Civil War History

Confederate Ruse Led To Capture of Beaty Men

ransomMary Polly (Hull) Beaty, my grandmother of the Civil War era, understood firsthand the pains of War. In less than a decade, she watched as her life went from being a farmer’s wife with a healthy family to a widow who lost not only her husband, but two sons, a son-in-law, a nephew and a grandchild. Her husband and grandson were the only two not killed by the war. The other four men died, not in battle or from battle wounds, but instead they died of starvation and disease inside a Confederate prisoner of war camp.

Several situations had to increase Mary’s pain. One, her sons were buried away from home is a military graveyard and second, the way her sons and family members were captured.

These seasoned soldiers were victims of a well-planned ruse by Confederate sympathizers. The ruse would eventually cost two of her sons, Thomas and Andrew Jackson, their lives. Her oldest boy, Jonathon would survive the ordeal, but his brother-in-law Andrew Owens and cousin Morgan Hull would not.

We learn more about how the Beatys, members of Company B, were captured on Nov. 6, 1863 near Rogersville, TN in a book written by a fellow soldier. Twenty years after the capture, in 1883, John Ransom, published a book based on a diary he kept (but later destroyed) as a prisoner of war with Company B. In John Ransom’s Andersonville Diary: Life Inside the Civil War’s Most Infamous Prison, he describes the way company was captured.

The rebel citizens got up a dance at one of the public houses in the village, and invited all the Union officers. This was the evening of Nov. 5th. Nearly all of the officers attended and were away from their command nearly all night and many were away all night. 

At dawn, with many of the Union officers missing or incapacitated from the previous night, the Rebel Calvary attacked Company B.

[The] Rebels had us completely surrounded and soon began to fire volley after volley into our disorganized ranks. Not one in five officers were present.

According to Ransom, the battle lasted 10 hours and when the unit finally surrendered 100 men were dead and another 400 were wounded. Once captured, it became apparent that the Confederate Army had no intention of treating the capture men humanely. The first order of business was to take personal belongings (blankets, etc) from all the Union soldiers.

Then the Army executed several soldiers accused of deserting the Rebel cause.

It set the expectations for what the captured men could expect. Within six months, the last of the four captured family members, Thomas, was dead.

Based on pension records filed by Mary in 1868, we further discover Mary was dealt one more hard blow — she lost her source of livelihood.

Thomas supported his mother both financially and physically, during the War. Each month, Thomas gave his mother all — or nearly all — of his Army stipend –and since his father, Alexander, was crippled with rheumatoid arthritis, Thomas planted and harvested the crops.

Categories: Appalachia, Civil War History, Cumberland Plateau, Family History | Tags: , ,

Confederate Families Exit The U.S. To Colonize Brazil

-flagsThe United States Civil War has always fascinated me especially once I discovered the high price my maternal family paid in the conflict. Living in the borderland region of Tennessee and Kentucky, my family line suffered death as well as the exploits of renegades like Tinker Dave Beaty and Champ Ferguson and overall, a general breakdown in law and order.

Another part of the War that I find interesting are the stories that have, for the most part, been removed from the history of the conflict –like this one about Americana, Brazil.

Shortly after the War ended, as many as 20,000 Confederates left the United States and an estimated 5,000-10,000 headed to Brazil (which still practiced slavery) where they hoped to create a plantation system based on a life that had left behind in the South. For nearly the first 100 years, the descendant spoke only English (with a southern drawl) before becoming more assimilated into the Brazilian society.

Historians say theirs was the only political exodus of American citizens in the history of the United States, though it is rarely mentioned in history books. In the latter half of the 1800s, thousands of Americans from all over the South left their homes and families in search of new lives in Mexico, Cuba and Brazil.

The Confederate families that chose Brazil found cheap land and the opportunity to colonize. The South American country welcomed the families because Brazil hoped to establish itself as the leader in worldwide cotton production by capitalizing on American farming techniques.

In the case of the ones that landed near present day Americana, Brazil — they maintain a connection to the Confederate South even to this day — holding an annual festival to honor their heritage.

Casa_dos_Norris

First Confederate home in Brazil.

Learn More

Wikipedia has a nice article on the history of the Confederate colonies in Brazil, but for a more in-depth article read The Confederados by Ron Soodalter originally published in America’s Civil War magazine.

I also found a few book titles (which I’ve added to my reading list).

Categories: American History, Civil War History

Books I’ve Read: This Republic of Suffering

Although it is a subject matter that I would not normally tackle, I found This Republic of Suffering: Death and the American Civil War by Drew Gilpin Faust to be extremely interesting.

Drawing on records from the military, family histories and benevolent organizations, Faust recreates the impact the War had on the American psyche. When the War commenced, the concept of death was neatly packaged in the idea of the Good Death.

But the battlefield and disease that took so many of America’s men were not conducive to the concept of dying at home, with family and with a clear Christian conscience. So as families and the country struggled with the sheer volume of death the War created, family members were further burden with the realization that their loved one most likely did not die the Good Death.

Faust also points out how industries like embalming rose up out of the need for American families to see the deceased.

What I found most intriguing, is the sheer volume of work and manpower required to account for all the dead. That is:

  • To make sure the deceased had a name and not just a serial number
  • The incredibly difficult job of identifying and re-interring soldiers, and
  • How the War inadvertently created the need for, and implementation of, National Cemeteries.

Possibly the most disturbing fact the book reveals is the desecration of graves — from both sides of the conflict — once the War ended.

Written in a scholarly fashion — with ample footnotes — the book is definitely not a quick read. But if you are interested in American history and, in particular the Civil War, you will find the book engaging.

Definitely a 5-star book because it is so well researched and because it offers such a poignant look at how soldiers were treated once they were dead.

Categories: American History, Books I have read, Civil War History | Tags: