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        <title><emph rend="bold">War-Time Sketches</emph>
Historical and Otherwise: Electronic Edition</title>
        <author>Dimitry, Adelaide Stuart</author>
        <funder>Funding from the Library of Congress/Ameritech National Digital
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        <pubPlace>University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill,</pubPlace>
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        <bibl><title>War-Time Sketches
Historical and Otherwise</title>
<author>Dimitry,
Adelaide Stuart</author><imprint><pubPlace>New Orleans, LA.</pubPlace><publisher>Louisiana Printing Co. Press</publisher><date>[1911]</date></imprint></bibl>
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    <front>
      <div1 type="cover image">
        <p>
          <figure id="cover" entity="dimitrycv">
            <p>[Cover Image]</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <div1 type="title page image">
        <p>
          <figure id="title" entity="dimitrytp">
            <p>[Title Page Image]</p>
          </figure>
        </p>
      </div1>
      <titlePage>
        <docTitle>
          <titlePart type="main">War-Time Sketches</titlePart>
          <titlePart type="subtitle">Historical and Otherwise</titlePart>
        </docTitle>
        <byline>BY</byline>
        <docAuthor>ADELAIDE STUART DIMITRY
<lb/>
HISTORIAN “STONEWALL JACKSON CHAPTER OF NEW ORLEANS
<lb/>
No. 1135” U. D. C.
<lb/>
(1909-1911 )</docAuthor>
        <docImprint><publisher>LOUISIANA PRINTING CO. PRESS,</publisher>
<pubPlace>NEW ORLEANS, LA.</pubPlace></docImprint>
        <titlePart type="verso">COPYRIGHT<lb/>
APPLIED FOR</titlePart>
      </titlePage>
      <pb id="dimiii" n="iii"/>
      <div1 type="preface">
        <head>PREFACE</head>
        <p>The following papers, written by Mrs. Dimitry while Historian of the
“Stonewall Jackson Chapter” of New Orleans, 
were intended not solely to amuse and interest, 
but primarily to set forth in correct form
historic events of the war of 1861-'65, and further to
preserve and hand
down to an interested posterity incidents
semi-<sic corr="biographical">biogrpahical</sic> which
otherwise would have passed into oblivion.</p>
        <p>The author has derived her data not alone from written history,
but largely from the lips of those who were participants in that memorable
struggle  -  men who had been comrades of Mumford, confreres of Benjamin,
and survivors of the ill-fated Louisiana. Material for the
sketches of social life
were drawn from the reminiscences of war-time women, mostly
members of the
Chapter, and all are based upon incidents occurring in real life. 
They shed side-lights upon the manners, customs and dress of
 that troublous period and reflect in their shining depths the high 
courage and quick wit of the women of the Southland.</p>
        <p>As a woman of the sixties Mrs. Dimitry herself writes in
 <hi><foreign lang="la">propria persona</foreign></hi> for
she was one of the signers of those “fair Confederate bank 
notes,” serving the Confederate government until its downfall. 
Born of splendid Southern lineage, a Mississippian, but of the 
Stuart family of Virginia and cousin to that chevalier Stuart
“<hi><foreign lang="fr">sans peur and sans
reproche</foreign></hi>,” she was qualified both by birth
and experience to write
 feelingly and in authentic fashion. As the wife and intellectual 
helpmate of Prof. John Dimitry, she lived in an atmosphere of
culture and scholarship.</p>
        <p>Professor Dimitry came of a family of educators and
literary folk and was
himself an historian of considerable merit, notable among his works being a
“School History and Geography of Louisiana” 
and “The Confederate Military
History of Louisiana.” In this connection we can not
refrain from quoting his
peerless epitaph to Albert Sidney Johnston, engraved in the 
tomb of the Army of
Tennessee, Metairie Cemetery, New Orleans. In its
epigrammatic terseness of
phrase, beauty of diction and poetic depth of feeling it 
deserves to rank as a classic.</p>
      </div1>
      <pb id="dimiv" n="iv"/>
      <div1 type="dedication">
        <lg type="stanza">
          <l>Behind this Stone is laid,</l>
          <l>For a Season,</l>
          <l>
            <emph rend="bold">ALBERT SYDNEY
JOHNSTON</emph>
          </l>
          <l>A General in the Army of the Confederate States, </l>
          <l>Who fell at Shiloh, Tennessee, </l>
          <l>On the sixth day of April, A. D.,</l>
          <l>Eighteen hundred and sixty-two. </l>
          <l>A man tried in many high offices</l>
          <l>And critical Enterprises, </l>
          <l>And found faithful in all;</l>
          <l>His life was one long Sacrifice of Interest to Conscience;</l>
          <l>And even that life, on a woeful Sabbath,</l>
          <l>Did he yield as a Holocaust at his Country's Need.</l>
          <l>Not wholly understood was he while he lived;</l>
          <l>But, in his death, his Greatness stands confess'd</l>
          <l>In a People's tears.</l>
          <l>Resolute, moderate, clear of envy, yet not wanting</l>
          <l>In that finer Ambition, which makes men great and pure; </l>
          <l>In his Honor  -  impregnable; </l>
          <l>In his Simplicity  -  sublime; </l>
          <l>No Country e'er had a truer Son  -  no Cause a nobler Champion; </l>
          <l>No People a bolder Defender  -  no Principle a purer Victim, </l>
          <l>Than the dead Soldier </l>
          <l>Who sleeps here!</l>
          <l>The Cause for which he perished is lost  -  </l>
          <l>The People for whom he fought are crush'd  -</l>
          <l>The Hopes in which he trusted are shatter'd  -  </l>
          <l>The Flag he loved guides no more the charging lines; </l>
          <l>But his Fame, consigned to the keeping of that Time, which, </l>
          <l>Happily, is not so much the Tomb of Virtue as its Shrine, </l>
          <l>Shall, in the years to come, fire Modest Worth to Noble Ends. </l>
          <l>In honor, now, our great Captain rests; </l>
          <l>A bereaved People mourn him;</l>
          <l>Three Commonwealths proudly claim him; </l>
          <l>And History shall cherish him</l>
          <l>Among those Choicer Spirits, who, holding their Conscience
unmix'd</l>
          <l> with blame,</l>
          <l>Have been, in all Conjectures, true to themselves, their
People, and</l>
          <l> their God.</l>
        </lg>
        <div2 type="introduction">
          <p>* * * * * * * *</p>
          <p>Realizing as loyal Daughters of the Confederacy that a true
and absolutely
unbiased history of the war between the States has yet to be
 written and that ours is the task of insisting on the
 <emph rend="bold">truth of history as taught</emph> and of
 helping collect and
preserve historic data, much of which is fast passing into
oblivion with the
ever-thinning ranks of the gray, this Chapter has accordingly
striven to make the
historic a salient feature of its work. As Daughter and
Historian Mrs. Dimitry was
ever faithful to her trust, and in her tender yet impartial
way has embalmed sweet
memories in our hearts and written herself down among those
choicer spirits who
“have been, in all conjunctures, true to themselves,
 their people and their God.” </p>
          <closer>
            <signed>M. G. H.</signed>
          </closer>
        </div2>
      </div1>
      <pb id="dimv" n="v"/>
      <div1 type="contents">
        <head>
          <emph rend="bold">CONTENTS.</emph>
        </head>
        <div2 type="contents">
          <head>
            <emph rend="bold">PART I.</emph>
          </head>
          <list type="simple">
            <item>The Battle of the Handkerchiefs . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim1">1</ref></item>
            <item>William B. Mumford . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim6">6</ref></item>
            <item>The Queen of the Mississippi . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim11">11</ref></item>
            <item>Memminger's Canaries . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim16">16</ref></item>
            <item>Judah P. Benjamin . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim21">21</ref></item>
            <item>The Louisiana . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim28">28</ref></item>
            <item>Four Richmond Girls . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim34"> 34</ref></item>
            <item>The Halt . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="dim37">37</ref></item>
          </list>
        </div2>
        <div2 type="contents">
          <head>
            <emph rend="bold">PART II.</emph>
          </head>
          <list type="simple">
            <item>The Confederate Girl (Part I) . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim41">41</ref></item>
            <item>The Confederate Girl (Part II) . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim46">46</ref></item>
            <item>A True Story . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim52">52</ref></item>
            <item>Davidson's Raid . . . . . <ref targOrder="U" target="dim58">58</ref></item>
            <item>A Rambling Talk of Richmond . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim63">63</ref></item>
            <item>A Woman of the Sixties . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim67">67</ref></item>
            <item>A Confederate Hoop Skirt . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim72">72</ref></item>
            <item>Mrs. O'Flaherty's Funeral . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim79">79</ref></item>
            <item>An Incident of the Reconstruction . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim83">83</ref></item>
            <item>Freedom's Shriek . . . . .
<ref targOrder="U" target="dim87"> 87</ref></item>
          </list>
        </div2>
      </div1>
    </front>
    <pb id="dim1" n="1"/>
    <body>
      <div1 type="text">
        <head>
          <emph rend="bold">WAR-TIME SKETCHES</emph>
        </head>
        <div2>
          <head>
            <emph rend="bold">PART I.</emph>
          </head>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>THE BATTLE OF THE HANDKERCHIEFS.</head>
            <p>IN THE early forenoon of February 20, 1863, a whisper ran
through New Orleans that the Confederate soldiers in
the city were to be taken that day aboard the “Empire
Parish,” Capt. Caldwell commanding, and
 transported to Baton Rouge for an
exchange of Union prisoners.</p>
            <p>The whisper grew in volume until it reached the ears of the
Confederate women of the city. At once, gentle and simple, old
and young, matron and maid hurried to the levee to give the boys
in gray a warm “God bless you and good-bye.” One o'clock was
the hour fixed for the departure of the prisoners, but long before
the stroke of the hammer on its bell, the levee for many blocks
was densely crowded with people  -  a number estimated by some
at 20,000. No New Orleans woman who had a brother, husband
or son on that prison boat could have been kept away. These
loving and patriotic women  -  many of them wearing knots of
red-white-and-red ribbon or rosettes of palmetto, or carrying
magnificent boquets of roses, camelias and violets  -  like the flow
of an ocean tide, steadily poured through Canal Street on their
way to the river front. They debouched, a living torrent, upon the
levee in front of the “Empire Parish”  -  a boat around which
guerilla guns had recently been quite busy. What a waving of
handkerchiefs was there and glad cries, and wafting of kisses as
the sight of a loved face was caught in the prisoner crowd on
deck! In the throng on the levee, redeeming it from the epithet
“mob” could be noted many ladies prominent in culture and social
position. Among these were the poet Xariffa, dear to all Louisiana
hearts; Miss Kate Walker, the courageous young heroine
<pb id="dim2" n="2"/>
of Confederate flag episode, and Mrs. D. R. Graham, then a
young wife and mother.</p>
            <p>At first, the crowd was orderly though emotional, as was to be
expected. Soon, between the soldiers on the boat and some of the
Federals on shore began a banter of wits as to what each might
expect the next time they met. Some ladies also, who were adept
in the use of the deaf and dumb language, were using this form of
wireless telegraphy in talking to their prisoner friends. Through
the dumb spelling tossed off upon their fingers under the eye of
the unwitting sentinel, they learned that the baskets and boxes of
delicacies sent to the Confederate prisoners in the Foundry prison
had fed the thievish Federal guards instead of the dear ones for
whom intended. This unwelcome news made more pronounced
the attitude of defiance gradually assumed by the crowd. A wave
of restlessness was sweeping over it. Some one cheered for Jeff
Davis. A dozen resonant voices joined in the cheer, and quickly
followed with a “Hurrah for the Confederacy,” or as a Northern
writer puts it, “shouted other diabolical monstrosities.” The feeling
growing more tense every minute was too strained for safety, and
sure to snap in twain. Listen to the narrative of a participator in
much that occurred on this eventful occasion:</p>
            <p>“I do not know who conceived the idea of going” (in order to
be nearer the prisoners), “on the ‘Laurel Hill,’ the large river
steamer lying beside the ‘Empire Parish.’ My companions and
myself saw the move and followed the crowd on board. As the
day advanced, the numbers grew so great that their
demonstrations of love and respect nettled the Federals. It was an
‘ovation to treason’ as they were pleased to term it, and they
peremptorily ordered us to ‘leave the boat, go off the levee,
disperse.’ The women could see no treason in what they were
doing  -  merely looking at their friends and waving a farewell to
them  -  so they made no move to obey. And <emph rend="bold">this</emph> was what
started the trouble. An officer, presumably under orders from
Captain Thomas, then in charge, gave the order to withdraw the
plank and cut the ‘Laurel Hill’ loose from its moorings. Jammed
from stem to stern with brave and dauntless women, little children
and nurses with babes in their arms, the boat, with stars and
stripes flying from its jackstaff,
<pb id="dim3" n="3"/>
drifted slowly far down the river to the Algiers side. We held our
breath as we went off, for we were much startled to find
ourselves running away from the ‘Empire Parish,’ but we waved
a brave good-bye with our handkerchiefs to those on shore and
they could not be kept from waving to us.</p>
            <p>“After passing beyond the city, we wondered if they were
taking us to Fort Jackson to shut us up as prisoners of war.
‘Many a good Confederate has groaned within its stony walls,
why should we escape?’  -  we whispered to each other drearily  -  
‘but at least it will be better than Ship Island.’</p>
            <p>“During our enforced excursion down the river, we learned
afterward the Federals had certain streets guarded and permitted
no one to pass. Relatives of the unwilling passengers on the
‘Laurel Hill’ were wild with fear for their loved ones, and tried to
get to the levee, but the guards brutally turned them back.”</p>
            <p>While the “Laurel Hill” was drifting out of sight, on the levee
the crisis had been reached. The Federal guards grew tired of the
noisy but harmless demonstrations and arbitrarily ordered the
women to “fall back, fall back, and stop waving their
handkerchiefs.” They talked to the winds. Above the rasping
order of the guards was heard a laughing retort: “Can't do it.
General Jackson is in the rear, and stands like a <emph rend="bold">Stonewall.</emph> Again
was the order repeated and still above the din of voices and
confusion of the multitude came the same jeering response that
was caught up by the crowd like the echo from a bugler's blast. In
the bright sunshine and friendly river breeze, more briskly than
ever, fluttered and waved the exasperating and much
anathemized handkerchiefs. Finally, Gen. Banks being informed
of the state of affairs, sent down the 26th Massachusetts
Regiment to clear the levee.</p>
            <p>With the hope of quelling the rising tumult, augmented by the
arrival of the regiment, a cannon was brought out and trained
upon the multitude, the soldiers not caring who were terrified or
hurt. In the meantime, imagine the feelings of those Confederate
prisoners on the boat, forced to witness the cruel act of cutting
loose the “Laurel Hill” with its freight of five hundred women and
children, and the cannon turned on the helpless crowd on the
levee!</p>
            <pb id="dim4" n="4"/>
            <p>But Gen. Banks met more than he reckoned upon. His
cannon neither killed nor drove the women away, for, according
to a Union writer, they presented “an impenetrable wall of silks,
flounces and graceless impudence.” The excitement was at fever
heat. The women now wrought to frenzy with heartache and
nerves, would not budge an inch, would not drop a single
handkerchief even though faced by the murderous cannon. The
soldiers first threatened them with the bayonet, and afterwards
actually charged upon them, driving every woman and child two
squares from the levee. But</p>
            <lg type="verse">
              <l>“Defiant, both of blow and threat,</l>
              <l>Their handkerchiefs still waved,”</l>
            </lg>
            <p>and the onset of the soldiers was unflinchingly met with the
parasols and handkerchiefs of the women. Only one casualty was
reported  -  that of a lady wounded in the hand by the thrust of a
bayonet. After the fray the ground was covered with
handkerchiefs and broken parasols. At last, the belligerent
women, tired out but not subdued, went home to sleep in their
beds. So much for the battle on the levee. Our narrator on the
“Laurel Hill” resumes:</p>
            <p>“I do not know how far down the river we were taken, but I
do know we had nothing to eat. In the late afternoon the boat
hands were marched into the cabin to eat their supper and, when
they had finished and marched out again, we were told we could
have the hard-tack and black coffee that was left. Some of us
were too hungry to resist eating, but the majority took no notice of
the invitation. Not one of the ladies showed fear or anxiety. If
they felt either, they would not gratify the Federals that much.
The bright and witty girls made things very amusing with their
<hi><foreign lang="fr">repartee</foreign></hi>, when a good humored officer came among us, but some
there were that were surly, and the guards at the head of the
gangway heard many a caustic aside expressive of contempt for
Yankees and devotion to the Confederates. There was no white
feather among them.</p>
            <p>“Slowly we drifted on, and no one would tell us where the
Captain was taking us. After we were prisoners for a few hours,
the ladies in passing through the cabin would ring
<pb id="dim5" n="5"/>
the bell to let our captors know we were hungry, but none took
the gentle hint and soon the bell disappeared.</p>
            <p>“That night about nine o'clock we were brought back to the
city, and when we were near the landing and saw that it was
indeed home, dear old New Orleans, we felt so happy that we
broke out into singing “The
<hi><foreign lang="fr">Marseillaise</foreign></hi>,”
“The Bonnie Blue Flag,”
and all the Confederate songs we could think of  -  our own dear
poet, ‘Xariffa’ leading the singing. This deeply angered our
Federal captors. To punish us, they said we should not land, and
proceeded to back out into midstream, where they anchored for
the night. The next morning, after sunrise, we were brought to the
levee again  -  a starving crowd and cold from the night air. They
set us free, I suppose because they did not know what else to do
with so many obstinate rebel women.”</p>
            <p>So ends the celebrated “Battle of the Handkerchiefs,”
courageously fought on the levee, February 20th, 1863, by the
Confederate women of New Orleans.</p>
            <lb/>
            <div4 type="subchapter">
              <head>
                <emph rend="bold">Authorities Upon Which Above Article
Was Based.</emph>
              </head>
              <p>Daily True Delta, March 23, 1863.</p>
              <p>Rightor's History of New Orleans.</p>
              <p>Written data furnished by Mrs. David R. Graham  -  a participator.</p>
              <p>Mrs. W. J. Behan's “Confederate Scrap Book.”</p>
              <p>Mrs. Simeon Toby's <corr>“</corr>Confederate Scrap Book.”</p>
              <p>“The Battle of the Fair,” a leaflet
written for the benefit of
the Orphan's Asylum and signed “Miranda.”</p>
            </div4>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim6" n="6"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">WM. B. MUMFORD.</emph>
            </head>
            <p>ON THE 26th of April, 1862, a boat manned by a few 
marines under command of a lieutenant, put off from
the war sloop Pensacola that was anchored in the harbor
of New Orleans. It landed at the foot of Esplanade Avenue, and
its occupants hurriedly marched to the Mint. Acting without
orders from Flag Officer Farragut of the hostile fleet, then abreast
the city, the marines under the direction of their officer, hoisted
the Stars and Stripes over the building that had been in possession
of the Confederate Government for more than a year. As unwise
an act, in the frenzied state of the public mind, as was the
precipitate conduct of our young men later on.</p>
            <p>In the crowd that soon gathered watching the marines at their
nefarious work were four young men  -  Canton, Burgess,
Harper and Wm. B. Mumford. These felt it impossible, at a
word, to change allegiance from the government of their choice to
one they had repudiated; and, certainly, to the citizens of New
Orleans at that time, this over-bold United States flag was as
much foreign as that of the two dominations, French and Spanish,
which once wielded authority in the State. By what right was it
there?  -  New Orleans had not surrendered. Gazing at the hated
symbol of oppression forced upon them as it challenged the
Louisiana sunshine and daringly waved in the river breeze, and
catching sight of blue uniforms, not quite the fashion in this State
since January 26, 186I, there was a sudden blinding rush of blood
to the head that upset the balance of reason. It was too much for
the patriotic quartette. Madly dashing upstairs, the first to seize the
unwelcome flag was young Harper, but Mumford was credited
with dragging the hated ensign through the muck and mire of the
city streets, soiling and tearing it into shreds. All four young men
were involved in what we now construe as a most rash, but
 <emph rend="bold">not</emph>
criminal, act brought about by the excitement of the time. Three of
them escaped, but Mumford was the scapegoat that bore the
heavy penalty for all.</p>
            <p>Three days after, on April 29th, New Orleans capitulated to
Flag Officer Farragut. Through the glittering pageant of
<pb id="dim7" n="7"/>
the military occupation of the city that followed, one resolve  -  
that of the death of Mumford  -  was never lost sight of by the
invaders. But it was his own unguarded, boastful speech relative
to the flag that is said to have been the immediate cause of his
arrest. He was at once confined in a room in the
northeastern corner of the Customhouse, where subsequently
his imprisonment was shared by two of our veterans, Capt.
J. W. Gaines and Mr. Howard Zachary. To us of this day, it
is a matter of surprise that after the commission of an act
which could not fail to draw down upon him the hostility of
the entering army, he should have remained in New Orleans.
Probably, his family was the magnet that held him.</p>
            <p>On April 29th, Gen. Butler now being in possession of the
city, announced: “I find the city under dominion of a mob. They
have insulted our flag  -  torn it down with indignity. This outrage
will be punished in such manner as in my judgment will caution
both the perpetrators and abettors of the act, so that they shall
fear the stripes, if they do not reverence the stars of
our banner.”</p>
            <p>If words convey purposes, Wm. B. Mumford was by them
<emph rend="bold">prejudged.</emph> By the finding of the
Military Commission convened
by Special Order No. 70, June 5, 1862, it was “ordered that he be
executed on Saturday, June 7th, between the hours of 8 a. m. and
12 m., under the direction of the Provost Marshal of the New
Orleans District.”</p>
            <p>Influential persons interceded in his behalf, and it is said that
Mrs. Butler entreated that he might be spared. But the Man of
Infamous Orders was inflexible and his threat of punishment was
carried out.</p>
            <p>There was a certain dramatic effect conceived by Gen.
Butler, in having this military murder of his take place from a
gibbet projecting from the peristyle of the Mint and erected below
its flag-staff. There, under the now triumphant folds of the symbol
of Northern authority he so detested, just forty days after his
futile attempt to destroy it, the life of Wm. B Mumford was taken
from him in the presence of a large body of the Federal soldiery.
Both cavalry and infantry were placed around the inclosure to
overawe the vast crowd of sympathetic witnesses to his
martyrdom. Governor Moore in a speech at
<pb id="dim8" n="8"/>
Opelousas a few days after the occurrence says: “Brought in full
view of the scaffold, they offered him life on the condition that he
would abjure his country and swear allegiance to the foe. He
spurned the offer. Scorning to stain his soul with such foul
dishonor, he met his fate courageously.” In a newspaper clipping
of that time published in the <emph rend="bold">“War of
the Rebellion,”</emph> with much
other data on the subject, we read: “He died as a patriot should die 
-  with great coolness and self-possession. An instant before he
passed into the presence of his Maker he was cool in his
demeanor and on his countenance could be found no trace of the
ordeal he was passing through.” Delving in these same impartial
records for traces of one whose name seems “writ in water,” we
find that his execution was the basis of official correspondence
ordered by President Davis, through Randolph, our Secretary of
War, and conducted by Gen. Lee with the Federal Generals,
Halleck and McLellan  -  all of which resulted so unsatisfactorily
that Robert Ould, Agent of Exchange, was instructed on January
I7, 1863, by way of retaliation, to refuse Federal officers release on
parole. In the proclamation issued by President Davis, in which he
declares Gen. Butler to be a felon and an outlaw, one-half of it is
given to an analysis of the Mumford execution.</p>
            <p>If devotion to his flag, whether as civilian or soldier, be the
test of a citizen's character, then surely Mumford, judged by this
standard, stands high. Through history the one who has passed
such a test has ever been ranked nobly by</p>
            <lg type="verse">
              <l>“That mysterious after-time</l>
              <l>Which circles round the grave.”</l>
            </lg>
            <p>Almost a parallel case with that of Mumford was the
rending from its staff by Col. Ellsworth, of the Confederate flag
that waved over the Marshall House at Alexandria, Virginia, and
the trailing it in the dust of the stairway. Jackson killed Ellsworth
for its destruction and himself, in turn, was shot by one of
Ellsworth's Zouaves. Here a friendly book tells us that in
sympathetic admiration “a monument was proposed to the hero of
Alexandria and a grateful people contributed towards the wants
of his bereaved family.”</p>
            <pb id="dim9" n="9"/>
            <p>With Mumford it was an instinctive love for what represented
the sovereignty of the South, and an ardent dislike for the emblem
of Northern invasion that incited his emotional act. But it was an
act committed in a <emph rend="bold">Confederate State,</emph>
of which the city was a
part, not yet surrendered to the Union of which she had declared
herself “free and independent.” He died on Louisiana
soil as truly a
martyr to his love for the Confederate flag as did Jackson who
was shot down in his own home in Virginia. The one before the
city was occupied, tore down the flag usurping that of his choice;
the other avenged an insult to the Stars and Bars that floated over
his own roof. Greater love cannot be shown for a principle than by
giving one's life for its sake. Both men gave this proof but, of the
two, poor Mumford's was the harder fate. Jackson passed in
storm, but quickly, while Mumford, after weary days of
imprisonment, met a felon's death.</p>
            <p>It is a matter for surprise and regret that the first martyr to
Butler's regime, whose shameful death stirred the entire Southern
heart to anger, should be so entirely forgotten by the present.
What token of remembrance or honor  -  save what is found in the
official records of the war or a few scant lines in the telling of a
military incident  -  has ever been awarded his memory? At least,
we know where he sleeps. Sixty paces from the entrance to the
Firemen's Cemetery on Metairie Ridge, he lies in a lonely,
neglected grave, in the top row of the ghastly
<emph rend="bold">“<hi><foreign lang="fr">bovedas</foreign></hi>,”</emph> or
ovens, in the inclosing left wall. The marble slab that shuts in his
dust bears only the curt inscription:</p>
            <p>
              <emph rend="bold">Mumford's Grave</emph>
            </p>
            <p>  -  his name even shorn of its legitimate initials!</p>
            <p>Sam Davis, of Tennessee, died as a spy on the gallows, but
his dual monument  -  the one in marble, the other in unforgetting
hearts  -  effaces its shame and the <emph rend="bold">Daughters.</emph>
in honoring the
gallant young patriot with their prodigal bounty of bloom,
themselves are honored. Jackson's deed was in the same spirit as
that of our Mumford  -  <emph rend="bold">he</emph> is not forgotten
by his fair
countrywomen of Virginia, but William B. Mumford  -  his name,
with many, is unknown in the city he loved and in
<pb id="dim10" n="10"/>
which he died, and, at least, the bold deed which cost him his life
is held but a vague remembrance.</p>
            <p>Both pitiful and strange, is it not?</p>
            <lb/>
            <div4>
              <head>
                <emph rend="bold">Authorities Consulted.</emph>
              </head>
              <p>Rightor's Standard History of New Orleans.</p>
              <p>Fortier's History of Louisiana.</p>
              <p>Dimitry's Military History of Louisiana.</p>
              <p>The War of the Rebellion, and others.</p>
            </div4>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim11" n="11"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">THE QUEEN OF THE MISSISSIPPI.</emph>
            </head>
            <epigraph>
              <lg type="stanza">
                <l>“On the South's imperial river,</l>
                <l>There's a name that fadeth never,</l>
                <l>'Tis the name of battle's champion,</l>
                <l>'Tis the peerless Arkansas;</l>
              </lg>
              <lg type="stanza">
                <l>For when navies all are rotten,</l>
                <l>When the art of war's forgotten,</l>
                <l>She shall lead the fleet of story,</l>
                <l>Titled queen without a flaw.”</l>
              </lg>
            </epigraph>
            <p>IN THE fall of 1861, the Confederate Government ordered
the construction of two gunboats by Captain John B.
Shirley, at Memphis, Tennessee. Both vessels belonged to
that formidable class of naval armament known as Rams. One of
them, the “Arkansas,” was destined by its exploits to gain a
reputation that will last as long as the name Confederacy itself.</p>
            <p>After the capture of Island No. 10 by General Pope, April 7,
1862, the Tennessee  -  consort of the Arkansas  -  was destroyed
to prevent its falling into the hands of the Federals, who were
then making ready to swoop down upon Memphis. Ordered by
the Government, the Arkansas, despite the unfinished 
condition of its hull, under the command of Captain
Charles H. McBlair, was towed down the great river, up the
Yazoo, until it reached the only Navy Yard in Mississippi. This
primitive Yard  -  upon whose site now screams a prosaic
saw-mill  -  was situated upon the east bank of the Yazoo, about the
southern boundary of the small city of the same name. Soon it
resounded with the clang of forge and metal, for brawny
workmen wielding heavy hammers made their mighty strokes ring
out in unison with the pulse of their own resolute, hopeful hearts.
Lieutenant Isaac N. Brown, already with a distinguished record in
the Confederate States Navy to his credit, was appointed
supervisory workmaster for the completing and arming of the
boat. The patriotic planters of Yazoo furnished laborers; forges
were sent in; the hoisting engine of the steamboat “Capitol” was
employed to drive drills. The logs that lined the inside were some
forty or fifty feet long, hewed
<pb id="dim12" n="12"/>
square to a dimension of one and a half to two feet thick. Her
engines were taken from the Mississippi steamboat “Natchez.”
The armor that plated her sides in rows of double thickness was
of ordinary railroad iron collected from all over the State. At the
bow, these iron plates were fashioned into a sharp point that
meant murderous work when driven with force into the ribs of an
enemy's vessel. One hundred feet in length, with a battery of ten
big guns manned principally by detailed navy men, but with a
sprinkling of landsmen in her crew of 200, and commanded by
experienced officers from the old United States navy, she was,
indeed, for those days, a formidable war ship. There were no
curving lines of beauty about the Arkansas. Although the child of
Confederate love and hope, it was an ugly, rough, sinister-looking
craft that tumbled like an ungainly leviathan into the yellow waters
of the Yazoo. The Arkansas was born of the need of the hour and
was built not for grace, but for power and destruction.</p>
            <p>From the fact that this famous gunboat was constructed of
timber growing in the Valley forests when first the work began;
completed at its navy yard through the patriotic zeal of the
farmers and carpenters of the county and of laborers furnished by
the planters, within five weeks after being brought up the Yazoo;
with several pilots and part of her crew taken from the vicinity, it
is only fair to call the historic ram a “Yazoo production.”</p>
            <p>It was due to Captain Brown's skill and intelligence that he
was put in command of the Arkansas for its brief but glorious
career of twenty days.</p>
            <p>In the summer of 1862, after a day spent in organization and
drill, Captain Brown started the Ram on her race of fifty miles for
beleagured Vicksburg. That morning, the 15th of July, the sun
rose in smiles and blessed her perilous cruise. Six miles from the
mouth of the Yazoo river, Ellet's small fleet consisting of the iron-
clad “<hi><foreign lang="fr">Carondelet</foreign></hi>,”
“Tyler” and “Queen of the West” kept steady
watch. Instantly, so soon as met, like a shark running afoul a shoal
of minnows, the “Arkansas” darted forward, steering
directly for
the “Tyler.” A running fight ensued. After chasing both the
“Tyler” and “Queen of the West” into the
Mississippi, she paid
special
<pb id="dim13" n="13"/>
attention to the “<hi><foreign lang="fr">Carondelet</foreign></hi>.” A shot went so true to the vitals of
the Federal boat with a stolen Southern name that she soon
hauled down her colors; a few more brought out white flags at
her ports and shortly after the “<hi><foreign lang="fr">Carondelet</foreign></hi>” sank. But victory was
not without loss to the “Arkansas.” Captain Brown was knocked
senseless for a time by a ball passing through the pilot house.
Two pilots were killed. One was Shacklett, a Yazoo river pilot
who, as they were carrying him below, had the courage and
devotion to exclaim with his dying breath: “Keep her in the middle
of the river.”</p>
            <p>Buoyed and borne on by the strong, friendy current of the
Mississippi, the heroic “Arkansas”  -  although with smokestack
riddled by shot and shell and pumping a heavy stream of water  - 
stubbornly kept on her way. The great Federal fleet composed of
Farragut's sea-fleet and Flag-officer Davis' river-fleet, like a
forest of masts and smoke-stacks, barred her path. The
“Arkansas” stopped not to ask the reason “why,” but at once
opened on the “Hartford”  -  afterwards the Admiral's fateful
flagship at New Orleans, and soon all her guns were in action.
Now began the real race, a race that was full of danger, a race
through shot and shell, a race through bomb and mortar, a race
through an entire fleet. The brave vessel was in one of the most
desperate fights any one ship ever sustained since ships were
made. In addition to the fire of the fleet, she encountered strange
rains, and hails and showers from the Federal fortifications that
lined either side of the river. There was no rest for the
“Arkansas.” A target for a hundred guns, the heavy shot of the
enemy pounded her armored sides like sledge-hammers. The day
was still and heavy smoke-clouds hung so close that it was only
through the momentary blaze of a discharged gun that aim could
be taken. But never did the musical guns of Groningen more
harmoniously sing their fierce ut, re, mi, fa, sol, la than did the
guns of the crippled “Arkansas” make ready and joyous response
to the enemy through the flashes of flame. Nothing could stop
her! Onward through the fire of transports and vessels of war
belching death, she boldly, unflinchingly fought her way.</p>
            <pb id="dim14" n="14"/>
            <p>Now, through the smoke and above the din of shot and shriek
of shell, was heard a voice crying out that the colors of the
“Arkansas” had been shot away. In an instant, a young hero,
Midshipman Dabney M. Scales  -  with a courage equal to that of
the wild, intrepid Beggars of the Sea  -  scrambled up the ladder
and fearlessly treading the terrible path of death, swept by a
hurricane of shot and shell, again raised the Stars and Bars aloft.
Onwards, the irresistible “Queen of the Waters” swept her way
victoriously  -  rushing through the deadly hail of iron hurled by
two fleets of about forty vessels of war and emerging shattered,
bleeding, weakened by heavy losses of her crew, but triumphant  - 
to anchor safe under the protecting guns of Vicksburg.</p>
            <p>On the hills above, Generals Van Dorn and Breckinridge with
thousands of soldiers eagerly watched the brave race. All hearts
were anxious and sympathetic, but the hands that longed to help
were powerless to aid. The heroic vessel plunged through the
waters firing in every direction, never refusing a challenge as
each war ship in turn tried to sink or disable her. It was as though
the bold heart of the Confederacy beat under her iron ribs! On
she pressed, unswerving in the path to her goal, until, finally, as
she entered her fair haven opposite the City Hall, with Southern
colors still aloft, still streaming in the breeze, still gloriously defiant
of the mighty men-of-war filling the river, a burst of enthusiastic
cheering greeted her. It was an ovation to a conquering hero!</p>
            <p>At night, Farragut's sea-going fleet and Davis' iron-clads
passed down the river. They came by singly and, at their coming,
the “Arkansas”  -  sorely crippled, yet ever ready for a fight  - 
dashed out and gave each a broadside as it dropped past. Admiral
Farragut, deeply mortified at the success of the daring rebel ram
in running the fiery gauntlet of his two fleets, sent a last spiteful
death-dealing shot as his flagship went by and killed and wounded
many of her crew. A few days later, her old enemy “Queen of
the West,” also the powerful iron-clad “Essex” under Captain D.
D. Porter tried to ram or capture her. But again the “Queen of the
Waters” was triumphant. Both ships were not only beaten off,
but disabled. Captain Porter, “The Boastful,” found the rebel
<pb id="dim15" n="15"/>
gunboat more than a match for his big “Essex,” and his next
despatch to Washington must have been less rosy than usual. But
now the Arkansas, though lame and halt from her fierce fight and
with a crew reduced to seventeen, was called to another field.
She was born to fight, never to rest! Here came a telegram from
General Breckenridge in Louisiana to General Van Dorn invoking
the aid of her guns, and forthwith the Arkansas was sent  -  her
blacksmiths making music with their hammers on repairs as she
laboriously steamed down the river.</p>
            <p>On the morning of the 5th of August, the attack on Baton
Rouge opened. All day long General Breckinridge listened eagerly
for the roar of the guns of the Arkansas, but he was destined
never to hear those guns again. The last hour of the veteran ram
had been tolled by the battle-clock. Born in Mississippi, she was
destined to end her glorious career in Louisiana. Five miles off,
already within hearing of the artillery of the Confederates, the
engineer announced that her machinery was so broken it could
not be repaired. Alas! the old engines of the “Natchez” were no
longer equal to the work required. The heart of the “Arkansas”
could no longer beat. Sternly resolved that the foot of an enemy
should never tread her deck, with the deepest grief, her officers
fired and left her. She was free to go where it pleased her  -  her
guns all shotted  -  her colors waving in the breeze. One by one,
those guns as the flames reached them, roared out; and so the
last race of the “Arkansas” was run, not
only without dishonor,
but with a glory that will long be remembered on the shores of
the great river.</p>
            <lg type="stanza">
              <l>“And her Banner sparkled prouder</l>
              <l>Till the fire had reached her powder;</l>
              <l>In her loudest peal of thunder</l>
              <l>Went the Queen of Battle down;</l>
            </lg>
            <lg type="stanza">
              <l>And in all her olden manner,</l>
              <l>Flared her never-conquered banner,</l>
              <l>Sinking 'neath the Southern waters</l>
              <l>That remember her renown.”</l>
            </lg>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim16" n="16"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">“MEMMINGER'S CANARIES.”</emph>
            </head>
            <p>To the Secretary of the Confederate Treasury, Mr. C. G.
Memminger, is accorded the honor of being the first official to
avail himself of the talents of his countrywomen in the service of
the State. In view of the fact that clerks of the Note-Signing
Bureau were needed in the formation of a Government Battalion
for the defence of Richmond, he decided upon the employment of
ladies in that special bureau. There were nearly 300 clerks of
whom more than half were ladies. ln 1863, this division was
removed from Richmond to Columbia<sic corr=",">.</sic>
South Carolina.</p>
            <p>A simple outfit  -  consisting of penholder and pen, a
spring-clamp and a blotter-pad  -  was handed to the new employee
and, by grace of her oath of allegiance to the young Confederacy, she
was henceforth known in the small world of the Treasury building
as a “Note-signer,” or a “Bond-numberer.”
With a bundle of
Treasury notes, eight to a sheet, flung over her arm, she then
sought the desk allotted her among those who were, from 9 a. m.
to 3 p. m., for long months to be her daily associates. It was a
unique world of toil, for the toilers were those who, once tenderly
reared in refinement and luxury<sic corr=",">.</sic> were now
forced to earn their
daily bread at a salary of $1,000 per annum, with such increase as
might, from time to time<sic corr=",">.</sic> be allowed by Congress. No one was
allowed to be a mere cipher filling up space, for the Secretary
was something of a martinet and, during office hours, exacted
strict attention to work.</p>
            <p>No great amount of brain power was expended in signing
one's name several thousand times in the course of a day; but, at
first, the common quality of paper caused many pouts and some
tears  -  a sharp pen point often jagging or blotting the note.
Eventually, our Richmond mills removed the difficulty by their
success in turning out a fair quality of linen paper so smooth of
surface as to admit of rapid writing with freedom from blots and,
consequently, less exasperation of nerves. Although forced to
substitute lithographs for steel engravings on our notes, we
thought they presented quite a handsome appearance, for it was
Southern currency and our faith was unbounded
<pb id="dim17" n="17"/>
that, “Six months after the ratification of a treaty of
peace,” it would be as “good as gold.”</p>
            <p>It was the special ambition of each lady to record her name
upon that fair and costly note known as the $500. It was the
highest denomination issued by this Government and had a noble
beauty unlike all others. On the left side was our flag with its
starry cross crowned with laurel; on the right, great “Stonewall
Jackson,” as the guardian of its honor, faced it with uncovered
head. Although the writing of the signature was merely a
mechanical process, the fact of being entrusted with the signing of
a note so high in value always gave the recipient of this coveted
honor much prestige in the note-signing community. As the notes
were caught fast in one corner by means of a clamp, signing a
name eight times on a sheet and throwing it over to take up
another was swift work that did not always admit of thorough
drying. There was an unwritten law to the effect  -  so it was
whispered  -  that the penalty for carelessness in blotting notes
was redemption of their value out of the offender's salary. Shortly
after a certain lady's promotion to the $500 note, to her
unspeakable horror, a clerk placed upon her desk several sheets
condemned for blotted signatures, all requiring duplication. For
some days<sic corr=",">.</sic> the lady avoided the manager's eye as he made his
tour of the room, but pay-day passed and she breathed more
freely upon finding that her salary was intact and the Government
yet had need for her pen.</p>
            <p>What types of youthful Southern womanhood and dignified
matronly grace, of social position and heroic endeavor, were
brought together within the dingy limits of that old note-signer's
room on Main Street  -  reached only by a narrow stairway! The
girls climbed the rickety stairs, light-hearted<sic corr=",">.</sic> because filled with
the joy of youth  -  strengthened for the day's work, perchance, by
a savory breakfast of toasted cornmeal, coffee and baked sweet
potatoes. We had not yet reached the starvation days of
Richmond, when the hungry rats came out of their holes and were
fed from the hand, gentle and playful as kittens, and there was
murderous talk of turning them into broilers for food. “Why,” it
was asked, “should Richmond be more dainty than Vicksburg?” The
<pb id="dim18" n="18"/>
girls of that period were irrepressible and, on the calendar, every
day was a red letter day. They cried: “Glorious Lee and glorious
Jackson keep watch and ward, therefore, all <emph rend="bold">must</emph> and <emph rend="bold">will</emph> end
<emph rend="bold">well.”</emph> So they sang their rebel songs with unabated ardor, put
white and red roses in their hair for defiance<sic corr=",">.</sic> and kept the hearts
of their soldier friends aglow with their own enthusiastic
patriotism.</p>
            <p>But it was the Confederate matron who sorrowed ever, for
she bore upon her heart the dual burden of anxiety at home and
fear for the beloved ones in battle. On the faces of many of these
<emph rend="bold">most noble women</emph> were reflected the “divine lights and shadows”
that tell of the soul's growth within its garment of flesh. So much
of their time in the gray hours of morning was spent on bended
knee, or in reading and pondering upon the bright promises of
God! <emph rend="bold">There</emph> was the source of that marvelous power which made
their courage as invincible at home as that of the veteran on the
field.</p>
            <p>After the lapse of years, it is difficult to recall many, but a
few names will give some idea of the personnel of the Bureau.
Again they rise and flit, like eager ghosts, through the shadows of
the past. There is Miss Darby, allied to the Prestons and
Hamptons of South Carolina, passing many a jest in quiet
undertones; vivacious Victoire Blanchard of Louisiana, in dainty
<hi><foreign lang="fr">organdie</foreign></hi> and silken wrap, with the voice of a lark in her fair young
throat, keeps up a monologue in a charming medley of French and
English; Miss Stuart, a pale, serious slip of a girl of the Virginia
house of that name, bends over her desk intent only upon
preserving the fair integrity of her name upon the $500 note; the
ladies Garnett, Bartow and Norton, Huger and DeSaussure, of
Cavalier and Huguenot ancestry, are placidly killing time by
diligent work. Seated near is Mme. Proctor, the majestic sister of
General Beauregard. What a picture she makes with her
abundant snowy hair dressed <emph rend="bold"><hi><foreign lang="fr">a la marquise</foreign></hi>,</emph> clad in silk, in
winter wrapped in velvet, and wearing the costliest lace. She is
numbering bonds, but, with pen poised for a moment in air, in her
erect regal dignity, looks not unlike Marie Antoinette when about
to affix her signature to some royal document of grace. In those
vanished days, as a queen, she daily gave audience at
<pb id="dim19" n="19"/>
her desk. The younger ladies, with one accord when through with
their personal allotment of notes, were ever ready to assist this
superb old lady with her bonds.</p>
            <p>Many of the note-signers of that year, 1863, dressed in most
unusual fashion  -  a creation of hard times. Handsome clothes,
that seemed sadly out of place, were not infrequently in that old
room. But, while homespun was most durable, it could rarely be
got; and though a simple calico dress was cheap at $30, it was
cheaper still to wear the costly garments already paid for.</p>
            <p>One day, in the yard, a pot of machine oil coming in contact
with some burning waste, caught on fire. It seemed as if a
conflagration was imminent. The smoke ascended and billowed
through the room, causing a sad flutter and fright among
“Memminger's Canary birds,” as the ladies were facetiously
called. They swayed from side to side peering through the dense
clouds of smoke at the open windows, seeking an avenue of
escape. Finally, moved by a common impulse, they rushed pell-mell
down the stairs into the open street, some with hair flying in
the wind, without bonnets, hats or cloaks  -  all forgotten in their
mad panic. The worst that came of it was a waggish paragraph in
the next day's paper.</p>
            <p>There was one order of the Bureau officials, so considerate
as to deserve mention. Whenever the day ended in rain<sic corr=",">.</sic> an
omnibus was directed to stop at the door and convey to their
respective homes, free of charge, such ladies as lived at a
distance. This humane bit of courtesy, coupled with the rather
humorous resolution passed by Congress declaring that in calling
for the ages of clerks in various departments, it was not
understood to include that of the ladies, certainly, in the eyes of
the ladies themselves, distinguished our Southern Government as
one rarely chivalrous.</p>
            <p>The spring-time of 1864 with its lustrous mocking sunshine
passed, and never were the <hi><foreign lang="fr">Solfaterre</foreign></hi> roses sweeter, nor the
oleanders whiter in the gardens of Columbia, nor the Congaree
Falls more musical as we listened to their play in the midnight
silence, and dreamed of Lee and victory. Then the long, slow
summer came and went, and the dreary autumn
<pb id="dim20" n="20"/>
followed. With its going, we began to live on anticipated horrors.
The new year of 1865 dawned sadly enough. There was much talk
of Sherman's advance, and an effort was made to draw troops
from Lee for the defence of Columbia; but in vain, every soldier
was needed for Richmond. After Sherman's burning of Columbia 
-  involving the destruction of the money-printing machine and of
a large amount of Treasury notes  -  there was some expectation
at the close of February, of removing the employes to Lynchburg,
Virginia, and of starting anew the manufacture of the notes. But
chaos had come again and this scheme was never carried
through. The collapse of all things dear to the Confederate heart
was close at hand. Appomattox followed swiftly upon the
evacuation of the Capital, and then  -  “the Confederacy took its
place in the graveyard of nations.”</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim21" n="21"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">JUDAH P. BENJAMIN.</emph>
            </head>
            <p>ON August 6, 1811, in an isle of the Danish West Indies called St.
Thomas, Judah P. Benjamin was born of well educated
Hebrew-English parentage. This beautiful isle, as in sunshine and
greenery it rests in the arms of old ocean, might well be called a Darling
of the Deep. Cyclone and hurricane sometimes come to play rough
games among its lofty hills; but usually no sky is softer than the
blue dome above; no sunlight more bounteous in its floods of gold;
no breezes more odorous than those which come from the salt
sea perfumed by the richness of tropic bloom. And the cradlesong
of the young Israelite born in the midst of this natural
loveliness was the rustle of mighty groves of palms, mingled with
the unceasing surge of the wild Caribbean Sea.</p>
            <p>With such an environment of storm and grace, was it strange
that our nursling of the tropics should, through all the years of life,
have felt their quickening influence in heart and brain?</p>
            <p>It is a coincidence that out of the West Indies should have
come, from the twin-sister islets of St. Croix and St. Thomas, two
of her greatest sons to unite their names and fortunes with the
mighty Republic of the West. Alexander Hamilton came in an
epoch of seething storm and revolution to be the trusted friend of
Washington and to sit in her councils of State. Later, came Judah
P. Benjamin to make himself ready for the services of a younger
nation that the prophetic soul of Hamilton already saw dimly
shaped in the future.</p>
            <p>In 1818, the green hills of St. Thomas sloped below the
horizon and the Southern Cross faded from view as  -  his
fortunes at a low ebb  -  Benjamin <emph rend="bold"><hi><foreign lang="fr">pere</foreign></hi></emph>, with wife and children,
left forever behind the sunny little island to seek a home of larger
possibilities in the United States. Landing in Charleston, South
Carolina, he resolved to secure for his young tribe that liberal,
lasting wealth of which adversity could not rob them. The children
of Benjamin were at once sent to a popular academy. Here Judah
proved so diligent and aspiring a student that at the age of
fourteen he entered Yale. The
<pb id="dim22" n="22"/>
soul of the ambitious boy must have grown dark when, for lack of
funds at the end of his second year he was compelled to
discontinue his collegiate course without gaining his coveted
degree. Early realizing that he was no petted favorite of fortune,
but that the glittering baubles of success and reputation were to
be forced by his own unaided strength from her closed, unwilling
hand, with the resolute patience of his race he at once faced the
struggle.</p>
            <p>In 1828, destiny drew the friendless boy to New Orleans. Here
we find him in the office of a notary delving as clerk, but,
meanwhile, scant as was his leisure, studying law and, the better
to understand the complicated jurisprudence of Louisiana,
mastering the French and Spanish languages.</p>
            <p>At twenty-one, on December 16, 1832, he was admitted to the
bar, and so encouraging was his future that, in the spring of the
following year, with the confidence of youth in himself and in his
own bright star, he led to the altar Miss Natalie St. Martin  -  a
beautiful Creole girl of New Orleans. Upon her and the daughter
Ninette, who came to bless their union, he lavished without stint
all the wealth of his affections and purse. As he was now a man
of family, he also became one of affairs. He spent much time on
his plantation of <hi><foreign lang="fr">Bellechasse</foreign></hi>, deeply interested in the chemistry of
sugar, and gave his leisure to writing articles both practical and
entertaining for magazines. Such work was delightful recreation
for one who loved the humanities and was accomplished without
neglect of Chitty and Blackstone. But while engaged in work so
congenial the failure of a friend, for whom he had endorsed notes
for a large amount, so crippled his fortune that he resolutely
closed his ears to the enticements of literature, and turned with
renewed ardor to the practice of his profession. Henceforth,
though interested like a good citizen in all that made for the public
welfare, the world knew him best as the silvery-tongued, eloquent
orator, and famous, astute lawyer.</p>
            <p>Elected in 1842, to the legislature of Louisiana, ten years
later he was sent to the Senate of the United States. In that great
body of statesmen he was peer of the highest. A disciplee of
Calhoun, he held to state sovereignty in his brilliant speeches upon
noted questions involving the two great issues
<pb id="dim23" n="23"/>
of the day  -  Centralization of Government and State Rights.
Upon the secession of his adopted State, with warm enthusiasm
of feeling and in far-reaching musical tones, he expressed his
conviction that the “State of Louisiana had judged and acted
wisely in this crisis of her destiny.” His farewell address to his
colleagues of the Senate, in its high-hearted, impassioned
patriotism was declared by Sir Geo. C. Lewis  -  a cool-headed,
discriminating Englishman present at its delivery  -  to “be better
than what D'Israeli could have done.”</p>
            <p>At Montgomery, in the formation of a provisional
Government for the young Confederacy, he was placed in the
Cabinet as Attorney General  -  an office for which his great legal
abilities supremely fitted him. In Richmond, upon re-organization
of Government on a constitutional basis, he was made Secretary
of War. With its stern, dry complexity of duties he was not
familiar, as several disastrous events soon proved. Not relishing
the caustic criticisms of the public upon his administration of the
War Department, he resigned his portfolio; but in February, 1862,
President Davis who delighted in honoring him, invited him to take
a seat in the Cabinet as Secretary of State  -  which he retained
to the end of the Confederate Government. To him, both by
training and temperament, diplomacy was congenial. True, he
failed in his unwearied efforts to secure recognition for our young
nation by the great European Powers; but we may safely assume
it was because the Star of Empire shone not upon the cradle of
the Southern Confederacy. When the swords of great Lee,
Stonewall Jackson and Stuart could not achieve our
independence, surely Benjamin may be pardoned that he did not
gain our admission into the family of nations.</p>
            <p>When Richmond fell, Benjamin, true to his personal friend
the President, with the other Cabinet officers, accompanied him
to Danville. All the long, dreary way he was the life of the party.
When the President went southwards he was still at his side; but,
on arriving at Washington, Ga., finding that further resistance was
reduced to “save himself who can,” he assumed a disguise and
made his way to the Florida coast. Again, after many hardships, a</p>
            <pb id="dim24" n="24"/>
            <lg type="verse">
              <l>“Forlorn and shipwrecked mariner.”</l>
            </lg>
            <p>life threw him upon St. Thomas  -  the isle of his birth. Thence, once
more he set out to fight the battle of life in a foreign land  -  this time, he
was middle-aged, a man of fifty-five. Landing in Liverpool, he
hastened to London and took up the study of English law. In June,
1866, a year after planting foot on the soil of Great Britain, he was
admitted to the English courts as barrister at law. Six years
passed, and in 1872, he became Queen's Counselor and presently
was so famous as to appear solely before the House of Lords and
Privy Council.</p>
            <p>A portrait of him in his Counselor's wig  -  his dark,
intellectual Semitic face framed in stiff rows of white woolen
curls  -  clearly shows in its triumphant smile the indomitable heart
and persevering genius of his great race. In his Hebrew lexicon
there was no such word as fail. Overthrown on one plane, he
never lost heart, but was ready cheerily to challenge Fate to
another wrestle  -  ever another, and again so long as life lasted!</p>
            <p>In the early spring of 1883, failing health admonished him to
lead a less strenuous life, and he resolved to give up his
magnificent practice which now ensured him a fortune of 18,000
pounds in English money  -  the third he had made. Before his
final retirement to Paris, leading members of the English bar
bestowed upon him a most unusual honor. Desiring to take a
collective farewell and to testify their high sense of the honor and
integrity of his professional career, and of their desire for a
continuance of their relations of personal friendship they tendered
him a grand complimentary banquet June, 1883, in the Hall of the
Inner Temple. Sir Henry James on this occasion, in allusion to his
forensic ability, voiced the recognition of all present when he
asked: “Who is the man, save this one, of whom it can be said that
he held conspicuous leadership at the bar of two countries?”</p>
            <p>He did not live long to enjoy his honors, for the seeds of
death were already planted in his frame. With the well-merited
plaudits of all England ringing in his ears, he crossed the Channel
for the last time. A Hebrew, he never obtruded, nor endeavored
to conceal the birth of which he was proud. He might well say
that “the world was his home.” A man of
<pb id="dim25" n="25"/>
two nationalities  -  British and Confederate  -  he passed the
short remainder of his days chiefly in Paris, in the beautiful home
he had built for his wife and daughter in the <hi><foreign lang="fr">Avenue d'Jena</foreign></hi>.
Here, he died May 6, 1884. He now sleeps in the famed
Cemetery of <hi><foreign lang="fr">Pere la Chaise</foreign></hi>.</p>
            <p>* * * *</p>
            <p>And now by way of epilogue, let us take up a most interesting question.</p>
            <p>Is it not singular to find that this great man  -  who in a
momentous epoch of the national history cast his fortune with the
South, when doubtless he could have secured preferment at the
North  -  should be so misjudged and accused by men of the
present day? If, as has been alleged, he carried with him the great
seal, he but took his own property; for unless surrendered to the
victor, such it became with the collapse of the government. He
thus saved it from desecration; and if he retained it during life
there was <emph rend="bold">then</emph> no organization which could receive this, no doubt
the most sacred of his treasures; and even if there had been, he
was under no obligation to part with it until he chose. If, as has
been asserted, he donated it to British keeping, he but put it into
the care of the world's most powerful and most reverent
custodian. And after all, is it not fitting that the longest-lived of the
English nations should guard this relic of the shortest-lived?  -  that
the symbol of our glorious quadrennium should abide among the
symbols of a millenium, and that the mighty mother of nations
should possess this memorial of the noblest of her daughters?</p>
            <p>If Benjamin left the South in the day of her overthrow, he did
no more than a score of her generals did, and no more than Davis
was trying to do. Glance at the prospect before him as he
surveyed the future with the President at Washington. The
Confederacy was dead. The Chief Executive and his official
family were fugitives. If captured, they could look for nothing less
than imprisonment  -  a merciless vengeance, possibly the
hangman's cord from the hands of a party at the North, drunken
and crazed with power and flushed with conquest over their
sister-section. In addition to this sinister prospect, he knew that all the
resources and power of the Confederacy had perished in its death
struggle. What was
<pb id="dim26" n="26"/>
there for him in Louisiana, what could he do to aid or comfort her
in her vast humiliation? Nothing! With the vision of a seer, he
must have seen the destiny that was to be hers  -  the judiciary of
which she was once so proud subjected to the rule of the sword,
even judges holding their place by sufferance. The dearest part of
a man's country is ever said to be his own family and fireside.
Benjamin's household gods yet remained and his allegiance as
husband and father was due to them.</p>
            <p>Look at the long list shining with the names of other eminent
Confederates who, after the surrender, in that first dark hour of
collapse and a noble despair sought other lands in which to hide
the agony of their hearts, in which to live<sic corr=",">.</sic> or, at least, to breathe
until health and strength came back to their sick souls.</p>
            <p>Let us single out a few.</p>
            <p>See Robert Toombs  -  than whom never breathed a more
rampant, defiant, devoted Southerner  -  yet he, chafing at defeat
like an entrapped lion, remained abroad until 1867.</p>
            <p>John Taylor Wood  -  the brother-in-law of the President and
his <hi><foreign lang="fr">aide-de-camp</foreign></hi>  -  when all was over, escaped to Cuba and
subsequently lived in Halifax, Nova Scotia.</p>
            <p>General Early, after riding like a paladin long and hard to
attach himself to a Confederate force and continue the war<sic corr=",">.</sic> gave
up the fruitless chase and became an exile for a time in Mexico
and Canada.</p>
            <p>General John B. Magruder  - called “Prince John” on account
of his lordly air  -  sought relief for his exasperation by enlisting in
the army of Maximilian and remained with him until his downfall.</p>
            <p>Our own loved Henry Watkins Allen, Governor of Louisiana
and gallant officer in the Southern army  -  unable to stand
the changed conditions brought on by the war  - took himself with
his broken heart to die in Mexico.</p>
            <p>But why add to the list? Against not one of these heroic
souls of the Confederacy has envy or detraction ever raised
slanderous voice impugning their patriotism. Why then against
Judah P. Benjamin? Would it not be ungenerous to ascribe this
petty resentment of which he is the victim to the fact that he
was a Jew and, therefore, heir to all the obloquy
<pb id="dim27" n="27"/>
that Christian tongues have too often meted out to his race. But,
rather does it not remind one of the antique Cato's criticism upon
the breach between Caesar and Pompey? “The great misery has
not come from their being enemies, but from their having been
friends.” The South, resentful that another should claim the
service and prestige of one whom she considered her own son,
questions his purity of motive. A weakness of humanity! When a
bond of union has once existed, we are apt to take ill even the
appearance of a transfer of affection.</p>
            <p>Instead of looking coldly upon one who was ever true to his
brethren of the Confederacy, rather should we hold in highest
esteem this official of our short-lived Government who in a
strange land won honor and dignities so notable. Those honors, by
reflection, are ours. Though the Atlantic rolled between the
country of his early and that of his later life, yet will the name and
fame of Judah P. Benjamin  -  three times chosen to a seat in
her Cabinet  -  ever be proudly and indissolubly associated with
that of the Southern Confederacy.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim28" n="28"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">THE LOUISIANA.</emph>
            </head>
            <p>IN April, 1862, when the bruit of a naval attack upon New Orleans
by way of the Gulf, first began to fill the air, it created little more
apprehension than an incredulous shrug of the shoulders, or a
laugh that one could be so silly as to believe the canard. Did not
Secretary Mallory believe that the invasion would come from
<emph rend="bold">above</emph> the city, not <emph rend="bold">below</emph> the forts? Surely, he must know better
than these idle rumor-makers! Serenely, therefore, in the
afternoon after closing his store, the merchant would stroll to the
foot of Canal street to enjoy the fresh breeze, and while watching
the swollen river  -  its muddy waters creeping stealthily but
steadily, night and day, to the top of the levee  -  would speculate
with his friends upon the probable height of the June rise, when
the Missouri would empty upon its current vast floods of thawed
snow and ice. Crevasses that endangered the orange orchards
and fields of growing sweet cane troubled his thrifty mind far
more than D. G. Farragut, “Flag-officer western blockading
squadron.”</p>
            <p>Though the times were full of war, the Crescent harbor
presented a scene of prosperity well-pleasing to the eye of planter
and factor. A number of foreign steamers stood in the harbor
laden with heavy cargoes of cotton for their return trip across the
Atlantic. Around others at the wharves was the cheery hum of
contented labor. The red-shirted stevedores, with their iron hooks
were toiling and tugging, to the measured rhythm of an old minstrel
melody, at the hundreds of bales that crowded the levee to get
them aboard before night-fall. Up and down the sheds and over
the wharves  -  as though a flock of sheep had passed through
and paid toll with their wool  -  were great bunches and shreds of
the fleecy staple, and everywhere the white lint floated in the
pleasant April air.</p>
            <p>Out in the harbor, too, was a staunch little fleet of thirteen
vessels, bearing among others such martial names as the Warrior,
Defiance, Resolute and the Stonewall Jackson. Some of these
were “converted vessels”  -  that is, river steamers made
<pb id="dim29" n="29"/>
shot-proof with cotton bulkheads and provided with iron prows
to act as rams, and among these were a few tug-boats for
pushing fire-rafts on the enemy, should an engagement ever take
place. Yet on her “ways” at the ship-yard in the Jefferson suburb was the
naval monster, Mississippi  -  since said by two navies to have
been the most formidable war vessel ever built. Although
unfinished, she was fast nearing completion and it was expected
that she would rival, or out-do, the dashing exploits of the Virginia
in Hampton Roads. The Manassas, glorious name but ill of
prophecy, was lying above Fort Jackson eager to try conclusions
with Farragut's fleet, should the Admiral be so daring as to extend
a challenge. But above all, the heart of the proud city placed its
trust in the LOUISIANA. Surely, that was a name to be relied
upon as a sponsor for the protection of New Orleans! This
formidable ironclad was not much of a trim, nautical craft to
please the eye, but it was thought to be a fearful menace to the
insolent ship that might brave its guns.</p>
            <p>Far down the river  -  thirty miles from its mouth on the
western bank  -  was Fort Jackson, guardian of the Passes and
the first outpost of defence. Named in honor of the Hero of New
Orleans, it bristled with guns and was garrisoned by a goodly
complement of soldiers. A few hundred yards above on the
eastern bank, the older fort, St. Philip, well gunned and manned,
stood sentinel, and more securely to obstruct the river against
possible invasion of New Orleans, was a barrier of schooners
lashed amidships and anchored across the stream between the
forts.</p>
            <p>So, upon this fatal 24th of April, 1862, New Orleans, cradled
in war, was not to be scared. Trusting in the strength and loyalty
of her forts and in the might of her steam rams  -  two bearing as
talismans against shot and shell the names of Gulf States, and one
with the name of a Northern rout  -  she believed herself
invincible. Off in the Gulf, an invasion that threatened might seem
alarming, but in the city no one was alarmed. The laugh, the song
and the dance went merrily on with the gilded youth on General
Lovell's staff and the dark-eyed girls of Creoledom. In the
gardens, the red roses and scarlet lilies bloomed in the spring
sunlight with ominous 
<pb id="dim30" n="30"/>
significance of color, but the Queen City of the South  -  trusting in
her defences on river and land  -  serenely pursued the even
tenor of her way.</p>
            <p>The Louisiana was simply a huge vessel built upon a dry
dock. In appearance, to one not versed in naval architecture  -  as
its unwieldy bulk lay heavily upon the water  -  it was not unlike
the sloping roof of a house with ridge cut off by a broad open
inclosure that, in turn, was surrounded by a parapet. Through this
inclosure, like a curious swarthy giant looking out upon the world,
loomed its smoke-stack. It was propelled by four engines and was
to have been mounted by sixteen guns and carry a crew of two
hundred men.</p>
            <p>General Duncan, commander of the two forts, harassed by
the fire of Commodore Porter's mortar-boats, called upon
Commodore Mitchell of the naval forces at New Orleans for the
services of the Louisiana. Yet incomplete, unwillingly, she was
ordered down. With machinists and mechanics at work on her
propellers, on the 20th of April, under command of Captain
Charles F. McIntosh, she was towed down the river  -  as brave
men believed  -  to be the guardian angel of the river defence.
Half a mile above St. Philip she was moored to the left bank. On
the 22nd, as the bombardment increased in severity, General
Duncan requested Commodore Mitchell to move the Louisiana
farther down the river so that she might drive the mortar-schooners
off. The Commodore declined, for the reason that the
Louisiana's machinery was not yet in working order; that the
engineers hoped to have it in a day or two; that its top was
unprotected, and if a shell dropped on it, it would pass through the
bottom and inevitably sink the ship, etc., etc. It was the same old
story so often told of our gun-boats  -  a state of unpreparedness
when occasion demanded their services. General Duncan,
naturally believing that the Louisiana was built for use and should
take some risks, felt aggrieved at the Commodore's decision  -  
although in its propriety he was supported by all his officers  -  and
unfortunately, from this time, all cordiality between the forts and
fleet ceased to exist.</p>
            <p>At 3:30 a. m., on April 24th, suddenly, in the midst of the wild
uproar on river and land, in the darkness of the night,
<pb id="dim31" n="31"/>
fell the silence of the desert. The mortars were mute; the forts
stopped their fire, and the only sound that broke the stillness was
the rush of the Mississippi, as the mighty current of its yellow
flood went swirling in the pitchy darkness to its watery bourne in
the Gulf. Inside Fort Jackson, just as longingly as the besieged
Antwerpers in 1585 watched for Gianbelli's “hell-burners,” or
fireships, that were to destroy the bridge of Farnese across the
Scheldt, so did Duncan and the brave St. Mary's Cannoneers
watch throughout that woeful, memorable night, counting the
hours in hopeless despair of aid from the fire-barges at New
Orleans. Through some one's blunder, the fire-ships, that would
have carried dismay and destruction into the enemy's fleet, were
not sent down on the one night when they might have turned the
dark fortunes of the hour.</p>
            <p>The sinister quiet did not last long.</p>
            <p>In one awful instant a wild glare lit up the scene. Then like
the deafening detonation of a volcano with its myriad quakings,
throbbings and blazings came a crash and a horrible din. Porter's
mortar-boats reopened their bombardment, with a shriek and roar
of bursting shells, grape, canister and shrapnel. Forts Jackson and
St. Philip responded with fury, but little effect. “Oh for the
fire-barges whose light would give us aim and accuracy!” groaned
Duncan, in his desperation peering into the darkness with a wild
hope that he might catch a gleam of their flaming torches. But his
appeal was heard only by the night winds struggling with the
dense smoke that, belching from the mortars, added to the gloom
of the night.</p>
            <p>Under cover of darkness and the fierce hail of the
mortar-boats, Farragut's fleet like ill- omened ghosts  -  each vessel
grimed with river-mud to make it more a part of the night  -  under
a full pressure of steam made the historic passage of the forts.
Each one in rushing past poured broadside after broadside of shot
and shell in swift succession into the forts. Once past, safe and
victorious from the perilous transit, they steamed slowly up the
river to their appointed rendezvous at Quarantine Station, six
miles above. The passage of the fleet was brief in point of
time  -  less than two hours  -  but long in tension as human hearts
beat.</p>
            <pb id="dim32" n="32"/>
            <p>There were presages enough of coming disaster; but still
above the forts floated the Confederate flag inspiring valor.
Unhappily, however, the colors while inspiring courage could not
confirm loyalty. Mutiny broke out in the two forts and signals
were exchanged between the mutineers. Perhaps here best may
be emphasized a consolation for state pride. No native
Louisianian was among the mutineers.</p>
            <p>In the meantime, the iron-clad Louisiana, pulling and tugging
at her moorings and longing like a fierce mastiff held in leash to
get at the enemy, had fired only a few scattering shots from her
guns. Owing to the position in which she had been made fast to
the bank and to the incompleted condition of her interior, her guns
could not be trained so effectively upon the enemy's advancing
fleet as had been hoped. After the gallant work of the
“Manassas” in her bold rush upon the “Hartford” and her
<sic corr="subsequent">subseuent</sic> disablement, the “Louisiana” received her officers and
men aboard.</p>
            <p>On the 27th negotiations for the surrender of the forts were
initiated by Commodore Porter, of the mortar-flotilla. On the 28th,
disheartened by the mutiny of garrisons in the forts and the
reported capture of New Orleans, the conditions were accepted
by General Duncan. Soon after, the Harriet Lane with
Commodore Porter and officers  -  a white flag at the 
fore  -  came opposite the forts to receive and sign the terms of
capitulation. Negotiations were proceeding amicably on the
Harriet Lane, when on the Mississippi  -  of late so rich in stately
spectacles  -  appeared a portent as awful as it was mysterious,
floating by to interrupt the proceedings on board.</p>
            <p>It was the “Louisiana,” once a powerful iron-clad, but at this
moment a helpless wreck, drifting and discharging her guns at
random. How worse than useless! The fleet which she had been
specially armed to resist and terrify, was lying at victorious
peace in the river in front of New Orleans. The mortar-schooners
which she might, if properly handled, have gripped hard and sunk
with her powerful battery, were near the head of the Passes,
warily watching her and the forts. Hopeless to save her from the
superior power bearing down on her from every side, her officers
set her on fire, and sent her with all her guns protruding, down the
river. Although in her death
<pb id="dim33" n="33"/>
throes drifting aimlessly as the current bore her, she was more
fortunate than her sister-craft  -  the great steam-ram
“Mississippi”  -  which was taken above the city, riddled and burned
before she had fired a gun! Abandoned to her own terrible self,
the luckless “Louisiana” floated down in the presence of the guns
of the mortar-fleet. The clumsy mortars, as she drifted past,
struggled to escape the blazing wreck, even in its ruin a menace.
When near her old moorings close to St. Philip, suddenly, from the
great iron-clad came the deafening explosion of her powder
magazine, scattering fragments of her wood-work everywhere
within and around the fortifications; then a mighty plunge like
some wallowing monster of the deep and the “Louisiana” sank into
the abyss of waters! The blowing-up, as if in angry protest against
surrender, shook the signers of the capitulation from their seats
and careened the “Harriet Lane” on her side. Once righted, her
officers rushed on deck, but saw only the river flowing sullenly to
the Gulf, while not a ripple upon the surface showed where the
“Louisiana” had committed her awful suicide.</p>
            <p>It looked like the grimmest irony or a hostile fate, that the
only casualties from the Louisiana's formidable battery should
have comprised one of our own men killed in the fort, and three
or four wounded.</p>
            <p>So, in a flame of fire, ashes and glory perished the ill-starred
“Louisiana,” on whose strength and the stout hearts beating within
her iron ribs had rested so many fond hopes. She never fulfilled
the purpose for which she was built; but who dares deny that her
phantom flag will float over the river, from New Orleans to the
Passes, so long as the Mississippi has memories!</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim34" n="34"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">FOUR RICHMOND GIRLS</emph>
            </head>
            <p>IT was the 2nd of April of that most disastrous year, 1865, that
Miss X. attended morning worship in the old Monumental Church
of Richmond, Va. A vague unrest born of premonition seemed to
permeate the congregation as, dismissed by the rector, they
slowly moved down the aisles to the central exit. At the doorway,
as Miss X. stepped upon the marble vestibule, her arm was firmly
seized by a friend in waiting and she was hurriedly drawn aside
from the pressing crowd. In a low tone was whispered: “I am just
from St. Pauls'. The President received a dispatch and left the
church in haste. Gen. Ewell has ordered out the militia. It is said
that Richmond is to be evacuated to-night. Come!” Ominous
whisper that boded much! A look that spoke volumes was
interchanged and the friends silently tried to make their way
through the steadily increasing, questioning crowds on the
sidewalks. Already the direful news was in the air, but its effects
were stunning rather than demonstrative of either anger or grief.
It seemed as if a mephitic vapor had fallen from midair and
clogged the utterance of speech. People looked at each other and
in some subtle way understood that all was over, that love, valor,
sacrifice  -  not even Lee in whom they trusted  -  could do aught
more for the proud Capital of the Confederacy. It was doomed!
And yet the heavens smiled serenely fair! It seemed so strange to
see that bright sunshine on the streets and the skies so blue, when
the cold shadow of despair was creeping over human hearts.</p>
            <p>The friends hurried home and packed a few necessaries in
handbags. Now, their number augmented by two others, they
hurried to the depot. It was about 4 p. m. and the platform was
jammed with struggling humanity seeking entrance to a long train
that was drawn up for departure, and impatiently signalling to be
off. What was remarkable was the fact that there were no noisy
protests when trunks were refused<sic corr=",">.</sic> or tumbled off when
surreptitiously put on  -  whatever came was stoically
accepted. All was confusion of moment; but it was a confusion
dominated by a sullen silence of disappointment
<pb id="dim35" n="35"/>
and heart-break. No ticket agent was in sight. It was “save himself
who can.” After vain attempts to gain a foothold, even upon the
open freight cars, the four friends returned to their home. All
Richmond was now upon the streets. They passed groups blanched
in face standing at street corners, or leaning over the gates of
residences asking in troubled tones for the latest news from Lee  -  
their alarm increased by belated orderlies who, carrying
despatches, clattered by with whip and spur. It seemed impossible
for the four young women to get out of the beleagured city, and
yet it was equally impossible for them to remain and face the
invading army on the morrow. “What was to be done?” they
despairingly asked one another. They knew that they were
desperately hungry, for they had eaten nothing for hours  -  that
was the first point. After a scant meal of corn bread and cold
turnips left from dinner of the day before, again the <hi><foreign lang="fr">quartette</foreign></hi> with
anxious hearts footed the long weary way back to the depot. It
was now about 8 p. m. and the aspect of the city had changed. In
the semi-darkness, companies of cavalry, like phantom horsemen
speaking to none, but stern and grim, thundered over the stony
pavements; the gutters ran a river of strong drink and a rabble,
both white and black, knelt upon the ground and leaning over the
edge drank of its flow like swine, or filled buckets and bottles to
take home. Knots of negroes gathered on the sidewalks and
seemed dazed, as if they could not make out the turn of events.
Like their masters, they too were under the spell that forbade
utterance or emotion. Through this half-drunken, but almost mute
crowd, the four friends reached the depot. A long line of cars was
drawn up that in the uncertain light seemed to stretch a league
into outer darkness, and promise accommodation for the
constantly increasing mob of refugees. But again the girls found
that expostulations, entreaties, prayers were only a waste of vital
energy. However, deliverance was at hand. A rough, but
sympathetic official standing near, wearied perchance with the
feminine din, gruffly said: “Ladies, this is a Government train with
no room for civilian passengers, but, if you <emph rend="bold">will</emph> go, the only place
is on top of the cars. Up that ladder at the end is where you have
to go.” The friends, in dismay, contemplated what was before
<pb id="dim36" n="36"/>
them. A perpendicular climb of several yards and afterward
should they survive the attempt, a ride through rain or shine on top
of a car. Oh, shades of Southern ancestry and instincts of
feminine reserve! But it was the time for action, not words. Miss
X. was a young woman of decision and solved the problem. Out
of that city she <emph rend="bold">had</emph> to go,for her two brothers lying in soldiers'
graves had sworn that their sisters should never be within the
enemy's lines. Bravely, she seized a round of the ladder and with
strong pulls finally reached the sloping top. Amid hysterical
encouragement to one another, friend followed friend, until the
four were aboard, drawn up close together on what seemed a central
plank, on top of a carriage that promised both peril and discomfort. 
The train lingered and from their point of vantage they looked with aching
hearts upon the motley scene below, and thought with dread upon
what the morrow was to bring forth. The car on which they
perched was out in the open and they watched the rockets,
signalling retreat and disaster, flashing high up among the stars.
They shivered in the chill night air and drew closer together as a
dull report following an explosion was heard, or the blaze of a
house in flames lit up the darkness. Towards the morning hours
the train pulled out on its long journey, and the last view of the
heroic city by the James was framed in the smoke and flames of burning cotton and tobacco.</p>
            <p>Away the train sped through desolate fields, but ever under a
mocking blue sky. Not much chance or desire for conversation
was there. Sometimes, an overhanging branch from a wayside
tree made the ladies duck their heads to escape a stinging slap in
the face, and the swinging of the cars on long unrepaired roads
produced a giddiness as if tossed on the ocean waves.</p>
            <p>At last, the long dreary day ended. That night, April 3rd, at 11
o'clock, Danville was reached and the free ride was over. Half
asleep from exhaustion and fatigue, stiff from cramped muscles
and faint from the fast of hours, Miss X. and her companions
backed down the narrow upright ladder and stood upon the
ground. Imagine the amazement of the adventurous damsels, when 
horrified friends informed them that they had made the journey from 
Richmond to Danville atop <emph rend="bold">an ammunition train!</emph></p>
            <note id="note1" n="1" place="foot" anchored="yes">
              <p>NOTE  -  This and the following sketch are 
compiled from the author's own personal experience while 
as Miss Ada Stuart she served the Confederate 
Government so loyally and faithfully.</p>
            </note>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim37" n="37"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">THE HALT</emph>
            </head>
            <p>THE spring of 1865, in Virginia, was one of the fairest ever given
to earth. There was a thrill in the air, a lustre in the light, a joyous
 beauty all around that seemed strangely out of tune with the 
sorrowful drama-of-war played by man beneath the ever-smiling, 
unclouded sky. The gardens
bloomed like a second Eden; undisturbed by human tragedy, the
 aspens danced lightly in the soft sunshine, flinging their gossamer 
lace-like shadows over the green lawns; and every breeze that 
swept the cheek came laden with rich perfume
from the forest jasmine. None looking upon this delicate beauty,
enlivened by the glad song of minstrel birds, could ever dream
that the men and women of the Old Dominion were, in reality, a
band of mourners gathered at a Nation's deathbed. The little town
of Danville seemed a place for the soft, rosy dreams of peace
and security, not for fear and wailing, nor for the bugle call to 
meet danger, disaster and humiliation.</p>
            <p>It was here that President Davis and his Cabinet halted for a
few days after the flight from Richmond. The reopening of
departments, the dash of mounted soldiery, of couriers coming
and going gave quite a martial, lively air to the sleepy, country
town. Refugees came crowding in from all over the State, for the
dread of separation from loved ones by falling within the enemy's
lines was upon all. We literally lived out of doors those last days of
the Confederacy, for hearts were too restless and oppressed to
remain within. Sitting on the front steps, the swift hoof-beats of a
horseman galloping past would bring every one in a tumultuous
rush to the gate to scan his face and read the message it bore of
good or ill tidings. It was in the air that our troops in North
Carolina would have to fall back to some more distant Southern
point; but we were not dismayed, for we understood that it meant
only a new line of defence where Johnson would form and fight
again. Then came the President's stirring, hopeful proclamation
that rang out in our ears like the notes of a clarion invoking
renewed effort and devotion. We caught its indomitable spirit, for
Appomattox had not yet been reached, and we likened our
<pb id="dim38" n="38"/>
gloomy present to the dark days of Wallace and Bruce when they
fought for Scotland's deliverance. Boldness and adventure won
for the Scots, why not for the Confederates? Our hearts, like that
of the President, were unconquered and unconquerable. So truly
confident were we that the God of Battles was with us, despite
the fact that we were overborne by numbers; driven from our
Capital; our once victorious army sullenly falling back, still we
cried: “God is in it all  -  as truly in the dreadful retreat from
Petersburg as in the sun-glory of the first Manassas.” Though
fronting constant disaster, our hearts stubbornly assumed that
victory, in the end, would crown the South. Sometimes, however,
when we thought of Lee in whom we always trusted, now so far
away; of his right arm, great Stonewall Jackson, forever still; of
his left, Stuart, that “Flower of Cavaliers,” under the sod, in spite
of the effort to be brave and strong against such heavy odds, a
shadowy fear crept out of the future and chilled our hearts.</p>
            <p>It was in this epoch-making time that two young Government
employes of the Richmond post office  -  Miss Selden and Miss
X. found themselves in Danville, still attached to the fortunes of a
fugitive Government; but without opportunity for giving it service.
Until the routine was established calling for renewal of their
duties, they were fortunate in finding friends who opened
hospitable doors to them. Miss X. was taken in charge by the
mother of “raiding Jeb. Stuart,” whom the fair Virginians dubbed
“The Knight of the Golden Spurs.” To be thrown so intimately
with this distinguished and stately old lady, and to hear from her
own lips, told with a mother's eager warmth, delightful home
gossipry of the bold leader of the famous Pamunkey expedition,
was an incident that appealed most strongly to the
hero-worshiping, enthusiastic temperament of this young girl. It came
into her life like a bright flower found blooming under a gray,
wintry sky.</p>
            <p>Several restless days were spent in anticipation of a
summons to duty  -  varied one beautiful Sunday morning by
church services and a prayer for President Davis. How little we
dreamed it was for the last time! Then the two friends were
notified to hold themselves in readiness to report to their
<pb id="dim39" n="39"/>
department at Greensboro, North Carolina. The sunny afternoon
upon which they received orders found them promptly at the
depot. They were at once given accommodations in a rough box
car whose sole merit was that it was wholly private to
themselves. It was roomy, but with open doors, and void of any
attempt at comfort or convenience. Its furniture was limited to
two chairs and some nondescript luggage. The fearless temper of
the women of that time is clearly shown in the fact that these two
young girls  -  brought up in comfort and refinement, and with a
most scrupulous observance of the proprieties of life  -  accepted
the situation, not only without question or complaint, but with
cheerful stoicism as a necessary outcome of the times. Alone in a
box car, in a season of war; off on a train that went whizzing
away to Greensboro like an uncanny monster in the darkness and
silence of the night! A perilous trip for two young maidens, does it
not seem  -  as we view it in the light of this quiet, uneventful<sic corr=",">.</sic>
prosaic present  -  forty-five years after occurrence? Life
demanded prompt action in those stormy days and everything was
so topsy-turvy that, if called upon to ride on the horns of the moon
in discharge of their accepted duty, they would have responded to
the call, feeling that some way would be provided to make the
feat possible.</p>
            <p>The train stopped a short time at Compay Shops beyond the
Virginia line, and kind old Col. Clement of the Richmond post
office, like a good Samaritan, sent a couple of hospital mattresses,
a new tin basin and also some apples for the refreshment of the
young marooners. Matters were much improved by his
thoughtful kindness and in the twilight they became quite merry,
as they spread their apples for a “starvation party” and speculated
upon the future. President Davis and his aide, Col. Wm. Preston
Johnston, loyal Judge Reagan with several other members of the
Cabinet<sic corr=",">.</sic> were in a car not far from that occupied by the two
young girls. Judge of their surprise when a little after sunrise the
next morning, Colonel Clement suddenly appeared from
somewhere and asked to borrow the tin pan for the President's
ablutions. Fortunately, their slight toilettes had been discreetly
made in the early dawn so, regretting that they could not furnish
towels also, the
<pb id="dim40" n="40"/>
laughing damsels cheerily sent the pan for His Excellency's
service and felt quite honored by the requisition  -  homely
though it was. Later in the day, it crept out that the entire
Presidential party, one by one, had followed their Chief's example
in the use of the pan. Only an humble bit of tinware was it, but a
relic to be sought after, when one recalls the distinguished and
historic group of faces reflected from its shining surface.</p>
            <p>From Greensboro, a day or two after, the Confederate
Government as represented by its Executive and Cabinet went
Southward. Then came the crash of doom! With the Government
in the saddle, the two employee realized that the death warrant of
all things Confederate was written, and their connection with the
post office had ended without the formality of a dismissal. The
“Lady Mayoress” of Greensboro, having heard of the freight car
episode, cordially invited the young ladies to accept her hospitality
during their enforced stay in the town  -  an invitation of which
they gladly and gratefully hastened to avail themselves. In the
meantime, events were making history fast. Fate struck the South
two hard blows. One was the assassination of the Northern
President, and the other  -  crushing us with anger, grief and
humiliation  -  was the capture and disgraceful treatment of the
Chief Magistrate of our beloved Confederacy.</p>
            <p>The two young employes never understood why, or through
whose agency they were awarded thirty Mexican dollars, each,
also a 20-pound box of tobacco apiece, as a share of the
ex-Government spoils. What became of the tobacco was
problematical, but the silver money came in most happily, for the
treasury notes were now worthless, save for sentiment. On their
return to Danville, Miss Selden finding the North an open door, at
once went on to her friends in Maryland. Miss X. was again
taken under the wing of Mrs. Stuart until, later on, she rejoined
her friends in that city of ruins and sentinel chimney-stacks, the
fire-scarred, blackened Capital of the dead Confederacy  -  sad
Richmond-by-the-James.</p>
          </div3>
        </div2>
        <pb id="dim41" n="41"/>
        <div2 type="chapter">
          <head>
            <emph rend="bold">PART II.</emph>
          </head>
          <div3>
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">THE CONFEDERATE GIRL.</emph>
            </head>
            <head>PART I.</head>
            <p>(Data for this and the two following papers furnished by
Mrs. George H. Tichenor, of New Orleans.)</p>
            <p>JUNE 3, 1861, Tennessee severed her connection with the 
Union. At once “Soldier Serving Societies” were organized by the
ladies of Memphis for the purpose of making uniforms and
clothing for our troops, and the preparation of bandages, lint, etc.,
for the hospitals. Old and young, matron and maid were eager to
aid in a cause that appealed strongly both to their affection and
patriotism. Soon the gatherings outgrew private houses and, when
other buildings were not available, the churches were pressed into
service for their noble work  -  a work all untrained, but pursued
with a heart and soul that gave it life and energy.</p>
            <p>Among the numbers that daily crowded one of these
churches  -  turned during the week into an immense sewing-room 
-  might be noted a young school girl, Margaret Thurman Drane
by name, a golden haired lass of fourteen with eyes of Scottish
blue. Ardently Confederate, each day after school she hastily
tripped to church to aid in what warm fancy and a generous heart
proclaimed a glorious task  -  that of making garments for the
brave boys already on their way to Manassas, battle field of
Virginia. Her eyes must have grown large from wonder and dim
from dismay when the grey uniform coat of an officer was put
into her untried hands to make. Poor little lass! She knew how to
hemstitch, but not how to back-stitch, and it was before the days
when sewing machines were made as much a part of the
household equipment as beds and chairs. However, her heart was
stout and with fingers both willing and diligent, after two days of
hard toil and the breakage of a paper of needles, the coat was
completed. Alas! when her labor of love was scrutinized at
headquarters, no fault could be found with the stitches, but it was
discovered that while the front and side pieces had been
laboriously sewed together, the
<pb id="dim42" n="42"/>
back had been innocently left out! She did not receive the blue
ribbon for her work that day, but was assigned the less
responsible task of bringing hot smoothing irons from the
basement, upstairs, to be used in pressing seams.</p>
            <p>A new hotel that had never been used as a hostelry was
converted into a hospital and the city was divided into sections,
each section taking its turn at service. The mothers, with a train
of household servants nursed the wounded and sick, while the
young girls carried flowers, wrote letters for the convalescent
soldiers and sometimes  -  it was told with much glee by the
mischievous recipients  -  they again washed faces that, in the
course of a day, had already received due attention by earlier
visitors, at least half a dozen times  -  all equally solicitous of
giving aid and comfort to our brave defenders. Here came our
lass  -  most eager to help, but so little knowing how. Timidly
threading the long aisle of cots, she was implored by a soldier
suffering from a gunshot wound to rub his arm with liniment to
cool his fever and ease its throbbing pain. Proud to be called upon,
her eyes bright and face aglow from sympathy, she seized a bottle
nearby and hastily poured its contents on arm and in wound  - 
bathing, saturating, rubbing it in with all the energy of which her
young muscles were capable to make sure it would do good work.
“Ah! unfortunate girl!” shrieked the soldier from the cot, his
agonizing pain getting the better of his chivalry. At the sound of
his wrathful voice there was a sudden flutter of skirts and patter
of feet, for the young practitioner fled down the aisle that seemed
endless, for fear that she had killed him! We will trust that the
remedy was curative  -  it certainly was heroic and the pungent
odors of turpentine were not a sweet, health-distilling fragrance in
a ward filled with sick folk.</p>
            <p>The days had now come when the looms of Dixie, hitherto an
unknown quantity, were to be busy weaving homespun for its
people to wear. But Margaret Drane with her sister and two
young friends may claim to be the first of the “Homespun Girls”
of Dixie of gentle birth who wore that much derided, homely
material. A good-humored merchant of the city, doubtful of their
brave, oft-repeated cry to</p>
            <pb id="dim43" n="43"/>
            <lg type="verse">
              <l>“Live and die for Dixie”</l>
            </lg>
            <p>resolved to test them on
a point where he was confident their girlish vanity would shake
their constancy. It was in the first days of the war when Southern
maidens still affected what was dainty and becoming. Cynicus
challenged them to put aside their pretty, airy, muslin frocks and
walk down the fashionable thoroughfare of Main Street clad in
humble homespun. While daring them to do this, he offered to
make the material a gift. At once the quick pride of the
Confederate girl was touched. She gloried in this opportunity for
the sacrifice of personal vanity upon the altar of patriotism. The
merchant's offer was accepted so soon as made and the girls
marched in a bevy to his store. There they selected the
unmistakably genuine article, with their own hands made the
dresses in the style of the day  -  ten widths to the skirt, tight
waist and low-corded neck. Wearing their homespun, not as
housemaids, but as if it were the ermine of royalty, and trying to
keep step in their ungainly brogans; with cornshuck hats of their
own braiding, bravely trimmed with red-white-and-red ribbons,
shading their blushing faces<sic corr=",">.</sic> the appearance of the
<hi><foreign lang="fr">quartette</foreign></hi> on Main Street at once set the patriotic fashion and
made them the toast of the hour.</p>
            <p>Ah! those early days of a war that had not yet grown cruel
and when, to the bounding heart of youth, the drama seemed just
enough touched with danger to be wonderfully fascinating and
entertaining! In the summer of '61 it was more of a game than a
reality. Our girls, from daily visits to the soldiers' target practise,
were fired with a spirit of emulation. “Who could tell<sic corr="&quot;">'</sic>  -  they
reasoned  -  “but what, like the Maid of Saragossa, behind the
rampart of cotton bales with which General Pillow has fortified
the river front, we, too, may defend our city.” True, many of the
young maids had learned to handle without fear the pistols coaxed
from brothers and friends and, too proud to betray ignorance,
after a unique fashion of their own, loaded them. First they
carefully rammed in a generous wad of paper, then bullets and all
the powder the chambers would hold. But lo! nothing they
could do would induce the weapon to go off and the entire
contents persisted in rolling out. Again and again the charge was
varied, bullets at bottom
<pb id="dim44" n="44"/>
and paper on top, but of no avail. Possibly the cap was omitted.
They could not tell, but cheerily looked to the future to remedy
their inexperience and crown them with laurels. By no means
discouraged, they turned to the target-practise  -  shooting with
guns and cartridges already prepared and about which there could
be no perplexing mixture of contents. Their spirits rose, for it
seemed so easy. Margaret led her companions in this as in
whatever enlisted the sympathies of her adventurous spirit.
Ambitious to excel, she flouted the friendly counsel of her wise
but over-mischievous escort, and chose for her first essay a
sharp-shooter rifle intended to pick off its victim a mile distant. Averting
her eyes, she resolutely pulled the trigger. What fatal ease! There
was a terrific bang as if earth and heaven had collided. The rifle
was dropped  -  our brave sharpshooter knew not where, for a
space she knew nothing! Dazed by the shock of sound, she fell
backward and rolled down hill to be picked up a somewhat
bruised and aching young rebel, but irrepressible as ever and
burning with the desire to fit herself for the service of Dixie.</p>
            <p>If there was one delinquency more than another resolutely
frowned upon, and that excited the keenest contempt of a Dixie
girl, it was the cowardice of a man that kept him at home in a safe
berth and left the fighting to be done by others. The girls looked
upon <emph rend="bold">that</emph> as a blot which all the power and wealth of the world
could not purge away. Those not enrolled and known as “Minute
men”  -  enlisted for the war and ready for the field at a moment's
notice  -  received short shrift at the hands of these young
fire-eaters. Margaret bribed a young man, whom she suspected of
being unduly slow in entering the ranks, with a promise to mould
the bullets he was to fire at the enemy. To do this tardy young
Southerner justice it must be said that he was the only stay of his
mother and she was both a widow and helpless invalid. But golden
hair and eyes of Scottish blue have more than once taken the
crook out of the way for a man. It was so in this case. The young
man went to an early battle-field taking with him the pledged
dozen bullets shining like newly minted dollars. Soon it was his
good fortune to return proudly to dangle before Margaret's shining
eyes an empty sleeve, and tell her <emph rend="bold">that</emph> was <emph rend="bold">her</emph>
<pb id="dim45" n="45"/>
<emph rend="bold">work.</emph> And the stouthearted little maiden was glad while she
grieved, for the South's true boy had stood General Bragg's grim
test of manhood  -  “To the front to die as a soldier.”</p>
            <p>So the memorable year of 1861 passed away and the
shadows were fast deepening over the land. A typical girl of the
'60's, our Margaret had sewed, wept and sung for the boys in gray
through the golden summer months and early autumn days. At
this time there was a Thespian temple in Memphis, newly built,
but never opened to the player folk. The grand old “Mothers” of
the city took possession of it and through local talent gave
concerts for the purpose of equipping several companies with
uniforms. Memory recalls one of those tuneful evenings, when all
the girls who had melody in their voices gathered upon the stage
arrayed in whitest muslin, with reddest roses for jewels, to sing
the songs of Rebel-land under the waving Stars and Bars. And
the rebel girls sang with a warmth and volume of voice that
stirred tender old memories, or touched a patriotic chord whose
vibrations set the audience wild with enthusiastic cheering and
clapping of hands.</p>
            <p>The “<hi><foreign lang="fr">Marsellaise</foreign></hi>,” “When this Cruel War is Over,” then the
sad sweet strains of “Lorena” in clear bird-like notes floated
through the hall and a hush, born of its pathos, fell upon all. Who
so deservedly proud as Margaret, our Confederate Girl, when one
who loved the song told her that she sang it better than a great
singer, claiming the fame of an artist! “Lorena” suggested tears
and heart-break, so there was a quick transition to lively old
favorites  -  as well known to the audience as the whistlings of
their own mocking-bird  -  such as “Maryland my Maryland,”
“Hard Times Come No More,” “My Mary Ann,” with a score of
others, but always sliding at the close into the inevitable “Dixie”
that was the signal for a shower of bouquets, sonorous
hand-claps, pounding of feet, and strong-throated hurrahs.</p>
            <p>In the meantime our Confederate Girl retires from the stage
to come forth again with the story of her refugee life and
subsequent return from Memphis<corr>.</corr></p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim46" n="46"/>
          <div3 type="chapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">THE CONFEDERATE GIRL.</emph>
            </head>
            <head>PART II.</head>
            <p>IT WAS late in 1861 before Commodore Montgomery and
Commodore Foote tried conclusions as to superiority of
their gunboats under the bluffs of Memphis. Fathers of
families, who by reasons of age, etc., were honorably exempt
from military service and were at home, thought it prudent to
remove to points less exposed to invasion by the common enemy.
Margaret Thurman Drane's father  -  a minister who had figured
prominently in the Alexander Campbell debates in Kentucky  - 
decided upon Canton, Mississippi, as a retreat and thitherto our
Margaret reluctantly went.</p>
            <p>For the active, sunny temperament of our Confederate girl,
Canton, a small inland town of Mississippi, proved rather a dull
place of residence compared with the constant excitement of the
river city, Memphis, in war times. The young girl's madcap
energies must needs have a vent and with odd perversity reached
their climax in the formation of a Cavalry Company. Among the
numerous girls of the neighborhood she soon enlisted sufficient
recruits, but, with all its rosebud beauty and grace, in picturesque
accoutrements it might have vied with Falstaff's Ragged
Regiment. A mixed multitude of mules and broken down army
horses bore the joyous, adventurous patriots to the ground where
they drilled by Hardee's Tactics. Their bridles were formed of bag
ravelings and girths and blankets were made of gunny sacks.
There were no privates in this well appointed company  -  it
consisted wholly of officers, the lieutenants alone being seven in
number! In her green riding habit Capt. Margaret gaily and
fearlessly at the head of troop rode an army horse loaned for the
occasion by a young officer at home on furlough. On a certain
evening as she rounded a corner on returning from her daily drill, it
so chanced that some soldiers were being put through military
instruction in the taking of a battery. The drums beat, the trumpets
gave forth a blare and the soldiers charged  -  yells of men and
clatter of swords rising above the tumultuous dash and rush of
horses. At once, Margaret's brave warrior-steed
<pb id="dim47" n="47"/>
caught the familiar notes and needs must charge along with its
army mates. No check of bit or bridle could change its course. Its
mettle was up and the frightened girl, borne up the hill, was
carried in the onward rush to the very front of the battery. Once
there, having led the onset, the old battle horse halted, its ambition
was satisfied; but the cavalrymen made the welkin ring with
cheer after cheer for the dauntless courage and gallant ride of
blushing Captain Margaret Drane.</p>
            <p>Despite her strenuous, open-air life, our girl never lost sight
of the practicalities. Confronted by the shoe problem  -  one that
often tried the soul of a Dixie girl to the uttermost  -  in her own
interest she bravely turned cobbler. From an old ministerial coat
of her father's she cut out what was known as uppers. Carefully
ripping the coat seams apart, she threaded her needle with the silk
thus obtained for sewing on the soles, that meanwhile had been
soaked in water to make them pliable for stitching. Tiny foldings
of the satin lining made strings and lo! her small feet soon
twinkled in new comfort and glory as, in pride and gayety of
heart, she <hi><foreign lang="fr">pirouetted</foreign></hi> from room to room.</p>
            <p>Only six months of refugee life in Mississippi when the illness
of a daughter left behind in Memphis called for the presence of
one of the family. It was decided that Margaret should go to her.
Fortunately, two old men, Messrs. Horton and King, the first
well-known to her father, were about to make one of their periodical
trips to Memphis. It was hinted that these old men were a brace
of smugglers and spies but, as they were known to be on the right
side in the war, loyal to the Confederacy and otherwise
trustworthy, such small transgressions of the moral code
counted for little in those wild days. Delighting in adventure and
laughing at the perils of the trip in prospect, Margaret  -  confided
to the care of these old men and with Miss Horton as
companion  -  set forth in a topless buggy to make the distance
between Canton and Memphis. It was just after Grierson's raid
had desolated the land. The railroads were torn up, bridges burned
and the long stretches of country highways were almost a
continuous quagmire from the incessant rains. Seven days over
these rough army roads,
<pb id="dim48" n="48"/>
exposed to every whim of weather, brought them to Hernando,
Mississippi.</p>
            <p>In the meantime Commodore Foote had taken Memphis after
a most dramatic naval combat which, from its high bluffs, was
witnessed by the citizens. Bragg was in Kentucky and
Confederate spies were busy collecting and forwarding him
information. The weather was sultry, but, despite the heat the
girls had a quilting bee. They made, and wore beneath their
hoop-skirts, petticoats, into which were stitched important papers to be
delivered to agents in Memphis. Tape loops at the top of these
petticoats made easy their quick removal should occasion call for
it. Heavy yarn gloves of her own knitting covered Margaret's
pretty hands, in the palms of which she concealed despatches so
valuable that she was bidden to contrive their destruction rather
than risk discovery.</p>
            <p>After leaving Hernando and reaching Nonconnah  -  the little
stream with melodious Indian name five miles out from Memphis  - 
the girls took out their weapons. Bravely equipped with pistols
they made the perilous crossing only to fall into the hands of a
group of Yankee soldiery drawn up to guard the bank and fire
upon all daring enough to come within range of their guns. They
were at once halted by a Colonel  -  an elderly officer who
threatened to have them searched at the barracks hard by.
Margaret, having her head in the lion's mouth, was bent on saving
it from being bitten off. Young in years, yet she was a true
daughter of Eve and resolved upon showing a charming candor to
this elderly man of war. Extending her gloved hands, palm
downward to conceal the bulky despatches, and putting out her
shapely feet encased in the cloth boots of her own manufacture,
with a laughing look in her eyes of Scottish blue, she quickly
retorted, “You had better search me when I go <emph rend="bold">out</emph> of the city  - 
that is if you can catch me. In our part of the world we have to
wear shoes and gloves like these. And sir, you had better be
careful for I have a Yankee sister in town.”</p>
            <p>Her breezy air, perhaps the covert threat implied in her claim
to Northern kindred, had the effect intended. The man of war
was placated. Bending down, he whispered: “Little girl, I don't
believe you have anything contraband. I like and
<pb id="dim49" n="49"/>
trust you, and will take you at once to your sister's, and besides, I
have a fine son you can marry.” “Yes,” replied saucy Margaret;
“provided some good Johnny Reb doesn't shoot him.” The daring
girl felt the despatches burn in her hands like coals of fire.
Outwardly brave, she practiced her coquettish tactics and the
procession drove on, soon to pause in front of her sister's house.
Eagerly she begged her escort to stop the horses a moment and,
without pausing for his helping hand, so fearful was she that the
wad of despatches might be detected, jumped to the ground and
rushed into the house, Miss Horton following. Bewildered by her
sudden flight, the deserted officer cried out, “You saucy little
piece! I believe I'll have you searched anyhow, for now I think of
it, I risk losing my stars if I don't.”</p>
            <p>By this time the parlor had been reached. The girls darted
through the open door, in breathless haste locked it, then in a trice
unlooping their quilted skirts with Bragg's precious despatches
inside, rolled all up into a bundle and thrust it up the chimney  - 
the open fire-place being concealed by a screen. No longer afraid
of being searched, Margaret demurely opened the door and was
engaged in quite a lively play of accusation and recrimination with
the officer when her sister walked in to greet her. Being vouched
for by one so high up in Yankee confidence was sufficient. The
suspicious Colonel sloped colors and saluted. Henceforth the
saucy little rebel was safe.</p>
            <p>Margaret's sister and husband were both staunch
Confederates but, through stress of circumstance, posed as
friends of the Union. Consequently they were enabled to give
much aid to the Southern cause. Mrs. Smith was permitted to visit
the Horton House  -  converted by the Northern invaders into a
prison for Confederates  -  for it was well known that she was a
Southern woman who, despite her apparent Union proclivities,
must have friends among the prisoners. On the present occasion
word had come from Gen. Forrest requesting her aid in behalf of
a certain member of his staff recently captured and confined in
the Horton House.</p>
            <p>Shortly after, Margaret was privileged to accompany her
sister on one of her mysterious prison visits. Before leaving
<pb id="dim50" n="50"/>
the house she was instructed to “do as I do.” Mrs. Smith presented
a pass from Col. Hillyer, the provost-marshal, permitting access to
her “cousin,” a young captain lately imprisoned. So soon as the
guard called him forward she advanced cordially saluting him as
“dear cousin” and apparently gave him a cousinly kiss. Margaret
remembered her orders and did the same, adding in pity a warm
embrace for a kinsman found in so pitiful a plight. “Oh, cousin, you
look sick,” exclaimed Mrs. Smith, whereupon the Captain
staggered as if in severe pain, in tremulous tones announcing that
he was “indeed ill, quite ill, but immensely glad to see her.” Much
mystified, Margaret listened to mutual recollections of a certain old
Aunt Sally who made the best cornbread ever eaten, and who
always made soup in her cabin and brought it in a broken pitcher
to any one who was sick. This last feat of memory seemed
particularly pleasing, but the captain's illness now increased so
alarmingly that the sisters, after taking a much-concerned leave,
hastily withdrew and the guard was summoned to assist him to his
cot. The next day there was quite a stir and audible discontent in
Mrs. Smith's kitchen. She insisted on compounding and herself
baking a cornbread-pone, also pouring some of the family soup
into a pitcher with a broken mouth. Bread and soup were arranged
on a tray and carried to the prison by a servant, Margaret
accompanying her armed with a pass to see her cousin. The
Captain, still confined to his cot, was much pleased at sight of the
food sent him, but the guard rather rudely called out that “it was
queer eating for a sick man.” Margaret explained that “he'd like it
and get well because it was the same he used to eat at home.”
Soon she left her cousin to his homely repast.</p>
            <p>The following afternoon, as six by the clock approached,
Mrs. Smith proposed a walk in direction of the prison. On this
eventful afternoon the sentry paced his usual distance in front of
the prison walls. Margaret, while walking briskly and chatting in
her own lively way, chanced to look upwards and so dreadful a
sight met her eyes she gave a loud piercing scream. She saw a
man dropping from one of the upper stories  -  falling to the
ground, as she thought, to meet his death. A rough push from
her sister, and an impatient order “to hush
<pb id="dim51" n="51"/>
her noise” made her aware that she had done something amiss.
The sentry in alarm drew near and to fix his attention upon
herself she fainted dead away. Then, reviving, screamed with all
the strength of her lungs and said she had fainted from a sprained
ankle. The more the sentry tried to calm her the more unbearable
was her pain and the tighter she clasped his knees. With lightning
intuition she realized that it was a Confederate prisoner she had
seen coming down his viewless stairway of wire, and that her
sister was aiding in the escape of her pseudo cousin the captain.
At whatever cost to herself the sentry must not be allowed to
give an alarm.</p>
            <p>Providence had worked his deliverance through the medium
of a file baked and conveyed in the cornbread, and a coil of wire
concealed in the cracked pitcher of soup. After the war,
Margaret learned that the prisoner was wholly a stranger to Mrs.
Smith, but that Forrest had invoked her aid in freeing this member
of his staff. She planned the method and means of his escape and
gave the cues which he was quick-witted enough to recognize
and follow to his deliverance.</p>
          </div3>
          <pb id="dim52" n="52"/>
          <div3 type="subchapter">
            <head>
              <emph rend="bold">A TRUE STORY. </emph>
            </head>
            <p>ON Sunday morning, August 21, 1864, Gen.  Nathan B. Forrest,
with about 1500 men in command, starting from Oxford, Miss.,
made his memorable raid upon Memphis, Tenn.  For two days
and nights his men were in the saddle, riding through blinding
rains, in thick darkness, stumbling over roads heavy with mud, and
swimming creeks swollen to the limit of their banks. They rode
hard, scarcely pausing to eat their scant rations, with their wet,
mud-clogged clothes clinging to and impeding their wearied
bodies. At Hickhala creek and Coldwater river, it was necessary
to build rude pontoon bridges lashed together with grape vines for
cables, before it was possible for them to cross.  But obstacles
made the steel that struck out fire from the flint of this magnicent
leader's nature, and from that of the iron-like men who rode with
him. Light-hearted and gay as if going to a revel, they pushed on
and, while it was yet dark, before the morning fairly broke, rode in
silent, steady ranks into the city  -  taking it completely by
surprise. </p>
            <p>Once sure of possession the buglers, as if seized with sudden
madness, broke loose, sounding the shrill charge and the men with
yells and shouts dashed forward, clattering over the streets and
filling the air with so outrageous an uproar it was enough to
awake the dead. It woke the living who were asleep, and they
sprang from their beds dazed, wondering if the foundations of the
world had crumbled and the crash of doom had caught them. 
Some of the men under Capt. W. B. Forrest, a younger brother of
the General, rode their horses into the rotunda of the Gayoso
Hotel, in quick search for Generals Hulbert and Washburn.  They
hunted the building from basement to attic, but the birds were
wary and had flown. From dawn until noon, Forrest and his men
swept the city like a cyclone  -  only a bullet carrying death could
stop them. Joy was in all the streets. At the corners stood groups
frantically cheering and waving hats and handkerchiefs; leaning
from windows hastily thrown up were women and children