An Intimate View of Battery E’s Demise
Stones River Stories
The story of rapid demise of Battery E, 1st Ohio Light Artillery at the Battle of Stones River has been shared previously on this blog, but I recently discovered this previously unknown account penned by Corporal Oliver P. Clark that provides an intimate view of those fateful opening minutes of Stones River.
Oliver Clark’s role with the
battery was the No. 2 man as part of Detachment F, the sixth gun in the
battery. Clark’s primary duties when the battery was in action included receiving
the shell from the No. 5, then inserting it into the muzzle of the
cannon. That said, he had an up close view of the action. Once the Confederate assault opened the battle, Clark raced to his
piece which was loaded with a double shot of canister. “Dick Gillett says, ‘Let
her go!’ and Detachment F was in it,” Clark remembered. “The old gun sent the
canister; it struck the Rebel column seven lines deep. The canister cut down
every man that was in range, cutting a hole in the column about 12 feet wide.
Perk said, ‘That’s the stuff!’ But they came as though nothing had happened.
They closed up the gap and Detachment F opened it time after time. Perk said, ‘Spread
‘em all around!’ We worked the gun and the Johnnies came over our way shooting
right at us and with that Rebel yell.”
Corporal Clark wrote an eight-part series giving a history of the battery which was published in the Weekly Toledo Blade as part of their Camp Fire soldiers’ column in the summer of 1894. This account of Stones River was originally featured in the August 30, 1894, edition of the Weekly Toledo Blade.
Stones River
or Murfreesboro was the place. Now about this time things began to get warm. The
Johnnies were getting stubborn; they had to be pinched considerably. We had to
take the whole battery along when we went foraging. The Johnnies were mad; they
called Rosecrans an old soap boiler, but Detachment F kept right along. On December
30, 1862, along toward night we drew way off on the stream to the left of
Rosecrans’ army at Stones River.
We took position and here we
commenced to speed the Johnnies. We unlimbered the piece and commenced firing
at a Texas battery [Captain Felix Robertson’s battery] Pick says ‘Give ‘em
hell, boys!’ and we did. We tore that battery all to pieces in about 30
minutes; then we fell back a little and went into park, ate our supper, and
slept by the guns. But that night the Johnnies did not sleep. They replenished
the Texas battery with infantry and the next morning about daylight Edgarton
came around and told the drivers very quietly to water the horses.
But about the time, Lieutenant [Andrew]
Berwick, a little spitfire, came out and yelled at the top of his voice ‘Water
your horses.’ The Johnnies heard the order as well as we did and they took the
advantage of it for they were only about 80 rods away in a pine thicket and
they made the advance on our battery. Sergeant William Welcher says, ‘Cannoneers,
to your pieces!’ We got there and double-shotted the gun with canister. Dick
Gillett says, ‘Let her go!’ and Detachment F was in it. The old gun sent the
canister; it struck the Rebel column seven lines deep. The canister cut down
every man that was in range, cutting a hole in the column about 12 feet wide.
Perk said, ‘That’s the stuff!’
But they came as though nothing had happened. They closed up the gap and Detachment F opened it time after time. Perk said, ‘Spread ‘em all around!’ We worked the gun and the Johnnies came over our way shooting right at us and with that Rebel yell. The reserve gave away. They left their guns in stack and went to the rear. The Johnnies came on. They killed 35 horses and 20 men and Detachment F was spread all around. We went in every direction but one, and that was towards the enemy!
Comanche versus the Professor: The Artillery Duel Along the Franklin Pike
Receipt in Full in Red Ink: Captain Warren P. Edgarton at Stones River
Captured Entire: The Loss of Battery E, 1st Ohio Light Artillery at Stones River
Source:
"Edgarton's Battery," Corporal Oliver P. Clark, Battery E, 1st Ohio Volunteer Light Artillery, Weekly Toledo Blade (Ohio), August 30, 1894, pg. 3
To learn more about the Stones River campaign, be sure to check out my new book “Hell by the Acre: A Narrative History of the Stones River Campaign,” available now from Savas Beatie.
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