Numbers and Rosters of the Two Armies in the Civil War y / •7 GEN. GATES P. THRUSTON OF NASHVILLE, TENN. 'fh\!>l^,\ The Numbers and Rosters of the Two Armies in the Civil War/ {This article reprinted from The Olympian Magazine) In this new era of universal devo- tion to the interests of our country, I am reluctant to revive the con- troversies of the past or to recall the victories or defeats of the Civil \\'ar. There is a subject, however, that has not received the attention from our military critics and writer? at the North or South which its importance merits. I shall take the liberty, there- fore, of considering briefly The Num- bers and Rosters of the tzvo Armies in the Civil War. The veterans of the Civil ^^^ar, Federal and Confederate, are com- mending our able Secretary of War for his efforts to obtain the names, numbers, and full enrollment of the soldiers of the Confederacy. These records are necessary to complete the official history of the war, and to give just recognition to the American sol- diers of the South. We have had very meager and in- definite figures by which to compare the number of enlistments and the magnitude of the two armies. Federal and Confederate, in the great conflict. Unfavorable comparisons and con- trasts are frequently suggested as to the number of soldiers engaged upon each side, but I believe when the offi- cial rolls and figures are placed on the same basis and finally reported and compared, there will be no room for contrasting criticism as to the mag- nitude of the two armies, or as to the courage, the prowess, or generalship of the American soldiers from the North or the South. Fortunately the names and full en- rollment of the union forces are .com- plete. The official figures, embracing the entire rolls, the enlistments and re- enlistments for long and short terms of service, the one hundred days' men, three months' men, the ninety days' men, the veteran reserve, the home guards, the colored troops, amount to the large aggregate enrollment of 2,778.304 men. This large total re- duced to the basis of a full tenn en- listment for the war would probably cut down the aggregate number to about 1,700,000 men. The absence of systematic records of the Confederate forces, the loss or destruction of official papers, during the evacuation of Richmond, and dur- ing the chaos of the reconstruction period, has left no definite summary nor figures by which the total enroll- ment of the armies and detached forces of the Confederacy can be ac- curately estimated. In 1(%9, soon after the Civil War, and during the era of prejudice that naturally succeeded. Dr. Joseph Jones, an ex-Confederate surgeon. Secretary of the Southern Historical Society at New Oreleans, prepared a paper upon the "Confederate Losses During the War." In this paper he stated that "the available Confederate force, ca- *This article, reprinted from The Olympian magazine of November, 1903, published at Nashville, Tenn., contains the main portion of an address delivered by Gen. G. P. Thrus- ton before the Society of the Army of the Cumberland in Washington, D. C, October 14, 1903, the advance sheets having been furnished The Olympian by the author. NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OF THE TIVO ARMIES. pahlo of active service in the field, did not (luring tlic entire war exceed six linndred thousand men." I quote from his brief paper It contains no statistics nor special grounds for his estimate of the number of forces. Dr. Jones states that his "calculation is given only as an approximation." The official jiapers of the Confede- rate War De]wrtment, including the incomplete army rolls, had been cap- tured at the close of the war, and were stored in the War Department at Washington, and, therefore, I do not think Dr. Jones' estimate from mem- ory or unofficial data can be relied upon as accurate. ".Available force" is a very indefinite and confusing term. We would usually interpret it as the efficient field force or fighting strength of an army. It does not generally constitute more than alx^ut sixty or sixty-five per cent, of the full army enrollment. There may have been a million enlistments on the origi- nal Confederate rolls, during the four years of the war, including re-enlist- ments and transfers, and men on post or detached and temporaiy duty, or home guards, veteran or invalid sol- diers guarding forts, or enlisted de- serters ("who are counted on the Fed- eral rolls), and yet out of this whole mimber, the availalile force capable of active service in the field may not have been over 600,000 soldiers. The aver- age effective strength of the Federal army during the Civil War was sixty- five per cent, of its enrollment. In the same proportion "an available force" of 600,000 Confederates would repre- sent on enrollment of ncarlv a million men, or to be exact, 92.3,076. Dr. Jones' "approximate" estimate was published in the Southern Histor- ical Society papers, and later his figures were republished in various forms throughout the South, Un- fortunately bis statement that the "available force in the field, capable of active service amounted to 600,000 men" was quoted and requoted from time to time, until, by some process of evolution, it was later regarded as an official statement of the entire en- listed forces of the Southern .\rmy of all classes and duties, and it is now (juite generally accepted at the South as the aggregate of the enrolled forces of the Confederacy. Dr. Jones' 600,000 estimate is en- graved upon enduring monuments in the South, commemorating the Con- federacy, in contrast with the engraved figures of the large official Federal en- rollment. The contrasting figures arc printed upon the certificates of mem- bership in the Confederate socie- ties. The Southern orators usually re- jieat the contrasting numbers at meet- ings and dedications in honor of the Confederate soldier. They are printed in the Sotithern school books, and thus a misleading historical error m figures, as I believe, originally possibly a just "approximate calculation" of the available force of the Confederacy, has been repeated, until its original significance and meaning have been changed and forgotten : and this mainly from lack of the full Confed- erate rolls and of definite information upon the subject, and usually with no intention to misrepresent the facts. It was not the special duty of any Southern Governor, or Confederate veteran, to worry through the haystack of Confederate army rolls to find the exact mimber of the total enlistments. 'J"he majority of the Southern veterans are too busy with the earnest things of life to bother with the statistics of the Civil War, and the camp fire or biv- ouac regulars who. after the manner of our Northern Grand Army posts, usually administer upon the military NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OF THE TWO ARMIES. affairs of the Confederacy at the South, were quite content with Dr. Jones' estimate of 600,000. Why should they not be? It is certainly small enough ! The main material is in the War Department at Washington. The carpet-baggers had also camped in several of the Southern capitol build- ings, and perhaps had lighted their pipes and kindled the fires with the army rolls. Occasionally some thought- ful Confederate has urged in the South- ern papers that the accepted estimate of Confederate forces was much too small, but the protests have made very little impression. No salary was waiting for the industrious historical pioneer who might investigate and work up a reliable summary of the rolls. It was in fact a convenient temptation to accept Dr. Jones" "ap- proximate calculation" as the true history and number of the entire en- rollment. Dr. Jones was a most ex- cellent gentleman and an accom- plished physician. I knew him per- sonally. Six hundred thousand in round numbers sounded well. The very figvires suggested the immortal six hundred of Balaklava. They were enshrined in poetry and printed in eloquent prose, and thus those ancient figures of Dr. Jones and this chronic and misleading historical error, as I believe it to be, have drifted down to our time without serious investigation or contradiction, and as I have stated, mainly from lack of exact and definite information, and usually with no in- tention to misrepresent the facts. I desire to present a brief analysis of the figures representing the enroll- ments and actual strength of the two armies. Confederate and Federal, in the Civil War, and some reflections regarding them, with the view of cor- recting, to some extent, at least, this widely spread misapprehension as to the 600,000 estimate, and to give a more just impression of the actual fighting strength upon each side. I trust I may be able to discuss the sub- ject impartially and without partisan spirit. The truth, I am sure, will leave no grounds for unfavorable comment or comparison, as to the military record upon either side. The time has come when the veter- ans of both armies desire to know the truth, the whole truth, unbiased by sentiment or prejudice. The sincere purposes, the patriotic aspirations, and the honorable and indeed brilliant record of the Confederate soldier have long since been crystallized into his- tory, and no presentation of the facts can detract from the laurels he has won. His enduring courage and man- hood through the years of the great confiict stand clear above the collapse at Appomattox and have survived after the war in a citizenship of which any nation might be proud. His sons shared with our sons the new honors of the Spani.sh War in loyal devotion to our united country. The heroism of the American soldiers on both sides of the great struggle will continue to challenge the admira- tion of the student of history as long as the story is told. VVe shall not be able to know the total enrollment of the soldiers of the Confederacy until Secretary Root's investigations are completed, and the final reports are received from the Southern States (and it may be years before final and satisfactory results are reached), but for some time past we have had approximate informa- tion and figures that I think readily establish the fact that the estimate of an "available force of 600,000 sol- diers" does not represent much more than half of the enlistments, and re- NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OE THE TWO ARMIES. enlistments, and transfers, and enroll- ments of Confederate soldiers during the four years of the war, wliich must have aggregated in numljcr^ at least a million men. It is, thereft)rc, manifestly unjust to set up in contrasting figures the full official Federal enlistment on the one side, and the "available force in the field" estimate of 1869, on the other side, as history or true history. They represent two entirely different stand- ards of estimation that are confusing. This method of calculation anrl crit- icism is a relic of the war and of the days when we were all partisans. It is one of the myths of that unhappy era that has outlived its day and gen- eration. If practical and useful re- sults are to be reached, the two full enrollments, or rosters of enlistments, Federal and Confederate, should be placed upon the same basis and com- jjared and contrasted, and I am satis- fied that neither side will sutfer by this just method of comparison. Upon making some investigation as to the approximate numbers of the Confederate enrollment. I find that the State of North Carolina some time since printed the rolls of its Confede- rate soldiers, aggregating about 12.^,- 000 men. A more recent summary in- creases the number to 127,000. The State of Tennessee has long claimed and fairly established the fact that she sent 115,(XX) .soldiers into the Southern armies, besides her contribution to the l^nion forces. At the dedication of the battlefield of Chickamauga, (lovernor Oates, of the State of Alabama, in his admirable address, reported that Alabama had furnished 100,000 sol- diers to the Confederacy, a larger pro- portion than I have assigned to Ten- nessee. Mississippi by a quite gener- ally accepted computation furnished 85,000. By these estimates the enlistments or enrollments of these four States ag- gregate 427,000 soldiers. Virginia, according to the official reports, sent twelve or fourteen more regiments into the war than North Carolina, or their equivalent in battalions and com- panies, and the State of Georgia a luunber of regiments more. A pro- portionate increase in the enlistments in Virginia and Georgia would creeyond PciuI.iikI aiul Kinds beyonJ Forth, P.C the Lords in the Lowlands, there are chiefs in the .N'orth." /\s Admiral Schley said of Santiago, "There's glory enough to go round." Yes ; and to spare. We are proud to have him as our guest tonight. Every true soldier honors the grand Admiral for his generous sentiment. NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OF THE TWO ARMIES. ii We won the honors of success in the Civil War, and we know full well that we shall never have a share in any other fluty or achievement so useful, so honorable, or so memorable ; but the Federal soldier must be cold and un- generous indeed, whether his home be at the North or South, if he fails to pay the tribute of respect and admira- tion to the soldiers of the Confederacy, who matched deeds with us through four long years, who with a narrower and mistaken loyalty, as we think, but with like sincerity, courage and devo- tion, and under greater trials and sac- rifices, fought a losing fight, clear through to the bitter end of the great tragedy ; who lost all save the jewel of an honorable record, and yet, with enduring manhood arose from defeat, and with equal courage and devotion turned their bronzed faces to the fu- ture, a future full of golden promise. and set about to build up anew and recreate their homes and country. And have they not, they and their sons and daughters, amid constant trials and embarrassments, recreated and rebuilt the South and brought that promise into fruition? Has not the South arisen from the ashes of war and waste into a splendid prosperity? Activities and energies, born of neces- sity and poverty have stimulated every avenue of commerce and developed her latent forces, until the South of today is rivaling the industrial and conunercial prosperity of the North. Neither tradition nor partisanship can stay her progress. The New South has no interest apart from her sisters of the North and West, and what is more, she is inspired with the same spirit of nation- ality and loyalty to every interest that afifects our common country. Her pa- triotiso) is as broad as the Republic. The Confederate Armies. To the Editor of the Olympian: In an article or address published in the last number of the Olvmpian, upon the "Numbers and Rosters of the Two Armies in the Civil War," I endeavored to show that the Confed- erate armies were much larger than the estimate generally accepted at the South, and that instead of having but 600,000 soldiers upon the rolls during the four years of the Civil War. thev had from 1,000,000 to 1,100,000 sol- diers. I presented three methods of calculation reaching practically the same result, in support of my views, as to these numbers. Since your November number was issued, mv attention has been called to a Confederate official report, made to the Confederate War Department in January, 1864, that gives more direct and definite information upon this sub- ject than I was able to present in the November publication. In Serial No. 129, page 95, of the official records of the Union and Con- federate Armies, in the War Depart- ment at Washington, there is an offi- cial report of Lieutenant-Colonel Blake, "Superintendent of Special Registration," made to the Bureau of Conscription of the Confederate War Department, at Richmond, Va., in January, 1864. The report contains a detailed state- ment of the number of troops fur- nished to the Confederate armies by the six States in his department of 12 NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OF THE TWO ARMIES. duty, to wit: The States of \'irgiiiia. North Carolina, South Carohna, Georgia. Alabama, and Mississippi. It gives the number of volunteers and conscripts, and the number of exemp- tions owing to physical disabilities, in each of these States, and points out methods by which the Confederate forces can be increased. In his final summary. Lieutenant- Colonel Blake reports that these six States in his de])artment had furnished 566.456 soldiers to the Confederate armies up to January 1, 1864. If the remaining five Confederate States, including Tennessee, furnished soldiers to the Confederate armies in like proportion (according to the census of their military po])ulation in isri()-1861), they must have furnished 410.176 soldiers. By this just method of calculation, we are able to show, ajiproximately, that the eleven Confederate .States sent to the armies of the Coufcfleracy, up to January 1. 1S64. 982.6.S2 men. The enlistments and conscripts during the last fifteen months of the war must have increased this number to nuich more than a million men. Add to this number the recruits ob- tained from the border States (from 90.000 to 100.000 men), and you have about I.IOO.CKX) soldiers, thus reaching practically the same result we arrived at by the three methods of calcula- tion presented in my article in your last issue. G. P. T. Statistics of Soldiers in Both Armies. B\! Ceil, datc.'i I'. Thrustoii (U. S. ./.), Nasln'illc, Tciiii. I notice in the excellent IVIarch num- ber of the Confederate Veteran that you reprint from the Baltimore Sun Mr. Cassenove G. Lee's ancient Civil War statistics as to the number of soldiers in the armies of the North and South. There is no historical foundation whatever for the statement made by him that the "total enlist- ments in the Confederate Army" con- sisted of "six hundred thousand men." A much more distinguished and re- liable Southern authority. Dr. \\'ood- row Wilson, of ^'irginia (now presi- dent of Princeton College"), in his ad- mirable "History of the American People" states the number of Fed- eral and Confederate soldiers in the Civil War as follows : "In the North four men out of every nine of the military fopulation had enlisted for a service of three vears in the field— in all. 1.700.000 out of a mili- tary population of 4.600.000." /"Vol- ume IV. ]iage 267.) And again (page 267) he gives the numbers in the Con- federate armies as follows : "The total military population of the South (the seceding States) was but 1,065,000. Nine hundred thousand of these she drew into her armies for at least three years of service, and before the war ended mere half-grown boys and men grown old were included in the mus- ter." The Confederate soldiers in the border States were not included in Dr. Wilson's statement. In the carefully prepared "History of the United States." by Afr. Waddy Thompscn, of Atlanta, Ga., published This article reprinted from the Confederate Veteran. NUMBERS AND ROSTERS OF THE TWO ARMIES. 13 in 1904, after its Civil War chapters had been reviewed by that prince of gentlemen and soldier. Gen. John B. Gordon, he slates that "it is probable that the total number of enlistments in the Confederate armies was nearly a million." (See preface and page 406.) I am so fond of the editor of the Confederate Veteran and read the magazine with so much pleasure that I am anxious that it shall be historic- ally accurate in its statements. General Thruston has been studying the statistics of the two armies for yeans, and there can be no question of his absolute sincerity in seeking to have the truth established ; but he has been in the South so long that he must be pardoned for pride in reducing dis- crepancy of numbers. General Thrus- ton is one of the best citizens in the South, and none the less good for hav- ing mar' ied twice into families of cul- tured, ardent Southern people. True, he simply quotes in the foregoing from cordially accepted Southern authors ; yet tlie Veteran, while having due es- teem for him and them, does not agree to quite so great compromise of the statistics that have been so long ac- cepted. The Union Armv reduced from 2,800,000 to 1,700.000 and the Confederate increased from 600,000 to 1,000,000 men is too great a difference. Southern authors should be very care- ful of their figures. A compromise from both sides as to actual three-year soldiers might be nearer the truth. ff LE N 10