CARTER'S WOODS - 2nd. WINCHESTER
After the
last angry echo had passed into the darkness that separated the
contending armies, but before he abandoned his vigil on the walls of
the Main Fort, the Union commander must have watched as the valley
and slopes below him blossomed with a carpet of guttering camp-fires
and the lanterns from those searching for wounded. At that moment
Major General Robert H. Milroy must have felt like the loneliest man
on earth. In his heart he surely knew that it was his intransigence,
which had delivered his troops into the Confederate, vice and that
he was solely accountable for their fate. If he stayed and fought,
perhaps thousands of his men would be killed or injured in a
hopeless gesture. If he surrendered, his men would live but his
reputation would die in their place. For weeks Milroy had dodged and
parried orders to abandon Winchester, but at that moment he surely
longed for one more order to withdraw, so that the awful weight of
the decision to fight, flee, or surrender could be lifted from his
shoulders. At 9:00 p.m., when further procrastination would have
decided the issue by default, Milroy convened a council of war,
which included all three of his brigade commanders. After reviewing
the situation and the options, Milroy decided that their best hope
was to attempt to steal out of town on the Martinsburg Pike in the
pre-dawn hours of the next morning. The council dispersed and began
to spread the word that at 1:00 a.m. the division would attempt a
breakout.
Before the retreat could commence the Federals had several hours
of intense preparation ahead of them. First, all the cannons were
spiked because they and the wagons were to be abandoned to the
enemy. Then the team and artillery horses were assembled in order to
provide transportation for the teamsters, gunners, and as many
infantrymen as could possibly be substituted as the animals' new
burdens. Whatever ammunition could not be carried was supposed to be
thrown into the cisterns of the forts' as all of the preliminaries
were commencing in town, preparatory orders were spread among the
men. "When I [Captain Baird of Milroy's staff] approached these
regiments I found many of the men asleep in their tents, or in the
rifle pits. It was a dark night, and the company officers began at
once to wake up their men. Every soldier was given instructions that
the evacuation was to be conducted silently, so as not to attract
the attention of the enemy, whose sentinels were not more than two
hundred yards from the fort. Next, the "[p]ickets were called in
where possible to do silently, and where no possible they were
abandoned to fate. Finally, "...about 12 o'clock Sunday night the
order came to have the men leave their knapsacks and everything of
any weight to it and move cautiously and noiselessly out.
Before the retreat could commence the Federals had several hours
of intense preparation ahead of them. First, all the cannons were
spiked because they and the wagons were to be abandoned to the
enemy. Then the team and artillery horses were assembled in order to
provide transportation for the teamsters, gunners, and as many
infantrymen as could possibly be substituted as the animals' new
burdens. Whatever ammunition could not be carried was supposed to be
thrown into the cisterns of the forts' As all of the preliminaries
were commencing in town, preparatory orders were spread among the
men. "When I [Captain Baird of Milroy's staff] approached these
regiments I found many of the men asleep in their tents, or in the
rifle pits. It was a dark night, and the company officers began at
once to wake up their men. Every soldier was given instructions that
the evacuation was to be conducted silently, so as not to attract
the attention of the enemy, whose sentinels were not more than two
hundred yards from the fort. " Next, the "[p]ickets were called in
where possible to do silently, and where not possible they were
abandoned to fate. Finally, "...about 12 o'clock Sunday night the
order came to have the men leave their knapsacks and everything of
any weight to it and move cautiously and noiselessly out."
The Confederates were not merely dreaming peacefully while their
prey made final preparations to flee. General Ewell
recognized that the Federal position was hopeless and, anticipating
a retreat rather than a fight or surrender, focused on the
Martinsburg Pike as the most likely route that his opponents would
follow. Major General Edward Johnson, because of his division's
proximity to the likely escape route, drew the assignment to try to
intercept the Yankees. Pursuant to Ewell's orders, sometime shortly
after sunset Johnson and three of the four brigades in his division
began to march from the area of the Berryville Pike toward a point
on the Valley Turnpike about two and a half miles northeast of
Winchester.
Johnson didn't wait very long to exercise some of the
independence which his orders necessarily entailed. "After moving
some distance on the Berryville Road, I was informed by my guide
that I would be obliged to cross fields over a rough country in
order to carry out literally the directions of the
lieutenant-general [Ewell]; and, moreover, that near Stephenson's
[Depot], 5 miles north of Winchester, there was a railroad cut
masked by a body of woods, and not more than 200 yards from the
[Martinsburg] turnpike (along which the enemy would certainly
retreat), which would afford excellent shelter for troops in case of
an engagement. The night was very dark, and, being satisfied that
the enemy would discover the movement and probably escape if I moved
to the point indicated by the lieutenant-general, I determined to
march to Stephen-son's by the road which led by Jordan Springs.""
While the Yankees were preparing to make an exit, the Rebels were
preparing a reception.
Shortly after midnight the Federal column, organized by brigade
number, began to take shape with the First Brigade in the lead.
General Elliott arranged his regiments with the Hussars on the
point, followed by the 123rd, 110th, and 122nd Ohio regiments in
that order. As for the balance of Elliott's command, the 116th Ohio
failed to reach the rendezvous on time, got lost in the dark, and
fell in behind the Second Brigade, and because Milroy feared an
attack from the rear more than from the front, the 13th Pennsylvania
Cavalry was detached and positioned at the head of the trailing
Third Brigade. The troopers from New York were assigned to the tail
end of the paraded.
Then, sometime between 1:00 and 2:00 a.m., "...the
[Union] column began to move down the hillside. It was a weird
procession passing in silence, without a spoken word, through the
midnight darkness."'" In order to avoid the town and hundreds of
Southern sympathizers who would have cheerfully raised an alarm,
Milroy led his men for the first mile through a canyon north of the
Star Fort and then to the right along a dirt path toward the
Martinsburg Pike. The regime of silence was maintained by the
jittery Federals except for an occasional clank of a canteen against
a belted bayonet, a few muted curses blurted out after stumbles in
the darkness, the nickering of nervous horses, and the hissing
shuffle of thousands of booted feet accompanied by the gentle patter
of hundreds of hooves. While the Federals tried their best to keep
quiet, the team mules, "...brayed a chorus seldom heard, as if
prompted by a malicious desire to notify the enemy of our
departure."
About two hours after the soldiers in blue commenced their march.
General Johnson,
who was at the head of the Southern column, halted his command on
the Harpers Ferry Road at a tiny wooden bridge which crossed the
Winchester and Potomac Railroad a few hundred yards from the Federal
line of march on the Martinsburg Pike. 12 "...I [Johnson] rode
forward with my staff and sharpshooters to reconnoiter the position
and assure myself of the whereabouts of the enemy. I had gone but a
short distance when I distinctly heard the neighing of horses and
the sound of men moving, and in a few moments ascertained that I had
opportunely struck the head of the enemy's retreating column. Those
horses undoubtedly belonged to the Hussars, who at that point were
about four and a half miles beyond Winchester. Moments later the
12th's vanguard collided with Johnson's sharpshooters and the
stillness of the night was shattered by shouted challenges followed
almost instantaneously by a burst of rifle and then carbine fire.
Immediately after the first spatter of gunfire, Johnson yanked on
his reins, spurred his horse, and galloped back to his division with
his staff trailing in his wake. Within moments the Confederate
division commander was back with his men, and shouting orders in
hopes of being the first to get his regiments into position."
While the Confederate commander was rushing back to his men, the
Hussars in the vanguard continued to exchange shots with what looked
like huge fireflies flickering against the backdrop of a dark sky
and an even darker forest." Then, as the Confederate regiments began
their deployment, the 12th's Lieutenant Colonel Moss rushed
reinforcements from Companies G and F, and perhaps others, to the
point of initial contact in hopes of quickly brushing the Rebel
skirmishers aside. The newly arrived troopers hastily formed in line
for a charge under circumstances that almost certainly evoked
disquieting recollections of the rough handling they had received at
Manassas Junction 10 months earlier. Despite those memories, when
the formation was completed, sabers were drawn; the order was
delivered by the shrill, beating call from a bugle, and once again
the Hussars surged forward into the darkness.
At the sound of pounding hooves, the Butternut skirmishers turned
and sprinted across the meadow they had occupied, in a desperate
race towards the sanctuary of the inky black woods in their rear.
Just as the troopers reached the tree line, barely a saber's length
behind the fleeing Confederates, the leading horses nose-dived
toward the ground, throwing shocked Hussars headlong into the
underbrush. Private Maiden Valentine, one of the victims, ruefully
recalled later that "the Rebs had stretched telegraph wires from
tree to tree...," in preparation for just such an eventuality,
"...and we struck it."" Private Valentine needed a number of seconds
to gather his wits, but before he could react he found himself
staring up the barrel of a .58-calibre rifle. With a carpetbag
containing the company records, which had just been entrusted to him
by Captain Patrick H. McAteer still in his grasp, the dejected
Pennsylvanian was escorted to the rear as a prisoner, where he
joined a number of his dazed and injured comrades."
Those of the attackers who saw the fate of the lead riders before
it was too late, reined their horses to a stop, quickly sheathed
sabers, drew carbines, and resumed the skirmish. It wasn't long
before the entire right wing of the Regiment galloped onto the scene
and began to get into formation for another try at dispersing the
enemy. But just when they were almost ready to wager their lives in
another charge, the Hussars* right flank was lashed by volleys of
rifle fire, to which the troopers responded with as much accuracy as
could be obtained in the dark from the backs of skittish and rearing
horses. For 15 or 20 long minutes the combatants, who were revealed
to each other solely by the spectral yellowish glare of multiple
muzzle flashes, exchanged bullets and curses.
When he heard the first eruption of gunfire.
General Elliott, who justifiably (but incor- rectly) surmised that
the enemy held the road, deployed his three infantry regiments for a
plunge straight down the road. About the time that his initial
formation was completed, however, a frantic messenger from the 12th
must have reported that the Hussars had managed to clear the road
but that assistance to hold back the Rebel force that was filling
the woods on the right side of the Pike was desperately needed.
Elliott responded by sending the 110th and 122nd Ohio regiments
rushing down the Pike in hopes of preserving the Federal escape
route.
The outgunned troopers of the 12th tenaciously held their line
and kept the Pike open during the time it took the Buckeyes to make
their initial faulty alignment and then to march nearly a mile to
the point of initial contact Just as the harried troopers were
beginning to fear that support would never arrive, the men of the
110th Ohio pounded onto the scene and began forming for a battle
that might save, or lose, the entire division. Cognizant that
bayonets were preferable to sabers under such circumstances, and
having already suffered three killed, a number of men wounded and
many more missing in action, the Hussars moved off a few rods to
make way for the infantry. Despite the maneuver, the Pennsylvanians
soon thereafter became the unhappy recipients of artillery fire
inadvertently thrown over the heads of the foot soldiers. The
screaming and exploding shells whipped some of the horses into a
frenzy of fear, and soon the entire regiment was on the verge of
chaos. In order to maintain some semblance of order, the Hussars
moved further to the west out of artillery range.
In the aftermath of the battle, both Milroy and Elliott implied
in their reports and testimony that the 12th abandoned the field
without orders as a result of cowardice. Although it is certainly
likely that in his Regimental after-action report Major Titus
attempted to put the best possible face on the Hussars' performance
that morning, it should be recalled that cavalry had almost never
been asked to charge artillery, even during daylight, since the
British Light Brigade earned its bloody fame at Balaklava in the
Crimean War. Further, instances of cavalry charges against infantry
were relatively rare up to that point in the Civil War and unheard
of in the dark. More importantly, despite the innuendoes, neither
Milroy nor Elliott revealed any plans, which they had for the 12th
once the infantry became engaged or that orders were issued to the
Regiment that went unfulfilled because the Pennsylvanians had
disappeared. Finally, it may legitimately be asked, what more might
have been expected of the 12th under the circumstances beyond its
accomplishment of holding the Pike open until the infantry arrived?
A more pertinent question to the eventual outcome of the battle
may be why Milroy did not, at the first rattle of gunfire, simply
turn his entire column to the right, charge the woods en masse, and
rout the enemy. Unfortunately for the Federals, the answer probably
lies in the fact that at the commencement of the battle their
commander was operating on subjective information gathered in real
time from his position near the center of his column. Because of the
darkness, Milroy had to rely mostly upon the scant information that
he could gather by ear." That limited sense initially conveyed only
the sounds of a minor spat at the head of his division between the
Hussars and just the leading elements of the six regiments, which
Johnson began to deploy after stumbling upon the Yankee vanguard.
There was nothing about those first few salvos up front which would
have warned Milroy that two Rebel brigades were moving into position
from the Union left to right along a third of his flank or that the
road from Berryville was filled with another brigade of hardened
veterans straining to reach the action. The scope of the threat only
gradually became apparent to Milroy as each successive Rebel
regiment or piece of artillery moved into position along his flank
and commenced a raking fire into the midst of his column. As a
result, the battle at Carter's Woods (the local name for the area)
evolved incrementally from northeast to southwest in a series of
somewhat uncoordinated and overlapping conflicts as the Federal
commanders responded to the steadily lengthening wall of Confederate
fire by engaging, or attempting to flank, newly revealed assailants
with the infantry regiments that could be most rapidly shoved into
the fray.
Once the cavalry impediment had cleared away, the bluecoated
riflemen of the First and then the Second Brigades commenced a
valiant effort to either drive the Confederates away from the Pike,
or at least keep it open until the men at the rear of the column
could pass behind them and on to safety. First into the maelstrom
were Elliott's Buckeyes of the 110th and 122nd Ohio who made three
separate charges that carried them to the very edge of the railroad
cut that the Rebels were using like a huge entrenchment. The Yankees
had the guts to claw their way almost to within bayonet range of
their adversaries, from where point-blank volleys were exchanged,
but lacked the numbers and the flank support to disperse the Rebel
formation. After pinning the Butternuts in the cut for nearly an
hour, the Ohioans, allegedly under Milroy's orders, left the field
and marched off toward Harpers Ferry.
The efforts of the Second Brigade commenced with the second
advance of the Buckeyes on their left. The 87th Pennsylvania went in
first but was forced to pull back when the 18th Connecticut mistook
the York County boys for the enemy and began to fire into their
backs. After those two regiments were realigned and then joined by
the 123rd Ohio, all three made two more attempts to smash the
Confederate line. Each successive assault foundered in front of a
stone wall and the railroad cut which gave the Rebels an almost
impregnable defensive position. In the confusion that followed the
last attempt, some of the 87th Pennsylvania broke and fled while
most of the rest of the Union Second Brigade was captured when the
Confederate Stonewall Brigade crossed the railroad and swept in on
the Yankees' exposed left flank.
Had Milroy been able to effectively thrust his remaining five
unbloodied infantry regiments into the contest, the Rebels might
still have been driven away and the entire command saved.
Unfortunately for the Yankees, the potential firepower carried by
the balance of the division's riflemen was squandered, either as the
result of Milroy's hope that the rest of his column could safely
pass behind the combatants on the front line or through the "fog of
war." The 116th Ohio and the 12th West Virginia were initially
deployed to take a supporting position behind the Second Brigade,
but before they could join the fray, the regiments in front of them
were broken. Rather than surrender. Colonel James Washburn of the
116th Ohio led both regiments down a back road away from the fight
and toward the position occupied by the Hussars.
The trailing Third Brigade added little toward the salvation of
the Federal division. Colonel McReynolds sent the 67th Pennsylvania
and 6th Maryland across the railroad in hopes of assaulting the
Confederate left flank but the Rebels, aided by the steadily rising
sun, were able to spot the movement and redeploy their forces to
meet the challenge. The Pennsylvania boys became easy prey for the
advancing Butternuts when they abandoned their formation and began
to ransack a nearby farmhouse and barn. Many were shot down in the
barnyard and almost all of the rest were captured. Seeing the fate
of their comrades, the men of the 6th Maryland scurried off to
safety around the Confederate far left flank."
The other component of Colonel McReynolds' plan to save the division envisioned
a cavalry charge around the enemy's left flank and rear to be made
by the 13th Pennsylvania. The other cavalry regiment from
Pennsylvania failed to rise to the challenge.28 As they attempted to
trot into position, the 13th was subjected to intense artillery fire
similar to that which had battered the rest of the Union line,
including one blast that allegedly slaughtered, but probably only
scattered, almost an entire company.
Whether it was artillery or a volley of rifle fire from
approaching enemy infantry as claimed by one of the troopers in the
ranks, the entire regiment's horses were thrown into a panic. Faced
with this new threat, the 13th's officers became confused about what
to do next. The dilemma was resolved to their liking when "...an
[unidentified] officer dashed in among us and gave orders for every
man to get away as best he could. This order ended all discipline,
and away we went, every one looking out only for himself, ..and as
we left the field of battle farther and farther behind us, the noise
became less and less until it died out altogether. We thus continued
to madly dash on, but to where we knew not. We had only one object
in view, and that to escape from our enemy. Major Michael Kerwin
chose a more delicate explanation for the behavior of his regiment,
"Seeing no other cavalry on the field, we withdrew toward
Charlestown...."
The men of the 1st New York Cavalry, who had originally been
detailed to act as the rear guard, and who sat atop their horses and
watched at least part of the disintegration of the rest of their
brigade, held the Federals' last hope for liberating the column."
Minute after agonizingly long minute dragged by as Lieutenant Colonel Alonzo W. Adams and his troopers
chafed under artillery fire that delivered shell after exploding
shell over their heads while they waited in column for orders from
the elusive McReynolds. Probably fearing that if he didn't attack
soon that his men would break and flee, the lieutenant colonel moved
his regiment "...forward at a trot until we reached a point from a
quarter to a half mile in advance of my former position on the left
of the road [and perhaps behind the rest of the brigade which was
moving toward the railroad], and, as I believe, within 500 yards of
the enemy, where I found an open field, ..and where I formed a line
of battle.
Apparently, when the formation was completed "...the order rang
out, 'Draw sabres! Forward! Trot!' The men gathered their reins,
grasped firm hold of their sabres, fixed themselves firmly in their
saddles, clenched their teeth, and spurred their horses into a
gallop....They came within range of the infantry firing. But that
line was too strongly posted. It would have been a grand charge,
like that of the Light Brigade..., but at a fearful sacrifice of
life, with nothing to gain but the name.... But just then some one
with some sense, either a staff officer or some junior officer of
the regiment, appeared at the head of the column and ordered it off
to the left."
Lieutenant Colonel Adams and historian Beach disagreed on the
reason why the New Yorkers peeled off to the left rather than "do
and die." In his original report, Adams wrote that it was a maze of
telegraph wires stretched between the trees that prevented an
attack. In Beach's version it was a near mutiny, similar to one that
occurred during the retreat from Berryville on June 13, which kept
the New Yorkers on their way.
It is doubtful that the series of maneuvers Adams ordered next,
in response to the alleged dissension in his ranks, helped to
restore his men's confidence. The lieutenant colonel led the New
Yorkers back into a field on the left of the Pike. When the Rebel
gunners once again found the troopers' range, the regiment was moved
one hundred yards to the left. Still without orders, the hapless
horsemen were made to shift position three more times. The bobbing
and weaving only ended after the 116th Ohio and the 12th West
Virginia were ordered to retreat to the northwest, and the troopers
from New York were sent along to guard their rear.
Practically speaking, the battle at Carter's Woods, and/or Second
Winchester, was over when the New Yorkers aborted their charge,
leaving only the desperate flight of the Federals who managed to
escape and the accumulation of those who had not. Colonel Keifer of
the 110th Ohio provided a sad postscript to the battle when he
described the final, ftitile, fight of the day. "Lieutenant Weakley
with sixty men was left upon picket [on Apple Pie Ridge], in
consequence of his whereabouts not being known to me, and a false
report that he was with the wagon train.The lieutenant, with most of
his men, were left at their post on picket, and alone engaged the
enemy at Winchester on the morning of the 15th. After a most gallant
resistance, they surrendered.""" Weakley's men would not feel lonely
and abandoned for long.
NOTE: The following information is from the book titled: "Leather
& Steel" "The 12th. Pennsylvania Cavalry in the Civil
War" Author: Larry B. Maier [Permission Granted] October
18,2002 Publisher: Burd Street Press publiscation Burd Street
Press Division of White Mane Publishing Company
Inc. Shippensburg, Pa. 17257-0152 USA
ALL RIGHTS RESERVED-No part may be reproduced in any form without
permission in writing from the publisher, White Mane Publishing
Co., Inc., P.O. Box 708, Shippensburg, PA 17257
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