Civil War History - The South & Western TheatersCheck this forum for all South and Western Theater Questions. Included are the Western, Pacific, Trans-Mississippi, & Lower Seaboard and Gulf Approach Theaters.
Would any of you northern ladies and gentlemen have knowledge of any particular US Army regiments that might have been in the vicinity of Tullahoma, TN in mid summer 1864? I know there was some sort of headquarters there on or about July 1 which included the 10th TN cavalry (US). If I could pinpoint some other regiments, it would likely aid my research. Thanks.
__________________ Ancestors in US Army: 13th TN Cav; 10th TN Cav; 3rd NC Inf
Ancestors in CSA Army: 48th VA; 63rd VA, 5th NC Cav; 37th NC
Wife and Grandson's CSA: 15th AL, 51st GA, 41st TN; 36th TN; GA Mil 1197 Dist
Larry, just thought I'd let you know that you aren't being ignored. I looked through many research sources I have and could not come up with any definite regiments. Best of luck.
__________________ I was gratified to be able to answer promptly. I said I don't know.
-Mark Twain
Larry try contacting Dr. Michael Bradley he is Professor at
Motlow State Community College and the author Tullahoma: The 1863 Campaign for Control of Middle Tennessee and With Blood and Fire: Life in Union Occupied Middle Tennessee. He has also written It Happened in the Civil War
He would be the person to ask on this subject. He may be reached at MBradley@mscc.edu.
regards, Steven
__________________ Steven Noel Cone Living Historian and Battlefield Preservationest
"Silver Spring Mess" ; "Citizens of the Bonnie Blue" ; "46th Tn Inf. Co. K"
THE FIRST CONFEDERATE CEMETARY - by Dr. Michael Bradley
When the War Between the States began in 1861 everyone knew there would be deaths. Of course, no one thought there would be many and everyone knew they would survive--the other fellow would be the one to die. As soon as training camps were established deaths began to occur and to occur in larger numbers than were anticipated. A great many of these dead were sent back to grieving families to be buried at local church or family cemeteries.
Combat changed the face of death. Instead of a few daily deaths in hospitals, hundreds of men were cut down in a few hours time in a fairly confined piece of real estate. Comrades hastily buried friends on the battlefield if they had time and opportunity while fallen foe were placed in burial pits as at Shiloh, Perryville, and numerous other places. Often local church or town cemeteries received the dead as happened with Confederates killed at Fredericksburg and Chancellorsville.
In the Autumn of 1862 the little village of Tullahoma, Tennessee, was chosen as a location for hospitals by the Confederate Army of Tennessee. Influencing this decision was the common belief that the area of the Highland Rim, on which Tullahoma is located, was a "healthful location;" more pragmatically, the main line of the Nashville & Chattanooga rail road passed through the village facilitating the gathering of sick men & supplies for their treatment. Since the main armies were several hundred miles away, struggling for control of Kentucky, all inmates of the Tullahoma hospitals were sick, no battle casualties were being treated, yet death was a daily event.
Tullahoma was a very new town. It had been founded as a construction camp for building the Nashville & Chattanooga rail road in the early 1850's. Because it was so new the town, and its churches, had no established cemetery. A pressing issue for the Confederate hospitals, then, was where to bury the dead.
Serving with the Army of Tennessee was a semi-disabled officer, Colonel Mathias Martin. Col. Martin suffered from a cyst, called a hydrocell, in the groin area which one doctor described as "large as a grapefruit." Unable to lead troops in combat, Col. Martin stayed with the Army to lend whatever help he could as an Aide. The Colonel was located now in his own door yard for he owned extensive farms in the vicinity and held property in and around the village of Tullahoma. The need for a burial place moved the Colonel to action. Matt Martin invited the Army authorities to bury his deceased compatriots in one of his fields beside one of the roads leading out of town. The offer was gratefully accepted.
In January, 1863, Tullahoma became the Headquarters for the Army of Tennessee and would remain so until July, 1863. During this time the use of the cemetery created by Col. Martin increased. A modern investigation (1997) with ground penetrating radar, reveals few individual graves. It seems to have been the case that a trench was dug to accept the bodies with the trench being extended day by day as more room was required. It would have been in keeping with the common practice of the day if boards with the names of the deceased had been placed at the head of each body.
The Army of Tennessee evacuated Tullahoma on July 1, 1863. There is some evidence that Matt Martin's plot of land was used to bury prisoners who died while in the custody of the Union Provost Marshal but the site was generally neglected. In the years following the War local citizens made sporadic efforts to maintain the graves; the grounds, commonly, were cleared of brush once a year on June 3, Confederate Memorial Day, and crosses of cedar wood were erected. In August, 1889, only days before his death, Matt Martin deeded the burial plot to a self-perpetuating Board of Trustees who would head a group to be called "The Tullahoma Confederate Association." This group was to have perpetual control of the cemetery. In 1912 the Captain Calvin C. Brewer Chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy erected wrought iron gates at the entrance to the cemetery.
By the 1920's other families were buying property outside the Confederate Cemetery to be used as burial plots. The surrounding area became known as Maple Hill Cemetery and, gradually, came under the care of the city. During the same decade the Trustees of the Tullahoma Confederate Association ceased to meet and the city began to maintain the Confederate graves to prevent the area from becoming an eyesore. The cedar wood crossed had mostly disappeared by this time and the graves were assumed to be those of "unknown" Confederate soldiers. The State of Tennessee even erected a historical marker on U.S. Route 41-A stating the cemetery was the last resting place for 407 "unknown Confederates." Here matters rested for about 40 years.
The Centennial of the War revived interest in local events and a committee was formed to revitalize the appearance of the old burial ground. A pipe and chair fence was erected, two flag poles put up, and a monument secured which, again, stated the burials were "unknown" Confederates who had died in hospitals at Tullahoma. Also, blocks of marble were acquired and were placed on the ground in a regular pattern, one for each of the men thought to be buried there. This arrangement would cause some confusion since later visitors readily assumed these marked individual graves.
This brief flurry of interest did not outlast the Centennial commemoration and the cemetery again came under the care of the city. But, in 1992, Raymond W. Watkins of Falls Church, Virginia, found a list in the National Archives giving a roster of most of the dead buried at Tullahoma. Suddenly the "unknown" Confederates had names! An application was made to the U.S. Office of Memorial Programs for an additional monument listing the names of the soldiers. Pursuing this goal would take three years.
Nineteen Ninety-Five was the Bicentennial of Tennessee's statehood. From the first, the state planners urged local communities to celebrate local history as a part of the wider celebration. A local committee was established at Tullahoma and a number of events were planned as part of the Bicentennial celebration. One of these events was to be a re-enactment of some events from the Tullahoma Campaign and a dedication of the new monument in the Confederate Cemetery.
As the week-end long celebration got underway some questions were raised about the propriety of the city maintaining the cemetery, especially there were questions about displaying the Confederate flag over the graves. It was agreed that flags were proper during the ceremony but not afterwards.
This decision caused a reawakening of interest in the history of the cemetery and a local attorney began to investigate the matter. It was found that under Tennessee law a perpetual trust does not expire through the death of its trustees; any person or persons willing to carry out the requirements of the trust may assume that role. So, in the Spring of 1996, the Tullahoma Confederate Association held its first meeting in seventy years, appointed Trustees, and assumed responsibly for keeping up the maintenance of the cemetery. One of their first acts was to raise the Confederate National flag, the Battle Flag, and the flags of the Polk and Hardee Army Corps over the graves of the men who had fought under these flags. In the Summer of 1997 the State of Tennessee awarded the Association a grant for maintenance of historic cemeteries and all work of maintaining the cemetery, from mowing the grass to painting the fence and flagpoles, began to be carried out by members of the Tullahoma Confederate Association. The cemetery is one of the stops on the Tullahoma Campaign Driving Tour promoted by the Tennessee's Backroads Heritage Committee.
Although Confederate soldiers were buried in existing cemeteries or on battlefields before Col. Matt Martin set aside his plot as the final resting place for his comrades in arms, the plot at Tullahoma may be the oldest cemetery in the nation created exclusively for the burial of Confederate soldiers. Today, the cemetery on Maplewood Avenue is a lovely, well maintained, and peaceful spot.
__________________ Steven Noel Cone Living Historian and Battlefield Preservationest
"Silver Spring Mess" ; "Citizens of the Bonnie Blue" ; "46th Tn Inf. Co. K"
Steven, quite by coincidence I was loaned a copy of Dr. Bradley's very well written book With Blood and Fire just this week. This one has considerable interesting information on the Nashville Chattanooga railroad which ran through Tullahoma (still does) and through the tunnel at Cowan, TN before linking up with another rail at Stevenson, AL. This was the army supply route for the Union to Chattanooga and Atlanta later on. This particular book also has considerable information on Gen. Milroy (may have been a Col. -- not looking at the moment) who was one of the main commanders in a long line of folks who tried to keep Bedford Forrest from tearing up the railroad, as you well know, with not too much success. There is a reference in there to the 10th TN being under his command for a brief period. That regiment was later transferred to Gen. Edward Hatch of Maine, all under the watchful eye of James Wilson. GG grandpa Cockerham was in Tullahoma when he was injured by a horse pinning him to his toolbox. GG Grandpa was a Union blacksmith. Thus my interest in Tullahoma. I have also done a lot of genealogical research on families in Bedford, Coffee, Franklin and Moore counties. Tullahoma was the army headquarters for much of the summer of 1864. I'm still up for a trip to the sutler at Wartrace after this next snow!
__________________ Ancestors in US Army: 13th TN Cav; 10th TN Cav; 3rd NC Inf
Ancestors in CSA Army: 48th VA; 63rd VA, 5th NC Cav; 37th NC
Wife and Grandson's CSA: 15th AL, 51st GA, 41st TN; 36th TN; GA Mil 1197 Dist
In 2003, Dr. Michael R. Bradley published another book WITH BLOOD AND FIRE (Burd Street Press, Shippensburg, PA) in which he quotes General Alpheus Williams, commander of Military District No. 1, Defenses of the Nashville-Chattanooga railroad 1863-64. I’m sure the chamber of commerce wouldn’t be interested in this one.
“one hundred straggling houses of faded paint and retrograde look. Judge Citron of the Supreme Court has a neat summer cottage in the suburbs, but it is badly soiled by the occupation of soldiers. The town is dolorous… thin, slabby, and shabby houses scattered about, with broken windows and a deserted air. The people are like the houses, poor white trash. The Negro is the only gay dog, keeping up dances every night and having a good time at a cheap rate…. The people are disgusting the mere scum of humanity, poor, half-starved, ignorant, stupid, and treacherous. The women all dip snuff. You must stay here and move through this country to see how many there are vastly inferior to the Negro on common sense, shrewdness, and observation, and in the comforts of life. Let us not grieve for the Southern Negro as much as for the poor Southern White man – covered with vermin and rags, and disgusting with the evidence of a cureless ‘Scotch fiddle’ (scabies) which they dig at continuously.”
(Message edited by Larry_Cockerham on January 14, 2005)
__________________ Ancestors in US Army: 13th TN Cav; 10th TN Cav; 3rd NC Inf
Ancestors in CSA Army: 48th VA; 63rd VA, 5th NC Cav; 37th NC
Wife and Grandson's CSA: 15th AL, 51st GA, 41st TN; 36th TN; GA Mil 1197 Dist