ijl pill) i^iipiiii iliiilllillill^iliiiil I ill 111' 1 li i i I i'i if' i li ! iiiiliilif! ^ H J.IFi'lNCOTT & CO, I'HlLADi oUht AlSiMW of ihc '^ ^H POLICE RECORD SPIES, SMUGGLERS, EEBEL EMISSARIES TENNESSEE. BEINO SELECTIONS FROM THE -§ittttafo af thi^ limjj 0( t\u ^mhtthnV BY AN OFFICER. PHILADELPHIA : J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. 1863. C.H.ft, r^ Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year 1803, by J. B. LIPPINCOTT & CO. FOR THE AUTHOR, in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the United States for tlie Eastern District of Pennsylvania. -o STEREOTYPED BY L. JOHNSON & CO. PRINTED BY LIPPINCOTT & CO. ^A PREFACE. The author of the " Annals of the Army of the Cumberland" has been requested by many soldiers and army friends to issue the Police Eecord of the "Annals" in pamphlet form, that all can afford to purchase it ; and he cheerfully complies with the request. The portrait of our good general commander is given as a frontispiece, together with the monumental design, as a matter of gratification to the army and our friends at home, and, also, with the hope of adding to the Monumental Fund by the sale of this volume of selections from the large work. ; The appropriateness of commencing the record with the sketch of our Chief of Police, and of the organization and ope- rations of his department, will not be questioned. Thus premising, we cast out our waif, born as it were upon battle-fields and amid the storms of rebellion, to seek the tide of popular favor, and a welcome from the loyal and true of our land. In Camp, Tullahoma, Tennessee, August 10, 1863. ^iom llitien JAN. 1, 1863. WRITTEN FOR THE "ANNALS, BY AN OFFICER. The day has sped. The night-winds wildly moan Their wintry chorus o'er the prairie West ; Weird, wandering shadows, lengthening, floating on To angels' realms, find refuge in their breast. Hark to the sound ! the engine's rushing blast Thrills through the hamlet as it rattles past. An aged father totters to the door. " Great battle fought !" — He trembles at the cry ; The dim-eyed mother breathes a broken prayer For souls now hushed in death and victory. Resounds the shout, — "The battle surely won !" Ah ! where their boy who to the war has gone ? The prattler, standing by his mother's knee, Lists to the shout, and eager clasps her hand : " Oh, tell me, mamma, where in Tennessee Is papa now, — and where his patriot band ?" He hears the sob ; he startles at the tear, And quivering lips which faintly murmur, " Where ?" And as the maiden dreams the battle o'er. Dark spectral visions hover round her pillow ; She sees a soldier gasping on the shore, Reeking and pale, beneath the bending willow. Ah ! is't a dream of that cold, dying lover Upon the margin of the dusky river ? Sleep sweetly, brother, husband, son, and sire, Where violet-blooms bedeck thy heather bed ! There let us raise the monumental spire To mark the tomb of brave unnumbered dead. Rear high the shaft above the sweeping river, Of martyrdom, and love, a sign forever ! Mtofrbesboeouoh, Tennessee, June 4, 1863. 8 POLICE RECORD OF OPERATIONS OF SPIES, SMUGGLERS, TRAITORS, ETC. OCCURRING WITHIN THE LINES ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND. CONTENTS. A REBEL MINUS $109,000. A NEST OF NASHVILLE SMUaOLERS. THE HOLLOW-HEELED BOOT. THE PSEUDO "SANDERS." DR. HUDSON THE SMUGGLER. NEWCOMER THE SCOUT. GENERAL JOHN H. MORGAN'S FEMALE SPT. NORRIS THE KIDNAPPER. PHILLIPS, THE KENTUCKY UNIONIST. MOORE AND BLUE, THE SCOUTS. TRAINOR, THE TRAITOR 'WAGON-MASTER. A SPY ON GENERAL JOHN H. MORGAN. SPECIMENS OF REBEL LETTERS. A CINCINNATI SPT. TWO REBEL CONGRESSMEN'S WIVES. JOHN MORFORD, THE SPY. FRAUDULENT TRANSFER OF REBEL GOODS. MRS. T ^'S BOOTS. " MRS. MOLLY HYDE. ADVENTURES OF TWO UNION SPIES. THE MISSES ELLIOTT. KILLDARE, THE SCOUT. DEATH OF A REBEL GENERAL AND VILLAIN. PRISON-EXPERIENCE OF A UNION SPY. A NAMELESS SPY. NASHVILLE AS A TYPE OF THE REBELLION. ghe %rm^ |Dlia mi its CJMef. The police and scout service — one of the most interesting and important departments of the army — can have no better or more appropriate introduction than a sketch of the life of its origin- ator and head. William Truesdail, Chief of Police in the Army of the Cum- berland, was born in Chautauqua county, New York, January 9, 1815, of American parents. At the age of eleven years he was bound to a merchant of Erie, Pennsylvania, at fifty dollars a year and three months' schooling, — but got no schooling. In the fall of 1835 he was elected deputy sheriff and police justice. While holding these positions, he devoted much attention to police-matters, and gained quite a local reputation for the skill displayed in investigating and developing numerous complicated and startling cases of fraud and crime. In a single instance nearly thirty thousand dollars was recovered by his agency. In the fall of 1836 he engaged in real-estate speculations, and in a short time cleared over fifty thousand dollars, having at one period between forty thousand and fifty thousand dollars cash in bank. In the general failure of 1837 this fortune was lost, with the exception of two or three thousand dollars. In 1838 he was appointed specie teller by the directors of the United States Branch Bank at Erie, and was confirmed as such by Nicholas Biddle, president of the parent institution. Six months after- wards he was made travelling agent for said bank, and continued in its service until its failure in 1841. He then turned his attention to merchandizing at Erie, and remained in that business until 1847. By this time he had again accumulated a handsome competence, which was mostly lost in the crisis of the same year. We next hear of him as a 346 ^^^^, . .^ ^- --^ 1 iJ T.i]'i'n;:'i.>T'r \ c;; PHiLAi^-^- THE ARMY POLICE AND ITS CHIEF. 347 contractor on the Lake Shore Eailroad, from Erie to the Penn- sylvania State line, where he continued some two years, and until the road was nearly completed, finishing in that time four miles of heavy cut and realizing a handsome profit from his contract. In 1849 the Panama Eailroad Company was organized ; and in the fall of that year he made an arrangement with John L. Stephens, and others, of New York, to go out and superintend the building of the road across the Isthmus, at a salary of six thousand dollars a year and expenses paid. He left New York in November, 1849, taking with him two hundred and fifty men, having arranged for the forwarding of subsequent instalments of laborers in similar numbers. He remained on the Isthmus one year, in which time he completed the work across the Chagres swamp. Through all the terrible mortality which at- tended the construction of that work, and by which many thou- sands of lives are known to have been lost, his health was not materially affected by the climate. Of the fourteen hundred men, however, who were sent out to him, not more than three hundred returned alive. On his arrival at New York he was highly complimented by the Board of Directors, and was offered ten thousand dollars a year to return and superintend the com- pletion of the enterprise. He accepted the proposition; but l)efore the arrangements were fully effected the balance of the work was let to a private company. In the fall of 1851 he proceeded to the West as the agent of H. C. Seymour & Co., and took charge of the western division of the Ohio & Mississippi Eailroad, in conjunction with Pro- fessor O. M. Mitchel (late Major-Greneral Mitchel, deceased), who was then chief engineer and bond commissioner of that great work. When the road was located and the money secured to build it, in company with others, he took large contracts in its construction, and built over sixty miles of the road between Sandoval and St. Louis. The same company, composed of three capitalists, subsequently built the St. Louis & Belleville Eail- road, fifteen miles in length, the St. Louis & Alton Eoad, twenty miles in length, and the North Missouri Eoad for some sixty 348 ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND. miles. These projects occupied some twelve years, and re- sulted largely to the profit of the contractors, although much of it was lost by the failure of the various companies to meet their payments. In these and many of his earlier operations the colonel lost heavily, indeed ; but he never failed, — was never unable to meet promptly and fully all his obligations, — a fact alike remarkable and creditable in a business career of such great and varied extent. In 1860, with two others, he embarked in the construction of the railroad from New Orleans to Houston, Texas, a distance of three hundred and twenty miles, and had completed and put it in operation from Houston to the Sabine Eiver — one hundred and ten miles — at the outbreak of the rebellion. This great road, in which the colonel will have an immense fortune upon the return of peace and good times, is intended to be a national Southern route, connecting New Orleans with the Eio Grande, and thence across the country to the Gulf of California and the mouth of Yuba Eiver. It crosses the Delta of the Mississippi and the high level plains of Texas, which latter were found so smooth and ready for the track that it was laid upon the grass for some sixty miles, the earth from the ditches at the side forming the filling between the ties. Upon the fall of Fort Sumter the secession element in the State became too strong to be endured by Northern men, and early in May, soon after the violent deposition of Governor Houston, Colonel Truesdail left Texas and came to Missouri. Upon General Pope taking command of the army in North- western Missouri, he was appointed military superintendent of the North Missouri Eailroad. Soon after, General Pope was recalled to St. Louis ; and the colonel then contracted to supply General Grant's army with beef, and continued the business under General Jefferson C. Davis, and again under General Pope when he re-entered the field. With him he also had charge of the police and secret service, the scouts and couriers, and the forwarding of mails and despatches; and in these and other labors he performed valuable service in that wild, interior THE ARMY POLICE AND ITS CHIEF. 349 country. Throughout the New Madrid, Island No. 10, and Fort Pillow campaign, in the trip up the Tennessee, and during the operations in front of and beyond Corinth, he remained with General Pope, by whom the worth of his great services was freely and constantly acknowledged. When the latter general was ordered to Yirginia, he invited Colonel Truesdail.to go with him; but, preferring to remain in the "West, where his family reside and his property is, and where he believed he would be more useful, he declined the invitation. General Eosecrans, upon assuming command of the Army of the Mississippi, retained the colonel in his position. The com- pletely unsettled condition of affairs in Mississippi at that time gave room for the display of his peculiar genius. The army mail and police service were irregular in their workings, and scarcely more than nominal in their existence. A new and complete organization of each was soon effected. Military mail-agents were placed on the boats and trains, and oflSces opened all along the route between Cairo and Corinth, A police system was put into operation that began at once to be felt throughout the army and all the country Avithin our lines. The first arrest made under it was that of a high official in General Grant's em- ploy, who was convicted of the fraudulent appropriation of seve- ral thousand dollars, and sentenced by that general to two years' imprisonment. Colonel Truesdail continued in this department until the assigrnment of General Eosecrans to the command of the Department of the Cumberland, when he was induced to accompany the general to his new field of operations, — although, personally, he was disinclined to longer service, having now been actively and constantly engaged since the beginning of the war, absent all the while fi-om his home and family. At Bowling Green the army mail system was organized, and policemen were put at work, not only there, but in the larger tcwns along the line of the Louisville & Nashville Eailroad, and a surprising amount of knavery, smuggling, and guerrilla- ism was discovered. Upon reaching Nashville the police busi- ness at once assumed vast proportions. The city was full of 850 ARMY OF THE CUMBEELAND. violent and confessed rebels, most of whom wore both smugglers and spies, as opportunity offered. The army had drawn thither its usual corrupt and festering element of camp-followers. The entire community was rotten, morally and socially. Murder, robbery, drunkenness, and all the nameless vices of rebeldom and war, were openly and shamelessly rampant. The Govern- ment was victimized at every turn. Horses and mules, stolen from neighboring farms and stables, were hawked about the streets for purchasers, at prices ranging from ten to fifty dollars per head. Arms were pilfered and sold for a trifle. Boots, shoes, uniforms, camp-equipage, ammunition, and supplies of every kind, serviceable to the rebel army, were daily sent beyond our lines in every possible way that the ingenuity of bad men and women could devise. In our necessarily contracted space we cannot hope to give even an outline of the work accomplished by the army police. Suffice it to say that in a short time its influence was felt in every part of the city and army. His patrols were upon ex^ery road leading from the city, arresting and searching rebel emis- saries, and at times confiscating considerable amounts of con- traband goods. His detectives were in every hotel, and upon cars and steamers. Assuming the role of rebel sympathizers, they were introduced into the proudest and wealthiest secession families. Passing themselves off, in many cases, as spies of Wheeler, Bragg, and Morgan, they acquainted themselves with the secrets, the hopes, and the intentions of that entire people. Men were also busy among our own camps, detecting army vice and fraud. Their searching eyes were on the several army departments, hospitals, theatres, houses of ill-fame, and every centre of public interest. A minute report of all these investi- gations and their results would thrill the land; but better that it be not told to blanch the cheek and chill the heart of many a true wife and fond parent. Many offenders thus detected were vigorously dealt with; and yet the police records of the department reveal instances of young men made wiser and better by the kindness shown THE ARMY POLICE AND ITS CHIEF. S51 and the advice given them. Humane, benevolent, and far-seeing, yet prompt to visit with merited punishment the hardened offender, none more ready than our Chief of Police to temper justice with mercy. The many instances of charity to the destitute, of forgiveness to youthful follies of the young men whom he has aided and counselled, of widows and orphans he assisted to fuel and bread during the hard winter at Nashville, of the young women found in male attire whom he and his assistants have decently clothed and sent to their homes, and of deserted children for whom he has found asylums, would of themselves fill many pages of this work. In brief, the influence of the army police was felt in every ramification of army and city life throughout the Department of the Cumberland. True, errors and wrongs may have been committed by its ofiicials ; many an arrest may have been made without good reason therefor, and many goods seized that ought to have been untouched ; true, many bad men may have wormed themselves into its service ; but, where such has been the case, none more ready to make restitution, none more severe in punishment of official treachery and knavery, than its justice- loving chief. All in all, he has done well, and has exercised the utmost care in the selection of his subordinates. For be it always remembered that there are but few men fitted for the business of a detective, and a still less number are found who will follow it. In large cities, and with armies, the detective is a necessity ; and yet it is a j)rofes8ion whose follower is and must be one continued counterfeit. Bad men can make it de- testable; but pure-minded, upright officers, operating secretly and in disguise though they may, can perform their duties with marvellous certainty in the detection of crime, with incalculable benefit to the public, and without injury to the innocent. That the most worthy motives actuate the subject of this sketch in all his official dealings, the author has abundant reason to know. Colonel Truesdail (he is called " colonel" by general consent, though a civilian and quite regardless of titles) is pos- sessed of a handsome private fortune, which thus far has been 352 ARMY OF THE CUMBERLAND. diminished, rather than increased, by his army labors. Though a Southern man as regards the location of a great portion of his property and by reason of many years' residence in the slave States, he has been an original and uncompromising friend of the Union. The results of the army police operations have been immense, both in gain to the Government and prevention of crime. Hun- dreds of horses and mules have been seized and turned over to the quartermaster's department. Scores of smugglers and spies have been detected and punished, thus largely curtailing this under-ground trade, alike beneficial to the rebels and detrimental to us. Large amounts of goods and medicines have been con- fiscated and sold, where the parties implicated were found fla- grante delicto ; and thus this branch of the army has considerably more than repaid its entire cost to the Government. Connected with it, also, is the spy department, from which a line of com- munication has been constantly maintained throughout the rebel States, to the extreme limits of the Southern Confederacy. This interesting feature in its operations, systematic as it is under the watchful eye of the Chief of Police and under the personal direction of the general commanding, must, for obvious reasons, be imagined rather than described. To illustrate the efficiency of the army police, a few of the very many cases of smuggling, spying, and treachery which it has developed are related elsewhere in this volume. They are compiled from the records; and, strange and improbable as some of them may seem, they are essentially truthful narratives of actual occurrence. Indeed, the facts are necessarily greatly abbreviated in a publication so comprehensive as this, the mi- nutiae — the smaller lines and threads which contribute to the beauty of the woof — being unavoidably omitted. As may be readily supposed, such an extensive army organiza- tion ere long attained considerable notoriety. It marshalled its friends and its enemies in almost regimental numbers. Even in the army it has been violently assailed, — not only by the vicious in the ranks, but by officers whose evil deeds were not THE ARMY POLICE AND ITS CHIEF. 353 past finding out. If any direct charge was made, however, to General Eosecrans, it was at once and fully investigated 3 and in no one instance has the charge been maintained, as affecting the good character of its chief or of his principal aids. The breath of calumny has been even wafted to the Presidential ears, and the newspapers of last spring contained the announce- ment that a special commission had been appointed at Wash- ington to investigate the operations of the police of the Army of the Cumberland. Many weeks elapsed, and this was not done. At the solicitation of its chief and his assistants, Gene- ral Eosecrans then appointed a special inspector. Captain Temple Clark, formerly a member of his staff in Mississippi, and now chief upon the staff of Brigadier-General Johnson, to examine into the operations of his army police, and report. A portion of that report is herewith subjoined; and it constitutes an appropriate conclusion to our chapter : — " Nashville, Tenn., June 2, 1863. "Major: — " In compliance with your instructions, I have made a thorough exami- nation of the books and papers connected with the Army Police Office and ita operations in this department since its first organization, and I respectfully submit the following report as the result of my investigations. " In arriving at facts and conclusions, I have taken advantage of every source of information at my disposal, except that of instituting a ' court of inquiry' and putting witnesses under oath. "I find that the records of the operations of this institution, together with all important papers and vouchers connected therewith, have been kept with correctness and system, so that almost any official act of its employes can be easily traced from its inception to its result. This order and system greatly facilitated my investigation, and reflects credit upon the chief and his subordinates. " The number of employes in this department, including scouts, spies, policemen, judges, clerks, mail-agents, &c., has at no one time exceeded fifty, although a much larger number appear to have been employed during the term of its existence, — most of them for short periods only. The expenses of the department from the middle of November, 1862, to June 1, 1863, are as follows : — " For mail-service, six months and a half, $3,320 ; for salaries of clerks, scouts, and policemen in secret service, $66,564.55; making a total of expenses, including the military custom-house at Nashville, of $69,884.55 ; 23 354 ARMY OP THE CUMBERLAND. of which amount the sum of $52,924.25 expenses up to May 1 have been paid, and the vouchers received and on file. " The balance of $16,960 is for the expenses and disbursements for the month of May, not yet settled, though the amount is ascertained. " Much of this last amount is for service rendered prior to the 1st of May last, and principally for secret service. " The Army Police Department has seized and turned over to authorized agents of the Government, up to June 1, 1863, property to the value of $438,000. " This property consisted of arms and ordnance stores, which have been turned over to ordnance oflBcers ; medical stores to a large amount which were found in the act of being smuggled through the lines to the enemy, — some of it stolen from our hospitals, — all being turned over to the medical director ; and large quantities of goods and merchandise, which has been turned over to the custom-house officer and to the quartermaster. " There has been placed in the hands of the United States District Attor- ney, with testimony for confiscation, the following property : — " Stock of goods of Stewart & Co., Nashville, $25,000 ; stock of goods of Morgan & Co., Nashville, $35,000 ; stock of goods of Wilder & Co., Louis- ville, $80,000 ; gold from Mr. Lee, $109,000. " For all the property thus disposed of, proper receipts and vouchers have been taken, and are now on file in the oflBce, an abstract of which is here- unto annexed. " Had the sphere of its usefulness ended here, the record of the army police would show well, and amply justify the wisdom of the commanding general in its establishment ; but the great pecuniary profit arising to the Government from this institution is the least of its advantages ; and the record of its services shows a long array of benefits to the army and the Government, only known to the members confidentially engaged in its service. " The most important of these I propose to enumerate. " 1st. Through the agency of the secret police, especially selected for the service required, many rebel spies and smugglers have been arrested and brought to justice within this department, and information obtained and transmitted leading to the arrest of many more outside of the department. " 2d. The detection and prevention, to a great extent, of stealing in the army by officers and men ; more particularly the stealing of horses and mules, at one time very extensively practised by both citizens and soldiers, now almost entirely suppressed through the successful vigilance of the army police. Over five hundred horses and mules stolen from the Govern- ment have been recovered by this organization and turned back to the proper channel. " 3d. Discovering frauds on the soldiers, attempted to be perpetrated by Northern houses through the agency of swindling advertisements and the circulation of obscene prints and books. These last have been seized to a THE ARMY POLICE AND ITS CHIEF. 355 large extent, and destroyed, and a considerable amount of money which was being transmitted to these impostors has been returned by the police to the respective owners through army postmasters. A record has been kept, showing that each sum thus stopped and returned was duly received. "4th. A perfect system of detection, reaching to the closets of traitors, and discovering who were the secret enemies of the Government within our lines, and guarding against their treasonable operations. "5th. The employment of skilful scouts and spies to operate within and about the enemy's lines and furnish intelligence for the information of the commanding general. These men have been carefully selected for their peculiar duties. Most of them are well acquainted with the country and the inhabitants where they operate, and possess tact, self-possession, and nerve to a high degree. " 6th. A record of the character and political sympathies of nearly every adult inhabitant of the section of country through and in which the Army of the Cumberland has operated. " 7th. Knowledge and investigation of secret political societies, North and South, having for their object opposition to the Government and the prosecution of the war. " 8th. The detention and return of deserters, — of whom more than eight hundred have been arrested by the army police alone, and over two-thirds of whom would not have been reached through other sources. " 9th. Discovering and forwarding lost or stolen property belonging to officers and soldiers. The value of property so recovered and forwarded, or turned over to the authorized Government officers, exceeds $100,000. " 10th. Detection and exposure of fraud and irregularities in the military hospitals and other army departments, and the great improvement in the con- dition of our hospitals, which is chiefly due to the able medical officers more recently in charge of these institutions ; yet a good share of credit is due to the detection, exposure, and punishment of grave abuses therein by the agents of the army police, who first occasioned the reforms by showing the necessity therefor. "11th. The Army Directory, a record showing every regiment and detachment in the Department of the Cumberland, — in what brigade, division, and corps, and where stationed. This record is continued and every change noted. It contains also the name rank, company, and regi- ment of every officer and soldier who dies in the department, whether in camp or hospital ; where he died, and where buried ; the cause of death, and any circumstance necessary to be recorded as to the disposition of his effects, &c. The record has an alphabetical index attached. "12th. The transmission of the mails done under the direction of ita chief and by the employes of the army police. The mails have been delivered with surprising regularity and safety to every division and brigade in the army. "That an institution like the army police, so vast and varied in its operations, assailing so many in their pecuniary, personal, and political 356 ARMY or THE CUMBERLAND. interests, should have powerful and numerous enemies, is not to be wondered at ; and that this enmity should develop itself in complaints and accusa- tions is natural. " Knowing this condition of public sentiment, I have inquired among all classes of people for the grounds of complaint against this institution. While I heard many general charges asserted and suspicions insinuated by persons who upon general principles or from personal motives believed that wrongs had been perpetrated and that the members of the army police were guilty of dishonest practices, I was only able to hear of one definite charge. " This was a case where a valuable carriage — the property of a young lady — was said to have been seized and confiscated by the army police and then appropriated to the private use of members of the police force. The person making the statement to me merely gave it as a rumor, saying that he knew nothing of the facts, and had no positive reason for believing it, he making the statement only because I was asking for charges. " An investigation showed that the carriage in question was the property of a secession family, the head of which had gone South: it was found secreted in separate parts and places, was taken by the police, and imme- diately turned over to the custom-house officer, who receipted for it and subsequently sold it at auction for five hundred dollars, and the proceeds were turned over to the Government. ******** "I would therefore earnestly recommend that the army police be continued as a branch of your department. Professional villains can only be matched by professional detectives. The one turns every resource of his nature, mental and physical, to the successful perpetration of crime ; and he can only be circumvented by one who concentrates all his powers to detection and prevention. " Very respectfully, " Your obedient servant, " Temple Clark, " Captain and Assistant Adjutant- General, " Special Inspector." ARMY POLICE RECORD. A Kebel Minus One Hundred and Nine Thousand Dollars ! One of the most important and interesting cases upon the records of the Police of the Armjr of the Cumberland occurred at Louisville, Kentucky, about the time when Major-General Rosecrans was assuming its command in October last. The Chief of his Ai-my Police, and some of his assistants, had hardly arrived in that city before they got upon the track of the case, and fully developed the facts, which are as follow. On the last day of October, 1862, as the mail-boat from Cincinnati to Louisville was ploughing its way down the Ohio River, well thronged with passengers, a party of three persons were to be seen in the saloon, seated before a table, enjoying themselves over a friendly glass and whiling away the hours with a game of euchre. The three were, comparatively speaking, strangers, — had not met with each other previously. Either by accident, by mutual attraction, or by spiritual affinity in the double sense (and whether these small, yet great, events in life come by chance, or are foreordained, we leave to casuists and philosophers to determine), it so happened that these three persons took to cards and cocktails from nine o'clock at night until two in the morning. One of these parties was Mr. John W. Lee, a well-dressed, smooth-faced, courteous, middle-aged gentleman, bearing the appearance of a prosperous and well-regulated country merchant. The second person was a resident of Cynthiana, Kentucky : his name or busi- ness is of no importance, as the only figure he cuts in this story is — like that of the deuce-spot in the game — to count. The third party at the table was a detective ; and that is enough to know, gentle reader, to appreciate fully the story. The game of euchre proved the entering wedge for another kind of game. The influence of cocktails and brandy-straight opened wide the door of friendship and confidence, and Mr. Lee intrusted to the keeping of his new- found acquaintance the weighty secret that he had in his charge a largo amount of gold and greenbacks in transitu to its owners in Dixie. Mr. Lee further intimated that he would like to purchase some twenty thousand dollars' worth of goods to take to Kentucky to sell, and if he could get passes and permits of the military authorities at Louisville to get his money and goods through, he would be all right. Much conversation ensued that night and during the following morning, the result of which was that Mr. Lee and B 453 454 ARMY POLICE RECORD. his friend were to go into partnership in the merchandise, and the friend was to be instrumental in getting the passes, or, if necessary, in running the blockade. Franklin, Kentucky, was the point fixed upon as a good locality for selling the goods, and, of course, the nearest and best point to rebeldom in Tennessee for smuggling purposes. Arrived at Louisville, Mr. Lee and his friend proceeded to the express- oflSce in that city, — the latter by invitation of the former. Passing along the streets, Mr. Lee more fully explained that he had about one hundred and sixty thousand dollars in gold and treasury notes ; that he had taken English sterling bonds for his friends in Knoxville, Tennessee, to New York and there cashed them ; that he had sold the bonds for thirty-two per cent, premium ; that he had bought some gold at about the same rate of premium ; that the money was to come to Louisville by express, and was there now, very probably. Upon inquiry at the office Mr. Lee found this to be the case. He asked the agent if jive bags of gold were there for John W. Lee. The agent replied, " No," and said, " Have you not made a mistake in the number of bags?" Mr. Lee looked at his receipt, and said, "Yes; there are seven bags." This was correct, and the agent expressed his readiness to deliver it upon Mr. Lee procuring the usual identification. The twain were rather nonplussed : however, Mr. Lee remembered that M. B. Whiteside, Esq., of that city, knew him, and would vouch for him; and they left the express-oflice. The detective volunteered to find Mr. White- side. He did so ; and that gentleman remarked that he merely knew Mr. Lee, but of his loyalty he knew nothing, and declined to vouch for or identify him. The new friend, however, did not despair ; he saw Mr. Lee, reported progress, or, rather, no progress, and said lie had friends in the city whom he would introduce, and who could not only identify, but also procure the re- quisite passes. All now was well. Mr. Lee and friend smiled most pleasantly in that very luxurious but rather one-sided apartment, the saloon of the Gait House. But — alas for the evanescent bliss of the happiest of mortals ! — at this juncture a policeman tapped our tapsters on the shoulder, and they followed him to the shades. Mr. Lee was informed that he was under arrest ; that his money had been seized where it lay in the express-office ; that he would not be confined, however, but liberated on his parole not to leave the city. The new friend was hustled off to prison summarily, as an old offender ; i.e. he was marched away from Mr. Lee under arrest ; and then, most probably, set off to work up some other case of rascality, pos- sibly a little sad at the loss of his prospective partnership in the country store at Franklin, or, tnore possibly, smiling at the trick that Mr. Lee was playing upon him, in holding out to him such an inducement to aid the smuggler on his way. There was now a shadow upon the countenance of John W. Lee aforesaid. He paced to and fro through the public halls of the Gait House, as if tormented by a perturbed spirit. The close observer might have noteil as much at a glance ; and one person there was, lingering around that hotel, in and about, who was thus taking notes. He was a gentleman A REBEL MINUS HIS GOLD. 455 familiar with the purlieus of the Gait House, and, probably, of many other houses in the city of Louisville. Some trivial pretext for conversation soon occurred, and this gentleman introduced himself to Mr. Lee as a paroled Confederate surgeon and a Mississippian, who enjoyed the privilege of the city through the interposition of influential friends. Our quondam surgeon had also come heavily to grief, and at once proceeded to unbosom himself to the interested Mr. Lee. lie told him that, because of his prominence and influence as a Southern Rights man, his name was not placed upon the regular cartel for exchange, recently made out by Major-General Buell, that he was about to proceed to Bowling Green, then the head-quarters of Major- General Rosecrans, to have his name thus properly placed, and that he would then proceed home speedily, and without taking the oath of allegiance to the Federal Government. This tale Avas pleasant to John W. Lee. It was told with such earnest- ness and unction, and was so well concocted, that it threw him completely off his guard. Here was trouble with which he could heartily sympathize. By this time the twain were cosily seated in the gentlemen's parlor of the Gait House, and Mr. Lee seemed to crave for friendly sympathy in return. To insure its extension, he gave this account of his affairs and their present condition. During the last autumn two persons from Kentucky passed through the North and proceeded to the city of Augusta, Georgia. There they purchased of Thomas Metcalf English sterling exchange to the amount of nearly two hundred thousand dollars, paying for it entirely in Confederate scrip, all of which proved to . be counterfeit. Upon ascertaining this fact, Metcalf at once sent to Knoxville for Lee, asking him to come to Augusta: he did so, and it was agreed that he (Lee) should have thirty-three and one-third per cent, of all the amount he could recover. This was a bright idea with our Southern brother Metcalf; for Lee was known at home as a good Union man, and could travel about among the Yankees and hunt up the money at will. Mr. Lee was faithful and energetic in his search for the lost treasure. Aladdin never rubbed his lamp with more ardor than did this gentleman seek for sterling bonds or their proceeds. He found his way back to Morganfield, Union county, Kentucky, on the IGth day of October, 1862. He crossed the Southern lines upon passes furnished him by Metcalf; and, of course, he could pass thi'ough the United States upon the strength of his Unionism pure and undefiled. He obtains an introduction to Mr. George R. Ellis, of that town, — the latter being an officer, a constable or deputy sheriff, we believe, — and hires his assistance to find two persons, by name, Frank Payne and Martin Hancock, telling him that these persons had passed counterfeit Con- federate money on the firm of Metcalf & Co., of Augusta, Georgia, to the amount of one hundred and sixty thousand dollars, or thereabouts ; that they lived somewhere in that vicinity, and that he wished to find them. Lee and Ellis, after a vigorous search, found Hancock in Henderson county, and ascertained that Payne was either dead or had left the country. 456 ARMY POLICE RECORD. They invite Hancock into a room, and Lee produces a letter from Metcalf & Co. (And here, by the way, we should remark that the latter gives two or three different names of parties in Georgia who owned the sterling bonds. In stating the case to the supposed Confederate surgeon, at the Gait House, Louisville, he gave the owner's name as Thomas Metcalf, of Augusta, Georgia ; and in stating it to Mr. Ellis — as we see by Ellis's affidavit — he gave the owners' names as Whiteman & Co., of Augusta, Georgia.) This letter Lee read to Hancock; it charged him (Hancock) and Payne with passing off the counterfeit money. Hancock at once admitted the fact, and then and there agreed to refund the whole amount involved to Lee, as agent for the owners, informing him that the money was in New York City, and that he would go on with him and make it all right. Lee then employed Ellis to accompany them to watch Hancock and make all sure, agreeing to pay him five hundred dollars for the service. The three soon started for the East ; and at Cincinnati Hon. Judge Trigg joined the party as counsel, procured by the far-sighted Lee. To be brief, they reached New York City, and there recovered one hundred and forty-five thousand dollars in money, and Hancock gave his note to Lee for fifteen thousand dollars, payable three mouths thereafter at Nashville, Tennessee. The party returned to Cincinnati, bringing the money in two large trunks, which were so heavy that Lee feared they would excite suspicion, and there telegraphed back to New York respecting the exchange of the gold for Southern scrip, or something that would answer the purposes of the owner, Mr. Ellis and Judge Trigg parted from Lee at Cincinnati, and the latter came on to Louisville with the money, as related in the beginning of this chapter. So much for the story of John W. Lee, told to our confidence-man, the Confederate surgeon. The latter heartily sympathized with his friend, and with the Southern owner, who, he hoped, would yet get his money from the Federal clutches. The surgeon remarked, — " I have a heartfelt interest in your case. I am a native of Georgia. I know Thomas L. Metcalf, of Augusta, well, and he is a true, uncom- promising friend of the South. He is very wealthy, — a heavy cotton-dealer and ship-owner, &c. When the war broke out, Mr. Metcalf raised and equipped a company called the Metcalf Guards, which company fought at the first battle of Bull Run, and was, sad to say, almost annihilated." "I am pleased to hear this," replied Lee, "and that Mr. Metcalf has another friend here. But one thing let me caution you about: don't breathe a word here about his Southern Rights course, as you respect him and love the cause. Be very careful ; for I shall now insist that he is a good Union man, and think that I can thus get his money back and save my portion of it." The surgeon of the Confederacy promised faithfully to be silent on that point. It was also further arranged that he would at once go to Bowling Green, see Major-General Rosecrans, get his exchange papers adjusted, and return to Louisville, when Lee would have letters ready for Mr. Met- A NEST OF NASHVILLE S3IUGGLERS. 457 calf explaining the ills that had happened to their plan, -which letters were to be taken to the sunny South by the surgeon. The story is told. Mr. Lee saw the surgeon no more ; nor did his old steamboat friend again turn up. His money is now in possession of the United States Government, and the trial of the case is pending, we believe, in the United States District Court at Louisville. When we last heard from John W. Lee, the good Union man, he had feed a lawyer for ten thousand dollars to win the case, at Washington, where he expected to get back his bargained share, thirty-three per cent, of the sum total. This statement is compiled from the evidence of the two witnesses, — the surgeon and Mr. Ellis of Kentucky, — and, if the facts are as thus stated, Mr. Lee will have a happy time of it in recovering his percentage. A Nest of Uasliville Smugglers. For many weary months after its occupation by the Federal army, Nash- ville was the great centre to which thronged all the hordes of smugglers, spies, and secret plotters of treason, whom a love of treachery or of gain had drawn to the rebel cause. The aid and encouragement received from the wealthy Secessionists of the city enabled them securely and successfully to carry out their designs, which, added to its proximity to the heart of the Confederacy, made it a peculiarly advantageous base of operation. Through them, lines of communication were kept open to every part of the South, and the rebel army supplied with valuable goods and still more valuable information. Their shrewdness and secrecy seemed to defy every attempt at detection. The regular pickets, do what they would, found it impossible to prevent the transportation of contraband goods beyond the lines ; and it was only when mounted policemen were stationed on every road leading from the city that a noticeable decrease in the operations of these aiders and abettors of the rebellion became apparent. As an illustration of the beneficial effects of the new arrangement, and to show to what great results a trifling circum- stance will sometimes lead, the case of the three Friedenbergs and the developments to which it gave rise are here narrated. On Sunday, the 28th of December, 1862, as two of these policemen were patrolling the Murfreesborough pike, they saw coming towards the city a buggy in which were seated three men. At first glance there was nothing to distinguish them from ordinary travellers ; but when they had drawn near enough to see the policemen, the youngest and smallest of the three jumped from the buggy and made for the woods with desperate speed. This, of course, excited suspicion, and he was at once pursued, but unavailingly. His two companions, however, were halted and sent under guard to the police-oflSce. An examination of themselves and vehicle revealed the presence of nothing contraband; the only thing found upon them being 458 ARMY POLICE RECORD. several hundred dollars In Southern money. Their names, they said, were Besthoff and Friedeuborg. They had been engaged in merchandizing at Atlanta, Georgia, before the war, and had remained there until recently. Finding they could no longer keep out of the rebel army, they determined to escape ; had closed out their stock at what it would bring, and with the pro- ceeds were now on their way North. Of the young man with them when first seen, they either could or would say nothing more than that he was a stranger whom they had found at Murfreesborough, and who had begged a passage in their buggy to Nashville. Such was the substance of a very pitiable story of hardships, suffering, and heavy losses, related with much volubility and feeling, and, there being no evidence contradictory of it, or warranting their further detention, — whatever private reasons there may have been to suspect its truth, — they were released. Attention was again directed to the young man — or boy, rather — who had escaped. His hasty flight indicated something wrong, and detectives were put upon his track. For several days nothing was heard of him ; but one morning he was seen gliding stealthily through an alley in the city, and, chase being made, was this time soon caught. He was found to be a German Jew, not yet sixteen years old, but bright and quick-witted far beyond what is usual at such an age. An examination at the police-office disclosed U230n his person about six hundred dollars, which was taken from him. On being questioned, he said that his name was James Wilson ; that he formerly lived in Cleveland, East Tennessee, but had been peddling in Atlanta, Georgia. His story was much the same as that of Friedenberg and Besthoff; he had sold his goods, was anxious to get away and go to Germany, was tired of the business, had lost heavily, &c. As in the case of the others, this was reason- able enough in itself, and he was about to be released, when a gentleman sitting in the office — formerly a resident in the South, but now in the army police service — called Colonel Truesdail to one side, and said to him, — • "That boy is lying to you, — is telling you a series of lies right along. 1 know him, and know who and what he is. I saw him at Murfreesborough peddling contraband goods, where he was generally known to be a smuggler, and I recognized him at once while he was talking to you." " Take him into another room, then," said the colonel, " and work upon him. Talk sharp to him ; tell him that you know all about him, and how you know it. Convince him that you have seen him in the South and know what he was doing there, and then tell him that if he will own up, tell all he knows about these smuggling operations, and disclose the names of those engaged in it, we will return him his money and let him off without punish- ment ; but, if he won't do that, we'll keep his money and send him to the penitentiary." This was done ; but the boy still persisted for some time in his original story. Finding, however, that he really was known, and that it was likely to fare hard with him, he finally yielded and made a new statement, which was in substance as follows. His name, he still said, was James Wilson, — this was afterward found to A NEST OF NASIIVILLK SMUGGLERS. 459 be untrue, — and he had beeu living in Clevehxnd, as he first stated, for two years. He was a native of Germany, and his parents still resided there. About two months since he came to Nashville, — purchased goods, succeeded in smuggling them through the Federal lines, and took them to Atlanta, Georgia, where he sold them. The goods were purchased of Staddler & Brother, No. 2 Public Square, and Kleinman & Co., on Market Street, and consisted entirely of fine combs, for Avhich he paid one dollar and twenty-five cents per dozen. These he packed in two satchels, and, wishing to get them out of the city, was introduced to one F. W. Keller, residing about one and a half miles out on the ZoUicoffer Road, who took him and his goods out to his house the same evening, with his children, as he carried them home from school. Keller also took out with him at the same time a box of goods which he said he haid bought of the Friedenbergs. For helping him out, Wilson paid Keller fifty dollars, and received from him the next morning a note to one Avis Brown, in which it was stated that the bearer was a smug- gler who wished to get away as soon as possible, and requesting Brown to assist him in doing so. From Keller's Wilson made his way, partly on foot and partly on a horse which he purchased on the road, to Brown's, who received him kindly and showed' him the way. Thence he went to Franklin and Murfreesborough, where he sold his horse and took the cars for Atlanta. Here he sold the combs for one dollar each, and then returned by rail to Mur- freesborough, where he met Friedenberg and Besthoff, with whom he came to Nashville, arriving there — or rather in sight of the policemen — on Sunday, the 28th of December. This trip occupied about twelve days, and proved very profitable to him; and it was now his intention to go home to Germany. Respecting others engaged in smuggling goods through the lines, he said that he knew a Mr. Wolfi", living in Atlanta, who had recently purchased an assortment of buttons, needles, pins, gold lace, &c., which he had carried out in a two-horse wagon that had a false bottom to the bed, and taken to Chat- tanooga, where the witness had assisted in unloading them. One A. Haas had a two-horse carryall with a false bottom, and had the previous month taken in it a load of goods from Nashville to Atlanta, where he also resided. The false bottom, he said, was put into the carryall in Nashville. Leo Cohen also had a false-bottomed wagon, which he had made in Nashville, and with which he had smuggled a load of contraband articles to Atlanta. About three months ago, a man living at Selma, Alabama, had come to Nashville and purchased two wagon-loads of goods, which he took through' the lines with him to Chattanooga, whence he made his way to Selma. He knew, he said, further, that Schwab & Co., a heavy firm in Nashville, had been engaged rn smuggling, but not to what extent. As to the Friedenbergs, &c., he did not know, of his own knowledge, that they had been running goods through the Federal lines, but he did know that Abraham Friedenberg had on several occasions taken goods to the South from Nashville, and had seen him in Murfreesborough and Chattanooga with them, and he knew that they were the goods which he had seen loaded into a two-horse wagon, furnished with a false bottom, at the store of B. F. Shields & Co., in Nashville, and he 46C ARMY POLICE RECORD. was afterwards told by Frledenberg that they had been sold by him in Chattanooga and Atlanta. These were the only persons engaged in contra- band trade of whom he had any knowledge. Having thus fully revealed these matters, the boy was released, his money returned to him, and himself sent North. The information given by him was at once improved by the arrest of Keller, at whose house was found and seized a large amount of dry goods and clothing. Keller, upon his examination, stated that about five weeks previously he had come to the city to sell some butter, and while at the market was approached by two Jews named Friedenberg, who inquired where he lived. On being informed, they asked him if he could not take out to his house some goods for them, for which service they would pay him well. After some conversation, and on being assured that there was no danger in it, he agreed to take them out, and came the next day, as requested, with his wagon for them. The Friedenbergs loaded the wagon with a large quantity of hoop-skirts and several small boxes and bundles of unknown goods. These he carried to his house, and the same evening another Jew, named Besthoff, came out with a new wagon, drawn by two mules. Stopping there a few minutes, he went down the road, and, returning the next morning, informed Keller that he had taken down a load of goods in that wagon, concealed by a false bottom. He then requested the Jew to take the goods from his house, or he would throw them out into the yard. Besthoff said he would come back and get them on his return from the city in an hour or so, — which he did, — loading them into the same wagon which he had with him on the day previous, and giving him at the same time an order on Friedenberg, written in Hebrew, for his pay. This order was presented the next day, and the amount — five hundred dollars — promptly paid by Friedenberg, who remarked that they would make fifteen thousand dollars on that load. There were three Friedenbergs, all of whom were in the habit of going out on the same pass which Besthofi" had used, and which was in one of the Friedenbergs' name. Whoever used it would leave it at Keller's house, and he would take it back to town for the others. At one of his visits to these Friedenbergs they induced him to take three boxes of gray caps out and go with them to Murfreesborough, saying that he could sell them there for five or six dollars each, and that they would divide the profits with him. About ten days before Christmas he went with the caps to Murfreesborough, where he found great difiiculty in disposing of them at all, but finally closed them out for one dollar each, in Confederate scrip, which realized about seventy cents to the dollar. Here he met Besthofi" and Friedenberg, the latter of whom informed him that he was then going to Atlanta, but that he would soon return, and would then want more goods brought through the lines. Returning on Christmas day, Keller went immediately to see the other Friedenbergs, who told him that they would furnish him some goods to take out and sell, which would pay a great profit,^. The arrangement proposed was that he should pay them the cost-price of the goods when ho took them to his house, and that they would pay him his money back, and fifty per cent, in addition, when the goods should be delivered A NEST OF NASHVILLE SMUGGLERS. 461 to their partner, the other Friedenberg, on his return from the South, To these terms he agreed, and took out the goods which were found at his house and seized there, and for which he had advanced over nine hundred dollars. Abraham Friedenberg returned to Nashville, but, instead of coming for the goods, as promised, went to Louisville, and the other Friedenbergs then said that they would send somebody else to get them ; but before they could do so their arrangements were broken in upon by his arrest and the seizure of the goods. The Friedenbergs and Besthoff were all partners, — they had told him so, many times ; also that they were smugglers, and did nothing else. The goods which he carried out were sometimes taken under a quilt or blanket in his market-wagon ; or sometimes he would put the boxes under bundles of oats ; and when they were large he would throw manure over them. He made five trips to bring out the goods, for which they paid him the five hundred dollars. At the time he was about to start for Murfrees- borough with the caps he did not keep it a secret, and about that time he met one Salzkotter, who requested him to say to his partner Schwab, if he met him, not to come back, for if he did the Yankees would catch him. Best- hoff had told him that this same Schwab had made twenty thousand dollars on hats which he had smuggled throi;gh the Federal lines in feather beds, and that he and his firm — Schwab & Co. — had been engaged in the same kind of business ever since the war began. Keller also related the history of his acquaintance with the boy Wilson, whose real name, as he had been informed by Friedenberg, was Solomon Guthman. This did not differ much from the boy's own statement, but con- tained the additional information that Wilson was connected with the Frie- denbergs, always procured his goods from them, and seemed to be one of them. He had made five thousand dollars, he boasted to Keller, by smug- gling goods through the lines, and he was now going on to Philadelphia to buy another stock, on which he would make five thousand dollars more. Keller stated, in conclusion, that he was a vegetable gardener, and had been doing well before the rebellion, but had found it impossible to make a living since. He had been driven into this business through sheer poverty and ignorance : he had no wish or design to injure the Government, — was not in favor of the rebellion. By the seizure of the goods he had lost every thing he had ; and, as they did not really belong to him, but to the Friedenbergs, by whom he had been inveigled into carrying them to his house, he hoped that the military authorities would force them to refund him his money, or a portion of it, at least. In consideration of all the circumstances, and believing that Keller did not engage in the business for the purpose of aiding the rebellion, but rather through actual fear of coming to want, and that he might be made of some service to the Government, it was proposed to him that he should turn around and assist in developing the case against the Friedenbergs and Best- hoff, so as to secure their punishment and the confiscation of their o-oods. If he would do this, and work faithfully, he was promised that he should not be a loser by it, but should be remunerated for the money he had 102 ARMY POLICE RECORD. advanced to the Friedenbergs. Keller gladly accepted the offer, and went to work at once, following the mattor up diligently and faithfully, and since then has been almost constantly employed in the secret service. Through his instrumentality Isaac and Mike Friedenberg were arrested, and some nine hundred dollars in money, besides personal property, as watches, &c. were found upon their persons and seized. Diligent search was made for Abraham Friedenberg and Besthoff; but they had gone to Louisville to purchase goods, and, by some means hearing of the affair, made good their escape. At the same time a large stock of goods, valued at between four and five thousand dollars, stored in the auction and commission Louse of B. F. Shields & Co., was seized as the property of the Friedenbergs. Isaac Friedenberg, when arrested, had little to say, further than to admit that he had sold the goods to Keller, but claiming that he did not know that the latter intended to smuggle them through the lines, though he did know that Keller had previously taken goods to Murfreesborough to sell. Mike Friedenberg, however, made quite a lengthy statement, which resulted in the arrest of still other parties, and was in brief somewhat thus : — In March, 1857, he went to Columbus, Georgia, and remained there, engaged in mercliandizing with his brother Isaac, until March, 18G2, when he came to Nashville. The reason of his leaving Columbus was that he did not wish to enter the rebel army, and could not longer remain there without doing so. He had not been back since leaving there, and his business there was still in an unsettled condition. Ilis brother Isaac was at that tiriie in Richmond, whither he had gone when the Federal army occupied Nash- ville, and had written to him as he was about leaving Columbus to stop at Nashville and take charge of the balance of a stock of goods which he had left there. This he did, moving them first into the store of a Mr. Stein, and. on the latter's leaving for New York, to the store of Shields & Co., where he began selling them out. On the IGth of June, 18G2, he was taken sick, and for two months was unable to attend to any business. Just before this, however, Isaac had returned from Richmond, and proceeded immediately to New York to buy more goods. He returned, however, without any, and Mike, on recovering, went himself to New York, and remained there two months, when he again came to Nashville, reaching there on the 28th of No- vember, 18G2. In the mean time his brother Isaac had bought of two parties in Nashville a considerable stock of boots, shoes, hats, caps, and gentlemen's furnishing goods, which he then had in Shields's store, and which -he said belonged to himself, Mike, and their nephew, Abraham Friedenberg. After his return from New York, Mike himself purchased from A. Laob & Co. a lot of hats, which were still in the store of Shields & Co. when seized by the police. Abraham Friedenberg was in partnership with himself — Isaac — some five or six weeks, and then left them and went with Besthoff; but what they did he did not know. One day Abraham Friedenberg came to him and wished him to buy him a wagon and two mules, which he did, paying' for them four hundred and seventy dollars. The next day Besthoff came and requested him to get Mr. Smith, a carpenter, to make a false bottom to the A NEST or NASHVILLE SMUGGLERS. 463 wagon. He said Mr. Smith knew all about making it, and that when it was finished he — Besthoff — would call for it. Smith agreed to make, and did make, the false bottom, as he desired, and Friedenberg afterwards saw it in the wagon. Keller's arrangement for carrying goods out to his house was entirely with Besthoff and Abraham Friedenberg. He carried out five or six loads for them, and Abraham Friedenberg furnished the five hundred dollars to itaj him. Besthoff and A. Friedenberg loaded their own wagon — the one with the false bottom — twice, and went with it into the country, where they remained until December 28, when they returned, and in two or three days afterwards went North. Through them he became acquainted with Keller, and sold him seventy-four dozen fine combs, which cost one dollar and fifty cents per dozen, for two and a half or three dollars a dozen, eighteen pounds of flax thread, and some other goods. This testimony of Mike Friedenberg led to the arrest of John L. Smith, who made the false bottoms, and who stated, on examination, that he was a carpenter, and had a shop on the corner of Lime and High Streets. In the latter part of February or about the 1st of March, 18G2, a Mr. Salzkotter, of the firm of Schwab & Co., merchants of Nashville, called at the shop and re- quested him to make a false bottom in a light spring-wagon, and afterwards sent the wagon to the shop, where the bottom was made and put in. The way iu which it was made was this. Side-pieces were put on each side of the bed inside, and one through the centre, the whole length, and on these pieces planed boards were secured, leaving between the two floors a vacant space of from two and a half to three inches. When finished, Salzkotter himself came after the wagon and took it away, but neither at this nor at any other time did he say for Avhat purpose he intended to use it. Since then he had made five or six similar ones for other parties, all of whom had been introduced by this same firm of Schwab & Co. He objected to making them at first, but finally was induced to do so, though he knew it to be wrong. Salzkotter paid him fite dollars for the job ; Haas, the only one of the other parties whose name he could remember, paid him ten, and the remainder fifteen dollars. After the wagon for Salzkotter was finished, and before he took it away, he sent to the shop a dray loaded with boxes, the contents of which he said he wished to pack into his wagon. Smith gave him the key of the shop ; and during the night they were unloaded and packed, — as the wagon was gone in the morning, and the boxes were there empty. Mr. Smith did not know what was in these boxes ; but Mahlon Jones, one of his workmen, testified that he helped remove them from the dray, and, in so doing, one of them fell upon the ground and was broken open, exposing the contents, which were quinine and other medicines. It was now Salzkotter's turn to receive the attention of the police, as a smuggler and dealer in false-bottomed ^wagon-beds ; and some three or four thousand dollars' worth of liquors and domestics were seized as belonging to him. He was immensely indignant, of course, and unblushingly endeavored to lie out of the scrape in which he found himself. When questioned, he stated most positively that he had been keeping books for Schwab & Co. in 464 ARMY POLICE RECORD. Nashville for three years, until some three months previous, when the storo was closed. He had never been in partnership with Schwab. The firm — composed of Schwab and his brother-in-law, II. Dreyfoos — owed him some four thousand to five thousand dollars, for which he held their notes. Schwab and his partner had both left the city, and he believed them to be in Knoxville, where they had a branch house. They had left him about one thousand dollars' worth of liquors to sell for them, and he had sold all but about two hundred dollars' worth. He also had some two hundred dollars' worth of liquors of his own, which they had given him in settle- ment. He had never had made, for himself or anybody else, a wagon, car- riage, or vehicle of any description, with a false bottom, and he did not know anybody who had. He had never bought any wagon for himself or other person, nor had he been, directly or indirectly, connected with anybody in running goods through the lines to the enemy or to any disloyal persons. Schwab & Co. had had considerable trade with the South, but it was all before the war. Their books and papers were left with him to settle up, and he was to yjay himself out of the proceeds. He never knew of Schwab having had a wagon or carriage made for carrying goods through the lines. He knew Mr. Smith, the carpenter, but had never visited his shop for the purpose of having a false bottom made to a wagon or other vehicle. Of the other parties who had testified concerning them he knew nothing. When aSked by Colonel Truesdail if he would make oath to this statement, he rose from his chair and said he would. The colonel, however, would not allow him thus to perjure himself, but immediately called up the witnesses Smith and Jones, who reiterated in his presence their former statements, and identified him as the man whom they called Salzkotter and who had several times been to the shop for the purpose of having the false bottoms made. Mike Friedenberg was then called in, and, in the presence of Salzkotter, stated that his nephew, Abraham Friedenberg, told him to go to Mr. Salz- kotter's store and inquire of him who could be hired to make a false bottom to a wagon. Accordingly, he went to Salzkotter one Saturday, some five or six weeks before, and made the inquiry, to which the latter replied that he would introduce him to a Mr. Smith who would make it, but that Smith would not make it if he went to him alone. After supper he called on Salz- kotter by invitation, and together they went to Smith's, to whom he was in- troduced, and with whom, in Salzkotter's presence, he made an arrange- ment for the making of the false bottom. This testimony being rather damaging, Salzkotter endeavored to weaken it by a cross-examination ; but Friedenberg still persisted in his statement, and further said that the wagons were made for the express purpose of smuggling. The complicity of Salzkotter in the wagon-bed transaction was now fully established ; and witnesses were next examined to prove that both he and the house of Schwab & Co. had been extensively engaged in smuggling goods through to the rebels. Edward Speckel testified that he lived in Nashville, knew Salzkotter well, and that the latter had told him some five months previously that he had been smuggling goods from Louisville to A NEST OF NASHVILLE SMUGGLERS. 465 Nashville. They were principally quinine and other medicines ; and he had made eighteen hundred dollars on one trip. The goods were taken by a car- riage to a way-station some distance from Louisville, and thence shipped by rail to Nashville. Near Louisville he just escaped detection by saying that the trunks contained only the clothing belonging to a family who were to join him at the station. Salzkotter said that his father-in-law, Schwab, had taken the goods South from Nashville and sold them, he being a partner in the transaction. He further said that he had been South himself before this occurred, and that he had cleared eighteen hundred dollars by the trip, — of which he had one half and Schwab the other. He had often remarked, laughingly, that they could make more money than the Union men, and seemed to make no secret of his sending goods to the South. David Kuhn, who had lived in Knoxville eight years, testified that he knew the firm of Schwab & Co. Salzkotter was connected with them in some way, but he did not know whether he had an interest in the store or not. In Knoxville they sold liquors, cigars, and notions, but they had closed their store some eight months before. It was the general belief, and he knew, that the house was engaged in smuggling goods through the Federal lines. He knew that they had brought goods from Nashville, but did not know that they had brought them in wagons with false bottoms. Both Schwab and Dreyfoos had told him they had smuggled goods through since they closed their store, and in October, 1862, Salzkotter came to Knoxville in a light spring-wagon, with goods, as was believed. His reputation was that of a smuggler. William Muller, who was formerly a clerk for Schwab & Co., corroborated Kuhn's testimony, and added that it was common report that Schwab & Co. and Salzkotter were in the habit of running goods through the lines by means of wagons having a false bottom. While clerking with them, he had heard the firm say that they were smuggling medicines and other goods through the lines ; and he knew of pistols and knives having been sent to the Knoxville house of Schwab & Co. early in 1862. Salzkotter went to Knoxville in the summer of 1862; and it was the general report that he had taken goods with him. It was his impression that Salzkotter was a silent partner in the house, on account of having failed in business at Knoxville. Salzkotter's case was now hopeless; and he seems at last to have given it up himself, as he made no further efibrts to avert punishment by holding out against evidence so strong and positive. His liquors were turned over to the United States Marshal for libel and confiscation in the United States District Court, his domestic goods were put to immediate use in the hospi- tals, and he was sent to the Alton Military Prison, but has since been re- leased, and is now again in Nashville. His money — of which he had some twenty-three thousand dollars — was not found, though long and thorough search was instituted for it. He admitted, however, afterwards, that the officers came within an inch or two of the place where it was secreted. In the case of the Friedenbergs, Isaac was imprisoned in irons for some time ; but finally he and Mike were paroled not to come south of the Ohio River 30 466 ARMY POLICE RECORD. again during the war. Their goods seized in the act of smuggling were confiscated at once, and those in store at Shiekls & Co.'s were turned over to the United States Marshal for libel and confiscation in the District Court. Their watches and money, after deducting enough to repay Keller, were returned to them. Smith, the carpenter, was released without punishment. Thus ended this remarkable case, or rather series of cases, all resulting from the trifling incident of a boy jumping from a buggy in which he was riding, and escaping to the woods. It disclosed a vast network of fraud and villainy, and resulted in the pvmishmeut of three persons, the pardon and subsequent good behavior of numbers of others, and the confiscation of some ten thousand dollars' worth of goods. But, more and better than all this, it demonstrated the sleepless vigilance of the Government in the discovery of guilt, however secret and well planned, and the heavy hand of justice not yet too weak to visit upon the violators of its laws the full penalty so de- servedly prescribed. It taught a lesson which could not but be heeded, and disclosed a power which must be respected and feared, if not loved. The Hollow-Heeled Boot. In the earlier days of the rebellion there lived in Southeastern Missouri one Ogilvie Byron Young. He was a wild, graceless scamp, rich in the blood of his ancestors, but poor in purse. To the pride of Lucifer he added the courage of Falstaff and the honorof lago. A scion of Virginia's aristo- cracy, he deemed himself a statesman from birth and an orator by nature. Showy in manner and superficial in attainments, he could act the accom- plished gentleman or the bullying braggart as best suited the occasion. Vain, reckless, and boastful, he was scorned as a visionary enthusiast by some, feared as a bold, bad man by others, but admired as a genuine Southern cavalier of the old school by those who knew him least. Wildly imaginative, but immensely unpractical, he plunged madly into the first waves of rebellion, and, while Sterling Price was yet a Union general and Claiborne F. Jackson a loyal Governor, dared to avow and advocate opinions of the most ultra-Southern character. Fine-drawn theoretical arguments on the right and duty of secession were spread before the people of the State, in column after column of letters published in newspapers and to which was attached the full signature, "Ogilvie Byron Young." The rough back- woodsmen of his county were momentarily swayed by his presumptuous ^clamor, and he was sent to the first Missouri State Convention. Here he was the only member that took strong gi'ound in favor of secession j9e>' se, gaining thereby not a little notoriety. The State did not secede ; but Ogilvie Byron Young did, and for some months he was not so much as heard from. In the fall of 1861 he was arrested at the Spencer House, Cincinnati, as a spy. In due time an indictment and trial followed ; but, though tb^re was THE IIOLLOW-HEELED BOOT. 467 abundant evidence of guilt, he escaped conviction by means of some tech- nical informality in the proceedings. He vras ordered to leave the city, however, and did so. In the following spring he was found in Covington, Kentucky, under an assumed name, aiding and abetting the rebels by fur- ' nishing information, and was again arrested. lie had been cautioned by some one, it would seem ; for there was found nothing upon him in the way of papers or letters to warrant his detention, and he was again released, to again disappear from sight for some months. In November, 1862, he is again met with, in Nashville, where he had been for some weeks as a paroled prisoner, but acting all the while in his old capacity of smuggler and spy. In this business he seems to have had remarkable success, until his career was fortunately arrested by a com- bination of circumstances and the watchful shrewdness of the army police. About the last of that month Young was introduced to a gentleman who represented himself as a hostage for the return of certain loyal Missis- sippians captured at luka and treated by Price as traitors, contrary to the terms of ihe cartel between the Federal and Confederate Governments. At first he was shy and suspicious, but was finally convinced that his new acquaintance was really what he purported to be, and heartily entered into all his plans for the advancement of the Confederate cause. As his confi- dence grew stronger, he remarked that he had been of more benefit to the South, as a spy, than any brigade of rebel soldiers. He had encouraged de- sertions in the Federal camps, an^ made out paroles in the names of Morgan and Kirby Smith. The business was getting a little dangerous now, how- ever, and he should get beyond the lines as soon as possible. He would have gone long ago, only that he had expected to be saved the trouble and expense of the trip by the fall of Nashville. Our luka hostage then informed him that Mrs. Major Ranney — wife of Major Ranney of the 6th Texas Regiment — was in the city, under his charge, and just returned from Europe, whither she had been on diplomatic business for the Confederate Government. She had in her possession lery important despatches, and was anxious to get safely through the lines with them. Young said, in reply, that he would bring his influence to bear upon the army officials in her favor, but in case she should be searched it would be well to provide for such a contingency. There was, he said, in the city a man by the name of Thompson, ostensibly a citizen, but really a rebel lieutenant in Bragg's army, and now acting as a spy. He had made the trip through the lines ten or twelve times, and could do it again. He was now engaged in drawing a map of the fortifications around Nashville and pro- curing information as to the numbers of the troops, &c., which should be forthcoming in due season. These secret despatches of Mrs. Ranney's, together with this map and other papers, could be hidden in the heel of a boot, which would be made for them by a bootmaker of the city in the employ of the Confederate Government. His name was C. J. Zeutzschell, and his shop was on Union Street. This plan was agreed to, and Young was to assist in the execution of it ; 46>S ARMY POLICE RECORD. in return for which, he was to he placed in a high position at Richmond. Young's reputation, however, was not of the best, and the bootmaker would do nothing for him, when called upon, without first making inquiries among his friends and consulting with our hostage, for whom the boots were wanted. Accordingly, Zeutzschell came to his room one evening and said that Young had been to his house and wished him to make a pair of boots and to secrete important documents in them so as to defy detection. He had no confidence in Young's honor, and did not wish to do it for him. He knew him as identified with the Confederates, indeed, but he was a bad man, low in his habits and associates, never had any money, &c. He (Zeutzschell) had been inquiring of the friends of the South — undoubted secessionists — concerning him (our luka hostage), and was convinced that he was a gentle- man and a true Southerner. He would do any thing to promote the cause, — money was no object, — he would lay down his life for it. If Young could be thrown off the track, he would make the boots and secrete in them a map of the fortifications about Nashville. His brother-in-law, Harris, would go out and see if any new ones had been erected. If not, he had a perfect plan of them in his head, to prove which he immediately sat down and drafted one. He remarked that he had recently sent several such to General Morgan. He had made the boots for all the spies in the same way, and not one had ever been detected. He had sent valuable information in a common pipe. "Can you get a pass for your man?" asked our hostage. "Certainly," was the reply ; " as many as you like. There is a German at head-quarters who steals blank passes for me, and I fill them up myself. I give him whiskey for them." He would like to go South, too, he said, in conclusion. He could describe the fortifications so much better than in a map. Both parties being satisfied, an' agreement for the boots was made. Zeutz- schell was to get the exact distances of the defences, the number and dispo- sition of the troops, &c., and secrete them, together with Mrs. Ranney's despatches, in the heel of one of the boots. This he did, according to promise: the boots were made and delivered on the evening appointed. Instead of reaching Generals Bragg and Morgan, as intended, however, the maps, papers, boots, owner, maker, and spy, suddenly found themselves in the hands of the army police, much to the astonishment and chagrin of all parties concerned. Zeutzschell and Young were sent to the military prison at Alton. THE rSEUDO " SANDERS."' 469 The Pseudo " Sanders." Prominent among those thronging the head-quarters of Brigadier-General Boyle, in the city of Louisville, one morning in November, 1862, might have been noticed a bright, handsome woman, who seemed exceedingly anxious for the success of some suit in which she was engaged. Her dress and manner indicated that she belonged to the higher walks of life, but other- wise there was nothing in her conduct or appearance by which a careless observer would distinguish her from the hundreds of others who daily gather at the office of a commanding general, seeking favors as numerous and diverse as the applicants themselves. The practised eye, however, could easily discern certain suspicious circumstances attaching to her and suggest- ive of the idea that beneath all this pleasant exterior there might be an under-current of deceit and treachery. But her story was plausible, her manners winning, her conversation sprightly and interesting. The impres- sion made by her upon all with whom she came in contact was in the highest degree favorable, and it seemed both ungallant and unjust to harbor the shadow of a suspicion that she was otherwise than a high-minded, honor- able woman, who would scorn any of the petty meannesses of such frequent occurrence within our lines. It subsequently transpired that her name was Ford, that her husband was a Baptist clergyman, — a man of ability and reputation, formerly editor of a religious paper in that city, and now representative in the Confederate Con- gress from that district of Kentucky. She herself belonged to one of the first families of the city, and moved in the highest circles of an aristocratic society. To a naturally brilliant mind, strengthened and polished by a thorough education, were added the ease and grace of an accomplished Southern woman. In the palmy days of peace she had been the centre of a bright galaxy of wit and beauty, dispensing to her admirers a bounteous hospitality, as genial as it was welcome. Now all was changed. These social gatherings had long been discontinued, the family circle was broken and scattered, her husband was a fugitive from his home, and she was seek- ing from the Federal authorities permission to pass southward beyond their lines and join him in his exile. Lounging about the same head-quarters, on the same morning, with seem- ingly no particiilar business or present occupation save to watch the move- ments of others, was a quiet-looking man, who now and then cast sharp^ quick, and stealthy glances at this Mrs. Ford, apparently regarding her with iiiuch interest. Presently, seeing her somewhat apart from the crowd, he approached, and, in a respectful, diffident manner, engaged her in conversa- tion, which continued for some time, and, from the animated character it gradually assumed, was evidently upon some subject in which both parties were deeply interested. That it was of a confidential and private nature was easily inferred from the caution maintained during its continuance. It seems that, after some commonplace talk, the stranger informed her that C 470 ARMY POLICE RECORD. he was not what he then seemed, but in reality Captain Denver, of the Con- federate army, visiting Louisville as a spy upon the movements of the Federal army in that portion of Kentucky. Highly gratified at this intelli- gence, the lady became very friendly, and at once invited the captain to visit her house. The invitation so warmly given could not be declined without apparent rudeness, and so was accepted, but with, as the lady thought, a rather unnecessary and suspicious hesitation. Whatever unwillingness the captain may have outwardly exhibited in accepting the profi'ered invitation, he was not slow in availing himself of its present privileges and prospective pleasures. Calling soon afterwards at the residence indicated, he was cordially received by the family, whom he found sti'ong in their sympathy with the South. Conversation naturally turned upon the war, and by a warm espousal of the Confederate cause he soon succeeded in ingratiating himself into their confidence, and, by way of showing his confidence in them, revealed his intention of presently escaping through the Federal lines to the nearest Confederate command, taking with him as large an amount of quinine, morphine, and other medicines as he could safely carry. Confidence thus implicitly reposed in the acquaintance of but a few hours could not be otherwise than pleasing to the fair hostess ; and surely a reciprocal confidence would be little enough expression of gratitude in return. It was not safe ; it was not wise ; but " there can be no harm in *trusting so true and firm a Southerner as Captain Denver," thought Mrs. Ford. It was her purpose too, she said, to smuggle through the lines large quan- tities of medicine, and at the same time carry to the Confederate authori- ties valuable information of Federal movements and plans. Her husband was in the South, and she apprehended no difiiculty in procuring a pass allowing her to go to him, so soon as the circumstances of her case could be brought to the personal notice of General Boyle. The enterprise in which both were about to engage now became the exclusive topic of a lengthy con- versation, in the course of which the captain remarked that he had not suffi- cient money to make as extensive purchases as he wished, and was desirous of assistance from the friends of the cause in Louisville. Mrs. Ford thought this need not trouble him. She could arrange it to his satisfaction, and appointed an interview for the next morning, at which she hoped to report the complete success of her efforts. The evening passed rapidly, and the captain took his departure, leaving his entertainers highly pleased with him as a valuable acquaintance and colaborer in the cause of the South. The same evening the captain chanced to meet in the office of the Gait House an old friend. Dr. Rogers, surgeon on the staff of General Sterling Price, a paroled prisoner, and now, by order of General Rosecrans, on his way to Cairo to report to General Tuttle for transportation by the first boat to Vicksburg. According to the terms of the cartel agreed upon by the Federal and Confederate authorities, surgeons were held as non-combatanta and not subject to exchange ; but the doctors, with others, found in the hospital at luka, had been detained by General Rosecrans, in retaliation for THE PSEUDO "SANDERS." 471 the arrest and- imprisonment by General Price of certain Union soldiers \a Mississippi, and as hostages for their return. Their release had been followed by his ; and he ^Yas now, as stated, en route for Cairo. At their meeting the next morning. Captain Denver mentioned the doctor to Mrs. Ford as his friend and an intelligent and accomplished gentleman, with whom she would no doubt be highly pleased, at the same time remarking that he was on his way South, and it would be greatly to their advan- tage to go thither under his protection. To this she readily assented, and desired the captain to procure her an interview with the doctor. This not very difficult task was speedily accomplished, and the doctor called upon her that evening. Some time having passed in conversational pleasantry, the doctor adverted to the carrying of contraband goods, and spoke dis- couragingly of its policy, saying that any thing of the kind would be a violation of his parole and might leiid to his arrest and imprisonment. With apparent sincerity, Mrs. Ford promptly replied that though an enemy of the Federal Government she was an honorable enemy, and would engage in no enterprise to which the military authorities would refuse their sanction. The doctor seemed satisfied, and did not revert to the subject, but, instead, imparted to her, in strict confidence, a secret of the utmost import- ance. It will be remembered that some months previous to this, George N. Sanders had successfully escaped from the rebel States and made his way to England for the purpose of negotiating a Confederate loan. High hopes of success, on his part, were entertained, and his return was anxiously looked for by the rebels. Mrs. Ford, with her whole heart and soul in the cause, was more sanguine even than her most sanguine friends : and imagi- nation can scarcely conceive the bright colors with which she painted the future of the embryo Confederacy. Who, then, shall describe her surprise and joy when told by the doctor that their friend Captain Denver was no other than this same George N. Sanders, who had eluded the guard at the Suspension Bridge and was now on his return to the Confederate capital ? She was also informed that his mission had been completely successful, — that the loan had been taken by the Rothschilds, and that Sanders had in possession the evidence and documents connected therewith, all written in cipher. She was cautioned against hinting a word of it to anybody, or even intimating to Sanders that she knew him in any other character than as Captain Denver. He would accompany them to Vicksburg in his present disguise, and, until that point was reached, safety required that it should be penetrated by no one, however friendly to the South. The interests at stake were too vast to be hazarded by exposure to a mischance, which a single careless word might bring upon them. In case, however, he should be suspected, it would be their business to assist him in the secretion of his papers. The arrangements for the journey were discussed, and the suggestion of the doctor warmly espoused by Mrs. Ford. Her eyes sparkled with delight as she asked a thousand questions about Sanders : how he had managed to 472 ARMY POLICE RECORD. escape the vigilance of the Federals ; by what means he had accomplished his mission ; -what was the state of feeling in Europe, the prospects of recog- nition, and so on. The doctor answered as best he could, and at length took his leave to make final preparations to start the next evening. Passes were obtained, tickets bought, trunks checked, berths secured in the sleeping-car. Every thing bade fair for the successful termination of the enterprise. The night was passed comfortably in sleep, from which they were wakened, on arriving at Cairo, to find themselves under arrest. Denver and Kogers were indignant, but Mrs. Ford trembled like an aspen-leaf, and had the earth opened under her feet, revealing a bottomless chasm in which she must inevitably be buried alive, she could not have been more astonished and horrified. She could find neither tongue nor heart to utter a word in defence, and was led away in silence. A personal examination brought to light a number of letters and a large quantity of quinine concealed about her clothes. The trunks were found to contain similar contraband goods and much information of value to the rebels. Grieving will not restore lost opportunities, nor bring to the surface sunken treasures : else had not the hopes of Mrs. Ford been thus ruthlessly dashed to the ground, her letters and goods fallen into the hands of her enemies, and the riches of the Confederate loan taken to themselves wings and flown away. After a protracted investigation, Mrs. Ford was sent South-, — since which time she has engaged in the business of publishing a book giving an account of her experience and treatment under Federal rule. Captain Denver, cdias George N. Sanders, alias Conklin, it is needless to say, was simply a member of the detective police of the Army of the Cumberland, and Dr. Rogers, of Price's stafi", also a member of the same corps. Dr. Hudson the Smuggler, etc. The stroller about Nashville and its vicinity, in some of his more extended walks, may have noticed, on the summit of a considerable elevation about three hundred yards north of the Penitentiary, a large white house, half hidden in a beautiful grove of sugar-maples. The broad grounds in front, with their well-filled flower-beds, winding walks, and neatly trimmed shrub- bery, tell of wealth and taste combined. Apart from the business portion of the town, with its constant hum, the air is redolent of perfume. Even the winds, seemingly, pause to dally in luxurious idleness with the cedar- boughs, and from the birds in the heavy-leaved magnolias are heard the notes of gladness. Surely here, if anywhere, under the shade and in the quiet of these magnificent trees, one could spend a life of happy content, alike ignorant and careless of the noisy world beyond. In character with the house and its surroundings was the ftimily that dwelt within, a few short months ago. Its head — Dr. J. R. Hudson — was a DR. HUDSON THE SMUGGLER. 473 large, stalwart man, whose whitened hair and beard would have indicated that fiftj-odd years of life had weighed none too lightly upon him, had not the signs of present comfort been visible in every feature of his cheerful face. And, indeed, he had but few of the world's troubles to breast. The possessor of an elegant residence, and the proprietor of extensive iron- works near Harpeth Shoals, with three thousand acres of land attached thereto, and the owner of slaves and other property, he could now well afford to sit beneath his own vine and fig-tree, secure in the full possession of his ample fortune, and look out almost unconcernedly upon the wild waves of rebellion's stormy sea. His wife — a comely and interesting lady — was much younger and smaller than himself, but not less the embodiment of an un- troubled and self-satisfied mind. A bright, keen eye told of acuteness and penetration, to which even her liege lord, physically great as he was, must bend the knee of inferiority. Three daughters, and a son, the youngest of all, constituted the family then at home. Two of the daughters were young ladies grown, and the third was just on the verge of womanhood : they were attractive in feature and manner, and possessed of many of those graceful accomplishments which mark the perfect woman. To such a family, dwelling amid such scenes of beauty, and in the enjoy- ment of all that earthly riches could give, it would seem that the future could not well be otherwise than an unrufiled sea of happiness. But life, like an ocean-voyage, is full of uncertainties. And so with this household. At the very moment in which we have looked in upon them, they were treading upon the threshold of a great disaster. But we will not anticipate, further than to say that the story about to be told is a striking illustration of that wild spirit which will peril all the blessings and comforts of life to gratify a reckless malice and hate. One afternoon in the first week of January, 1863, the doctor was visited by a young lady, a Miss Roberta Samuels, a rebel sympathizer of Nashville, in company with a young man whom she introduced as one of Ashby's cavalrymen and a Confederate spy. In the most gracious manner the doctor expressed his gratification at having such a guest under his roof. The call being one of mere introduction, the visitor took his leave after about an hour's conversation, in which his host somewhat guardedly ex- pressed sympathy for the Southern cause, and invited him to call again and often. In three or four days the spy called again, — this time in the morning, remaining until after dinner. The doctor, for some reason, was more communicative than on the previous visit, and, by way of showing his hearty good will towards the Confederacy, related the story of his assisting some fourteen rebel prisoners to escape from the penitentiary at Nashville through the Federal lines. On a very dark night, he said, they came to his house, where he secreted them until the way was clear, when he took them into the fields, pointed out the Federal picket-fires, and showed them where they could slip by in the darkness without being seen. By one of them — Samuel Y. Brown — he had also sent out a fine revolving rifle and nistol and various other articles. He turned to his visitor, and asked, 474 ARMY POLICE RECORD. "Of what does your command stami in most need?" "Pistols and ammunition," was the reply. "And it is the principal part of my business here to-day to make arrangements with you to get a supply and have them run through the linos. You can help me, can't you ?" "I am just the man to do it," said he, earnestly, clapping his hand on the knee of his companion. " How many can you manage to carry out ? I can get ypu as many as you want." " I can get through with fifty, I think." "Well, I'll look around and see about them. The next time you come I'll let you know, and I doubt not it will be all right." The second day after, the doctor was again visited by this friend, who 1>rought with him a Mr. Walker, whom he introduced as a paroled Confede- rate prisoner. They were gladly welcomed, and presented to the family in the sitting-room. The doctor remarked that he had been too busy since the last call to do any thing about the pistols, but he hoped "to get to work at it Boon." He interested himself also in Mr. Walker's case, and asked him if he did not wish to get away from Nashville by running through the lines, without waiting to be exchanged. "If you do," said he, confidently, "I can get you through any time you want to go. I can pass you out as one of the hands employed in my iron- works down on the Cumberland River, or I can send you out as a carriage- driver or wood-chopper. I have passed out several in these ways ; and some- times I give a man an axe to go out to chop wood, and he quite forgets to come back." At this witticism all had a hearty laugh ; and a still more lengthy and confidential conversation ensued, developing, however, nothing materially diflPerent from the points already touched upon. Highly pleased, the party at length broke up, with the promise on the part of the two Confederates to call again in a week or ten days and make further arrangements about the pistols, &c. This appointment was kept according to agreement,-^the two friends walk- ing out to the residence one cold, rainy evening. They found that the doctor had a visitor before them, — one Captain Redman, a Federal quarter- master. This, of course, precluded the further transaction of the business on which they came, and might have embarrassed a less politic man than Dr. Hudson. He met the diiSculty boldly, introduced them to the captain as workmen from his iron-woi-ks, questioned them as to affairs there, asked them if they had passes to go back, talked to them as Union men, and took every occasion to mock and jeer at the rebels and their cause, slyly winking, however, the while, at the two Confederates. Accompanying them to the door, the doctor was told by the spy that he had just returned from the steamboat-burning expedition near Ilarpeth Shoals, and that the Con- federates were greatly in need of pistols ; they wanted fifty at once. "You shall have them," he exclaimed, shaking his hand energetically. " I have some Federal Government vouchers, to the amount of several hundred dollars ; I am expecting to get the money on them every day ; DR. HUDSON TilE SMUGGLER. 475 and with it I'll buy the pistols. When shall I meet you to go and see about them ?" "I can't go at all. It will not do for me to be seen on the streets of Nash- ville," was the reply. "Sure enough ! But there's Mr. Walker, — he'll do just as well. I'll meet him to-morrow, at eleven o'clock, at McNairy's store in Nashville, for the purpose." * This was agreed to, and the parties separated for the night. The nezfc morning Hudson and Walker met, as proposed, and went directly to a gun- smith's shop on Deadrick Street, kept by one William Eear. Rear was in the front part of the shop when they entered, but, without a word being said, all three walked through to the back room. Here the doctor, without intro- ducing Walker, said, — " I want fifty pistols for a friend of mine who is going to run the lines." " I have but two," replied Rear, producing them. "What is the price of them?" "Twenty-five dollars apiece." "Well, I'll take them ; and I want you to get some more right away." Then, turning to Walker, he added, " I'll go out now and see if I can't get some from Captain Redman's clerk ; and I will leave a line here to-morrow morning, letting you know what I have done." The two then left the shop, leaving the pistols until more could be pro- cured. The doctor did not come to town the next day, as promised, nor the day after ; and Walker began to fear that something had happened to him. To set his mind at rest, he sent him a note, which was answered by the doctor in person the next morning, at Rear's shop. In reply to Walker's queries he said, — " I couldn't get any pistols, as the teamsters and soldiers from whom I expected to buy them were all gone. But I have something here that's pretty good, I think," exhibiting a bullet-mould made to run twelve at a time. "You had better have some balls run with it," remarked Walker, as he examined it carefully. " I'll have a peck of them run at once ; and if you can't get them out, I will. I can put them under sacks of bran, or I will keep them at the house to load the pockets of prisoners when they run the lines. I can find ways enough to get rid of them ; for Confederate spies and escaping prisoners always stop at my house. In fact, they make it their head-quarters," he said, laughingly, as he bade Walker " good-morning." The doctor saw no more of Walker after this, — which he accounted for by the supposition that he had made good his escape from Federal restraint. Other parties and other business soon claiming his attention, he thought but little about it, indeed. On the last Monday of January he was surprised and pleased by a visit from his old friend the Ashby cavalryman and spy, of whom he had lost sight for some time. The sitting-room being occupied by a Federal soldier, — there as a guard to protect his property, — the doctor i7G AKAIY POLICE RECORD. and his guest retired to the parlor, where they had a long conversation touching the matter in which both were so deeply interested. The former was exceedingly communicative, and did most of the talking. He had re- cently secured, he said, through a Dr. Ford, a pair of fine revolving pistols and a revolving rifle, which his wife had taken out on the Charlotte pike to Mr, Charles Nichols, residing fifteen miles from Nashville, and there left them for a fifiond, who had doubtless got them by that time. He declared that his whole time and attention were devoted to assisting the Confederate cause, and that his principal object in taking the contract to furnish the Federal hospitals with milk was that he might pass the lines at will with men and materials to aid the South. He dwelt particularly upon the fact, and boasted of it as a shrewd trick, that he was kind to the Federal sick and wounded in order to pass as a good Union man and thus accomplish more for the cause he was engaged in ; and it had been of great service to him ; for he had been enabled to get many rebel prisoners and friends through the lines on his own pass and in other ways. At one time he had on his back porch eight Confederate soldiers just escaped from the penitentiary, while he was entertaining four Federal officers in the house. His particular aim was to keep arms passing into the guerrilla region on the Cumberland, to harass steamboats and the rear of General Kosecrans's army, and thus keep alive the spirits of the rebels. Towards the close of this conversation he said to his visitor, — "My friend Dr. Ford is afraid of being arrested by the Nashville army police. Can you get him through the lines ?" "Yes, I can; but it will be in a risky way. He will have to run his chances, and may get shot," was the answer. " Never mind, then : I can easily do it myself." The s])j now rising to take his leave, and intimating that he might not see him again, the doctor accompanied him to the porch, where he stood in his stocking-feet to say many parting words. When cautioned against it, he merely replied, — "I would be glad to walk to the State-House on my bare feet ten times, if I could advance the Southern Rights cause by so doing." Four days afterwards, on the morning of the 30th, a Mr. Newcomer called at the doctor's house and presented him a letter of introduction from J. Prior Smith, living twelve miles from Nashville, on the Hillsborough pike. His business, as stated in the letter, was to obtain assistance in procuring negroes, especially negro children, and running them through the lines to Smith, to be sold at the South. The enterprise, if successfully managed, would prove exceedingly profitable ; and the doctor entered heartily into the arrangement. Having unbounded confidence in Smith, he was not at all reserved in his expressions, but repeated much of what he had told to "Walker and the Confederate spy, ending by making an appointment to meet Newcomer at Rear's shop, there to aid him in the purchase of pistols to carry South. Here they found five pistols, — the same which had been procured for Walker, but which were finally sold to Newcomer. The DR. HUDSON THE SMUGGLER. 477 doctor also purcliasoil on his own account several pounds of Minie balls to send to the rebels. Ilis wife, he said, was now beyond the lines for the pur- pose of taking oat a fine horse which he had bought from a soldier for 3 trifle. Newcomer advanced Rear money for the purchase of other pistols, Hudson promising to sec that they were forthcoming at the proper time, and, just before leaving, made an arrangement with the latter to procure for Smith the requisite number of negroes and run them through the lines. He was to procure a pass for his driver and servants to go out into the country for milk for the hospitals ; and in that way they could get the negroes out and such other articles as Newcomer wished to carry with him, — the latter acting as driver. (We should have stated, ere this, that Dr. Hudson had quite a herd cf cows, and supplied milk to the Nashville hospitals, to a con- siderable amount, daily.) The doctor assured him that he could be relied on in every emergency, and that he would not hesitate to do any thing to assist the cause of the South. The next day Newcomer called again, and paid the doctor two hundred dollars, taking from him the following receipt: — "$200. " Received two hundred dollars of Mr. Newcomer, to be appropriated as distiiictlj' understood, or accounted for on sight, or sooner. "J. R. HcDsox. "January SI, 1863." The understanding referred to was that he should purchase pistols and ammunition to be carried South by Newcomer. The next day the doctor showed Newcomer the pistols, a double-barrel shot-gun, and a place which he called liis arsenal, prepared by him for the express purpose of secreting arms whenever he should deem it necessary, and which, he said, would hold a thousand stand. The doctor was now engaged heart and soul in the pistol and negro busi- ness, and for the next two weeks held almost daily consultation with his friend Newcomer as to the best means of procuring and getting them to their destination. In a week or so they had obtained six likely boys, who, Smith was informed, would be delivered at any place he should name outside of the lines, and the doctor had procured the promise of four more. So far every thing was progressing favorably ; but the operations were more limited than suited the tastes of either, and each was constantly on the watch for some opportunity of materially enlarging them. Meanwhile the doctor was visited by numbers of persons representing themselves as paroled prisoners, spies, &c., to all of whom he extended a welcoming hand. With one in particular — introduced by Newcoiuer as a spy of General Wheeler — he became very intimate, and revealed to him his real sympathies and feelings quite at length. To him he said, on his first visit, — " I am a strong Southern Rights man ; and not a day passes over my head that I do not do something to assist the Southern cause. I am watched by the detectives, I know, and have been frequently reported, but have not yet been imprisoned, because I play my cards right. I have in my house fre- 478 ARMY POLICE RECORD. quently, and am friendly with, many Federal oflScers, and, when reported, I prove by them that the charge is false. I have aided in the escape of many prisoners, but they have always thought me innocent." Mrs. Hudson, however, did not seem as confident and easy as the doctor. She repeatedly cautioned their new friend to be very careful, as they were watched on all sides, and she had reason to suspect that certain suspicious- looking men who had been there a few days since were nothing else than spies sent there by some of the officers. She was assured by him that he was sharp enough to evade any detectives that could be sent to watch him or them, — at which she seemed satisfied and more at rest and confidential than before. Some of their friends, she said, with great glee, had recently escaped from the penitentiary, and intimated that she and a neighbor lady had assisted them to do so, without, however, saying it in so many words. The doctor made an appointment to meet him in town that day, — which he did, and pointed out to him on the street a number of friends whom it would do to talk to, gave him the names of others living in the country who would be of great assistance, and invited him to visit him at his house often, and to call upon him for any thing in his power to give. At this tim'e large numbers of negroes were employed upon the fortifica- tions at Nashville ; and it was here that the doctor hoped to procure all that he wished to run South. Accordingly, he called upon Dr. or Lieutenant D. J. Deardurfi", Acting Assistant Adjutant-General of the Engineer Camp, and inquired if he could be spared some negroes long enough to build up and repair his fence, — saying that he would be very much obliged if he could be thus accommodated. The lieutenant replied that he might have them as soon as they could be spared, calculating, however, that this would not be until the works were finished, and not intending to let him have them until then. Soon afterward he was instructed by higher authority to confer with Dr. Hudson and consent to arrangements with him to furnish negroes, and was informed that the doctor would call on him soon, — which he did in four or five days. Being treated with some courtesy, he proposed the trap- ping of boys from ten to fifteen years old, and said to the lieutenant that if he would engage with him in the business and turn them over to him, he could get at least one thousand dollars for every boy large enough to plough, and for able-bodied men from fifteen hundred to two thousand dollars, and that they would divide the proceeds equally. He further said that he could get any kind of a pass he wished, as he had a farm outside the pickets, and would have no difiiculty in getting through and disposing of them as fast as they could be furnished. Deardurff assented to the proposition, and told him he could have as many as he wanted ; whereupon the doctor took his leave, promising to call for them on the following Monday. The next thing now was to see Newcomer, report his success, and make arrangements for the future ; and for this he was not compelled to wait long, as the latter called upon him that very evening. The doctor reported that he had sounded Lieutenant Deardurflf, with whom he had just taken dinner, in regard to the negro-smuggling business, and that the lieutenant hs»