Perryville Hungry Hogs after the Battle

Joined
May 18, 2005
Location
Spring Hill, Tennessee
"The Battle-Field of Chaplin Hills—Dr. McMeens."

[This was written November 5, 1862 after observing the field less than a week after the battle.]

"… The field is still covered with the debris of the fight,--dead horses, broken artillery wagons, haversacks, cartridge boxes, hats, shoes, remnants of clothing, &c., &c. In every field—and there are many, for the line of battle covered miles of territory—fresh graves are abundant, and in places the clay soil assumes a darker hue, red with the blood of friend and foe. Since the fight, no rain has fallen, and these dark stains are still discernable.

To the honor of human nature our own dead are buried, mostly where they fell, sufficiently deep to cover them from our eye. To its dishonor the enemy are tumbled into graves, and in many cases parts of the blackened remains are visible above the earth. Riding by where the enemy fell in numbers, I saw a hand black with exposure, but still as delicate as that of a lady, resting on the top of the parched earth while the body to which it belonged had a thin covering of earth over it. The walnut colored cuff of the coat still around the wrist showed that it was a secession soldier, and a physician present with us, pronounced the hand that of a mere youth which had never been hardened with labor.

A few moments after, I saw another hand and part of the face protruding. In another field, an open one near by, a swarm of long backed and long snouted hogs, common to this part of Kentucky, had rooted into the thinly covered graves, and were making their horrid banquet upon human flesh. As we drove them away, they stood at a short distance impatiently waiting, and scarce had we turned the heads of our horses from this disgusting scene before they were again at the graves, furiously tearing limb from limb and devouring the half corrupted flesh of those who, but a few days before, stood in the pride of manhood battling for home and honor. Nearby these graves were the bodies of horses, yet these were scarce touched, the hogs preferring human flesh to that of animals. A sight more horribly disgusting, human eye never looked upon.

Occasionally we found a grave with a board at its head, giving the name, regiment and company of the dead occupant, and these were generally protected by a rail fence, or covered with stones, with which every field abounds, to protect them from the hogs, who, having tasted human flesh are more ravenous than the hyena in their taste for human gore. Around the graves thus covered, myriads of flies, smaller it is true, yet resembling the green bottle-fly swarmed on the tops of the graves, and particularly the stones were black with them.

In traversing the scene of the slaughter, men, women and children, on foot, on horseback and in carriages, are met, and to the honor of the womanhood be it said, that I saw a group of them, with boards, and with their own fair hands, diligently engaged in scooping up the dirt to cover the exposed parts of the victims of the great slaughter laid bare by shallow graves and by the rooting of hogs. The woods are full of acorns, walnuts and buckeye-nuts and corn is scattered over the fields, and yet, fond as the hog is of these, he scarce touches them, the human banquet being chosen above all vulgar and common food. The Bible teaches us that the hog is an unclean animal, unfit for the food of man, and after the sight I saw on the field of battle, so far as pork in this region is concerned, I adopted the Jewish faith in prohibiting the eating of hog."
 
This was one of the consumate horrors of the Civil War, and sad to say, was not unusual at all. Letting hogs roam free was a common practice (root hog or die!) and this scene was repeated on numerous battlefields. Depending on where the battle was fought, and which side abandoned the field, enemy casualties were often buried without as much care as the fallen on your own side and even then, if the armies were ordered to move on quickly (The Wilderness) there was not enough time to bury your friends, much less your foes.
 
This reminiscence of the Perryville Battle is from a soldier of the 88th Illinois. After the battle he recalls…

…At any rate we encamped on or near the field of battle for two whole days, and by that time Bragg and his wagons were far away. Because of the absence of rations, we were compelled to do some foraging here, and the ducks and geese in the almost empty stream were made to suffer their necks to be stretched, to help appease the general lack of food.…

On a rocky spot in the bed of the creek I saw four or five bodies, by their clothing, apparently officers of the enemy. These had been cared for to the extent of the building of a rail fence around them, so as to protect the remains from being attacked by the swine that prowled in the woods. The disgusting sight of these animals feeding upon human gore was more than sufficient to give them immunity from sacrifice by the hungry of our army. No one could be found sufficiently hardy to talk of eating of the flesh of hogs captured near the batttlefield. No ! No more than if we were an army of Hebrews.

Page 58-59
 
Hogs can be very dangerous at times. I remember my Granny always telling me to be careful and not get near her pigs. Especially not a mother pig with little ones.

Indeed. From 2017.

https://www.dw.com/en/wild-boar-kills-german-hunter/a-41649912

From other accounts I remember, the victim was an experienced hunter who should have known better than to go traipsing into a field alone with vegetation high enough to conceal a wounded boar.
 
Our family homestead was near Perryville, and I know I've shared this on another thread but will repeat it here.

According to stories told by my elders, it sounds like the soldiers were not the only ones who had no interest in eating the hogs in that area after the battle. I was told that when cold weather hit and the hogs were slaughtered that year that the meat was taken to Louisville and sold to dealers there because none of the locals wanted to eat it.
 
"The Battle-Field of Chaplin Hills—Dr. McMeens."

[This was written November 5, 1862 after observing the field less than a week after the battle.]

"… The field is still covered with the debris of the fight,--dead horses, broken artillery wagons, haversacks, cartridge boxes, hats, shoes, remnants of clothing, &c., &c. In every field—and there are many, for the line of battle covered miles of territory—fresh graves are abundant, and in places the clay soil assumes a darker hue, red with the blood of friend and foe. Since the fight, no rain has fallen, and these dark stains are still discernable.

To the honor of human nature our own dead are buried, mostly where they fell, sufficiently deep to cover them from our eye. To its dishonor the enemy are tumbled into graves, and in many cases parts of the blackened remains are visible above the earth. Riding by where the enemy fell in numbers, I saw a hand black with exposure, but still as delicate as that of a lady, resting on the top of the parched earth while the body to which it belonged had a thin covering of earth over it. The walnut colored cuff of the coat still around the wrist showed that it was a secession soldier, and a physician present with us, pronounced the hand that of a mere youth which had never been hardened with labor.

A few moments after, I saw another hand and part of the face protruding. In another field, an open one near by, a swarm of long backed and long snouted hogs, common to this part of Kentucky, had rooted into the thinly covered graves, and were making their horrid banquet upon human flesh. As we drove them away, they stood at a short distance impatiently waiting, and scarce had we turned the heads of our horses from this disgusting scene before they were again at the graves, furiously tearing limb from limb and devouring the half corrupted flesh of those who, but a few days before, stood in the pride of manhood battling for home and honor. Nearby these graves were the bodies of horses, yet these were scarce touched, the hogs preferring human flesh to that of animals. A sight more horribly disgusting, human eye never looked upon.

Occasionally we found a grave with a board at its head, giving the name, regiment and company of the dead occupant, and these were generally protected by a rail fence, or covered with stones, with which every field abounds, to protect them from the hogs, who, having tasted human flesh are more ravenous than the hyena in their taste for human gore. Around the graves thus covered, myriads of flies, smaller it is true, yet resembling the green bottle-fly swarmed on the tops of the graves, and particularly the stones were black with them.

In traversing the scene of the slaughter, men, women and children, on foot, on horseback and in carriages, are met, and to the honor of the womanhood be it said, that I saw a group of them, with boards, and with their own fair hands, diligently engaged in scooping up the dirt to cover the exposed parts of the victims of the great slaughter laid bare by shallow graves and by the rooting of hogs. The woods are full of acorns, walnuts and buckeye-nuts and corn is scattered over the fields, and yet, fond as the hog is of these, he scarce touches them, the human banquet being chosen above all vulgar and common food. The Bible teaches us that the hog is an unclean animal, unfit for the food of man, and after the sight I saw on the field of battle, so far as pork in this region is concerned, I adopted the Jewish faith in prohibiting the eating of hog."
It brings to mind the saying, "The Horrors of War."
 

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