Author Topic: Today in 18XX  (Read 1598 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« on: December 10, 2004, 07:44:43 AM »
Today In History for Dec. 10

 

  1861- Tuesday

  KY admitted as 13th Conf. State. The KY Conf. government was in exile or

  shifting continuously throughout the war.

 

  Lt. James W.A. Nicholson took the USS Isaac Smith up the Ashepoo River

  in South Carolina. He landed part of his crew on abandoned Otter Island

  and took possession of a Conf. Fort, which he later turned over to the Federal

  Army.

 

  1862- Wednesday

  The camps of the Army of the Potomac are buzzing with preparations for

  tomorrow's river crossing. Halleck warns Burnside "not to make telegraphic

  details of your plans....No secrets can be kept which passes through so many

  hands." Chief Engineer Cyrus Comstock promises to have the bridge

  equipage in place "where the bridge is to be thrown at 3 a.m. tomorrow."

  However, Edwin Sumner and William B. Franklin, whose Grand Divisions

  are to lead the advance, have yet to receive their final battle orders from

  Gen. Burnside.[Pencil memorandum on foregoing dispatch. ] - The intention

  is for you to cross as soon as the bridges are completed. If you deem it

  advisable, you will attack as soon as you cross, without waiting for

  Gen. Sumner. It would, of course, be preferable to make it simultaneous...

  [Not signed.]

 


  News From Home


  Chambersburg, PA

  Valley Spirit, December 10, 1862, p. 4, c. 1

        More Trouble with Conscripts.

 

  We learn that a general skedaddling of the drafted men in camp at

  Chambersburg occurred on Friday and Saturday, who were not properly

  provided against the "pelting of the pitiless storm" that suddenly came upon

  them. On Saturday they broke guard and fled in every direction. Such was the

  condition of affairs that a detachment of the provost guard battalion of this city

  were ordered to Chambersburg, on Saturday afternoon, to guard the camp and

  prevent further desertions.  The kind of weather we are now experiencing is

  very severe upon men unused to exposure, especially when government jails

  make proper provision for them.

 

  The Unites States House of Representatives votes 96 to 55 in favor of a bill

  creating the state of West Virginia. The people of the area welcomed statehood

  as their livelihood had never depended on slaves, and they had never felt

  themselves properly represented by the plantation-dominated government of VA.

 

  1863 - Thursday


  Affair, Russellville, TN


  KENTUCKY (U)  -  11th  and 27th  Infantry

  OHIO  -  45th  Mounted Infantry.

  TENNESSEE (U)  -  1st Infantry

 

  Skirmish, Long's Ford, TN  

  OHIO--2d Cavalry.

 


  Action, Gatlinburg, TN


  PENNSYLVANIA  -  15th  Cavalry

      Union loss -  3 Wounded.

 


  Action, Bean's Station, TN


  ILLINOIS  -  112th  Infantry

  INDIANA  -  15th  Indpt. Battery Light Arty

  MICHIGAN--8th Cavalry

  OHIO  -  45th  Mounted Infantry

  TENNESSEE---1st Mounted Infantry.

   U.S.A.  - 700 Killed and  Wounded

   C.S.A.  - 932 Killed and  Wounded, 150 Missing/ Captured

 


  Action, Morristown, TN


  MICHIGAN  -  9th  Cavalry

  OHIO  -  2d and 7th  Cavalry.

  TENNESSEE (U)  -  2nd Infantry  

 

  1864- Saturday

  Sherman reaches Savannah and a twelve day siege begins.

 


  Siege of Savannah, GA


       Dates: Dec. 9-21, 1864

        U.S.A.- 200 Killed and  Wounded

        C.S.A.- 800 Missing or Captured

 

  While his army consolidates its position along the outskirts of Savannah's

  outer defenses, Sherman makes plans for the final advance into the city.

  Facing Sherman, Gen. William Hardee could only muster about 15,000

  regulars and militia, and his only escape route, across the Savannah River

  along the road to Charleston, is being threatened by Gen. Foster's force near

  Honey Hill, South Carolina.

 

  Conf. steamer, Ida, was captured and burned on the Savannah River.

 

  Born on this day.....

  1794 - Union Brig. James Wolfe Ripley at Windham City CT

            Note: Uncle of Confederate Gen. Roswell S Ripley.

  1820 - Union Brig. Gen David Allen Russell at Salem NY

  1822 -  Union Brig. Gen. Thomas Casimer Devin at New York NY

 

  Fascinating Facts:

  Important Jewish Confederate Leaders Judah P. Benjamin: secretary of war,

  state, treasury Abraham C. Myers: quartermaster general of the Conf. Army

  Union Generals who were American Citizens born abroad

  George Meade  (Spain)

  Jacob D. Cox   (Canada)

 


  SIEGE HOWITZERS


  8-inch siege howitzer, Model of 1840

  Total length, 61.5 inches; weight, 2600 pounds; total production, 50 by

  Columbia, Fort Pitt, Tredegar and West Point foundries from 1841 to 1862;

  known survivors, 17. Chamber is cylindrical 12-pounder. From 8 August 1861

  through 26 February 1862, Tredegar Foundry cast 24 8-inch siege howitzers

  presumed to be of this pattern. Two of them, known to have been utilized to

  defend the southern approaches to Charleston SC, survive at Washington

  Navy Yard. One is battered beyond readability of any markings; the other

  lacks the usual markings and has only a small "62" on upper muzzle face.

 

  8-inch siege howitzer, Model of 1861

  Total length, 60 inches; weight, 2550 pounds. Total production, 171 by Cyrus

  Alger and Fort Pitt Foundry 1862-65; known survivors, 82. The cylindrical

  chamber of the Model of 1840 was abandoned for this model in favor of the

  same stretched hemispheroidal bore bottom used in the Model of 1861 8-inch

  mortar.
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« Reply #1 on: December 11, 2004, 07:23:49 AM »
Today In History for Dec. 11

  1860 - Tuesday
  President Buchanan proves unable to keep either side happy, as pro-Union
  Secretary of State Lewis Cass resigns over Buchanan's failure to reinforce
  Federal forts at Charleston.

  1861 - Wednesday
  Charleston, S.C., a raging fire swept the business district east of King Street
  and near the Cooper River. Coupled with the shortages created by  the blockade
  and providing food to the Conf. Army, this was a new, and unwanted, blow
  to the economy. The city was rebuilds and,  fortunately for Charleston and its
  new buildings, the Conf. army would evacuate in 1865, successfully diverting
  the destructive General Sherman's troops.

  Skirmish at Bertrand, MO
  ILLINOIS----2d Cavalry
         U.S.A.  -   0 Killed,   1 Wounded
         C.S.A.  -   Casualties Not Reported

  1862- Thursday
  At 3 a.m. "four bridge trains are taken to the banks of the river" and
  preparations are made to build "two bridges...above the center of the town,
  one bridge opposite the lower end of the town; and one bridge about 1 mile
  below the town."  Brig. Gen. Daniel Woodbury, commander of the Engineer
  Brigade, is responsible for the bridge construction and he assigns one regiment
  of infantry and "numerous batteries of light and heavy guns" to support each
  crossing site.

  At 6 a.m.,  Lee is notified by Gen. Longstreet that "the enemy is attempting to
  cross at Fredericksburg, and is now putting down his pontoon bridges." Lee
  orders his artillery commander Gen. Pendleton to, "ascertain the best position
  for the two big guns, and bring them to bear. " Gen. William Barksdale's
  Mississippi brigade opens fire on the working parties "as soon as the come
  within good range of rifles." Nine attempts are made to complete the bridges
  under fire, "but every one being attended with such severe loss from our men
  --posted in rifle pits, in the cellars of the houses along the banks, and behind
  whatever offered concealment --that the enemy abandoned their attempts...and
  opened a terrific fire from their numerous batteries...just above the river."
  Around 3 p.m., the heavy cannonading ceases and 120 men of the Seventh
  Michigan cross the river on six pontoons. "As soon as they reach the opposite
  bans, they form and gallantly rush to the buildings" occupied by Barksdale's
  men.

  With the day too far gone to cross his mighty 115,000 man army over the
  pontoon bridges, Ambrose Burnside occupies the city with a brigade from his
  old Ninth Corps, O.O. Howard's division and one of  William B. Franklin's
  brigades. As "Old Burn" secures his bridgehead,  Lee orders " Stonewall"
  Jackson, stationed near Guiney's Station, to send two divisions to Hamilton's
  Crossing on the right of the Confederate line.

  An electrically fired torpedo has sunk the Union gunboat Cairo. She is the first
  vessel to be sunk by explosion of such device since the war began. The Cairo
  was ascending the Yazoo River when she struck the torpedo about a mile
  below Hayne's Bluff. She sank in 15 minutes in 40 feet of water.
  No lives were lost.

  1863- Friday
  While the Union gunners on Morris Island are concentrating on the city of
  Charleston, a small arms magazine catches fire and exploded in Fort Sumter.
  Killing 11 and wounding 41 Gen. Ripley reports, "I fear the cotton in the
  casemates of the gorge at Sumter has been set on fire. Have ordered the
  mortars of Sullivan's Island to open heavily on Gregg, if the enemy continues
  his fire. I do not apprehend much damage unless the fire gets to the rafters of
  the bomb proof."  It is not long before the fire begins to draw enemy missiles.
  Gen. Beauregard reports, "At 9.30 a.m. large volumes of smoke and flame
  were observed issuing from...Sumter.... About this time, the enemy, observing
  the fire, opened upon Sumter with rifle and mortar shells, to prevent assistance
  reaching the fort.  Commander Tucker, however, sent a boat's crew, under a
  heavy fire, with buckets....Telegraphic communication having been cut off by
  the explosion, which destroyed the instrument." At 4:00 p.m., communication
  is restored to Sumter and the fire is under control.

  1864 - Sunday
  Gen. Warren reports that he has completed his mission to tear up the Weldon
  Railroad south of Petersburg.
    "I have completely destroyed the railroad track from the Nottoway to
  Hicksford....I have met but trifling opposition or annoyance, but the marching
  and working night and day has been very fatiguing, and the weather very
  uncomfortable.... I propose to return to-morrow." Second Corps commander
  Gen. Humphreys gets a request from George Meade to "find out what troops
  are in your front either by authorizing some intercourse with the pickets or by
  a dash, getting some prisoners." Meade writes: "I think it is pretty well settled
   Lee holds his lines in my front with...15,000 men. If this is the case, he cannot
  very well assume the offensive..., but...that gentleman might try his hand at an
  attack on our rear, coming up the Halifax or Vaughan road. I  think,  therefore,
  our attention should be directed to this point."

  Commanding the Union Navy brigade on the Broad River in SC was an officer
  named Preble. He wrote today of a new weapon being used against his men:
  "It is a conical ball in shape, like an ordinary bullet. .. The base of the ball
  separates from the conical end and has a leaden.. plunger. The explosion of the
  charge drives the base up so as to flatten a thin disk of metal between it…and
  the leaden plunger is driven against the fulminate (in the nose) and it explodes
  the ball..."   Commander Preble found this weapon disturbing, and in his report
  he sounded a note heard before, and would be heard again: "It seems to me
  that use of such a missile is an unnecessary addition to the barbarities of war."

  1865 - Monday
  The 13th Amendment was ratified by Oregon.

  Born on this day....
  1797 -  Hiram Paulding, USN, Commandant of the New York Navy Yard

  Fascinating Fact:
  The five Gen.'s Having the most Horses killed from under them
   1.  Conf. Lt. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest     30 horses
   2.  Conf. Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler              16 horses
   3.  Conf. Brig. Gen. Alfred J. Vaughan, Jr.      8 horses
   4.  Conf. Brig. Gen. William B. Bate               6 horses
   5.  Union Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman        5 horses

  One last Fact:
   Gen. Forrest has had 31 horses shot out from under him. Granted the last one
  happened 135 years late but it did occur just the same.  Let me explain.
  To the south of Nashville, on I-65, stands an area where all the States of the
  Confederacy are represented by the flying of their State Flags. In the fall of
  1999 a rather controversial statue of Forrest, on a rearing horse was placed at
  the site. Someone, in a 'drive-by', shot at the statue , striking the horse in a
  manner that would have resulted in a mortally wound. Gen. Forrest escaped
  unscathed. Therefore, thirty horses have succumbed...
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« Reply #2 on: December 13, 2004, 01:37:54 PM »
1861 - Thursday
  The armies are settled into winter camps around the countryside by now,
  but mere bad weather was not enough to put a halt to the activities of the
  U.S. Navy. The blockade effort continued to be strengthened as the number
  of ships available to be put on patrol continued to be increased. Actual
   military efforts were today concentrated on the Ashepoo River area. Ships
  carrying sailors and Marines steamed in and out of the main base which
  had been established in Port Royal Sound. The purpose of the venture was
  to locate any concentrations of Confederate forces, and beyond that, to
  allow captains and navigators to familiarize themselves with the tricky and
  complicated inlets of the coastline

  1862- Friday
  USS Tuscumbia
  Casemate gunboat ,  Dimensions:  length 178', beam 75', draft 7'
  Displacement:  915 tons,  Speed:  10 knots,  Crew:  130?
  Armor:  3" casemate, 2" rear casemate, 1" deck/sides
  Armament:  Three 11" and two 9" Dahlgren smoothbores
  Built by Brown at New Albany IN. Launched 12 Dec 62.
  Commissioned 12 Mar 63.
  Decommissioned Feb 65. Sold 29 Nov 65 at Mound City.
  Commander: LtCdr. James W. Shirk (Mar-Oct 63).

  Exp. up Yazoo River, MS
  U.S. Ram "Queen of the West," and Gunboats "Marmosa," "Signal," "Cairo"
  and "Pittsburg."

  On the Yazoo River near Vicksburg, an electrically fired Conf. torpedo sunk
  the Union gunboat Cairo. She is the first vessel to be sunk by explosion of such
  device since the war began. The Cairo was ascending the Yazoo River when
  she struck the torpedo about a mile below Hayne's Bluff. She sank in 15
  minutes in 40 feet of water. No lives were lost.

  Just a postscript to the sinking of the Cairo.  Almost one hundred years after it
  was sunk the Head park historian at Vicksburg helps to organize and raise the
  Cairo from the depths of the Yazoo rivers.  It is now on display in an open
  air/covered exhibition space and its' own separate museum with the contents
  that were recovered.  

  Clara Barton, one of the most famous nurses of the war, is informed by a dying
  Conf. officer of a Conf. trap laid in the city of Fredericksburg. The information
  does not come in time, and Union troops suffer severe losses.

  Edwin Sumner's Grand Right Division crosses the Rappahannock River and
 occupies Fredericksburg. Many soldiers stack arms and begin to explore the
  deserted houses in the city. Before long the looting begins in earnest as
  "valuable books and colonial furniture are sent flying into the snowy streets...
  and paintings are slashed with bayonets." Provost guards have to be stationed
  at each bridge to prevent the looters from escaping with their ill gotten gains.
  Gradually as the excitement of the day winds down, many of the soldiers begin
  to wonder why the Rebels did not try to stop the river crossing. One private,
  has a pretty good idea: "crap, they want us to get in. Getting out won't be quite
  so smart and easy. You'll see."

  Gen. Lee spends the day consolidating his army on the heights above
  Fredericksburg. Only the divisions of D.H. Hill and Jubal Early are left to
  guard the river crossings at Port Royal and Skinkers Neck. "Old Pete"
  Longstreet orders the units in McLaws' division, positioned at the base of
  Marye's Heights, to increase the already "natural strength of their position;
  [featuring] ditches, stone fences, and road cuts [with] rifle trenches and
  abatis." A.P. Hill places his men, on the right of Lee's line, but inexplicably
  leaves a 600 yard gap of "boggy woods" between the brigades of Gen. Archer
  and Lane. This gap bothers Lane and he "takes pains...to make known the
  existence of the gap" to the commanders of the brigades closest to the
  unguarded terrain.

  Skirmish, Little Bear Creek, AL
    ILLINOIS--52d Infantry
    INDIANA--66th Infantry
    IOWA  -  2d and 7th  Infantry
   U.S.A.  -   5 Killed,  48 Wounded
   C.S.A.  -  Casualties Not Reported

  Action, Franklin, TN
  KENTUCKY (U)   -  3rd  Cavalry.  
  MICHIGAN  -  4th  Cavalry.
  PENNSYLVANIA  -  7th  Cavalry.
  TENNESSEE (U)  -  1st and 5th Cavalry (Middle).
  OHIO  -  1st Cavalry,  Battery "D" 1st Light Arty
       Union loss, 1 Killed.

  1863- Saturday
  Smoke still rose this morning from the charred wood that until yesterday had
  been a large salt works in St. Andrew's Bay, FL. Acting Master  W.R. Browne
  of the USS Restless, along with two other ships, had found the outpost and
  launched an attack on it. Artillery fire hit one of the houses of the workers,
  and wind had spread the flames until nearly  the whole compound was
  incinerated. Brown wrote in his report, "It was in fact a complete village...
  employing many hands and 16 ox and mule teams constantly to haul salt to
  Eufaula Sound and from thence conveyed to Montgomery, at which place it is
  selling at fabulous prices--$40 and  $50 per bushel."  The operation included
  22 large steam boilers and 300 kettles averaging 200 gallons each, used to
  evaporate sea water to harvest the salt. The 2000 bushels found were returned
  to the sea from whence they had come.

  1864- Monday
  The Federals captured another Conf. vessel, CSS Resolute, on the Savannah
  River.
 
  Quartermaster-General A.R. Lawton responds to Gen. Lee's request for
  additional shoes, clothes, and blankets for his army. "It was with some
  surprise that the department learned the great necessities of the  troops.... The
  impression here has all along been that you were receiving enough to make
  the army not only efficient but comfortable....To meet the present deficiency
  of pants and jackets it has been arranged to put up the production at this point
  to 1,000 suits a day; all of which will go to you until you are supplied."
  However, Lawton remains skeptical about the condition  of Lee's army. "It is
  suggested that immediate and efficient steps be taken to check the waste of
  soldiers' clothing by sale and barter. It is an evil greatly on the increase, and
  with the facilities that soldiers have in Petersburg and Richmond for disposing
  of what is sent to them, it will be impossible with the amplest supply to keep
  the army clad,  unless this abuse is stopped...I would suggest, further, that
  next spring the soldiers be required to turn in their blankets. They will then
  be more available for reissue."  In addition, Gen. Lee also addresses the
  growing problem caused by the lack of regular rations for his men by issuing
  a general order. "The general commanding has heard, with pain and
  mortification, that outrages and depredations, amounting in some cases to
  flagrant robbery, have been  perpetrated upon citizens living within the
  lines, and near the camps of the army. Poor and helpless persons have been
  stripped of the means of subsistence and suffered violence by the hands of
  those upon whom they had a right to rely for protection. In one instance an
  atrocious murder was perpetrated upon a child by a band of ruffians whose
  supposed object was plunder."

  Born on this day.....
  1806 -  Conf . Brig. Gen. Stand Watie, near Rome GA
        Note:  The last Confederate general to surrender his command.
                  Surrendered on  June 23, 1865          
  1818 -  Conf. Brig. Gen. Paul Ocxtave Hebert at Iberville Parish LA
        Note: Cousin of  Brig. Gen. Louis Hébert
  1830 -  Conf. Brig. Gen. Joseph Orville "Jo" Shelby at Lexington KY
 
  Fascinating Fact:
  The Old Army Artillery Regiments ranked by Seniority -
  1. 1st   Artillery, formed 1821
  2. 2nd  Artillery, formed 1821
  3. 3rd   Artillery, formed 1821
  4. 4th   Artillery, formed 1821

  Side Note:
    1870
  First African-American Congressional Representative Joseph Hayne Rainey,
  a Republican from SC, is sworn in tothe House of Representatives to fill the
  seat made vacant by the expulsion of Representative Benjamin F. Whittemore.
  Rainey, who serves as a SC representative for ten years, is the first African
 American to sit in the House. In the aftermath of the American Civil War, the
  Civil Rights Act of 1866, granting U.S. citizenship and equal rights to all
  persons except Indians born in the United States, was passed over President
 Andrew Johnson's veto. One year later, the Reconstruction Acts of 1867 was
  passed, dividing the South into five military districts and granting suffrage to
  all male citizens, regardless of race. A politically mobilized African-American
  community joined with white allies in the Southern states to elect the
  Republican party to power, which in turn brought about radical changes across
  the South. By 1870, all the former Confederate states had been readmitted
  to the Union, and most were controlled by the Republican party, thanks to the
  support of African-American voters. Although African-Americans Republicans
  never obtained political office in proportion to their overwhelming electoral
  majority, Joseph Rainey and some fifteen other African- American men served
  in Congress during Reconstruction, over six hundred served in state legislatures,
  and hundreds of African-Americans held local offices.
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« Reply #3 on: December 13, 2004, 01:41:55 PM »
1861- Friday
  Over in the western part of Virginia (which was still one state in these days)
  there is a high spot of land known as Buffalo Mountain. On this hill was a
  Confederate outpost known as Camp Allegheny. This was not an entirely
  comfortable place for them to be, as Western Virginia had voted strongly
  against secession and was full of Union supporters. In fact, just on the next
  hill over, known as Cheat Mountain, there was a whole camp of Union soldiers,
  under command of Brig. Gen. R. H. Milroy. Milroy and his men came one
  mountain over to pay a call on their secessionist neighbors, and a considerable
  battle ensued. Camp Allegheny is arguably the highest battlefield in elevation
 of all  the Civil War battles.

  Eng. at Camp Allegheny, WV or  Allegheny Mountain
  Location: Pocahontas County
  Campaign: Operations in Western Virginia
                     (June-December 1861)
  Principal Commanders: Brig. Gen. Robert Milroy [US]
  Col. Edward "Allegheny" Johnson [CS]
  Forces Engaged: Brigades
  Estimated Casualties: 253 total  
         U.S.A.-  20 Killed, 107 Wounded, 10 Missing
         C.S.A.-  20 Killed,  96 Wounded
  Results: Inconclusive

  1862- Saturday
  Union Gen. Burnside, despite disadvantageous terrain, attacks Lee at
  Fredericksburg.  This defeat would result in Burnside's removal as
  Commander of the  Army of the Potomac.

  Battle of Fredericksburg, VA or Marye's Heights
  Location: Spotsylvania County and Fredericksburg
  Campaign: Fredericksburg Campaign
                     (November-December 1862)
  Principal Commanders: Maj. Gen Ambrose E. Burnside,    
  Maj. Gen.  Sumner, Brig. Gen.  Franklin,
  Maj. Gen. Hooker[US];
  Gen. Robert E. Lee,  Lt. Gen. Longstreet,
  Lt. Gen. Stonewall Jackson ,
  Lt. Gen. D.H. Hill, Maj. Gen. Hood,
  Brig. Gen.  Anderson, Brig. Gen. Early[CS]
  Forces Engaged: Army of the Potomac  100,007 [US]
  Army of Northern Virginia  72,497 [CS]
  Estimated Casualties: 16,929 total  
  U.S.A.-1,284 Killed,  9,600 Wounded, 7,769 Missing /Captured
                       Brig. Gen.  Jackson Killed
                       Brig. Gen.  Bayard Killed
   C.S.A.- 579 Killed , 3,870 Wounded, 127 Missing /Captured
                      Brig. Gen.  T.R. Cobb Killed
                      Brig. Gen. Maxcy Gregg Killed
  Results: Confederate victory

  It was after this battle that Robert E. Lee made his famous remark, "I wish
  these people would go away and let us alone."
 
  During the Battle of Fredericksburg, at Marye's Heights, a 19 year old
  sergeant, a South Carolina soldier named Richard Rowland Kirkland climbed
  over the stone wall to take water to the wounded.  For over an hour, both
  sides held their fire so he could help the suffering. For this action, he was
  called the "Angel of Marye's Heights". He was later killed at Chickamauga.

  A Union soldier remarks "We might as well have tried to take hell"

  Most of the 4,000 citizens of Fredericksburg had evacuated when the armies
  arrived. Fredericksburg has been the hometown of  John Paul Jones, James
  Monroe and George Washington's mother.

  Federal troops attempt to loot Fredericksburg but are prevented from taking
  their booty out of the city by Union Gen. Darius Couch, who posts guards on
  the city's bridges with orders to shoot looters.

  Actions near Southwest Creek, NC
  Dates:  Dec. 13-14, 1862
  MASSACHUSETTS  -  23d Infantry.
  NEW JERSEY  -  9th  Infantry.
  NEW YORK  -  Battery "B," 3d Light Arty.;
   1st  Marine Naval Brigade Arty.
  PENNSYLVANIA  -  85th  and 103d Infantry.
         U.S.A.-   3 Killed,   8 Wounded
         C.S.A.-   Unknown

  1863- Sunday
  Capt. Frank Gurley, who was arrested for the "murder" of  Gen. Robert
  McCook, is ordered to stand trial before a military commission to be
  assembled by General Thomas. Late in 1862, Gurley and his small command
  unexpectedly encountered McCook, riding in an ambulance far ahead of his
  column. When McCook refused to surrender, Gurley shot and killed him.

  Affair, Germantown, VA
  MASSACHUSETTS  -  2d Cavalry (Detachment).
         Union loss, 2 Killed

  Skirmish, Hurricane Bridge, WV
  WEST VIRGINIA--11th Infantry (Detachment)
         Union loss, 2 Missing.

  Emily Todd Helm, Mrs. Lincoln's half sister and widow of slain Conf. Gen.
  Helm, is visiting at the White House.

  1864- Tuesday
  Sherman reaches the sea by taking Fort McAllister
  Eng. at Fort McAllister II , GA
  Location: Bryan County,  GA
  Campaign: Savannah Campaign (1864)
  Principal Commanders: Brig. Gen. William B. Hazen [US]
  Maj. George A. Anderson [CS]
  Forces Engaged: 2nd Division, XV Corps, Army
  of the Tennessee [US]
  Fort McAllister Garrison (120 men) [CS]
  Estimated Casualties: 386 total  
       U.S.A.  -  24 Killed, 110 Wounded
       C.S.A.  - 250 Missing or Captured
  Results: Union victory

  Action, Paperville and Kingsport, TN
  KENTUCKY--Battery "E" Light Arty.
  MICHIGAN  -  11th  Cavalry.
  TENNESSEE (U)  - 8th, 9th and 13th Cavalry.
         Union loss, 2 Killed, 7 Wounded

  Born on this day....
  1818 -  Mary Todd Lincoln
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« Reply #4 on: December 14, 2004, 07:17:25 AM »
Today In History for Dec. 14

 

  1860 - Friday

  The Georgia legislature issued a call to  SC, AL, FL, and MS for delegates to

  be appointed to a convention to consider a Southern Confederacy.

 

  As talk of secession heats up in South Carolina, not all citizens feel such a

  move is in their best interests. One James L. Petigru, when asked directions to

  an insane asylum, replied, "The whole state is one vast insane asylum."

 

  1861- Saturday

  The  British India was the Union's source of saltpeter , the principle ingredient

  of gunpowder. The war had drawn down saltpeter stockpiles to the danger point.

  The British government clamped an embargo on all shipments to the United States

  until the Trent crisis was resolved. No settlement, no saltpeter .

 

  Conf. Brig. Gen. H.H. Sibley assumed command of the forces on the upper Rio

  Grande and in NM and Arizona territories.

 

  1862- Sunday

  Burnside spends the early morning hours making plans for a grand bayonet

  charge, to be led by his trusted 9th Corps, on the Confederate position at the

  stone wall. He wires Lincoln with his plans: "Our troops are all over the river.

  We hold the first ridge outside the town....We hope to carry the crest to-day."

  When "Old Burn" meets with his corps commanders, it is old "Bull" Sumner,

  his most aggressive subordinate, who convinces Burnside to belay the attack

  order.  "There is not a general in the army who expects it to succeed." Without

  a dissenting voice from any of his general officers, Burnside cannot ignore

  Sumner's advice. "This caused me to decide that I ought not to make the attack

  I had contemplated....I felt I could not take the responsibility of ordering the

  attack, not withstanding my own belief...that the works of the enemy could

  be carried."

 


  Eng. at Kinston, NC


  Location: Lenoir County, NC

  Campaign: Goldsborough Expedition (December 1862)

  Principal Commanders: Brig. Gen. John G. Foster [US]

  Brig. Gen. Nathan Evans [CS]

  Forces Engaged: Department of  N.  Carolina, 1st Division [US]

  Evans's Brigade [CS]

  Estimated Casualties: 685 total

     U.S.A. -  40 Killed, 120 Wounded

     C.S.A. -  50 Killed,  75 Wounded,  400 Missing /Captured

  Results: Union victory

 

  Expedition, Nashville, and skirmish on Franklin Pike, TN

  ILLINOIS  -  Chicago Board of Trade Indep. Battery Light Arty.

              19th Infantry.

  KENTUCKY--Battery "B" Light Arty.

  OHIO  -  69th  Infantry.

       Union loss, 1 Killed, 5 Wounded

 

  Affair near Helena, AR        

  MISSOURI  -  6th  Cavalry (Co. "E")

     Union loss, 24 Missing

 

  1863- Monday

  A year after Lee had breathed his famous wish at Fredericksburg "I wish these

  people would go away and let us alone" Gen. James Longstreet had to be

  thinking precisely the same thing. He had withdrawn from the gates of

  Knoxville after the last attack had failed, and wanted nothing more at the

  moment than to get his battered, ill-supplied troops to a winter camp where

  they could rest and rebuild their strength. He had selected Greenville, TN.,

  for this camp, but the problem was getting there. He was set upon today by

  the forces of Union Gen. James M. Shackelford in a battle at Bean's Station, TN,

  and it turned into quite a sharp fight. As the weak winter sun sank early this

  afternoon, Longstreet's men had driven the Federals back some distance but

 had not broken them. Everyone settled down for an uneasy night.

 


  Eng. at Bean's Station, TN


  Location: Grainger County ,  TN

  Campaign: Knoxville Campaign (1863)

  Principal Commanders: Brig. Gen. J.M. Shackelford [US]

  Lt. Gen. James Longstreet [CS]

  Forces Engaged: Cavalry Corps, Department of the Ohio [US]

  Confederate Forces in East Tennessee [CS]

  Estimated Casualties: 1,000 total  

         U.S.A.- 16 Killed,  51 Wounded, 48 Missing

       C.S.A.- 932 Killed and  Wounded, 150 Missing or Captured

  Results: Confederate victory

 

  Affair near Catlett's Station, VA.

  Six guerrillas, dressed in blue overcoats attacked a Federal detachment.

  Col. Hardin was shot through the arm and Col. Gustin shot in the hand in the

  attack.

 

  The Georgia Assembly approves an act "to reorganize the militia of the State of

  Georgia," which requires the enrollment of all white males between the ages

  of sixteen and sixty for military service.

 

  Lincoln announces a grant of amnesty for Mrs. Emilie Todd Helm, Mary Lincoln's

  half sister and the widow of a Conf. general. The pardon was one of the first

  under Lincoln's Proclamation of Amnesty and Reconstruction, which he had

  announced less than a week before. The plan was the president's blueprint for

  the reintegration of the South into the Union. Part of the plan allowed for former

  Confederates to be granted amnesty if they took an oath to the United States. The

  option was open to all but the highest officials of the Confederacy.

 

  1864 - Wednesday


  Skirmish, Germantown Road, near Memphis, TN


  IOWA  -  4th  Cavalry (Detachment Co.'s "A and B" ).

    U.S.A.  -   3 Killed,   6 Wounded, 15 Missing

    C.S.A.  -  Casualties Not Reported

 

  Born on this day....

  1830 -  Conf. Brig. Gen. Allen Thomas in Howard Cty MD

  1832 -  Conf. Brig. Gen. Daniel Harris Reynolds at Centerburg OH

 


  MORTARS


  12-pounder wooden mortar Made of oak and iron bands

  Fired a 12-pounder shell at Conf. positions prior to the availability of a

  sufficient number of 24-pounder Coehorn mortars.

 

  24-pounder bronze Coehorn mortar, Model of 1838.

  Total length, 16.32 inches; weight, 164 pounds; total production, 279;

  known survivors, 100.

 

  24-pounder iron Confederate Coehorn mortar

  Total length, unknown, but approximately 18 inches; weight, unknown but

  estimated at approximately 165 pounds; total production, 49 by Tredegar,

  9 by Selma, unknown quantity by an unspecified foundry in Mobile AL;

  known survivors, 5. Tredegar Foundry also made 26 of a smaller 12-pounder

  version, but there is no known survivor.
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate

Offline El Confederado

  • Trade Count: (0)
  • Avid Poster
  • **
  • Posts: 171
Today in 18XX
« Reply #5 on: December 15, 2004, 07:20:25 AM »
Today In History for Dec.  15

 

  1861- Sunday

  Gen. "States Rights" Gist, adjutant and inspector general of SC announced

  that South Carolina troops were being placed under Gen. Lee, relieving a

  delicate situation as who commands whom.

 

  1862- Monday

  Conf. guerrillas destroy the steamer "Lake City" at Concordia, AK  The

  Federals retaliate as the "DeSoto" shells the town, burning 42 houses in the

  process.

 

  Benjamin Butler is officially relieved of command of the Dept. of the Gulf by

  Nathaniel Banks.  New Orleans celebrates as Butler leaves the city. Butler

  would be rivaled on by Lincoln and Sherman in earning the hatred of the

  Southern populace.

 

  In Fredericksburg, occasional skirmishing between pickets is mixed with

  sharp, sporadic artillery duels. The pitiful moans of the wounded and dying

  compose a "strange mournful mutter on the battlefield, that pathetic cry

  ceaselessly is audible. Burnside, still refusing to admit total defeat,

  "disapproves of the proposition to send out a flag of truce, for the purpose of

  burying the dead." Finally, late in the afternoon, Burnside issues orders for a

  withdrawal from the shattered city and allows a flag of truce to be sent across

  the lines. Lee reports: "No attempt to advance had been made to-day. He has

  been busy  collecting  his dead and wounded."

 

  Lincoln has made his decision. After reviewing the evidence under which

  307 Dakota Indians have been sentenced to death, in retaliation for their

  bloody uprising last summer, Lincoln pardons 268 of them. The evidence,

  Lincoln decides is "flimsy and unconvincing" The remaining prisoners, after

  originally being scheduled to be hung on December 19th, are sentenced to be

  executed on the day after Christmas.

 

  1863- Tuesday

  Conf.  Maj. Gen. Jubal A. Early is assigned to the Shenandoah Valley District.

 

  Affair near Pulaski, TN

  A small party of Rebels commanded by Maj. Jo. Fontaine is captured while

  tapping into telegraph lines along the Chattanooga and Nashville Railroad.

 

  Skirmish, Sangster's Station, VA    

  NEW YORK  -  155th  Infantry.

      Union less, 1 Killed, 4 Wounded

 

  1864- Thursday


  Battle of  Nashville, TN


  Location: Davidson County,  TN

  Campaign: Franklin-Nashville Campaign (1864)

  Dates: December 15-16, 1864

  Principal Commanders: Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas [US]

  Gen. John Bell Hood [CS]

  Forces Engaged: IV Army Corps, XXIII Army Corps,

  Detachment of Army of the Tennessee, provisional detachment,

  and cavalry corps [US]

  Army of Tennessee [CS]

  Estimated Casualties: 6,602 total

         U.S.A.  -   387 Killed, 2,562 Wounded, 112 Missing

         C.S.A.  -  4,462 Missing / Captured

  Results: Union victory

 

  Gen. John B. Hood was fighting without the aid of Gen. Nathan Forrest and

  his cavalry, whom Hood had sent to attack Murfreesboro.

 

  Gen. Hood tries to cut Gen. Sherman's supply lines with an attack on Gen.

  George Thomas at Nashville. Hood's attack fails, and his army is nearly

  decimated in the attempt.

 

  Shy's Hill was named Compton's Hill before this day of battle, it was re-named

  for a Conf. officer who gave his life in its defense. A Conf. veteran picked

  himself up out of the mud in which he had fallen and groaned disgustedly:  

  " Ain't we in a hell of a fix?  A one eyed President, a one legged General , and

  a one horse Confederacy!"

 

  Skirmishes, Mitchell's Creek, FL  

  Dates   Dec. 15-16, 1864        

  FLORIDA--1st Cavalry

  UNITED STATES  -  82d Colored Infantry

      Union loss, 2 Killed, 21 Wounded, 1 Missing

 


  CW  -  Weapons


  MORTARS


  8-inch siege mortar, Model of 1840

  Total length, 22.5 inches; weight, 925 pounds; total production, 41;

  known survivors, 5.

 

  8-inch siege mortar, Model of 1861

  Total length, 23.25 inches; weight, 1,050 pounds; total production, 170;

  known survivors, 94.

 

  10-inch siege mortar, circa 1807

  Total length, 31.25 inches; weight, unknown; total production, unknown quantity

  by Henry Foxall; known survivors, 2.

 

  10-inch siege mortar, Model of 1840

  Total length, 28.0 inches; weight, 1,800 pounds; total production, 98;

  known survivors, 16.

 

  10-inch siege mortar, Model of 1861

  Total length, 29.25 inches; weight, 1,900 pounds; total production, 150;

  known survivors, 53.
Lt. J.M. Rodriguez II
Captain- K Company-- 37th Texas Cavalry C.S.A.
 Lt---2nd  Louisiana  Zouave Cavalry
( Coppens Zouaves Trans-Mississippi)
Lt.---1st Battalion of Louisiana Zouaves
WoNA historian
Un-Reconstructed Confederate