Federal Bridge-Burning Expedition
From the British periodical The Monthly Packet,
reprinted in Littell's Living Age, April 29, 1865
Accounts of several very dashing exploits by
small parties of soldiers of the Confederate States have reached us, but
comparatively few, if any, by those of the Northern armies. Perhaps in the
natural feeling for those who appear to be the weaker party fighting against
superior numbers with indomitable perseverance, we have overlooked some of those
deeds of daring which such a war is sure to call forth. Where war is being waged
on such a large scale, in a country intersected by railroads, the old days of
marching are comparatively at an end, for all supplies of men and stores are
forwarded by the more speedy and ready method ; and at the same time that great
ease of communication is thus obtained, a risk is encountered in the liability
of a railroad to be injured and the traffic stopped for precious days by flying
parties of the enemy destroying bridges; during the repair of which irreparable
disasters may befall troops thus as completely isolated for the time as if their
communications were cut off by the enemy occupying the ground in force. An
account of an expedition undertaken with such a purpose, written in a singularly
modest, unassuming tone by Lieutenant William Pittenger, of the second Ohio
volunteers, has lately come into our hands, and we hope that the interest of the
detailed narrative may not be lost in the condensed sketch we propose to
attempt.
Mr. Pittenger was one of the last persons
likely, it would be supposed, to be most anxious for a desperate expedition of
this kind, and, as he is stated in the introduction by a friend, to be one of
the most enthusiastically brave during his conduct. He was the son of a farmer,
and so much distinguished during his youth by his bent for the study of history
and science, that his proposed profession was tuition. He appears to have been a
small stout man, and very short-sighted; at the time of starting on the
expedition, about twenty-two years old.
In the spring of 1862, some reverses in the South West —
the loss of Fort Donelson, and the success of Grant against Johnston in
Tennessee-— determined the Confederates to adopt an inner line of defence. In
the West this line may be roughly taken to be the Memphis and Charleston
Railroad, extending from Memphis through Corinth, Huntsville, Chattanooga, and
Atlanta, to Charleston. The Federal fleet ruled the Mississippi; Grant, with his
army and gunboats, occupied the Tennessee river ; Buell, with 40,000 men, was
marching through the State of Tennessee towards the same point; Mitchel, in
whose division were the second Ohio, was also in Tennessee; and Morgan, with
another strong force, before the Gap in the Cumberland mountains, ready to
strike at Knoxville.
To meet these forces, Beauregard concentrated
his main army at Corinth, with detachments along the railroad to Chattanooga.
The railroads on which he relied, being an irregular parallelogram, of which the
northern side extended from Memphis to Chattanooga, the eastern from Chattanooga
to Atlanta, the southern from Atlanta to Jackson in Mississippi, and the
western, from Jackson to Memphis. The great East Tennessee and Virginia Railroad
intersected this parallelogram at Chattanooga. Thus, if the northern and eastern
railroads could be destroyed for a time, Beauregard would be isolated and East
Tennessee left open to Morgan. These communications were considered so
important, that it had been proposed to reach them with, armies and destroy them
by force; but the distance precluded this. At this time J. J. Andrews, a “secret
agent of the United States," or, as we should call it, a spy, "who had
repeatedly visited every part of the South," proposed to accomplish the same
object by a small party in disguise, who should burn the bridges, and thus give
time for a great blow to be struck. He first made the proposition to General
Buell, who did not approve it, and afterwards to Mitchel, who received it with
favour. The division was at Murfinsboro’, when eight men were detailed on secret
service. Many were the conjectures as to their destination ; but Pittenger was
soon let into the secret by an officer who was an intimate friend. His
imagination was so taken by an idea so audacious as penetrating many miles into
the enemy’s country to burn their bridges, that he instantly went to the Colonel
to beg that he might be included if any similar expedition should start. The
party soon returned, having made their way on foot to Chattanooga, and thence by
railway to Atlanta, in civilian dresses. Here they expected to meet an engineer,
and with his assistance to seize the passenger train at breakfast and run
through to their own lines, burning all the bridges. They waited several days,
but the man did not come, having been pressed to run troops to Beauregard; and
thus defeated, they stole quietly back.
On the 7th of April Andrews returned to the
camp, now at Shelbyville, having spent some time on the railroads, and reported
that the plan was still feasible, but desired a larger number of men.
Twenty-four were therefore detailed from the 3d Ohio regiment in Sill’s brigade,
of whom Pittenger was one. They procured plain clothes, and, according to their
orders, passed quietly through Shelbyville by twos and threes, and made their
first meeting in a thicket two or three miles farther on. There, in the dark, in
this small thicket, where they were sure of no listeners, Andrews revealed his
plans, the first orders being to make their way to Chattanooga in small parties,
the distance being a hundred and three miles. The party to which Pittenger
belonged, consisting of four, started to walk along the railway; but rain had
begun to fall, and they became so wet and weary as to be compelled to seek
shelter. .A house was at last found, and the inmates roused; they told the
master that they were Kentuckians disgusted with the tyranny of Lincoln, and
discovered by his dissentient remarks that he was a Unionist, but did not dare
to reveal themselves to him. Next day they were stopped by some of their own
guards at Wartrace, and were obliged to inform the commanding-officer of their
real character to procure their release. At Manchester they managed to obtain
the names of some of the most prominent secessionists on the way, who would be
likely to help them on towards the free South: and knowing these names proved of
great advantage; for, having influential men to inquire for, it was taken for
granted that they were trustworthy.
Footsore from the constant rain making their
feet sodden, the Cumberland mountains were a hard and toilsome journey; the
descent, over steep rocks, yawning chasms, and great gullies, by an eastern
Tennessee road, led down to Battle Creek — a beautiful valley hemmed in by lofty
projecting ridges. The legend of the origin of the name is that an Indian tribe
retreating hither with booty were traced by their pursuers, who, to make the
capture sure, divided their forces, each band taking one side of the valley.
Though the morning mist came down in thick fog, they marched on, determined that
their prey should not escape; and meeting at the head of the valley, each
supposed the other party to be the enemy; and not till nearly all had fallen in
a desperate contest, did they find out their error; while the plunderers higher
up the mountains listened to the noise of the conflict in safety.
They spent the night at the house of a man whom
they termed a rabid Secessionist, and whom they so thoroughly deceived, that
when they were apprehended they heard he could not believe that those whom he
entertained could be anything but loyal Southerners.
At Jasper, on the Tennessee, they met Andrews,
who gave them some directions as to how to make their way best so as to avoid
posts where they would be questioned, not having satisfactory credentials such
as Andrews himself possessed. In the morning they were getting into the
ferry-boat, when an order arrived to allow no one to pass for three days; so
they turned over the spurs of the mountains again, and at last got ferried over
unquestioned at Chattanooga. Thence they went by train to Marietta, arriving
about midnight; and here the whole party were warned by Andrews to be ready by
four next morning for their great attempt.
Eight miles from Marietta is a station called
Big Shanty, where the train stops for breakfast. Round it were encamped at that
time ten thousand men, and a guard was placed watching the train. Now came the
moment of excitement; the engineer, conductor, and most of the passengers, were
gone to the eating-house. Andrews takes a look up the line, and says quietly,
“Let us go, boys;” just as quietly they rise and stroll after him without
exciting any suspicion. So they reach the head of the train; Andrews and two
engineers leap on the engine, one takes the brake, and the others climb the
first baggage-car, which had been, with two others, uncoupled from the rest of
the train. One moment — and suspense and concealment was over; and away they go,
those twenty daring men, far within the bounds of the Confederacy. Four as
willing hearts had missed the rest of the party. Away they go, rejoicing in the
idea of running back to their own lines at Huntsville in triumph. But the
telegraph! There was no telegraph station at Big Shanty; but the danger must be
guarded against. They stop; a man climbs the telegraph-post, detaches the wire,
and swings down on it, and it is cut with a saw found on the engine.
While this was being done, another party took
up a rail and laid it on the car to carry off. Andrews clasped their hands in
ecstacy —“Only one more train to pass, and we will run at full speed, burn the
bridges behind us, and off to Mitchel at Huntsville.” It would have been
accomplished if only one train had been on the road to meet them.
Being before the regular time, they were
obliged to run slowly to meet the down train at the regular time on a siding;
the railroad being, as most are in America, a single line. At the next station
Andrews procured a time-table from the tank-tender, telling him that he was
running an express powder train for Beauregard. On they went till they came to
the station where the down train passed; finding the switch not right, Andrews
walked into the station, took down the keys, and without saying a word to any
one, adjusted the switch. The station men made some objection, but the
powder-train story quieted them. After waiting a short time, the down train
passed; but what was their disappointment to see a red flag on it, the signal
that an extra train was following it. Thus they still had to run at the regular
time, which was very slow, not more than twelve miles an hour. At last they
stopped on a siding to let the expected train pass, and had to wait twenty-five
minutes for it. It came; but it also carried a red flag. Thus, notwithstanding
their now extreme anxiety, there was nothing for it but to run on in the regular
slow time. No retreat. Nothing but to obstruct the track as much as possible by
laying on cross-ties, and to cut the telegraph-wire between each station so that
no message could get ahead of them.
Near to the station where they expected to meet
the last train, they stopped to take up a rail. This was a tedious business,
from want of proper tools, and was hardly effected when the whistle of an engine
in pursuit was heard. The other train was passed in safety; but the pursuers,
abandoning their own engine, ran on foot to meet the coming train, and turned it
back in pursuit. Every expedient that could be thought of to delay the coming
train was now adopted; but as they were cutting the wire near Calhoun, it came
in sight. Then ensued probably the most wonderful chase on record — the flying
engine at full speed, the cars rocking furiously. The smoke of the pursuer could
be seen in every long reach, and the scream of the whistle heard on every curve.
It was still necessary to cut the wire, and to gain time for that two cars were
successively dropped on the line. A new expedient was now tried: the end of the
remaining car was knocked out, so that rails, cross-ties, and any other
obstacle, might be dropped out on the railway without stopping. Most of these
bounded off the line; but some few remained, and caused delay to the pursuers.
During one necessary stop for cutting the telegraph, a rail was placed with one
end projecting upwards towards the advancing train. The engineer, who afterwards
visited them, told them that this was very nearly successful; and if it had been
but one inch higher the train would have been upset, for the rail was so small
and dark that it could not be seen till too late to stop. The pursuers were very
energetic and determined; one man rode on the cow-catcher, and would jump down
to throw off obstructions, and re-mount with the train only checked, not stopped
entirely.
The fliers gained time nevertheless, but not
enough to take up a rail; for each time they tried, the pursuers were again
visible before the rail could be torn up. A plan was now proposed to Andrews to
let the engine be taken on out of sight, on a curve, while the party, placing an
obstruction on the line, should conceal themselves, in readiness, when the train
came up, to shoot every man on the engine, reverse it, and let it drive back.
Andrews did not consent; but afterwards said, in prison, he regretted that the
attempt had not been made.
All this time they were running through towns
and villages at a terrific rate; intending passengers came down as they heard
the train approach, but shrank in horror at the rate they were going, and were
still more astonished when they saw three trains full of soldiers in pursuit.
Wood and water now began to run short. They had obtained supplies at first, but
later the close pursuit had prevented this. Now they attempted to kindle a fire
in the one car left, in order to leave it burning on a bridge; but the rapid
motion put the matches out. Now at last they were compelled to feel that they
had failed, and nothing remained but to save themselves. The telegraph was not
cut, and the first message sent a-head of them. At Chattanooga great
preparations were made, and the military received orders to shoot every one.
Now, fifteen miles from Chattanooga, it was determined to abandon the train;
Andrews unfortunately giving orders to disperse and each man to shift for
himself. Had they kept together, they would have had a good chance of reaching
the Tennessee river, fifteen miles, and crossing it before the country was
roused. Once over the river and in the forests, the chances would have been much
in their favour of reaching their own forces.
Now we may return to the pursuers, and give an
account of how the chase was so speedily organized. An extract from a Southern
newspaper is given by Mr. Pittenger. It commences with an account of the blank
astonishment felt at seeing the engine with three cars move off while all were
at breakfast at Big Shanty. Fuller, the conductor, or, as we should call him,
guard, Cain, the engineer, and Murphy, foreman of the wood department, started
off on foot at a run, amid shouts of laughter of the crowd; yet that very run on
foot saved the Confederacy from a great disaster. Three miles on they met a
party of plate-layers with a small truck such as they use to carry their tools.
They took this and some men, running behind to push it up inclines, and letting
it drive at full speed on the descents. In this way they ran on to Etowah
station, twenty miles, where stood an old coal-engine with steam up; this they
took on to Kingston at full speed, and found that the fugitives were only twenty
minutes a-head. There is a junction, and the engines waiting ready fired up for
the down train; this they took, and a large party of gentlemen joined them with
arms procured as they could. Near Adairsvllle they found rails taken up
—perceiving it in time to stop, but they had to leave the train. Fuller and
Murphy now started again on foot, and in two miles met the down goods train, and
reversed the engine, driving the trucks before it one mile from Adairsville.
Then they left the trucks on a siding, and on to Calhoun, a short distance above
which they caught sight of their chase halted on a curve. Of course they were up
and off at once; and now was indeed hot pursuit. Now were needed sharp eyes to
catch sight of the cross-ties and other obstructions left on the line. The cars
left behind were coupled to the front of the engine, and so driven to the first
siding and here left. Thus they were within four hundred yards when the
adventurers left their engine and took to the woods.
Thus this most skilful and energetic pursuit,
so pressed that not one bridge could be burnt, saved the Confederacy from
dangers thus summed up by their own paper:—"Had they succeeded in burning the
bridges, the enemy at Huntsville would have occupied Chattanooga by Sunday
night. Yesterday they would have been to Knoxville, and thus had possession of
all East Tennessee. Our forces at Knoxville, Greenville, and Cumberland Gap,
would, ere this, have been in the hands of the enemy. Lynchburg, Virginia, would
have been moved on at once. This would have given them possession of the Valley
of Virginia, and Stonewall Jackson could have been attacked in the rear. They
would have possession of the railroad leading to Charlottesville and Orange
Court House, as well as the South Side Railroad leading to Petersburg and
Richmond. They might have been able to unite with McClellan's forces and attack
Jo. Johnston's army front and flank. It is not by any means improbable that our
army in Virginia would have been defeated, captured, or driven out of the State,
this week. Reinforcements from all the eastern and south-east portion of the
country would have been cut off from Beauregard. The enemy | have Huntsville
now, and with all these designs accomplished, his army would have been
effectually cut off."
Thus ended this most daring scheme; hardly
practicable in a war between two nations of different tongues, for how rare
would it be to find a sufficient number of foreigners speaking the language so
well, and acquainted with the habits and localities of a strange country, as to
penetrate some two hundred miles or more without exciting some suspicion?
Sufficient interest has, we trust, been excited in our bold adventurers to cause
a wish to know their ultimate fate.
The narrative now turns to Mr. Pittenger's own
adventures. It was Saturday, the 12th of April, when he thus found himself
adrift in a strange country, without compass, and only a vague knowledge that
proceeding in the north-west direction would bring him to friends. It happened
to be a general muster-day for conscripts; and as soon as the news of the
expedition was received, drill was suspended and all turned out in chase. The
country was rough and uneven; pines in the bottoms, but the timber on the spurs
mostly oak, and other deciduous trees, not then in leaf, and affording no
concealment. After crossing a stream in flood with great difficulty, and scaling
a precipitous bank, he lay exhausted, when the distant bay of a bloodhound
reached his ears. The sound roused his energies, and he proceeded as well as he
could, for that time escaping. Towards evening he came on a hut, and venturing
to inquire the road to Chattanooga, found he was but eight miles from it. Taking
the best direction he could when out of sight, he walked for more than an hour
very fast, when what was his horror to find, that, as often occurs to persons
lost in the bush, he had made a circle and returned to the place he started
from. Another start and another hour’s toil only produced the same
disappointment; and a few steps more brought him to the same river he had before
crossed, and within hearing of the bloodhounds. In desperation he took the road,
and following it a long time, met a negro, from whom he learnt he was only four
miles from Chattanooga. He now resolved to endeavor to reach the Tennessee
river, some ten miles off; for some time going well enough, but a large field of
dead timber set him astray again. He reached a large road which seemed to lead
right, and walked along it for several miles: no moon, no stars, to guide; only
the leaden clouds overhead. At last he met three horsemen in the dark.
“How far is it to Chattanooga?”
“Three miles.”
“Is this the road?”
“ Yes sah! right a-head.”
These continua1 errors exhausted his strength,
and at last he lay down and slept; waking with a start, fancying he heard a
voice saying, “Let us shoot him before he wakes,” to find himself in solitude.
Thus he blundered on, seeing illusions of angels and other shadowy forms, no
doubt produced by fatigue and hunger. Once he nearly walked in on a picket, no
doubt sent out to apprehend the “engine thieves.” Night was passed in pouring
rain, and Sunday morning came; weary and foot-sore, he walked on, scarcely
heeding any one, till about twelve o’clock. Near Lafayette, in Georgia, a party
of about twenty men apprehended him. Questioned by the leader of the party, he
repeated the story that he was a citizen of Kentucky, disgusted with the North,
and going to join the Confederate army; giving such a plausible account of his
proceedings that the leader said,—
“We may as well let this fellow go; he seems
all right.” But another said they had better take him to town, and then if he
was all right, they could help him on his way to Corinth.
In Lafayette he was closely examined by some
lawyers, and had to invent all particulars of his journey from Fleming county in
Kentucky. They were evidently puzzled; but while they were deliberating , a man
arrived on horseback from Kinggold, with the news that some of the
bridge-burners had been captured, and had at first pretended to be citizens of
Kentucky from Fleming county. Thus by the mischance of the similarity of
description, the last hope of release was taken away. Next day, again brought up
for examination, he claimed to be taken before the military authorities, and
announced that he would before them state his name, regiment, and cause of
coming. Accordingly he was sent to Chattanooga, and brought before General
Ledbetter; on leaving whom he saw Andrews and two more members of the expedition
waiting to be brought in. He was confined, with many other prisoners, in a
suffocating underground room of the negro gaol in Chattanooga, where they were
so insufficiently fed as to be continually suffering hunger; and others of their
number were continually added as they were captured. They remained here three
weeks; during which time Andrews was tried; and a former business partner of
his, whom he himself had called as a witness, testified that Andrews had
repeatedly been in the South, and professed allegiance to the Confederacy;
indeed, he had passes in his possession which could hardly have been obtained
without having taken the oath of allegiance. The sentence was not then given,
and they were soon afterwards removed to Madison. There they were visited by a
man whom Andrews recognized as a Federal spy, though dressed in Confederate
uniform. They had no opportunity for private communication; and in the evening
the captain of the guard told them that it had been ascertained that a spy of
Lincoln’s had been among the visitors, and a guard was sent to the station to
arrest him just as the train was coming in. He indignantly told them he had
plenty of papers in his pocket to prove his character; they released their hold
to allow him to produce the papers. He put his hands in his pockets as if to
search for them, waited till the train had got into swing, when he wrenched
himself from his captors and swung himself into the train. There was no
telegraph station at Madison, and he escaped.
In three days they were sent back to
Chattanooga to their old quarters, but now put in the upper room of the prison;
the removal having been occasioned by reports that Mitchel was advancing. All
this time they were chained; but one of the party having a small knife, managed
to make keys of the bones of their meat, so they were able to release
themselves, and resume their fetters when necessary.
Twelve were at last detailed to be sent to
Knoxville for trial, being told it was only to establish the fact of their being
a military expedition. While there, news reached them that Andrews and another
had escaped from Chattanooga. This was the method: One day an officer entered,
and carelessly handed to Andrews his death-warrant, as traitor to the
Confederacy. He was separated from the others, and put into the lower room. They
determined to effect his escape; cut round the bolts of the trap-door, raised
it, and drew him up by a rope made of blankets, cut another hole through the
ceiling, and just at gray dawn Andrews mounted aloft, and the next instant was
swinging to a rope of blankets over the wall. But he had loosened some bricks,
and their fall gave the alarm; he dropped to the ground, and was over the fence
at once, followed by another. Andrews went only a few hundred yards from the
town, and hid in a tree till night, gained the river and crossed it; but at
break of day was seen and chased just as he was going to climb another tree for
concealment during the day. He regained the river, swam to an island, where he
hid, but was discovered by bloodhounds; he threw them off by wading in shallow
water, climbed a tree, and baffled his pursuers. Two little boys had remained,
and one of them said he saw a curious great bunch in a tree; looked again, and
called out that it was a man. Andrews attempted again to cross the river, but
was captured by a canoe. He was sent to Atlanta and there hung. The other man
was captured by a party of cavalry, on the very brink of safety, and sent to
Atlanta, whither the remainder of the prisoners had been removed.
The twelve at Knoxville were tried separately,
on a charge for “lurking in and around Confederate camps as spies, for the
purpose of obtaining information.” Not a word of the engine adventure. Their
plan of defence was to tell their real intention, and claim that they were
soldiers detailed on a military expedition, and therefore entitled to the
protection accorded to prisoners of war. They were allowed to employ counsel.
The trial appeared to proceed favourably; and their counsel cited in their
favour the instance of the Confederate General Morgan having dressed his men in
Federal uniform, and by passing them off as Pennsylvania Cavalry, succeeded in
reaching a railroad and damaging it. Also that some of these men, being
captured, were treated by the Federal Government as prisoners of war. Seven had
been tried, when on another advance by Mitchel and Morgan threatening Knoxville,
they were removed to Atlanta, when their companions from Chattanooga were in
another neighbouring gaol.
One day, without any warning, seven were
removed from the room; and presently one returned saying, “We are to be executed
immediately.” Then came the sad farewells; and their cruel doom was speedily
carried out and met with the greatest courage.
Thenceforward was a gloomy time, no one knowing
when he might be taken for the same fate, and sorrowing for their comrades.
Plans of escape were often talked of; and at last the attempt was precipitated
by a report that orders had come from Washington for the execution of the whole
party. The plan was to seize the jailor when he came to take out the buckets
that supper was brought in, take the keys and release all, while others fell on
the guard, taking their arms. The jailor was seized, Pittenger placed his hand
on his mouth, and he was quietly secured, not without a vigorous resistance. The
guards were as successfully disarmed; but two happened to be lounging at a
distance, and gave the alarm. There were troops at hand, and nothing was to be
done but to throw down the guns and run for it. Those who were engaged
up-stairs, on coming down found the court full of armed men; and making an
attempt to dash past them, were most of them captured, to the number of six, of
whom Pittenger was one — his short sight not enabling him to take ready
advantage of opportunities. This occurred in October.
Eight escaped; two southward to the coast,
where they found means to get on board a Federal cruiser. Two westward, by a
most perilous journey, of which one of them furnished an account.
“We started on the 16th of October, and reached
the Federal lines on the 16th of November. During this time we endured all the
hardships imaginable. We travelled night and day, sleeping mostly in the woods,
and subsisting on wild grapes, chestnuts, hickory nuts, walnuts, and some few
sweet potatoes. Occasionally we got a little cornbread from the low class whites
and the negroes. It was miserable stuff. Several times we slipped into the
fields where negroes were at work, and stole the provisions they had brought for
their dinner. Once we were seven days without a bite of bread, and often went
without for two or three days. We suffered much with cold, for our clothes were
very poor. We slept but twice in houses during the whole journey. One night we
travelled till we became chilled and weary; it was very late, and we were nearly
frozen, when we fortunately discovered a nest of hogs. Immediately we routed
them up, and lying down in the warm retreat they had left, slept till morning.
Many streams were in our way, which we were obliged to wade, or float across on
logs. After twenty-two days of such privations, we reached the Tennessee river,
twenty-seven miles below Bridgeport. There we pressed a canoe into the service,
and started down the river. We would run the canoe at night, and hide it and
ourselves in the day-time. When we arrived at the head of Muscle Shoals, we were
compelled to abandon our canoe on account of low water, and make a circuit of
forty miles round. When we reached the foot of the Shoals, we procured a skiff,
and continued our voyage until within twelve miles of Pittsburg Landing. Here we
left the river, and striking across the country to Corinth, reached there in
safety.”
The re-taken prisoners now expected nothing hut
the worst; but happily their fears were not realized, nor was their treatment
worse. Wells, the jailor, was unable to write a legible hand, and often employed
prisoners to make out requisitions and reports for him. Pittenger was one day so
engaged in the office when a man in the uniform of a Confederate officer was
brought in for confinement in barracks. He seemed very drunk, but remonstrated
against being confined with all the prisoners ; so Wells allowed him to remain
in the office while he went to look after some other business. No sooner was the
room clear, than he approached Pittenger without a trace of drunkenness.
“You are a prisoner?”
“Yes, sir.’
“One they call engine thieves?”
“Yes.”
“I know you; I was here when your comrades were
hung. They do not yet know who I am, but they will to-morrow; and then I shall
be hung, for I am a spy from the Federal army. Can’t you help me?”
After a few questions to test his truth,
Pittenger asks, “What can I do for you?”
“Can’t you write me a pass and sign the
commander’s name to it?”
“That would be discovered; but take that
overcoat,” pointing to one belonging to Wells,” put it round you, and walk
independently past the guards; chances are you will not be stopped.”
He tried it, and succeeded in getting safely
off. When Wells returned, he asked Pittenger where the officer was; and received
for answer, “He picked up his coat, and said he was going to supper.” Wells soon
saw how it was, and after sending off in haste to the guard, began to think
about the coat. A few questions more as to where he got it, answered, “Off the
foot of the bed.” Wells sprang up, “My coat! worth eighty dollars! the
villain!” then sat down again, exclaimed, “Well, if that aint a cool joke!”
burst into a loud laugh, and so it ended.
The Confederates often tried to induce their
prisoners to enlist in the army, always meeting with a refusal. The heavy weeks
rolled on, but at last came the joyful news that they were exchanged. But there
was more time to be passed yet before they were released. On the 3d of December
they were sent to Richmond, and there confined, with many other Federal
prisoners, for a time; afterwards their party of six and nine Tennesseeans
together. It was a hard trial to see other parties marched away to the
truce-boats, and their own time not yet come. At last, on the 18th of March,
they were exchanged, and to their intense delight once more able to revisit
their families, who had long since given up all hope of seeing them again. They
each received a medal from the secretary at war, and were made lieutenants.
Thus ended this remarkable expedition. Of the
twenty-four who originally started, two were left behind in Marietta and
compelled to serve in a battery of artillery, from which, at different times,
they both escaped during actions. Eight escaped from prison in October, six were
exchanged in March, and eight were executed. Perhaps in the case of Andrews,
convicted of being a spy, and of having taken the oath of allegiance, this can
cause no surprise; but as regards the other seven, it does appear rather a
stretch of the laws of war.
Littell, E. (editor), "The Federal
Bridge-Burning Expedition ," Littell's Living Age, Volume 85, Issue 1091,
April 29, 1865, pp. 144 -
151, Boston: Littell, Son, & Co.
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