Speech of General Fitz. Lee, at A. N. V.
Banquet, October 28th, 1875.
After speaking in general terms to the sentiment of the toast to the cavalry,
General Lee delivered the following beautiful tribute to his old commander,
General J. E. B. Stuart:
Brother Confederates--I hope I may receive your pardon if 1 occupy a brief portion of your time in talking to you of the
Chief of Cavalry of the Army of Northern Virginia, for my thoughts just now go out, in the language of
General Johnston, to the “Indefatigable
Stuart.”
To-day, comrades, I visited his grave.
He sleeps his last sleep upon a little hillside in
Hollywood, in so quiet, secluded a spot that I felt indeed that no sound “could awake him to glory again.”
A simple wooden slab marks the spot, upon which is inscribed--“
General Stuart, wounded May 11th, 1864;
died May 12th, 1864.”
And there rests poor
J. E. B. Stuart,
It was in 1852 I first knew him, the date of my entry as a cadet in the United States Military Academy--twenty-three years ago. Having entered
West Point two years before, he was a second-class-man
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at the time — a classmate of
Custis Lee's,
Pegram's and
Pender's. “Beauty
Stuart” he was then universally called, for however manly and soldierly in appearance he afterwards grew, in those days his comrades bestowed that appellation upon him to express their idea of his personal comeliness in inverse ratio to the term employed.
In that year, I recollect, he was orderly sergeant of his company, and in his first-class year its cadet captain.
I recall his distinguishing characteristics, which were a strict attention to his military duties, an erect, soldierly bearing, an immediate and almost thankful acceptance of a challenge from any cadet to fight, who might in any way feel himself aggrieved, and a clear, metallic, ringing voice.
I can well remember, when a cadet there and in the next company to his in the line at parade, always listening with eagerness to hear him bring his company to “order arms, parade rest” --there was so much music in his voice; and even as I speak here I fancy I can almost hear it once more, sounding like the silver trumpet of the
Archangel.
Little, gentlemen, did I imagine then that I would hear that same voice so often above the roar of battle and trampling of steeds upon so many hard fought fields — still delightfully musical, calm and clear as of old — only perhaps a little more powerful.
After his graduation, I never saw him again until the commencement of the late war. He was assigned to the First United States Cavalry, whose
Colonel was
Sumner and whose
Lieutenant-Colonel was
Joseph E. Johnston. Two years later, when I graduated, I was put in the Second Cavalry, serving in
Texas.
My
Colonel was
Albert Sidney Johnson; the
Lieutenant-Colonel was
R. E. Lee; the
Majors were
Hardee and
George H. Thomas, and the two
senior Captains Van Dorn and
Kirby Smith.
Stuart served with much distinction as a
United States officer; had plenty of roving, riding, and fighting
Indians.
When
John Brown's troops were marching on and took possession of the engine-house at
Harper's Ferry,
Stuart was in or near
Washington on leave of absence, but he immediately volunteered for the occasion, and accompanied the then
Colonel R. E. Lee as his aid to that place.
He it was who, at great personal risk, carried the summons to surrender to
Brown, and afterwards united in the charge the marines under
Green made there when battering down the door, and largely contributed to end forever the career of
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the “messenger and prophet,” as some at the
North delighted to call him.
J. E. B. Stuart's duties began in the late war in the
Valley of Virginia, as a
Lieutenant-Colonel of cavalry under
General Johnston, when he was confronting
Patterson, and after that his person, his prowess, his daring, his dash, his gay humor, his great services, are as familiar as “household words” to all of us. Many within the sound of my voice recall him then.
His strong figure, his big brown beard, his piercing, laughing blue eye, the drooping hat and black feather, the “fighting jacket,” as he termed it, the tall cavalry boots, the high health and exuberant vitality, forming one of the most jubilant and striking figures in the war, which cannot easily be forgotten.
It was after the
first battle of Manassas that my personal intercourse with him began.
I in turn, as he was promoted, commanded his old regiment, his old brigade, and his old division — being one step behind him — and feel that, perhaps, I have a right to speak of him. Can I or any one else do justice to his many exploits as commander of the cavalry of the historic “Army of Northern Virginia?”
Is it necessary to tell you that his ride around
McClellan's army, on the
Richmond lines, was not undertaken to gain eclat by the popular applause it might bring him, but it was made to locate the flanks of the
Federal army — to blaze the way for the great
Stonewall Jackson, whose memory has been so vividly recalled to us, and whom
General Lee was planning to bring down upon the right and rear of
McClellan, and wanted to know where it was located.
I commanded a regiment upon that expedition, and know that after
Stuart found himself in rear of the
Federal right, his own grand genius taught him to make the circuit — the entire circuit of the
Federal army — as the easiest way to avoid the dispositions that were being made to cut him off, should he return the way he marched.
Must I tell you of his trip to
Catlett's, in
Pope's rear, or of his second ride around the same
McClellan, and of his ride from
Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, to
Leesburg, Virginia, a distance of ninety miles, in thirty-six hours--a march that has no equal in point of rapidity in the records of the war?
Of his behavior upon the right of
Jackson at
Fredericksburg?
Of
Chancellorsville, where an eye-witness asserts that he could not get rid of the idea that “Harry of Navarre” was present, except that
Stuart's plume was
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black; for everywhere, like “Navarre,” he was in front, and the men “followed the feather” ? And where, riding at the head of and in command of
Jackson's veterans, his ringing voice could be heard high, high above the thunder of artillery and the ceaseless roar of musketry, singing, “
Old Joe Hooker, won't you come out the wilderness” ? Of the 9th of June, at Beverly's Ford; of
Brandy Station; of
Gettysburg; of his action during the memorable early days of May, 1864; of his last official dispatch, dated May 11, 1864, 6.30 A. M., where he was fighting against the immense odds of
Sheridan, preventing them from occupying this city, and where he said, “My men and horses are tired, hungry and jaded, but all right?”
Of “
Yellow Tavern,” fought six miles from here, where his mortal wound was received, given when he was so close to the line of the enemy that he was firing his pistol at them?
His voice — I can even now hear — after the fatal shot was fired, as he called out to me as I rode up to him, “Go ahead,
Fitz, old fellow, I know you will do what is right,” and constitutes my most precious legacy.
Shall I tell you when he was on the
Rappahannock, and they telegraphed him his child was dying — his darling little
Flora — that he replied that “I shall have to leave my child in the hands of God; my duty to my country requires me here.”
Comrades, here in the city of
Richmond, and for whose defence he fell, his pure spirit winged its way to heaven.
Faith, which overcomes all things, was in his heart.
Right here he, who on the battle-field was more fiery than even “Rupert of the bloody sword,” quietly lay awaiting the summons of the angel of death.
The bright blue eye, that always beamed with laughter, now looked into the very face of death without a quiver of the lid. About noon of the day of his death,
President Davis visited his bedside, and in reply to his question as to how he felt, the dying hero answered, “Easy, but willing to die if God and my country think I have fulfilled my destiny and done my duty,” showing that beneath the gay manners of the cavalier there was a deep, divine and religious sentiment that shone forth, illuminating the hero's character and giving dignity to the last moments of his life.
“Sing,” said he to
the Rev. Dr. Peterkin, the very worthy pastor of St. James church in this city, “Rock of ages cleft for me, let me hide myself in Thee,” and the fast sinking soldier joined in with all the strength his failing power permitted.
He then prayed with the friends around, and with the words “I am going fast now, I
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am resigned, God's will be done,” the great, grand cavalry leader furled his battle-flag forever.
Gentlemen, my object in all this is to bring you to the simple grave upon the hillside in beautiful
Hollywood that I saw to-day, and to ask you if the Pantheon of
Virginia's heart can be complete until it contains the image of this, one of her most gracious cavaliers?
The city of
Richmond, saved by the fight at “
Yellow Tavern” from capture, pledged itself to erect a monument to this hero, and I hope the day is not far distant when she will be able to redeem so sacred an obligation.
Soldiers I from the depths of my heart I rejoice to have witnessed the splendid tribute that has reached us from across the ocean to the memory of the immortal
Jackson.
I feel a natural pride in the knowledge that the day is close at hand when the capital of the
State can boast of an equestrian statue to the great Confederate
Commander-in-Chief; and after that, may I not express the fond hope that the memory of his trusted and chosen commander of cavalry will also be transmitted to posterity in a statute that will not only be an ornament to the city, but around which we all can unite in paying a true tribute to the virtues of the hero to whose name and fame it will forever stand in lofty and lasting attestation?