Confederate Desertion

Joined
Jun 24, 2015
Location
Talladega, Alabama
Reid Mitchell's book, "The Vacant Chair,"
Mitchell points out what ought to be obvious:
"Confederate soldiers left their wives -- and their mothers, sweethearts, daughters, fathers, sons, family, and friends -- at higher risk than most Union soldiers left theirs. And as the war went on, the dangers that the people back home faced grew more widespread. Confederate soldiers found themselves torn between two duties, one to the Confederacy, one to their families. After 1864, some Confederates saw the war as likely to end in defeat, others saw it as unlikely to end at all. Not surprisingly, more of them chose their duty to their families over their duty to the Confederacy, even over their duty to their fellow soldiers."

Ella Lonn's "Desertion During the Civil War"
Lonn's book lists 1,028 as the figure for Confederate army officer deserters, and 103,400 as the figure for enlisted men.

The amount of officers were somewhat surprising to me. But over 100,00o enlisted men deserting, that's would be one huge army in itself.
As Mitchell points out in his note, that the front line soldier in the Confederate Army left for properly the same reason they joined the army. For family and protecting them.
 
Reid Mitchell's book, "The Vacant Chair,"
Mitchell points out what ought to be obvious:
"Confederate soldiers left their wives -- and their mothers, sweethearts, daughters, fathers, sons, family, and friends -- at higher risk than most Union soldiers left theirs. And as the war went on, the dangers that the people back home faced grew more widespread. Confederate soldiers found themselves torn between two duties, one to the Confederacy, one to their families. After 1864, some Confederates saw the war as likely to end in defeat, others saw it as unlikely to end at all. Not surprisingly, more of them chose their duty to their families over their duty to the Confederacy, even over their duty to their fellow soldiers."

Ella Lonn's "Desertion During the Civil War"
Lonn's book lists 1,028 as the figure for Confederate army officer deserters, and 103,400 as the figure for enlisted men.

The amount of officers were somewhat surprising to me. But over 100,00o enlisted men deserting, that's would be one huge army in itself.
As Mitchell points out in his note, that the front line soldier in the Confederate Army left for properly the same reason they joined the army. For family and protecting them.
Actually not really. I have a whole thread " how serious was desertion in the Confederate Army" lots of estimates plus debate. Many Southerners deserted the Confederate Army and joined the Union Army or became Unionist guerrillas or freelance bandits. My thread Union vs CSA Guerrillas" has a lot of sourced evidence about that.
Some Confederate deserters did join local homeguards and many preyed on their fellow white Southerners. It's a real mixed bag.
Leftyhunter
 
Where they were from also dictated their desertion rates; those serving farther away from home actually tended to see fewer desertions, wheres those serving in their home state usually saw the highest desertion rates. Trans-Mississippians serving east of the river had some of the lowest desertion rates. Troops from the Deep South in the ANV also saw fewer desertions compared to those from the Upper South. When Longstreet's Corps - mainly comprised of men from the Deep South and the West - was sent to Georgia and Tennessee in 1863 it suffered some of its highest desertion rates during the war, wheres when it was in the East it saw far less, maybe with the exception being the final months of the war.

There were also other factors such as whether they came from slaveholding households, their wealth, or whether they were married with children. Soldiering in the Army of Northern Virginia by Joseph Glatthaar contains some interesting statistics. Not surprisingly, he finds that a large percentage of deserters were married with children. He also finds that those from poorer, nonslaveholding households were more likely to desert.
 
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Reid Mitchell's book, "The Vacant Chair,"
Mitchell points out what ought to be obvious:
"Confederate soldiers left their wives -- and their mothers, sweethearts, daughters, fathers, sons, family, and friends -- at higher risk than most Union soldiers left theirs. And as the war went on, the dangers that the people back home faced grew more widespread. Confederate soldiers found themselves torn between two duties, one to the Confederacy, one to their families. After 1864, some Confederates saw the war as likely to end in defeat, others saw it as unlikely to end at all. Not surprisingly, more of them chose their duty to their families over their duty to the Confederacy, even over their duty to their fellow soldiers."

Ella Lonn's "Desertion During the Civil War"
Lonn's book lists 1,028 as the figure for Confederate army officer deserters, and 103,400 as the figure for enlisted men.

The amount of officers were somewhat surprising to me. But over 100,00o enlisted men deserting, that's would be one huge army in itself.
As Mitchell points out in his note, that the front line soldier in the Confederate Army left for properly the same reason they joined the army. For family and protecting them.

Confederate Desertion
Desertion in the South though less extensive than in the North, was a factor of large significance; and a study of the causes that produced it goes far toward revealing the conditions which made the war intolerable to thousands among people and soldiers. As explained by Miss Ella Lonn, backwoodsmen and crackers were drawn into the army who had no sympathy with slavery and no interest in the issues of a struggle which they did not understand. The conscript net gathered in even Northerners and Mexicans, whose tendency to desert was natural enough. Many of the deserters were mere boys. Poor food and clothing lack of shoes and overcoats, and insufficient pay inevitably produced dissatisfaction. Sometimes the pay was fourteen months behind; Often a soldier on leave could not pay the transportation to return to his command. Unsanitary camp conditions had their debilitating effect. Soldiers kept in unwholesome inaction were more than commonly subject to homesickness and depression. Often the alternative was abandonment and neglect of wife and children or departure from the army – in other words a choice between two kinds of desertion, a dilemma in facing conflicting loyalties. Not a few Southern soldiers found themselves in the situation of an Alabaman who deserted the army when his wife wrote him: "We haven't got nothing in the house to eat but a little bit of meal… I don't want you to stop fighting them Yankees… but try and get off and come home and fix us up some and then you can go back." Some Arkansas soldiers deserted when informed that Indians were on a scalping tour near their homes. Indignant at extortioners and profiteers, soldiers would become disgruntled at the "rich man's war and the poor man's fight." For such men desertion bore no stigma; and, in sum, it appears that this factor (which after all, was but a reflection of many other factors) 'contributed definitely to the Confederate defeats after 1862 and to the catastrophe of 1865."

J.G. Randall, David Donald, The Civil War and Reconstruction 516-517

Union desertion

In view of the conditions which prevailed in the war department and in the Union army, it is not surprising that desertion was a common fault. Even so the actual extent of it, shown in official reports, comes as a distinct shock. Though the determination of the full number is a bit complicated, the total would have been over 200,000. From New York there were 44,913 deserters according to the records; from Pennsylvania, 24,050; from Ohio, 18,354. The daily hardships of war, deficiency in arms, forced marches sometimes made straggling a necessary for less vigorous men), thirst, suffocating heat, disease, delay in pay, solicitude for family, impatience at the monotony and futility of inactive service, and (though this was not the leading cause) panic on the eve of battle—these were some of the conditioning factors that produced desertion. Many men absented themselves merely through unfamiliarity with military discipline or through the feeling that they should be "restrained by no other legal requirement than those of civil law governing a free people"; and such was a general attitude that desertion was often regarded "more as a refusal… to ratify a contract than as the commission of a grave crime."

The sense of war weariness, the lack of confidence in commanders, and the discouragement of defeat tended to lower morale of the Union army and to increase desertions. General Hooker estimated in 1863 that 85,000 officers and men had deserted from the Army of the Potomac, while it was stated in December of 1862 that no less than 180,000 of the soldiers listed on the Union muster roll were absent, with or without leave. Abuse of leave or furlough privilege was one of the chief means of desertion. Other methods were: slipping to the rear during a battle, inviting capture by the enemy (a method by which honorable service could be claimed), straggling, taking French leave when on picket duty, pretending to be engaged in repairing a telegraph line, et cetera. Some deserters went over to enemy not as captives but as soldiers; others lived in a wild state on the frontier; some turned outlaw or went to Canada; some boldly appeared at home; in some cases deserter gangs, as in western Pennsylvania, formed bandit groups.

To suppress desertion the extreme penalty of death was at times applied, especially after 1863; but this meant no more than the selection of a few men as public examples out of many thousands equally guilty. The commoner method was to make public appeals to deserters, promising pardon in case of voluntary return with dire threats to those who failed to return. That desertion did not prevent a man posing after the war as an honorable soldier is evident by a study of pension records. The laws required honorable discharge as a requisite for a pension; but in the case of those charged with desertion, Congress passed numerous private and special acts "correcting" the military record.

J.G. Randall, David Donald, The Civil War and Reconstruction pp. 329-331
 

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