[417]
Meade and I found our chimney, &c., all torn down and carried off, and we are now out of doors, sitting around a real camp-fire.
We had to unload our wagon and send for a load of wood as soon as we arrived.
My brigade did not leave camp until 9 o'clock P. M., Thursday, and marched until 6 o'clock P. M., Friday, before going into bivouac.
When it was halted about two miles beyond the bridge over the Nottoway river it was hailing, and the poor fellows soon had up their little tents as a partial protection from the weather.
We were in motion early next day through the mud, rain and sleet, and went into camp at dark about two miles beyond Jarratt's Station.
Next day we returned to the bridge over the Nottoway, near a Mr. Wyatt's. Yesterday afternoon (Monday) we camped about a mile from Dinwiddie Court House, and to-day we reached our old camp again.
Our division did not encounter any of the enemy, as we were in rear.
Mahone's division struck the railroad about six miles below Jarratt's and four miles above Bellfield, while we, with Heth's in front, made for Jarratt's. The enemy had torn up the road and were beating a hasty retreat, leaving their cavalry to protect their rear.
Only a few shots were exchanged, when they took the back track, and as their infantry had so much the start it was deemed useless to pursue.
The movement was a terrible one upon our troops and transportation.
The freeze was fortunate as regards the latter—otherwise we would hardly have been able to get the artillery and wagons back, as the roads had been badly cut up in our advance—in some places the wheels sinking below the hubs in mud. The rapid marching done by my brigade was wonderful—particularly the first night and day—when the condition of the roads is taken into consideration.
Mahone and Heth both had the start of this division, but we succeeded in overtaking them Friday afternoon—some parts catching up with Heth's rear Thursday night. I was relieved of the division Friday afternoon by General Wilcox, just before the head of the division crossed the Nottoway river.
While building a fire in the woods to keep warm until my brigade, which was the rear one of the division, came up, Mr. Wyatt came along and invited me to his house, where I took shelter for a short time and found it more pleasant than my bivouac in the woods the night previous.
I was at the head of the division when it went into camp Thursday night, and was caught without a blanket and without anything to eat. I helped Major Hunt and one of the couriers to pick up a lot of dead pine with which we made a fire and before which I took a few ‘cat naps,’ in my overcoat until
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chapter:
Southern Historical Society
Papers.
chapter 2chapter 3chapter 4chapter 5chapter 6
Memorial services in
Memphis
Tenn.
,
March
31
,
1891
.
New Orleans, Louisana.
chapter 9
General
P.
R.
Cleburne
. Dedication of a monument to his memory at
Helena, Arkansas
,
May
10th
,
1891
.
chapter 11chapter 12
The women of the
South
.
chapter 14
General
Burkett
Davenport
Fry
.
United Confederate
Veterans
.
chapter 17chapter 18
General
John
Rogers
Cooke
.
chapter 20chapter 21
General
Junius
Daniel
.
an Address delivered before the
Ladies
' Memorial Association, in
Raleigh
, N. C,
May
10th
,
1888
.
The
Southern Historical Society
: its origin and history.
chapter 24chapter 25chapter 26chapter 27chapter 28
General
R.
E.
Lee
's war-horses, Traveller and
Lucy
long.
chapter 30chapter 31
Monument to the
Confederate
dead at
Fredericksburg, Virginia
, unveiled
June
10
,
1891
.
chapter 33chapter 34
Escape of prisoners from
Johnson's Island
.
chapter 36
Index.
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