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Life of a Confederate Soldier
In the Words of Sam Watkins
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Sam R. Watkins,
born on June 26, 1839 near Columbia, Tennessee, attended
Jackson College at Columbia prior to his enlistment as a
private in the First Tennessee Infantry, Company H in the
spring of 1861. Watkins served throughout the duration of
the war, and was promoted to fourth corporal for picking
up a Union flag from the battlefield during the Battle of
Atlanta, July 22, 1864. In 1881, 20 years after the war
began, Watkins wrote his memoirs of the war, recounting
his engaging saga in "Co. Aytch": A Side
Show of the Big Show. Watkins died on July 20, 1901.
Selected excerpts from his engaging narrative on the war
provide a glimpse into the life of the common Confederate
soldier.
Thoughts on the Common Soldier
Reminiscences of Camp Cheatham, 1861:
A private soldier is but an automaton, a machine that
works by the command of a good, bad, or indifferent
engineer, and is presumed to know nothing of all these
great events. His business is to load and shoot, stand
picket, videt, etc., while the officers sleep, or perhaps
die on the field of battle and glory, and his obituary
and epitaph but "one" remembered among the
slain, but to what company, regiment, brigade or corps he
belongs, there is no account; he is soon forgotten.
(p. 22)
After the battle on Cheat Mountain (September 12-13, 1861):
After the fighting was over, where, O where, was all
the fine rigging heretofore on our officers? They could
not be seen. Corporals, sergeants, lieutenants, captains,
all had torn all the fine lace off their clothing. I
noticed that at the time and was surprised and hurt. I
asked several of them why they had torn off the insignia
of their rank, and they always answered, "Humph, you
think that I was going to be a target for the Yankees to
shoot at?" You see, this was our first battle, and
the officers had not found out that minnie as well as
cannon balls were blind; that they had no eyes and could
not see. They thought that the balls would hunt for them
and not hurt the privates. I always shot at privates. It
was they that did the shooting and killing, and if I
could kill or wound a private, why, my chances were so
much the better. I always looked upon officers as
harmless personages.... If I shot at an officer, it was
at long range, but when we got down to close quarters I
always tried to kill those that were trying to kill me. (pp. 29-30)
The Weariness of a Long March
After the Battle of Perryville (October 8, 1862):
Along the route it was nothing but tramp, tramp,
tramp, and no sound or noise but the same inevitable,
monotonous tramp, tramp, tramp, up hill and down hill,
through long and dusty lanes, weary, wornout and hungry.
No cheerful warble of a merry songster would ever greet
our ears. It was always tramp, tramp, tramp. You might,
every now and then, hear the occasional words "close
up"; but outside of that, it was but the same tramp,
tramp, tramp. I have seen soldiers fast asleep, and no
doubt dreaming of home and loved ones there, as they
staggered along in their places in the ranks. I know that
on many a weary night's march I have slept, and slept
soundly, while marching along in my proper place in the
ranks of the company, stepping to the same step as the
soldier in front of me did. Sometimes, when weary, broken
down and worn out, some member of the regiment would
start a tune, and every man would join in....
...the boys would wake up and step quicker and livelier
for some time, and Arthur Fulghum would holloa out,
"All right; go ahead!" and then would toot!
toot! as if the cars were starting—puff!
puff! puff and then he would say, "Tickets,
gentlemen; tickets, gentlemen" like he was conductor
on a train of cars. This little episode would be over,
and then would commence the same tramp, tramp, tramp, all
night long. Step by step, step by step, we continued to
plod and nod and stagger and march, tramp, tramp, tramp.
After a while we would see the morning star rise in the
east, and then after a while the dim gray twilight, and
finally we could discover the outlines of our file
leader, and after a while could make out the outlines of
trees and other objects. And as it would get lighter and
lighter, and day would be about to break, cuckoo, cuckoo,
cuckoo, would come from Tom Tuck's rooster. [Tom carried
a game rooster, that he called "Fed" for
Confederacy, all through the war in a haversack.] And
then the sun would begin to shoot his slender rays
athwart the eastern sky, and the boys would wake up and
begin laughing and talking as if they had just risen from
a good feather bed, and were perfectly refreshed and
happy. We would usually stop at some branch or other
about breakfast time, and all wash our hands and faces
and eat breakfast, if we had any, and then commence our
weary march again. If we were halted for one minute,
every soldier would drop down, and resting on his
knapsack, would go to sleep....
We march on. The scene of a few days ago comes unhidden
to my mind. Tramp, tramp, tramp, the soldiers are
marching. Where are many of my old friends and comrades,
whose names were so familiar at every roll call, and
whose familiar "Here" is no more? They lie
yonder at Perryville, unburied, on the field of battle.
They lie where they fell. More than three hundred and
fifty members of my regiment, the First Tennessee,
numbered among the killed and wounded—one hundred
and eighty-five slain on the field of battle. Who are
they? Even then I had to try to think up the names of all
the slain of Company H alone. Their spirits seemed to be
with us on the march, but we know that their souls are
with their God. Their bones, today, no doubt, bleach upon
the battlefield. They left their homes, families, and
loved ones a little more than one short twelve months
ago, dressed in their gray uniforms, amid the applause
and cheering farewells of those same friends. They lie
yonder; no friendly hands ever closed their eyes in
death; no kind, gentle, and loving mother was there to
shed a tear over and say farewell to her darling boy; no
sister's gentle touch ever wiped the death damp from off
their dying brows. Noble boys; brave boys! They willingly
gave their lives to their country's cause. Their bodies
and bones are mangled and torn by the rude missiles of
war. They sleep the sleep of the brave. They have given
their all to their country. We miss them from our ranks.
There are no more hard marches and scant rations for
them. They have accomplished all that could be required
of them. They are no more; their names are soon
forgotten. They are put down in the roll-book as killed.
They are forgotten. We will see them no more until the
last reveille on the last morning of the final
resurrection. Soldiers, comrades, friends, noble boys,
farewell! we will meet no more on earth, but up yonder
some day we will have a grand reunion. (pp. 67-70)
Nicknames
Almost every soldier in the
army—generals, colonels, captains, as well as
privates—had a nick-name; and I almost believe that
had the war continued ten years, we would have forgotten
our proper names. John T. Tucker was called
"Sneak," A.S. Horsley was called "Don Von
One Horsley," W.A. Hughes was called "Apple
Jack," Green Rieves was called "Old
Snake," Bob Brank was called "Count," the
colonel of the Fourth was called "Guide Post,"
E.L. Lansdown was called "Left Tenant," some
were called by the name of "Greasy," some
"Buzzard," others "Hog," and "Brutus," and "Cassius," and
"Caesar," "Left Center," and "Bolderdust," and "Old Hannah"; in
fact, the nick-names were singular and peculiar, and when
a man got a nick-name it stuck to him like the Old Man of
the Sea did to the shoulders of Sinbad, the sailor. (p.
71)
Foraging for Food
Swimming the Tennessee River with "Roasting-ears":
The Tennessee river is about a quarter of a mile wide
at Chattanooga. Right across the river was an immense
corn-field. The green corn was waving with every little
breeze that passed; the tassels were bowing and nodding
their heads; the pollen was flying across the river like
little snowdrops, and everything seemed to say,
"Come hither, Johnny Reb; come hither, Johnny; come
hither." The river was wide, but we were hungry. The
roastingears looked tempting. We pulled off our clothes
and launched into the turbid stream, and were soon on the
other bank. Here was the field, and here were the
roastingears; but where was the raft or canoe?
We thought of old Abraham and Isaac and the sacrifice:
"My son, gather the roastingears, there will be a
way provided."
We gathered the roastingears; we went back and gathered
more roastingears, time and again. The bank was lined
with green roastingears. Well, what was to be done? We
began to shuck the corn. We would pull up a few shucks on
one ear, and tie it to the shucks of another—first
one and then another—until we had at least a hundred
tied together. We pulled the train of corn into the
river, and as it began to float off we jumped in, and
taking the foremost ear in our mouth, struck out for the
other bank. Well, we made the landing all correct.
I merely mention the above incident to show to what
extremity soldiers would resort. Thousands of such
occurrences were performed by the private soldiers of the
Rebel army. (p. 97)
Impressions after a Battle
After the Battle of Chickamauga (September 19, 1863):
We remained upon the battlefield of Chickamauga all
night. Everything had fallen into our hands. We had
captured a great many prisoners and small arms, and many
pieces of artillery and wagons and provisions. The
Confederate and Federal dead, wounded, and dying were
everywhere scattered over the battlefield. Men were lying
where they fell, shot in every conceivable part of the
body.... In fact, you might walk over the battlefield and
find men shot from the crown of the head to the tip end
of the toe. And then to see all those dead, wounded and
dying horses....
Reader, a battlefield, after the battle, is a sad and
sorrowful sight to look at. The glory of war is but the
glory of battle, the shouts, and cheers, and victory.
A soldier's life is not a pleasant one. It is always,
at best, one of privations and hardships. The emotions of
patriotism and pleasure hardly counterbalance the toil
and suffering that he has to undergo in order to enjoy
his patriotism and pleasure. Dying on the field of battle
and glory is about the easiest duty a soldier has to
undergo. It is the living, marching, fighting, shooting
soldier that has the hardships of war to carry. When a
brave soldier is killed he is at rest. The living soldier
knows not at what moment he, too, may be called on to lay
down his life on the altar of his country. The dead are
heroes, the living are but men compelled to do the
drudgery and suffer the privations incident to the thing
called "glorious war." (pp. 109-110)
Promotion to Corporal
After the Battle of Atlanta (July 22, 1864):
"Why, hello, corporal, where did you get those
two yellow stripes from on your arm?"
"Why, sir, I have been promoted for gallantry on the
battlefield, by picking up an orphan flag, that had been
run over by a thousand fellows, and when I picked it up I
did so because I thought it was pretty, and I wanted to
have me a shirt made out of it."
"I could have picked up forty, had I known
that," said Sloan.
"So could I, but I knew that the stragglers would
pick them up."
Reader mine, the above dialogue is true in every
particular. As long as I was in action, fighting for my
country, there was no chance for promotion, but as soon
as I fell out of ranks and picked up a forsaken and
deserted flag, I was promoted for it. I felt
"sorter" cheap when complimented for gallantry,
and the high honor of fourth corporal was conferred upon
me. I felt that those brave and noble fellows who had
kept on in the charge were more entitled to the honor
than I was, for when the ball struck me on the ankle and
heel, I did not go any further. And had I only known that
picking up flags entitled me to promotion and that every
flag picked up would raise me one notch higher, I would
have quit fighting and gone to picking up flags, and by
that means I would have soon been President of the
Confederate States of America. But honors now begin to
cluster around my brow. This is the laurel and ivy that
is entwined around the noble brows of victorious and
renowned generals. I honestly earned the exalted honor of
fourth corporal by picking up a Yankee battle-flag on the
22nd day of July, at Atlanta. (p. 185)
The Field Hospital in Atlanta
It was the only field hospital that
I saw during the whole war, and I have no desire to see
another. Those hollow-eyed and sunken-cheeked sufferers,
shot in every conceivable part of the body; some
shrieking, and calling upon their mothers; some laughing
the hard, cackling laugh of the sufferer without hope,
and some cursing like troopers, and some writhing and
groaning as their wounds were being bandaged and
dressed....
Ah! reader, there is no glory for the private soldier....
The officers have all the glory. Glory is not for the
private soldier, such as die in the hospitals, being eat
up with the deadly gangrene, and being imperfectly waited
on. Glory is for generals, colonels, majors, captains,
and lieutenants. They have all the glory, and when the
poor private wins battles by dint of sweat, hard marches,
camp and picket duty, fasting and broken bones, the
officers get the glory. The private's pay was eleven
dollars per month, if he got it; the general's pay was
three hundred dollars per month, and he always got his. I
am not complaining. These things happened sixteen to
twenty years ago. Men who never fired a gun, nor killed a
Yankee during the whole war, are today the heroes of the
war. Now, I tell you what I think about it: I think that
those of us who fought as private soldiers, fought as
much for glory as the general did, and those of us who
stuck it out to the last, deserve more praise than the
general who resigned because some other general was
placed in command over him. A general could resign. That
was honorable. A private could not resign, nor choose his
branch of service, and if he deserted, it was death.
(pp. 202-203)
Watkins, Sam R., "Co. Aytch": A Side Show
of the Big Show, Herald, Columbia, TN,
1881-1882, (Reprinted: New York: Touchstone, 1997).
Image of Sam Watkins care of Belle Grove Publishing Company.
Common Soldier Index
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