Memoirs of a
Southerner
1840 - 1923
BY
EDWARD J. THOMAS
SAVANNAH, GEORGIA
1923
Copyright 1912
BY
EDWARD J. THOMAS
PREFACE
My
young manhood having spent in the South just before, during and
after the War of Secession, I may say I lived in two distinct
periods of our Southern history, for this war completely severed
the grand old plantation life, with all its peculiar interests
and demands, from the stirring and striving conditions that followed.
The first was a life complete in all things to foster intelligence
and honor; the second simply, for me, a constant struggle and
a hard fight to keep the proverbial wolf from the door, but with
pluck, frugality and endurance the fight was won, and now, in
my old age, with kind relatives and good friends, I have found
happiness and contentment.
MY FATHER was of Welsh stock descended from one John Thomas,
captain of the first vessel that brought colonists to Georgia.
My mother's maiden name was Huguenin, of the Huguenots, who, being
Protestants, left France and settled in South Carolina after the
revocation of the Edict of Nantes by Louis XIV in 1685.
I
was born in Savannah, Georgia, March 25, 1840, but a few years
after we moved to the old homestead in McIntosh County, some forty
miles from this city. My first recollection was of this plantation.
It was called "Peru" on account of its fertility - the
legend of Pizarro's gold find being not yet forgotten - situated
on South Newport River, a bold and wide salt water stream emptying
into Black-Beard Sound. My grandfather lived at one end of this
plantation of three thousand acres, and my father lived at the
other. I remember my grandfather very distinctly; he wore no whiskers,
and, not shaving daily, would catch me in his arms and rub his
face against mine, scratching me with his beard, much to our mutual
delight. This impressed me with the belief that old men had beards
and young men had whiskers, for father wore whiskers except the
moustache, which, to wear in those days, was considered "horsey."
Grandfather, Jonathan Thomas, died a few years later, leaving
his many plantations - Peru, Belvidere, Baker, and Stark, comprising
some fifteen thousand acres and about one hundred and twenty-five
slaves.
His
remains are buried by a large oak in our private burying ground
on the banks of South Newport River, and there he rests while
the restless waters ebb and flow nearby. His portrait now hangs
over my fireplace, and kindly smiles down on his great, great,
great grandchildren.
Plantation
life on the seaboard of Georgia was master and slave in its prettiest
phase. It was the rarest thing to sell a negro, and but few were
bought. The negroes on these places had been reared along with
their young masters and mistresses, and the interest of each was
the concern of all.
And
just here permit me to say that of our one hundred and twenty-five
slaves there was but one mulatto, and let me tell you how that
one came. It became necessary, on account of mother's health,
when I was about eight years old, for father to take her to one
of the northern springs. Those were the days of state money, and
no express, and I well remember the bags of gold father had to
pack in his trunk, for Georgia money would not be good in Massachusetts,
and vice-versa. Of course no Southern lady traveled without her
colored maid.
Mother carried "Fanny," and
behold, sometime after "Fanny" got home, a chocolate
boy was seen. "Fanny" told me that the red clay hills
of the old North State did it. I was delighted. I claimed him
as my special charge, to rear as my body servant. I named him
"Ned," but he died a year or two after.
There
was on the plantation a trusted and intelligent slave called the
Driver, who was directly in charge of all field work, Sea-Island
cotton, corn, peas, sweet potatoes, sugar cane, melons, and all
garden stuff; another was in charge of the horses, cattle, etc.,
and a third was foreman of the plows.
The
fields were all staked off in tasks, a quarter of an acre, and
each slave was required to cultivate with hoe or plow a certain
amount of these staked fields, and as near as possible the same
area cultivated in the early spring would be constantly worked
by the same person, that he or she might be rewarded for doing
the work well in the beginning, as it would be less labor the
second hoeing if it was well done at first. In this way the industrious
and diligent negro seldom worked after the noon hour.
They
were very well housed in two-room lumber cabins, a chimney to
each house, and allowed a garden. Sundays no work was permitted,
the slaves attending church. They could raise as many chickens
as they pleased, could have boats and go anywhere fishing, so
they came home by daylight to resume work.
They
were given two suits of clothes a year, one of wool, the other
cotton, two shirts, a pair of blankets, and a pair of heavy shoes.
The clothing was given to them twice a year, in the early spring
and winter; the shoes in the beginning of winter. During the summer
they generally went barefooted. Each slave's foot was measured,
and his name written on the stick showing the length of foot;
these sticks were then bundled and sent to the merchant furnishing
the shoes, and each shoe would come home with the stick inside
of it. The master would then take up the shoe, pull out the stick,
and call the name of the slave, who would receive it.
The
ration on cotton plantations was corn meal and grits, potatoes,
peas, and a little bacon or Louisiana molasses; on rice plantations,
rice instead of meal. These rations were distributed weekly, the
slaves coming with proper utensils to receive them. Having their
own boats, they could always have fish and oysters, and in their
gardens raised chickens and vegetables.
The
marshes abounded in raccoons and the woods in 'possums, and nightly
the baying of the dogs - their own - would tell you the boys of
the plantation were on a hunt. Diamond-backed terrapin were abundant,
and one never was brought to our dwelling that the bearer could
not get in exchange a "thrip" (the old-fashioned six
cents), or, if he preferred, a ration of bacon or syrup. Many
old English coins were in use, the thrip - six cents - and the
"seven- pence," twelve cents.
The
women sold their chickens to mother, eight for a dollar. Baked
'possum and roasted potatoes, as these people would fix them,
were always nice; at least I thought so as a boy, and many the
time some old mammy would call "Mas' Ed" and give him
a portion of what was in her little three-legged iron pot. Yes,
"Mas' Ed" could have all he wanted, patting me on the
shoulder, "Bless de chile, 'e spit image of 'e Granpa.
The
older men were allowed to keep guns; to many they were supplied
by the master. Many had horses and cows, permitted to run in a
large free pasture. These pastures extended over thousands of
acres of salt marsh, and in these pastures the horses were reared,
hence the name they acquired, "marsh tackies." They
were not quite so large as the horses reared on the Mexican plains,
but for durability and deviltry they had no equal. On the eve
of coming home from school, I would write the Driver to get many
of these marsh tackies penned and fed, so they would be in good
shape when I got there, and then, getting a half-dozen or more
of our negro boys about my age, would bridle these devilish beasts,
strap a saddle cloth on, and go bouncing and scampering over the
plantation. Magnificent sport for boys.
The
young negroes particularly looked forward to Mas' Ed's coming
home, for they knew I would insist on a big barbecue of beef for
our mutual enjoyment.
'Twas
no strange sight to see many ponies and wagons on our route going
to church, several miles away in some shady grove, driven by these
families, for wherever the white folks attended church the slaves
were welcome, and on Communion Sundays they all, master and slave,
took wine from the same silver cup - the white folks, of course,
first. They had their own meeting and prayer house on the plantation,
built by the master, where "shouting" and singing and
sleeping were enjoyed, and strange doctrines preached, but, by
the master's order, never after twelve o'clock at night.
I
can remember to this day the sweet chants of "our people,"
as we used to call them, when the young men and girls, on moonlight
nights, would meet to grind their corn around the hand mills.
The constant whirr of the mill stones and the plaintive ditties
and merry shouts of these happy people frequently lulled me, when
a boy, to sleep, the negro quarters being not so far away. Never
more will such merry shouts be heard!
I
remember the great big cotton house, three stories high and every
window glassed, where the older women would sit and "pick
and sort" the good cotton from the bad, where the youngsters
would take the newly ginned cotton to the strong men with the
iron pestles, who stood in a strong bag of stout bagging - no
presses those days - until the contents were hard and fast, pestling
in this bag some three hundred pounds of cotton; the horse gin,
where Dick and Montezuma, the two horses, took turns with Lewis
and Robin, the two mules, in pulling the lever that turned the
machine that ginned the cotton; the two little black nigs who
rode on the lever to keep the animals at even speed, and after
a few hours, when the horses got accustomed to the noise, would
fall off in the nearest corner fast asleep; the pleasant rivalry
between the men and women to see who would pick the most cotton,
and hence get the prize - a calico dress or hat or pair of Sunday
shoes - that father would offer weekly to the one picking the
most cotton. The picking season then was very long, no guano those
days to hasten matters, so the cotton would not open until October,
and the fields would be white until after Christmas.
Our
family consisted of mother, father, and six children, and for
the comfort and convenience of this family the following servants
were employed in and about our house: Old "Mamma Chaney,"
who had held us all from babyhood, and rocked and soothed us to
sleep by her lazy and loving pat and monotonous crooning. Her
queer ways, high headgear, red shawl, and her black face and white
bordered eyes, holding my little sister in her lap, I shall never
forget. "Mamma Martha," the head servant, to whom the
keys were entrusted, and who, during mother's absence, looked
after our comfort; Fanny, mother's maid; Ann and Lizzie, seamstresses;
Nancy, the washerwoman; Phyllis, the cook; old Lucy, looking after
the chickens; little Lucy and Zelleau taking their first lessons
to become maids to my sisters; Phil, the coachman; William, the
hostler; Daniel, the butler; Bony, the fisherman; Henry, the gardner;
and Joe, my body servant. These slaves were not housed or fed
at our house, but were given the regular ration and served in
all things at their own cabins.
THE
YOUNG negro men, getting tired of cultivating the fields, would
at times run away; that is, they would leave their cabins and
seek shelter in the neighboring woods or some isolated "hammock,"
which so abundantly are found about plantations on the seaboard.
When on these runaway frolics they would live by stealing cattle,
or perhaps, robbing the nearest field or barn or potato cellar,
and, of course, were always slyly abetted by those of their family
at home. In this way they became outlaws, always a menace to the
peace and good order of the plantation, and a source of extreme
annoyance and vexation to the master, and, in fact, to the entire
neighborhood.
Being
accustomed to the use of boats and firearms, and knowing every
little inlet through the marshes, which furnished all the fish
and oysters they needed, these runaways could keep up their frolic
of idleness and theft almost indefinitely. They would always be
smart enough to provide themselves with good boats at the start;
if they had none of their own suitable, they would steal the best
they could lay hands on.
At
night they would leave their hiding places and sneak to their
respective cabins to get a change of clothing from mother or wife,
or to replenish their rations from the nearest field or barn.
It
can easily be imagined then what peculiar duties at times devolved
upon the master. He had not only to be financier and executive,
but at times detective. I remember early one morning going with
my brother to the piazza of our home, and finding a sword broken
in half and a heavy bar of lead. At breakfast table we asked father
where they came from. He told this story. At twelve o'clock the
night before he had an idea a runaway, by name Emmanuel, would
be prowling about the negro quarters, and so he got out of bed
and dressed, and before starting took his little bird-gun which
was loaded with bird-shot, and not knowing what he might encounter,
he rammed three buckshot (muzzle loaders those days) on top of
one of the small shot charges. He walked a mile, perhaps, to where
the cabins were and hid behind a tree. Soon he saw someone walking
towards him, and when nearby he stepped from behind the tree,
recognized Emmanuel, and ordered him to stop. Emmanuel stopped
instantly, and put both hands behind his back. Father asked, "What
have you in your hands?" He replied, "Nothing, sir."
"Well," said father, "hand me what's in your right
hand." He did so, and it was a sword; this father ran into
the ground and putting his foot on it, snapped it. In the other
hand he had a bar of lead. He surely came well supplied to carry
off a beef. Emmanuel was then ordered to cross his hands, and
father, placing his gun between his knees, took from his coat
pocket a large silk handkerchief and was about to tie his hands
when Emmanuel dashed for the woods. He was ordered to stop, but
he kept on running. Father then fired the barrel with small shot,
calling him to stop, and then the other barrel, but Emmanuel kept
on his run to the woods. Father prided himself on his good shooting
and could not imagine how it was he did not stop this man, who
had been an outlaw for so many months - a perfect nuisance to
the entire neighborhood.
The
matter was almost forgotten, except that brother and I took our
first lessons in swordsmanship with the broken sword, and had
a set of new quoits from the bar of lead, when one morning while
playing in the front yard we saw Daddy Emmanuel coming up the
front avenue, a long straight way about a mile through the cotton
fields from the woods to the residence. Father was absent. We
ran to mother and told her. She came to the front door and asked
the man why he had come home. "Missis," he said, "Massa
hit me wid ebery shot in de gun, and me come home to dead."
He was placed in a comfortable bed, the nearest physician called
in, every attention given him, and he recovered very soon. This
man belonged to us, was worth before the shooting some $2,000;
afterwards, perhaps, only $500; that shot from father's gun cost
him $1,500, but it was necessary, and today any outlaw would be
treated by lawful officers in the same way. Daddy Emmanuel was
always a good man after that; we children all liked him. He was
put to light work, and, when his freedom came he preferred to
remain on the old plantation, where a home was provided him to
the day of his death.
It
is strange that no negro ever thought of defending himself in
these nightly encounters. Here was a man well armed, who made
no resistance. Even if armed with a loaded gun, they would yield
at the first command of the master. Father put the question to
one of them, and the answer was, "My gun might snap, Massa;
yourn neber do."
As
a small chap I was given my milk and hominy or butter and hominy,
fed me by my nurse, and put to bed before dark, and many the time
I slipped from my bed and, looking downstairs at the lamps burning
then with whale oil, and wondering, how funny it all looked. Then
only whale oil, and wax and tallow candles made at home, were
used for lighting purposes by the well-to-do; the negroes and
poor whites - "poor Buckrers" we called them - used
mostly lightwood in the chimneys, and even to this day many of
these people use this same lightwood torch. Then came a fluid
we called "burning fluid," somewhat like naphtha, and
then, kerosene, gas and electricity.
My
brother and I had a nice time catching birds in traps we made
with sticks; the bulfinch, the red or cardinal bird, the speckle-breasted
thrush - and, killing them, made a fire in the woods, broiled
the poor little devils, and had a quick lunch; and as a boy I
thought them fine until one day we caught a crow, but his meat
was more than our appetites would permit. Sometimes we sat on
the front porch in summer with bare feet and legs, to see which
could kill the most mosquitoes.
When
I was about ten years old, the biggest runaway squad in my remembrance
almost worried my good father to death. He had arranged the planting
of his crop for, say fifty or sixty slaves and the necessary mules,
so much cotton and other crops to each hand. When the hot weather
was the greatest, and the grass began to race with the crops for
existence and the greatest diligence and energy were required
of each hand to do his or her part, some eight or ten of his best
men, with several from adjacent plantations, left their duties
on a runaway. Of course this required that a certain proportion
of the planted crops be abandoned, for there were none to hire
to take their places. These were Solomon, Dick, Daniel, Jonas,
Mark, etc., all fine boatmen and accustomed to firearms. They,
as usual, lived by raiding the cattle ranches and corn bins, and
gave intolerable trouble everywhere and to every one in the direct
neighborhood. Besides it was like having twelve or fifteen thousand
dollars taking wings to itself, destroying the proper ratio on
the plantation as to the workers and consumers and thereby making
the year's results perhaps unsatisfactory. After these men had
been "cutting their capers" for a month or two, and
after every individual effort on father's part to catch them had
failed, the neighborhood decided to make a united effort to rid
themselves of these outlaws. The idea was to provide a good boat,
all equipped for ready action; then to scour the neighboring plantations
with good dogs, and if they were not found on the mainland, then
to take to the boats and search the "hammocks" and islands.
A well known man from Savannah, with his trail hounds, was engaged.
I
well remember the big eight-oared boat towed to the landing, the
buffalo robes and blankets, and champagne baskets filled with
hams and chickens and goodies of all kinds, the demijohns of good
whiskey, in case of snake bite, the guns and ammunition, besides
a sail to hoist if the weather permitted. I remember feeding the
dogs and wondering how pretty "Musie," with her soft
brown eyes, could prefer that ugly old man to anybody else. The
dogs were docile and obedient, only intended to trail the outlaws,
not to injure them. We were much interested in their welfare,
for were they not our own? When everything was loaded in the boat
and it was anchored in place, the neighborhood party mounted their
horses and proceeded to do the first act in the drama, viz., searching
the mainland. Scarcely had the party gotten to the woods, about
a mile distant, when a large party of these runaways came running
up from another quarter, and in the happiest mood, bid mother,
who happened at the back door, "Good morning, Misses,"
and walked towards the well furnished boat at the landing. They
all shook hands with me, and with a hurrah pushed off the boat
and were gone. A runner was sent after the scouting party, and
returning, I remember father's remark: "Well, they have the
best boat in the county, and nothing more can be done now."
Some spy among the many house servants must have kept these runaways
informed.
The
man and his dogs returned to Savannah, and the hunt, for the present,
was at an end. We heard no more of these runaways, except now
and then that some cow had been killed by them, until about the
first of December, when one cold night, happening at the back
door, I heard some one outside in the dark say, "Huddy, Mas'
Ed." I went down the back steps and said, "Hello! What
you want?" And looking closely saw Solomon, one of the runaways.
He said: "Mas' Ed, tell Massa we come in." I ran to
the parlor where father was reading and I called out: "Father,
Solomon and all the runaways have come in." Father said,
"Tell Solomon and all his gang I wish them in hell. Will
see them in the morning." Father then hired the gang to a
railroad contractor for the balance of the winter, and the neighborhood
was rid of them. When all this was happening on the plantation,
we had no fear of them at home. Frequently we would be left alone
for several days, mother and children, with the house servants,
all our own slaves, and the doors of the residence not even locked
at night. You may be sure, though, strong locks were on the barns,
meat houses and chicken coops.
THUS
OUR country life passed, mother teaching us our first lessons,
and making us stand in the corners of the room, face to the wall,
if we missed our lessons, and oh, what an awful time we thought
we were having! If we got our lessons well, we were rewarded by
going with her on her customary carriage drive, through the well
kept roads draped with jessamins and overhanging trees, that ran
through various parts of the plantation. Gero and Jerry, mother's
chestnuts, with Daddy Phil, the coachman, and the pretty and sweet
woods of the home plantation, will always have a warm place in
my memory.
Christmas
month we always spent with our grandmother, Mrs. Eliza Huguenin,
in Savannah. There being no railroads in this section at the time,
and in fact no railroads south of Savannah, the distance - a good
day's journey by carriage - was made partly in our carriage, and
partly by stage. At that time all communication south of Savannah
was by stage. How well I remember one of these trips when about
ten years old. We had driven some twelve miles to catch the stage,
arriving at the little village of Riceboro. It grew very cold,
so father provided each of us with a rough blanket to wrap our
legs in. There was a lady in this stage dressed in a handsome
black gown, on her way to the city, and the white hairs from our
coarse blankets falling on her black dress, almost drove her wild,
and all to our extreme delight. I fear we disturbed those coverings
more than was necessary. A fine-looking, elderly gentleman was
also a passenger, and was constantly teasing us, declaring that
when we got to town the "big boys would grease our heads
and swallow us whole." Little did I think then the relation
I would bear to this jolly old gentleman in after years.
Father
found it necessary about this time for us to have more regular
instruction, so he engaged the services of a Miss Mary Boggs,
a Virginia miss, for our governess. She came and she captured
us all, with her great brown eyes, pretty brown hair, and large
mouth filled with white teeth. I think she was my first sweetheart.
She only taught English branches, so soon we grew beyond her acquirements.
In truth she was so sweet and pretty that Judge McLaws, of Augusta,
won her love and took her to his home, and this suited nicely,
for he was our cousin and therefore she became our Cousin Mary.
At
that time, 1853, there were good schools in Walthourville, Liberty
County, some twenty miles away. So we went to live there. The
premises we occupied were just across the road from the home of
a Mr. George W. Walthour, and what was my surprise and pleasure
to find him the jolly old gentleman of the stage four years back,
and the lady in black who so disliked my blanket hairs, a relative.
In
his family there was a daughter about ten years of age, and in
my family there were two sisters nearly her age. It goes without
saying that having no sisters companionable with herself, and
living so near, my sisters and she became every-day playmates
Her name was Alice She had dark brown hair combed back from her
pretty face with the large circular combs used at that time. Her
eyes were blue-gray and twinkled like stars, and as a thirteen
year- old boy I thought this ten-year-old girl the prettiest thing
I ever saw - chock full of mischief and fun, as straight as an
Indian maiden, and supple as a reed. She took precedence in all
our romps, and was never so happy as when catching a frisky calf
by the tail, she made pandemonium with the chickens in the yard,
and caused peals of laughter from all who saw her. Soon she was
off to boarding school.
The
first of May always brought us happiness in the way of a May party
at the Academy's big shady grounds. Months before the jolly day
everybody in the village was making preparations. The girls were
getting ready their white dresses, ribbons and dancing slippers,
the boys their natty coats and white pants, the mothers making
cakes and goodies of all kinds, and the fathers cussing at the
expense and yet more delighted than anybody else when the girls
were rigged for the occasion. Of course the prettiest girl in
school was chosen by the boys as our Queen of May, and I shall
never forget our two queens of '55 and '56 - Miss Tilla and Miss
Helen. Sweet and pretty girls they were sixty years ago, and today
they are glorious matrons - the same sweet smile tempered with
the cares of life. May the God of Love ever protect them!
I
well remember the January of 1857, when not quite seventeen years
old, I started for college. The railroad from Savannah southward
and westward was only constructed thirty miles out, so I went
by private conveyance, and then these thirty miles by rail to
Savannah, where I took train to Augusta and thence to Athens,
where I was to attend the University of Georgia. It took two days
and two nights to make the trip in those days.
This
was my first trip from home, and my first ride on a railroad train,
and surely I expected some highwayman to attempt to rob me of
my gold watch, or perhaps the small pieces of silver I had in
my pocket, and as a college man I must defend my property, so
I invested seventy-five cents in a sharp and shinning bowie knife
(the kind they had in Kansas at that time), eight inches long,
and a horn handle, and in a red morocco sheath, tipped with silver.
I then cut a small hole in my waistband behind, and buttoned in
my ugly armament. No sleeping cars, so when I got tired I twisted
upon a seat, and wriggling in my sleep to get comfortable my coat
pushed up and my big knife showed up in great shape. Some good
old gentleman passing by unbuttoned my armament, waked me up,
and quietly asked me if I had not better put it in my satchel.
I never felt so cheap in my life. I quickly took it from him,
thanked him, and threw it under the seat, and that is the last
time I ever had such a thing.
COLLEGE
LIFE was very pleasant but very uneventful. My first vacation,
before going home, was spent with Col. Julius Huguenin, a kinsman
in South Carolina. His mode of life was peculiar. Up early every
morning, after a cup of coffee, he would take saddle-horse and
ride over his home place; then getting into his carriage, to which
were harnessed two elegant black stallions that tried so hard
to chew each other up that an iron rod was fastened between their
bits and their heads well checked - was driven to his second plantation,
where saddle-horses would be in readiness, and with his overseer
he would ride and direct the affairs of that place; then likewise
to his third plantation, getting home about noon, when his breakfast
would be served. About two o'clock - it was in December - all
hands would prepare for a fox hunt, horns blowing the signal would
be heard from the stable yards, the baying of hounds would testify
to their readiness; saddle-horses, held by negro chaps in gay
caps, would be waiting on the lawn, but not long waiting, for
we would all soon be in the saddle and cantering to the forests.
I never had anything to suit my taste as did these fox chases.
We would take no guns, relying on the dogs and our swift horses,
going pell-mell through fields, over fences and ditches, and once
in a while bring home the tail of a fox stuck in some one's hat.
Getting home about dark, a bounteous dinner would be served.
Cousin
Julius took me into his cellar one afternoon, and all kinds of
good things were there in evidence. He had a man who employed
his time hunting, and hence venison, wild turkey and ducks, and
birds were in abundance; the fisherman had also been industrious,
and his catch was in evidence, clams and oysters were piled in
the corners; portions of a fat ox and a small lamb showed that
the dinner table would not be in want. This dinner was a long
meal, and when it was over every evening, Cousin Julius, mellowed
up with many glasses of good old brandy, would be lifted from
his seat by two or three body servants, taken to his room, bathed
and put to bed, like a veritable old Turk. Cousin Julius never
drank wine, although his table was abundantly supplied with all
kinds and enjoyed by the younger folks. When I went to college
at seventeen I determined within myself not to touch a drop of
any spirits until I was twenty-one, so I did not join the other
youngsters in getting rid of the wine. I made one exception to
this determination, for when I went home on vacation and mother
exhibited her "orange cordials," "cherry bounce"
and blackberry wines, I thought it would sound so unwelcome for
me to say "Mother, I don't drink," so with her we drank
her nice products, and I praised them to the sky, although to
be honest, I did not care for them. This abstemious resolution
made in early life has helped me wonderfully.
While Cousin Julius lived as I have
mentioned, his wife had her three customary meals. Separate cook
and kitchens were provided. Sundays the entire family took meals
together, either at the husband's or wife's table. On this visit
I met my cousin Tom Huguenin, who afterwards became the gallant
defender of Fort Sumter.
Getting
home after Christmas, father had arranged to give us a hunt on
St. Catherine's and Black Beard's Islands. To make my story complete,
I must tell about an old lady, Aunt Peggy Harris, as everybody
called her, who owned a plantation and some twenty-five or thirty
slaves, all being raised by her during a long life, from a few
negro women inherited in her youth. She did not keep her plantation
in very good discipline and hence father, her nearest neighbor,
did not like to have his negroes companionable with hers. But
she had a young man, very tall and strong, by name Landcaster,
who wanted to marry one of father's women, by name Nelly. Father
objected, as I said before, to having any of Aunt Peggy's people
given the freedom of his plantation, and hence refused to sanction
this wedding. However, his objection availed but little, for love
found a way, and year by year Nelly's family grew larger. While
father objected to Landcaster as a husband, because it would give
him the freedom of his plantation, yet when he went on a hunt
he would exchange hands with Aunt Peggy for the occasion - much
to Landcaster's delight. He was a good oarsman (no naphtha launches
then), sang songs merrily, knew every path through the woods,
and where to get up a deer or find the best fish, a good cook,
always jolly and willing - a complete rascal in all things; hence
he was along on this trip.
The
hunt and fish on the islands came off with the usual good luck,
and we had enjoyed camping out under the large oaks, resting on
the robes, and all the good things that boys do so enjoy. On our
way home in this eight-oared boat, when perhaps half way home,
my brother fell asleep, and when the boat made a sudden jerk he
raised his foot suddenly, when out of the boat and in some ten
feet of water, tumbled one of our best guns. Father immediately
called out: "Landcaster, get that gun and I'll give you Nelly."
Without even taking off his hat, Landcaster was overboard and
into this ten feet of cold salt water, but in a shorter time than
I can write it, up he came, gun in hand and a grin on his face.
Immediately he was helped out of the water, three fingers of good
old Bourbon floated under his shirt, his seat resumed and the
oars feathering the water and driving the boat at fast speed ahead
He knew he had Nelly.
A
day or two after he got home, father fulfilled his promise to
him and his dusky bride in, to them, royal style. The bride was
diked out in one of mother's white dresses, ribbons ad libitum
floated from head, waist and arms; the groom in the tallest white
collar the community could furnish, and big yellow cravat. The
large piazza was turned into a dance hall, and with fiddle and
banjo they made merry, while a barbecue awaited them on the lawn.
To
finish the story, Landcaster, so soon as the Federal gunboats
in 1862 made their appearance off the coast and in sight of our
place, took his wife and babes in a boat to find freedom After
the war, he told me, he soon found freedom with a wife and six
children very different from having a master to provide for them.
Like the man he was, he did the best he could. When the war was
over, he came back and lived on the old plantation until he died.
I obtained a pension from the U. S. Government for his wife, Nelly.
It seems he got his name on the payroll of the government by doing
some trivial service and now his widow is receiving the usual
pension. All bosh, I know, but while millions are being distributed
to the undeserved, this poor woman might just as well get her
mite. And strange to say that while I am writing, this same Nelly
is now sitting in my kitchen waiting for a helping of whatever
I may have, which she or any one of our old slaves shall have
as long as the recollections of Peru Plantation, and those happy
days, linger in my memory; and they all know it, for even to this
day they bring all their big troubles to "Mas' Ed" to
have him explain or correct.
I
do not mean to imply that there was no cruelty between master
and slave, but no more so than between husband and wife, or father
and children, or employer and employed, but I do know that laws
were enacted preventing a master's cruelty to his slave, as also
that a husband should not beat his wife. In all relations in life
the tyrant will manifest himself.
FATHER
DIED in the year 1859 in his forty-third year; was buried beside
my grandfather in the old graveyard on South Newport River. He
was not a church man; a man of good deeds rather than a man of
faith, and goodness and sympathy beamed from him as naturally
as light from the glowworm. A soul full of charity for every one,
he has gone to his Maker to get that reward provided for the just.
The
first of January, in my young days, was a day of rejoicing. Visiting
the rule. About early noon we would gather in fours, get into
carriages and visit everybody worth visiting; always the best
of wines and cakes in evidence at every house, and perhaps we
would have headaches the next morning, but 'twas all forgiven
in the general good cheer. If you left your card New Year's Day,
you were to have the civilities of that house for the year. For
the disobedience of this custom, when quite a young chap, I got
in much trouble. I was visiting my grandmother, who gave me a
list of her friends to call on, she having driven to her plantation
some five miles from Savannah. I had paid most of the visits;
the last visit was to call on two old maids. They were close-fisted,
sour old ladies, never had anything good to eat, but always a
lecture on their tongues. Their house was near the Central R.
R. depot on Liberty Street, and when we got near there, meeting
friends, the idea struck us that we would switch off from that
house - no cake, no nuts no nothing - and have a game of catcher
on the cotton bales at the Central R. R. yard. In those days all
the cotton that came to Savannah was unloaded at this yard, and
then drayed to steamers, etc. The result was, in one of my leaps
from bale to bale I slipped and broke my right leg, and had to
be carried home in the arms of one of the big Irish laborers.
When grandmother arrived home from her ride and found me lying
down with my leg in splints, she wanted to whip me because I had
disobeyed her in not going to see those old maids, and I thought
I was pretty well punished. Father came from our old Peru Plantation
home to see me, hunted up the laborer and treated him handsomely.
My
dear old grandmother - how she used to indulge me, and how I used
to fool her! Many little stories could be told of her confiding
love and my infernal duplicity, but I suppose it is the experience
of all boys.
About
1860 the papers rang out with discordant notes, the North against
the South, the South against the North. How little we college
boys knew what was before us! The beginning of this term, 1860,
a chair of geology was established at the college for the first
time, and Dr. Henry Hammond, fresh from the advanced schools in
Paris, France, was consigned to it, and to us boys (we thought
we were men) who had been sitting under teaching of good old Dr.
Mell, Dr. Hammond's new ideas were surely confounding.
Dr.
Mell taught that the world was made in six days, and Dr. Hammond
that it took twenty-two thousand years to bring the earth to the
present condition. Judge Joseph Henry Lumpkin, at that time Chief
Justice of the Supreme Court of Georgia, once a week gave the
Senior Class, of which I was a member, lectures on the Constitution
of the United States. The Judge was a strong Secessionist, and
delighted and enthused our young hearts with his word pictures
of the glorious South, cut loose from the Union, with Cotton as
King and free trade with the world.
Being
so wise in our judgment, we boys thought surely he could and would
decide whether Dr. Mell or Dr. Hammond was right - whether it
took six days or twenty-two thousand years to make the world.
After one of our lectures this question was put to him, and I
shall never forget the result - at least to my mind.
The
Judge was short and stout, wore very long hair much inclined to
curl, and getting up he shook his head like an enraged lion, and
almost swore at us boys for indulging in skepticism, declaring
the Bible says "the world was made in six days, and you young
gentlemen have no business to look further. You are losing that
faith in Holy Writ which has brought not only individuals, but
nations, to destruction. Beware! Beware!" Such was the answer
given by Judge Lumpkin to the Senior Class of 1860, at that centre
of learning, the University of the State of Georgia! How the world
has progressed in thought, as in all things, in the last generation!
During
my college course I paid much attention to religious matters;
I became deeply interested in church work of all kinds. The various
churches in Athens had protracted meetings, and eminent divines
thundered orthodox doctrines in the ears of their congregations
night after night. The gifted T. R. R. Cobb, an eminent lawyer,
took active and enthusiastic part. The angry God and the loving
Son was the burden of their song, and unless you were converted
(?) you were sure of eternal punishment. I tried to get what these
Orthodox called converted, that is, to feel that my sins had rolled
off me like a mountain, and that I felt so happy I wanted to shout.
I never got it. I even felt disturbed when some converted sinner
would begin shouting his happiness; but I tried to keep not only
my actions, but even my thoughts, "unspotted from the world."
I tried to be too orthodox. I became too earnest. I wanted everybody
to walk that narrow chalk mark, as it was chalked out to me by
those who said they knew all about it. This would have suited
very well, perhaps, if I had not begun to think too much, and
ask too many questions of those who were teaching me. My teachers
all had different views on all these matters, and I had sympathy
for them all. I found my chalk mark grew wider as my sympathy
and learning expanded, and soon I found the whole world chalked
over, and the great and kind Creator, instead of the angry God,
looking and lightening up the pathways for all mankind. Whereupon
I opened my heart to that great Creator, discarded all the "isms"
I had recently so fondly cherished, and simply put my trust in
Him. Sympathy for all mankind and trust in God, I will live by
and hope to die by.
I
GRADUATED this summer in the class of 1860, and received my "sheepskin"
as a Bachelor of Arts. On my route home, at most every station
a liberty pole was erected from which flags of various designs
were hung, always expressing something defiant of the Yankee.
A rattlesnake coiled, with "Don't step on me" was frequently
seen, and the secession badge pinned to every man's coat and lady's
jacket; and the nearer I got home, the higher the poles and larger
the flags. Father's death made it necessary for me to take charge
of our plantation, and this, together with the unsettled condition
of the country, made me forget my individual interest. The first
of January, 1861 I assumed charge, and with the assistance of
our old Driver, "Daddy John," prepared to plant the
usual crops. Our family lived in Walthourville, Liberty County,
twenty miles away, in order that the younger members of the family
might have school privileges. I kept bachelor quarters on the
plantation, with old "Mamma Peggy" as provider. About
this time Federal gunboats could be seen out in the sound, and
the neighboring planters became uneasy.
One
of our neighbors, Mrs. Anderson, had a son about my age, a nervous
and eccentric chap, and a very interesting daughter. I frequently
rode or drove to their home, and was always welcome. They were
distant relatives. One Saturday night about the first of March,
riding over to this house, I saw quite a suspicious boat nearing
the landing hard by, and suspected it to be one of those "Damn
Yankee" trading schooners, selling, or rather trading with
the negroes their products, such as skins and pelts of various
animals, and frequently what stuff and cotton or corn they could
steal from their masters, for mean whiskey and gim-cracks of all
kinds. These vessels were not allowed about our landings without
permission. Hence when I got over to Anderson's I told him about
the vessel, and we agreed to visit this particular landing about
midnight. Anderson had a young relative by name Jones visiting
him. About eleven o'clock we started off. I took my long buggy
whip, Anderson a gun loaded with buckshot, and Jones a gun loaded
with small shot in which he rammed three large buckshot on top
of each charge. I laughed at them, wanting to know whom they intended
killing. We found nothing wrong at the landing, but returning,
we heard what the negroes call shouting, in one of the cabins
not far from the residence. It was a moonlight night, and this
noise being contrary to rules, we walked over to see who the parties
were and quietly stop the noise. Anderson and Jones were to go
to the front door and rap, and I to the back door, and if any
one attempted to get by me, I would intercept him. Anderson rapped,
and the door by me was flung open and a negro boy, as well as
I can remember about eighteen years old, ran by me before I could
take hold of him. The idea immediately suggested itself to me
that he belonged to some neighboring place, so I would at least
have the frolic of catching him and finding out. Being quite swift
of foot, I ran after him, and scarcely got beyond the corner of
the cabin before Anderson fired his gun and the whole contents
entered my right shoulder. He could not have been more than thirty
feet from me, for it brought me down all in a heap. I suffered
no pain, but I felt as though my body had been torn away and my
head only rested on the earth. The nearest physician, eighteen
miles off, was sent for, and the wound dressed. And thus I spent
my twenty-first birthday, March 25, 1861, in bed.
Anderson
never could give any reason why he fired the gun, and the name
of the chap who ran by me was never known. The whole Anderson
household did all in their power to alleviate my wretched condition.
It seemed that when we stopped for a few moments at the landing,
Anderson and Jones, by some means, exchanged guns. If that had
not been done, I would have been killed, for Anderson started
out with the gun loaded with buckshot. The doctor said that thirty-two
duck-shot had entered my shoulder and back of my head, and three
buckshot had passed entirely through my shoulder. Many of these
shot have been taken out by the lances, but some twenty or more
are still in my shoulder. I was in bed for about a month fretting
that I was incapacitated to go and fight for my native land, for
about this time companies of volunteers were being organized,
through the entire South.
FROM
THE writing of the Constitution there were always two distinct
opinions as to the right of a state to secede from the Union.
The New England states, Massachusetts, Connecticut, Rhode Island,
were the first to declare for this right to secede, and openly
threatened to do so July 4, 18 1814, on account of Jefferson's
embargo, and then their right to do so was not particularly questioned.
From the days of Hamilton and Jefferson - the first for a central
control, the latter for state's rights - and then again in the
time of Webster and Calhoun, later in the time of Lincoln and
Davis, these two separate causes were championed. This ghost of
secession was forever rising to disturb the Union, the Southern
states always claiming the right; and hence we felt we were acting
within our rights when, in 1860-61, we withdrew. Only such authority
was delegated by the states to the General Government as would
have this government function properly. All the other rights were
reserved to the states.
The
border states were loath to break from the Union. The great R.
E. Lee and his state, Virginia, were for the Union until Lincoln
called for Virginia's quota to make the desired number of troops
to coerce the Southern states, and then Lee said, "The die
is cast. I cannot fight for that." And Virginia, too, seceded.
In fact, the Southern states have always felt that their first
allegiance was to their state, and second to the Union. The Northern
states have, so to speak, let down their state fences and are
known more particularly by their large cities - as Portland, Boston,
New Haven, New York, and so on, while we of the South have continued
our state pride. For me, I am a Georgian first, and an American
afterwards. This does not make us love our nation less, but our
state more.
Before
1860 Georgia and Massachusetts were almost as distinct countries,
under the Constitution of the United States, as are now Italy
and Belgium under the League of Nations, for it was primarily
for self-defense that these unions were effected. Yes, at times
even the contrast is more favorable to the European countries,
for a man can go from Belgium into Italy and not have his property
stolen from him, but we of Georgia could not go to Massachusetts
with our slaves - guaranteed to us under the Constitution as our
slaves, and sold as such to us by these same Northern brethren,
and also guaranteed by the Supreme Court of our land - without
having them stolen from us, and then by underground railroad whisked
off into undetermined places. It was not officially done, but
connived at; and, perhaps, with the approval of the majority of
the citizens of the state. Towards the end, it became a moral
issue rather than a Constitutional measure.
The
planters on the seaboard of Georgia found it necessary at this
time to move further inland. Shot and shell from the Yankee gunboats
would sometimes be thrown most too near. I took all the infirm
and very old slaves, and many of the little negroes, to our home
in Liberty County, and found homes for the others among the farmers
about Thomasville, Georgia. My object was to get them good homes
during the war rather than to drive hard bargains as to wages.
I had not a particle of trouble with them. They seemed to feel
the emergency of the case, and assisted me in the work. Loyal
they were to me, and they have never been forgotten for it. Although
managing negroes from boyhood, I never whipped but two of them
in my life. Jumping from my buggy one morning for a package I
had forgotten, and rushing into my room buggy whip in hand, I
found the house maid using my toothbrush. I struck her two or
three cuts across the shoulder, threw the brush out of the window,
and then resumed my trip in the buggy. I strapped my boy one day
in camp for not having my horse ready when "boots and saddles"
was sounded. While doing duty on the seaboard, a great many of
us officers, non-coms and privates, had our body servants, and
half a dozen forming a mess, our own negro cook; but when ordered
to the front, all luxuries were abandoned, the servants sent home
on the extra horses, and only the scantiest necessities kept.
Nevertheless, how happy we were to go!
Knowing
that I would be obliged to leave my mother, sisters and little
brothers at home, without a male protector - for every white man
was in the army - I called "Daddy Henry," one of our
trusted slaves, to my room before departing, and told him that
I left everything in his care. He must see that the many house
servants were obedient to mother; he must take care of the old
slaves and many young ones, keep mother well provisioned from
plantation and garden; that, in fact, he must stand right square
up, as he knew I wished. He was standing, hat in hand, and said,
"Mas' Ed, 'fore God I won't betray you." I left with
every confidence in the world. He proved faithful to the trust
imposed, and when it became necessary for mother to take refuge
in Savannah, on account of the raiding parties from Sherman's
army, he did all in his power to aid her. When I met "Daddy
Henry" at the old plantation after the war, he gave me a
verbal accounting of his conduct, and seemed perfectly happy when
I shook his hand and said "Daddy Henry, I knew you would
be true." Before my visit at the plantation ended, I deeded
to him his home and ten acres of land, as a home for him and his
good wife, "Mamma Nancy," who had been our washerwoman
as far back as I could remember. The South should never forget
the loyal conduct of our slaves during the war of Secession; they
not only took care of our families, but made bread for the soldiers
at the front, and never a single instance occurred of improper
conduct to any of these families. The day must come when a noble
monument will be erected to their memory; and this loyal conduct
refutes in burning language the assertion that the master was
cruel to his slave, and I believe this same good conduct would
still prevail, if the infernal fanatics had not insisted on their
enjoying political preferences and social advantages, two privileges
they were unfit for, and not prepared to receive.
During
my vacation from college in 1859 I met Miss Alice Walthour, then
sixteen years old, at a wedding, for the first time since we frolicked
in childhood, six years before. She was one of the bridesmaids,
and to say she was charming is only to be just. The pretty brown
hair had grown in all its womanly luxuriance, and was becomingly
arranged around the same sweet and saucy face. The pretty child
had grown to be the beautiful woman. I only shook hands and said
a few words, for Miss Alice was busy in her duties as first maid
of honor, and I had taken a young lady to whom my duty as escort
required my attention, but her image struck deep into my soul.
So,
returning to college, the vision of that pretty miss, my former
playmate, would not down at my bidding. I am not sure I bid it
down. It kept dancing on the pages of all my text books, and I
liked it. It smiled at me through the tangles of my calculus.
I saw it in the deepest resources of my geology. I think it was
in my eyes, and impressed itself everywhere.
After
graduating from college I was so anxious to get into the army
and help kill the d--n Yankees, fearing that the war would end
before I got a chance. A cavalry company was organized in our
county, which I joined, and we offered ourselves to the Governor
of Georgia. He accepted us, and had us do duty watching the Yankee
gunboats, always just off our coast, until the last of March,
1862, when we entered the service of the Confederate Army for
the war. I stipulated for a thirty-day furlough in the beginning,
and the second of April Miss Alice and I were married. The fond
dream of my young manhood was realized.
The
young men of the South were so afraid the war would end before
they had a chance that a company was made up in my county and
offered to the state, without compensation. I became one of them,
although my right arm was yet in a sling. We were accepted by
our Governor, and required to do picket duty along the coast,
reporting the manoeuvres of the gunboats, always in sight along
our ocean front. In 1862, April 1st, I enlisted for the war. Our
victories had made us believe a few more months would see the
end of it. How little we knew the feeling in the Northern states,
and how determined Lincoln was to preserve the Union!
About
this time our regiment was ordered to Florida to take part in
the battle of Olustee, but General Colquitt, who was on the ground,
made such quick work of the Federal attack that we reached there
only in time to follow up the retreat of the enemy, and to see
thousands of dead negro soldiers, dressed in blue. On this battlefield
I found a dollar greenback, and didn't know what it was. I had
frequently to pass through this stretch of woods, where the fiercest
engagement occurred, and for a mile or more the dead horses were
so thick and the stench so bad that, arriving at the place, I
would hold my nose, put spur to my horse, and hasten through.
WHEN
SHERMAN began his march on Atlanta, we were ordered to General
Joseph E. Johnston's army to stop Sherman, and became a part of
Joe Wheeler's cavalry, but we did not succeed. However, we all
think if Johnston had not been retired at this time by President
Davis, Sherman would never have made his hellish march to the
sea. But who knows? Just before Sherman took Atlanta, the cavalry
under General Joe Wheeler was ordered to the rear. Why, I, of
course, don't know, but I expect because General Johnston wanted
to cut off Sherman's railroad supplies, and because we had nothing
for man or beast to eat. The order assembling us was strange.
It commanded that we assemble without a change of clothing, without
a blanket, but plenty of ammunition. Being acting Quartermaster
of the Regiment, I was not included, but having a good horse,
good pistols, and hungry for a fight, and from the nature of the
order so poorly equipped for service, we all thought it a short
raid, so I arranged to go.
Soon
we found ourselves almost in Tennessee, living on what we could
forage. At Dalton, Georgia, we captured - or stole, perhaps, is
the better word - lots of goodies from the Yankees who had followed
Sherman and opened shop. It was the first time I ever saw canned
goods. We had been living on green apples and green corn since
we left Atlanta, and to see the boys eat crackers and condensed
milk was amazing.
The
quartermaster had become forage master. With a squad of men to
leave at crossroads, I was given the direction the march would
take, and when about twenty miles distant, would provide the food,
which would consist of a field of corn just maturing, making good
food for both man and beast, but without salt or meat. We paid
these obligations by giving a certificate of purchase, reading:
"Two years after a treaty of peace between the Confederate
States and the United States, the Confederate States promise to
pay John Jones one hundred dollars for fifty acres of corn,"
I signing as quartermaster.
When
the regiment or brigade reached this place, they would pull the
ears of corn for their horses, and make large fires and roast
the ears for themselves; then catch an hour or two of sleep on
the bare ground, rain or shine, night or day, and, strange to
say, the men and horses all kept well. The boys soon learned to
put the green corn ears, just as pulled from the stalk, in the
fire, and when the husk was burned off the ear was just properly
cooked. The sharp line between officers and enlisted men was not
severe in the Confederate Army. Although at first a sergeant in
the army, the Colonel, a West Point graduate, would offer me his
headquarters tent to entertain my sisters. The sharp command of
an officer to attend to a duty was not necessary, each man seeming
to realize that he was his own captain.
When
leaving Dalton, I received orders the night before as to the route
to provide the next night's forage for man and beast. Riding out
of the city early in the morning, I heard a train stop just over
the hill and out of sight. Soon the hill top was bristling with
bayonets and blue coats, and the bullets spattered around me lively,
but my good horse soon put the required distance between us. This
occurrence cut me off from my command for four or five days, and
when I put in an appearance I was warmly welcomed with the shout,
"Why, here is Ed Thomas! He wasn't killed at Dalton after
all!"
On
this raid the horse I rode became lame on account of casting a
shoe. At first I tried to put a shoe on; I found an old shoe at
an abandoned blacksmith's shop, and having nails I fastened the
shoe to the foot. Pretty bad job, and did not help much.
My
Confederate "promise to pay" was all the cash the army
had, and they were only accepted by these East Tennessee bushwhackers
when handed out at the point of sharp sabres; but I had to have
a horse. The question to decide was whether the bushwhackers should
get me, or I get one of their horses. Being both judge and jury
in deciding this matter, it did not take me long to come to a
conclusion.
I
started out early one morning determined to be sufficiently in
advance of the corps to get a good selection. As forage master
and quartermaster I had passes to go and come as I pleased. It
wasn't long before I came to a farm yard. Just at the roadside
I saw two horses in a pole stable. I opened the gate, went in
with my lame horse, intending to force a swap for one more serviceable.
The pretty sorrel mare I first examined, but her shoes were much
worn, so I selected a gray horse, quite recently shod, and was
about putting my bridle and saddle on trim when the owner came
rushing from the house, some hundred yards away, swearing at the
d--n scoundrel about to steal his horse. As he came he picked
up an ugly, heavy stick, and when near me I ordered him to halt,
with pistol in hand; but I believe he would have rushed on me
requiring me to kill him, for horse I had to have, when he saw
the head of our cavalry coming down the hill, and looking at my
gray coat, he mounted the little sorrel and scampered for his
life. Those poor border states! It was either the infernal Yankee,
or the rascally Reb, who were constantly sapping their existence.
During
the raid we lived by impressing what the country afforded, and
whatever we did was done with despatch. To provide pork from an
adjoining farm, and no hot water to get hair off, resulted in
great waste; stripping the hide from a hog by amateur butchers,
almost as much flesh was left at the pen with the hair as was
taken away on the bones.
I
remember going into a flour mill in Tennessee and asking for a
certain amount of wheat flour, which the miller promptly furnished,
and then, of course, wanted his pay. He would only receive my
"promise to pay" after it was stuck on my sword and
I quietly but determinedly let him feel how sharp it was when
pressed against his abundant stomach. Then after getting the flour,
how to prepare it for food? Found a lot of large flat stones,
which I had the men heat very hot, and mixing the flour with water
in a large barrel, spread it over the stones, and thus we had
very large pones of eatable stuff. These, in large hunks, were
handed the troopers as they rode by, and all shouting "Hurrah
for Captain Thomas."
On
these cavalry raids, which were within the confines of the seceding
states, where our "promise to pay" was expected to be
valid, we lived on what we could get in the immediate surroundings,
but when Lee went into Pennsylvania, while he assessed the towns
in accordance with military tactics, yet everything he consumed
was paid for, and the strictest order maintained - no outrages
or pilfering were permitted.
After
feeding the boys, I began to scratch, for I was infested with
what the boys now call "cooties" but we called "gray-backs."
So the idea struck me I would beg a shirt of the good ladies living
in this cozy town, stretched out for about half a mile on a pretty
stream. I rode up to the first place and told the lady I had a
sick friend who needed a shirt. "Certainly," she said,
and presently she brought me what the boys call a "biled"
shirt, all white and starched stiff. Of course I had to thank
her for it, and stuffed it under my saddle blanket; and riding
out of sight of this house repeated my lie to another lady, who
brought me another "biled" shirt, which, as before,
I thanked her for and again stuck under my saddle blanket. These
shirts were about as much use to me as though she had given me
a palmetto fan. So riding again further down the stream, in a
quiet nook I took a bath, made a big fire, and holding my shirt
and coat over the flames, singed those miserable things until
I could hear them pop in the fire, and then, after throwing the
biled shirts in the woods, dressed myself and caught up with the
command.
After
searching the country one night, I could only find a pen of sheep
- no hogs or cattle and the boys did so dislike this horridly
butchered mutton. But this or nothing, so I rode up to the pen
where perhaps forty or fifty sheep were corralled in a good pen,
and directed my men to get eight or ten of them. None of us knew
anything about sheep, so the boys got down from their horses,
found heavy sticks and went at the sheep. We knocked their horns
off, crippled a few, but killed none. One of my men, coming up
a little later, said, "That aint the way to kill them; just
catch them and cut their throats." Soon we had all our horses
could carry to camp. I have often wondered, when the owner came
by daylight to see this destruction, what he thought had happened.
On
this raid it was learned that the Yankees meant to destroy our
salt works at Abington, Virginia, a small town in the southwest
of this state. We were sent to defend the place, and quite a skirmish
ensued. The Yankees retreated, and hearing of a mountainous short
cut, our command was ordered to take it, hoping by this short
cut to head off the enemy. 'Twas the darkest night I ever saw,
and this mountain path as crooked and slippery as could be. In
marching over it a large torchlight was carried at the head; each
man dismounted, leading his horse and holding to the tail of the
horse before him, for if the chain had been broken all might have
gone over the precipice. At times the torchlight would be at our
backs, so tortuous was the path, and frequently we would find
ourselves slipping down a slide - but for God's sake don't let
go the tail! By daylight we again reached the public road, just
to see the rear guard of the enemy pass by. My comrade, Lawrence,
was captured on this raid. The dead negro soldiers dressed in
blue were lying so thick on the grass that it was with difficulty
I rode without having my horse trample them.
While
this raid temporarily destroyed the railroad over which Sherman
received most of his supplies, I doubt if it accomplished any
good to the Confederate cause. When we got back off the raid General
Hood was on his unfortunate campaign northward, and Sherman on
his march of devastation through Georgia to Savannah.
The
Confederate cavalry furnished their own horses and equipment,
and after we got to our line again, an order was issued giving
a thirty-day furlough to any trooper without a horse. I had a
good horse, but I gave him to a fellow trooper who had lost his
horse in exchange for his thirty-day furlough. I made haste to
get home, and there found my baby boy had grown out of my and
his recollection. He looked upon me as an intruder, and if his
legs had been strong enough would have kicked me out of the house.
A few days, though, made him my staunch friend.
At
this time Sherman was devastating the state, letting us know what
he thought war was. Judging from what he was doing, I feared he
would permit ill treatment of the women, so thought best to take
my wife and son, two young lady sisters, and a niece who was stopping
with us, out of the city. I stacked mother's store room with rice,
about all that could be purchased in the city. No vehicles could
be hired to leave the city, so I got from my grandmother's plantation
near by, a horse and wagon to take the four ladies, my boy, and
two negro girls - for the ladies must have their maids - and four
or five big trunks, over the Savannah River to Hardeeville, S.
C., the nearest railroad station; all other railroads were in
Sherman's hands.
How
I expected to accomplish the journey, I never knew; was like the
darned fool who, knowing a thing could not be done, tried it,
and did it. Good luck played in my hands, and at last we were
in Hardieville.
WHEN
I arrived there I saw a woman waving a handkerchief. Going to
her, I found it was my wife, who told me that arriving at this
station, the party was rushed on the train, saying that it was
the last train to leave as the Yanks had cut off communication;
that she began to cry, when General Beauregard, who happened on
board, asked "why that lady was crying." Being told,
he took from his pocket a small memorandum book and wrote: "Captain
Thomas has permission to go to Charleston and return. G. T. Beauregard."
But by and by another train did come, on to which we all tumbled,
bag and baggage, and thus I had accomplished by luck what seemed
at first impossible.
By
some hocus-pocus I went as far as Columbia, S. C., where friends
were met, and I turned my head southward, feeling for the first
time since the war began that we could hold out but little longer.
I never got back to Savannah to get my equipment. Sherman was
there before me, and of course my horse and wagon were gone, and
not knowing where my command was and not having any change of
clothing or blanket to keep out the December cold, I felt disconsolate
indeed. By some hook or crook, though, I got what I needed, joined
my command, which, with the other troops, was endeavoring to make
a junction with Lee in Virginia. Before this could be done, however,
Grant had pressed the great Lee so severely, by overwhelming bodies
of troops, that he had surrendered. Joseph E. Johnston was at
this time again in command of what was left of the Western Army,
after Hood's unfortunate battles, and with him I continued my
duties until he, too, surrendered to Sherman.
As
before mentioned, my wife and son and two sisters had refugeed
to Limestone Springs, situated in the northern part of South Carolina.
Hence my first journey was to see them. Riding a mule towards
home, I took a mental inventory of my condition. The plantation
we had bought in Baker County, we had given notes for; I had been
informed by my brother that these notes had not been paid. When
they became due they could not be found. It seems a firm of bankers
in Savannah had purchased them, and knowing they were well secured
by mortgage on the plantation, had taken the notes to England.
Without the negroes to work the land, we could not make the cotton
to procure the money to pay these notes. Hence that, too, was
gone.
This
is the way my inventory looked: a wife and babe to take care of;
a mother, four sisters and little brother to help to support.
How? It is true I had a good education. I had taken special work
in engineering; but no money to make improvements, and hence nothing
for the engineer. I could not look to that for support. The negroes
were all free, and in fact I had no money to hire them if I desired
to plant. Well, I will say one thing; to be sure I had the desire
and the pluck, and these two carried me through.
Arriving
at Limestone Springs about May first, I was truly rejoiced to
be with my folks again, although I was almost as destitute as
though I was an immigrant from another country. All the earnings
and savings of my forefathers had been destroyed by the effects
of the war. Yet I felt hopeful and confident that I could pull
through.
Limestone
Springs had been noted for its fine female college, founded and
operated by one Dr. Curtis, who married my wife's oldest sister.
His idea was to open the seminary again, and he offered me the
position of teacher of mathematics if he succeeded. As a beginning
I immediately opened a free school for the neighboring community
and the doctor canvassed the state to see how matters looked.
He returned in less than two weeks, disheartened; everybody too
poor to send their daughters from home. I remained with Dr. Curtis
for a while, but after seeing no prospect of his college opening
again, I was convinced that I had got to get other work. The railroads
were, of course, all destroyed; so saddling my mule, I rode to
Savannah with only my two silver dollars, and how I did it seems
strange to me now, yet I remember giving a small piece of even
those two dollars to a poor family I met on the road just before
entering Savannah. There I met my good mother and sisters and
little brother, and what a lot of things they had to relate!
Sherman's
entering the city had proven a blessing in disguise. He maintained
good order; the soldiers had plenty of money to buy whatever the
citizens had, and paid well for it. My mother had reserved a sack
or two of peanuts, which my little sisters roasted, and sitting
on the front steps sold to the soldiers passing by. The ladies
made cakes and pies of all kinds, and sold to the soldiers. The
officers roomed or boarded at the various dwellings, and materially
assisted the inhabitants, and in this way everybody was doing
very nicely.
I
remained in Savannah only long enough to extend such assistance
as the emergency of the case required, and then mounted my mule
and rode to my place in Baker County, two hundred miles west,
to see if anything was left there to assist me in my efforts for
a living. Walthourville was directly on my route so, of course,
I passed that way to see my wife's folks. I found these ladies,
who had owned abundant slaves to do their bidding, doing their
own work, and they were very cheerful. Luckily I found Mr. Bernard
in Walthourville, with wagons and teams preparing to make the
same trip I had set out on. Of course I joined him. In due time
we reached Baker County, where I found I was still possessed of
four mules, a horse, wagons, and several bales of cotton. I made
preparation at once to arrange for vehicles to go after my folks
at Limestome Springs in South Carolina. Proper harness could not
be purchased, so I bought leather and thread, and, with the exception
of the mules' collars, which were made of corn shucks by one of
our slaves, I made harness for a four-mule and a two-mule team.
These I loaded with cotton, six bales, and returned to Savannah
where I easily sold it at a good price.
After
assisting my mother in many ways, I started for Limestone Springs.
Arriving there I rested for a day and again turned my head homeward,
with wife and boy, sisters, the two maids and my brother Hugh,
who had made the trip with me, camping on the way at night. We
finally reached Savannah in very good shape. But the high prices
of all things prevailing then, and the necessities of the occasion,
soon depleted my pocketbook to such an extent that I found it
necessary to renew it before beginning my return journey to the
Baker County plantation. Freights from Savannah to Augusta were
$4 a hundred. So, taking three thousand pounds of cotton bagging
and my six-mule team, and hiring a colored man, Frank, to accompany
me, I made the trip there and back in seven days, getting my $120.
The day I left Augusta on my return, the man Frank complained
of feeling sick. He soon became so ill that I had to take his
driver's seat and allow him to lie in the wagon. This made the
three days' trip down very laborious, as I had to drive all day
and watch most of the night, the country being full of stragglers
always ready to steal a horse or mule. On approaching Savannah,
I went to the rear of the wagon where Frank lay sleeping and removed
a cover from his face to find that he had an awful case of smallpox.
He feared on my finding this out that I would abandon him on the
road, and cried out lustily for my clemency. I relieved his fears,
drove him to his home in the city, helped him out of the wagon,
paid him for services rendered, and gave him over to his kinsfolk.
Frank recovered, and today is one of my most loyal friends. I
had spent three days in company with this man, riding the same
feverish saddle he left, and yet did not take the smallpox.
In
a few days I started off to Baker County to finally settle up
matters there. The plantation was too firmly held by that unfortunate
mortgage to bring that away, so by the first of January I found
myself in Savannah with two wagons, six mules, and several bales
of cotton - my entire available resources. In this short space
of time, either on mule back or in wagons, I had made three trips
across the state of South Carolina and four across the state of
Georgia. I arranged for my wife and boy to remain in Savannah
with my mother, and I went on my grandmother's plantation, seven
miles out of the city, to plant cotton, rice, corn, and so on,
and only visiting my folks once a week. There, with my soldier's
blankets, which I found as I had left them on my going from the
city on the eve of Sherman's coming, and a bale of straw for my
bed, I lived for about three months; but I found it luxury, for
an ex-soldier. I was up early and late, encouraging my hands in
the performance of their various duties, untiring and indefatigable
at all hours. The second year I fixed up the old residence, doing
most of the work myself, and had my wife and son with me. While
these years were laborious to me, I yet was happy with my little
family.
I
HAD NOT as yet, since the slaves were free, visited our old plantation
home, Peru, in McIntosh County, but I had heard that a goodly
number of our old slaves had returned, and, without leave or license,
simply considered it their privilege to come home, after they
were scattered by Sherman's raid.
They
had taken up their abode in what cabins were left standing and
had begun to cultivate the land. I was pleased to hear this and
made up my mind to pay them a visit. So, just before Christmas,
with a pair of mules to a buggy, I drove to the old plantation.
If I had been a king returning to his subjects, I could not have
been more regally received. The men gathered around my buggy,
and bodily carried me to the front piazza of the old home, and
some of the women pulled out an old arm chair in which I was deposited
in state. I had soon, however, to get up from the chair and stand
as erect as possible, to keep old Mammy Peggy from putting her
arms around my neck and kissing me. My mules were soon stabled
and well provided for, and then the preparations began for entertaining
"Mars' Ed." One provided a mattress, another the sheets,
and so on until a most comfortable bed was secured. At supper
I found that each of my old friends insisted that something should
be on the table from his or her larder, and I never expect, during
my life, to sit down to such a supper again: fried chicken, pork,
smoked raccoon, eggs, fried fish, oysters, crabs, shrimps, honey,
rice, corn, corn bread, peas, collards, potatoes, and coffee!
And Mammy Peggy insisted on my eating some of her stewed 'possum,
which she brought me in a nice little bowl with a silver spoon.
When leaving home I had intended spending my nights at my cousin's,
Mrs. Anderson, who lived on the adjoining plantation, but they
would not listen to it! "Marse Ed wan't gwine to leab 'em
to go nowhar else."
That
was not long after the war when they had many of the comforts
provided them by their masters. Should I go there today, I know
I would find no such bed and supper, and as the old folks are
almost all dead, no such welcome. The feelings of the old slaves
for their master, and of the masters for their slaves, will never
be understood by coming generations.
While
living on this farm near Savannah I was elected magistrate of
the district. I accepted the place that I might use my influence
for good, for the Freedmen's Bureau was stationed in Savannah,
as also in other cities, and gave us much trouble in the proper
discipline of our laborers, who thought that freedom was to be
idle, to be untrammeled by law, and I used my office to counteract
these unfortunate ideas.
About
this time a negro man, by name Dick, killed another in cold blood.
Governor Bullock of Georgia, a carpet-bagger elected by the negroes
- most whites disfranchised - offered a reward of $500 for his
capture. I found out where Dick was in hiding across the river
in South Carolina, and made up my mind to catch him and get the
$500 reward. I had a great big negro man as my constable, who
was forever begging me for a horse I drove, so I told him if he
would do as I directed and bring Dick to me, I would give him
the horse. His reply, naturally, was that it would be necessary
to have a requisition from the Governor of Georgia to the Governor
of South Carolina before he, a Georgia constable, could arrest
over the river in South Carolina. I told him I had the requisition.
I got my sister to make me a rosette of red, white and blue ribbon,
which I pinned to his inner coat and told him to keep it hid until
he saw Dick, when he must approach him with great dignity, throw
open his coat, display the rosette, and say "Requisition
from Governor of South Carolina. You are my prisoner" - and
just take him and bring him along. I gave him the needed money,
and two days after he brought me the man, whom I turned over to
the proper authorities, and in due time got my $500 and the constable
got the horse. This was my first piece of detective work, and
my last.
It
was about this time that my sister Mattie died, and was buried
in Bonaventure Cemetery. This sister was particularly gifted,
remarkably pretty, large black eyes and light hair; was very smart;
wrote well, and had a decided talent for drawing and music. Her
young life was spent during the hard times of Civil War, and her
opportunities for schooling were very small. Father died when
she was quite a little thing, and it was always to my lap she
ran to be petted and loved. Poor girl, she passed to her eternal
home before the devastations of that cursed war were mended, having
spent her entire young life in the midst of strife and confusion.
A noble, gentle and modest girl. How I have wished she could have
lived to spend some happy days. As a young man, when she nestled
on my knee, and even then showed such undeveloped talent, I resolved
to give her the best opportunities to develop her talents for
music and drawing. But even as I was building these castles in
the air the murmurs of war were heard over the land, which soon
dispelled all my well laid plans.
THE
CONFEDERATE ARMY in and about Savannah consisted of only such
scattering stragglers and men on furlough, as could be rounded
up for the occasion. It was more of a mob than an army, and when
this mob was safe over the Savannah River, the mayor of the city,
with an escort, visited Sherman and surrendered the place to him.
His entrance into the city was made with so little noise and beating
of drums, that the citizens were surprised upon awaking in the
morning to find blue coats everywhere. Many encamped in the pretty
parks in and about the city. The magnanimous terms that both Grant
and Sherman gave to Lee and Johnston took out much of the sting
of defeat, and I am sure every Southern soldier, when Lee said
"Stop," obeyed, knowing we had done our duty to our
state, as demanded of us. Yet - "My country! Right or wrong,
my country!"
I
was in Greensboro, N. C., at this time, in charge of a large quantity
of stores and some two hundred men, and was given a certain amount
of silver dollars (I think $300) to pay to the command I was attached
to. It counted $6 to five men, and as we had no change, each man
was given a dollar and the sixth was drawn for. By luck I got
the extra dollar. This was all the money we got for some three
years' service to our states; but no murmuring was heard. We asked
nothing in return for doing our duty but health and powder. And
if Lincoln had not fallen a victim to fanaticism, the horrors
of reconstruction would have been averted. He always declared:
"Let the Southern states come back into the Union, we don't
want to punish them further;" "stop your fuss and come
home" - and I am sure, after our three years and a half fighting
we were anxious for peace.
My
state, Georgia, by election, sent to the Senate the two most noted
Union men of the state, Alex R. Stephens and Hershell V. Johnston,
for neither of these men advocated secession, always declaring
we should contend for our rights within the Union, and we so hoped
that, now slavery was abolished, the trouble was settled; but
at this time the Northern Radicals were in the saddle, the great
heart of Lincoln was still in death, and our poor bleeding South
passed through a period, called reconstruction, that cannot now
be approved even by the most radical of our land. To quote from
a Northern writer (H. T. Peck, LL.D., Columbia College):
"The
bitterness of the war would soon have passed away, but the horror
of reconstruction sank deeper into the soul of the South than
even the memory of devastated lands and of cities laid in ashes.
It is painful now to dwell upon the folly and fanaticism which
made that period the darkest in all American history. The wise
and conciliatory plans of Lincoln were forgotten by the Northern
Radicals. Legislative halls which had been honored by the presence
of learned jurists and distinguished law-givers, were filled with
a rabble of plantation hands, who yelled and jabbered like so
many apes. . . ."
Is
it to be wondered at, then, that the South, of almost pure Caucasian
blood, would not submit to this indignity? Surely the real man
of the North must have sympathized with us when, as by magic,
thousands of white-robed, resolute men sprung from the womb of
our dear old Southern mother and scattered the wretched scalawags
to their own respective slums! The poor black man was not to blame.
He reaped none of the reward - was only used as a tool; he was
accustomed to follow his white master, and when this master was
supplanted by the scoundrel, he knew no better.
Well,
my story is finished. I am an old man now, in my eighty-third
year, but young in every feeling. I am white and wrinkled, but
my soul shall be young. Providence has been good to me; my health
is good, and I have the respect and confidence of all who know
me; my children are all grown and are my greatest comfort. Many
grandchildren have come to me, all fine chaps, and at my knees
frequently my two little great grandsons sit and hear me tell
of that war which I passed through fifty-seven years ago.
As
time passes how vividly is reflected from Memory's mirror the
stirring events of those historic years. How loyal we of the South
have always been to the teachings of the Constitution of the United
States, and the highest decisions of our Courts, and how safe
we felt under these protections, when lo! to our amazement, we
heard these things classed by our Northern fanatics as "being
in league with the devil." All this is now in the past; but
we shall always stand in the presence of our God, proving by our
pious homage to the dear old Confederacy, our loyal devotion to
the living Union.
EDWARD J. THOMAS,
Savannah, Georgia