The Anderson intelligencer. (Anderson Court House, S.C.) 1860-1914, March 19, 1902, Page 2, Image 2
WAR SI
Col. Hoyt Speaks
Columl
Hallsville, March 8.-Col. Jamen
A. Hoyt, of Greenville, the distin
guished veteran, delivered an address
last night before tho J. L. Coker
Camp, Sons of Veterans. In refer
ence to tho losses in thc war some
striking facts were brought out, that
have never been put together before.
The information will probably bc
interesting to veterans as well as
their sons. Col. Hoyt spoke as fol
lows:
Thc Southern Confederacy was com
posed of eleven States, which in 18(30
had a military population of 1,004,193
with'whioh to confront the 4,559,872
of the same class in the other States
and Territories. During tho next
four years tho military population in
the South was increased over 200,000
from thoso reaching their 18th year,
and in other States and territories the
military population was increased
over 900,000 from tho same source.
These who wero exempt on account of
physical infirmities or otherwise, con
stitute in nearly every country one
fifth of the military population, and
official figures show that 25 per oent of
the persons examined in 1863-05 by
the United States authorities were re
jected as unfit for military duty. The
Confederate recruiting officers did not
insist upon any high standard of phy
sical requirements, as the noeds of the
army were too pressing, and they ac
cepted all recruits and conscripts ex
cept suoh as were manifestly inoapao
l ned for military servioe. Tho ag
gregate enrollment of the Confodorate
armies during the whole war, accord
ing to an estimate in the "Southern
Historical Sooiety papers," which was
approved by Adjutant General Samuel
Cooper, numbered over 600,000 effec
tive men, of whom not over 400,000
were enrolled at any one time. The
total enlistments in the Federal armies
were equal to 2,326,168 men reoruited
for three years' servioe.
These figures substantially maintain
the ratio of the military population as
ascertained by the census in 1860, and
as to the Federal armies they are
based upon the statistics of the war
dapartment in Washington. The offi
cial rosters of the Confederate armies
at various dates during the war show
the following number of organisations
that were in almost continuous service
in the field: 529 regiments and 85
battalions of infantry; 127 regiments
and 47 battalions of cavalry, 5 regi
ments and 6 battalions of heavy artil
lery and 261 batteries of light artil
lery. The aggregate is equivalent to
764 regiments of ten companies each.
Only a few new regiments were organ
ized after 1862, and in most oases
they were consolidations of previous
organizations. The recruits and
and conscripts were assigned to the old
regiments to keep up an effective
strength.
The total loss of tba Confederate
armies in killed and mortally wounded
will never be definitely known, and can
only be stated in round numbers. A
summary of thc casualties in each
battle and minor engagement, using
official reports oaly, and in their ab
. senoe the estimates from Confederate
? sources, indioates that 04.000 men
were killed and mortally wounded
jon the Confed?rate sido during the
war.
In the report made by Gen. James
B. Fry for 1865-66, there is a tabula
tion of Confederate losses as compiled
.from tho muster rolls on file in the
bureau of Confederate arohieves at
'Washington. The returns arc incom
plete, and nearly all the Alabama
colls are missing. The figures are
Trorth noting however, as they show
that at least 74,524 were killed or died
of wounds, and that 59,207 died of
disease. Without meaning to make
any invidious comparison, the tabula
tion of General Fry's report shows thct
out of the 74,524 who were killed or
died of wounds, North Carolina and
South Carolina are{acoroditcd*with|32,
59\ or more than 43 per cent of tho
-.otal loss. The highest percentage of
loss of killed and mortally wounded,
?rated acoording to tho military popu
laron in 1860, belongs to South Caro
lina, and is a most oomplete vindica
tion of her aotion in loading the se
cession movement.
Mr. Kirkley, tho statistician of the
United States war department, states
tho deaths from battles in tho Civil
War, aB he terms it, at 110,070, of
- whioh 67,058 are'olassified as killed in
action and 43,012 as having died of
^wounds. Estimating from the loss in
' Lilied and mortally wounded, the con
..elusion is drawn that there were L75,
?175 men wounded othorw* s than mor
tally in the Union armies, making the
^ tot ul number of killed and wounded
-385,245., within a small fraction of the
total number of effective men in all
tho annies of the Confederate States
during ?ne entire four yean, BO that
tot ?sen man in the Confederate eer
to Veterans' Sons.
jin State.
vice there wa9 a man killed or wound
ed in the Federal service. The Dum
; ber of wounded treated at the Federal
hospitals during the war waB 246,712,
which embraced nine-tenths of all the
wounded, according to tho surgeon
general's estimate. There is no way
of arriving at the exact number of
killed and wounded, but thc hospital
recorda are substantially accurate,
and thc losses in minor engage
ments for which no official returns
i of tho casualties were made will un
doubtedly increase thc total consider
ably.
At Gettysburg, which has been
: termed the greatest of historic battles,
: the Federal loss is atatcd at 3,063
j killed, 14,4'J2 wounded, and 5,435 cap
j tured or miasing. The mortally
j wounded ure as usual included in the
14,41*2 reported simply as wounded,
but. this docs not fix tho actual loss of
life, and Liout.-Col. Wm. F. Fox,
United States army, has examined the
rolls of each regiment which fought at
Gettysburg and taking name by name
ho has ascertained that 5,291 men
lost their lives on that field and the
Second Corps (Hancock's) ?sustained a
loss of 1,238 in killed and died of
wounds, or nearly one-fourth of the
tutai loss thus ascertained. It was
there that this famous oorps had the
hardest fighting in its experience and
won its greatest laurels, and it was
there thoy met and repulsed Pickett's
magnifict-nt oharge, whore the fighting
was deadly in the extreme. The per
centage of loss in the First Minnesota
regiment was without an equal in the
records of modern warfare. Only 263
men from 8 oompanies were in aotion
on July 2nd, and the total casualtiee
were 215, of whom 47 were killed and
168 wounded, making82 per cent.oThe
Federal regiment sustaining the great
est IOSB in battle during the entire war
was the Fifth New Hampshire
whioh lost 295 men, killed or mor
tally wounded in aotion, from 1861 to
1865.
The distinotion must be drawn be
tween a percentage of loss and the
greatest loss in any given battle, de
pendent upon the number of men
oarried into aotion. The several loss
es are not always the largest numer
ically. Take the Twen y-aix'a North
Carolina, Pettigrew's brigade, whose
loss al Gettysburg was 86 killed and
502 wounded, making a total of 588, in
addition to 120 reported as missing,
who were lost in Piokett's i charge,
nearly all of whom must have been
killed or wounded, as they foll into the
enemy's hands and were not included
in the hospital report. The casual
ties were 708 out of 820 who were
present, and this loss ooourred mostly
in the first day's fight, whioh is an al
most unexampled rcoord. The per
centage of loss in the Twenty-sixth
North Carolina at Gettysburg was 71.7
whioh is the third highest percentage
in the Confederate army.
The First Texas in tho battle of
Antietam (Sharpsburg) carried only
226 men in aotion, and the loss was
45 killed and 141 wounded, whioh is
82.3 per oent, the highest percentage
on reoord. The Twenty-first Georgia
at Second Manassas, August 28-31,
1862, with 242 men in aotion, lost
38 killed and 146 wounded, or 76 per
oent.
The Palmetto Sharpshooters at Fra
zier's farm, June 30, 1862, with 375
men in aotion, lost 39 killed and 215
wounded, or 67.7 per cent.
The Sixth South Carolina at Seven
Pines, May 31,1862, with 521 men in
aotion, lost 88 killed and 181 wounded,
or 51.6 per oent.
The first South Carolina Rifles
(Orr's Regiment) at Gaines' Mill, with
537 men in aotion, lost 81 killed and
225 wounded, or 56.9 per oent.
Anderson's South Carolina brigade
(afterwards Jenkins' and then Brat
ton's) in the "Seven Days Around
Richmond," with 1,250 men in action,
lost 136 killed and 633 wounded, 13
missing, or 62.9 por cent. This less
ooourred in tho two battles of Gaines'
Mill and Frazier's Farm.
Longstreet's Division (Anderson's
Pryor's, Wilcox's and Feathoratono's
brigades) during tho Seven Days' Bat
tles, lost at Gaines' Mill and Frazier's
Farm, 766 killed, 3,435 wounded and
237 missing; total, 4,438 out of 8,831
engaged, or 50.2 per oent. Nor was
this an uncommon loss as the offioial re
ports often indioute a loss of 40 per
cont or more. Through the desperate
struggle of four years, with its soores
of great battles and minor engage
ments, the ranks were divided and
sub-divided until the end came, and
with it a brigade or division was
merely a thing of shreds and patohes.
As early in the war as Sharpsburg,
September 17, 1862, regiments were
commanded by captains and companies
by sergeants.
Gettysburg was undoubtedly the
greatest battle of the war; the strate
. ? ." ; IA. .-'Slit''-.
gio issues involved wore the most im
portant; Washington city was imper
iled, and the Federals were on the de
fensive; and it was the turning point
in the fortunes of the Confederacy.
Tho contending armies were not only
large, but were at their best in point
of discipline and experience. Lee and
Meade were battling for the mastery,
aod thu loss of life exceeded that of
any other field swept by these two
great armies?
Antiotam (or Sharpsburg) was the
bloodiest and most furious battle, and
more men were killed that day than
any other one 'day of the war. At
Gettysburg, Chancellorsville and
Spottsylvania, the fighting oovered
three days or more; at tho Wilderness,
Cold Harbor, Shiloh, Chickamauga and
Atlanta tho losses were divided be
tween two days, but at Antietam the
desperate work began at sunrise and
was practically ended at4 o'clock in
the afternoon. Leo's army consisted
of 35,000 foot-sore, weary soldiers,
poorly clad, and slimly fed, while Mc
Clellan brought 00,000 men on the
field., with a reserve force of 27,000 in
full view of thc contest. One-fourth
of Lee's army, more than 8,000, lay
dead or wounded on the field, while
McClellan's losses wore 12,500 in round
numbers. It was a square, hand-to
hand fight and tho survivors on both
sides slept in tho very lines where
they had fought amid the carnage of
tho bloody held.
In the Seven Days around Rich
mond, Lee's army was between 80,000
'and 90,000, the very flower of South
ern youth and chivalry, and he never
led its like again.
Grant's army at the Wilderness two
yoars after numbered 120,000 compos
ed of veteran regiments, whose flags
had waved above the smoke and din of
numberous battlefields. Another year
carno, and the remnant of Lee's match
less soldiers furled their flags in the
presence of Grant's steadily increas
ing numbers, for the work of mili
tary attrition had been accomplished.
The Boston Tramp's Lecture.
"I think," said tho kind lady,
"that you will find work right around
the oorner there."
"Madam," said Sauntering Sim, I
was born and bred in Boston. I am
sorry that you used those words.
Carelessness in the use of our saored
language is to me far more distress
ing than hunger."
"What do you mean?" she demand
ed Tith considerable spirit, for she
had once been a sohool teacher and
prided herself on her parts of speech.
"That little word 'will,' " he re
plied. "Ah, how often His misused!
Have you ever heard of the lady who
fell from the steamship and oalled
?Help! Help!'"
"I don't remember it," she answer
ed.
"Well," he went on, "this poor wo
man fell into the water, having neg
lected to inform herself oonoerning
the proper use of the words 'will' and
'shall.' It happened that no heroes
were on deok when she went over
board, therefore her appeals for help
were made in vain.. 'Help! Helpl'
she shouted, but no one went to her
assistance, and in despair she cried,
"Nobody shall help me; I will drown 1'
What she moant, of course, was 'No
body will help me; I shall drown!'
You see what a difference the trans
position of those two small words
makes."
"But T don't know what that has
to do with me," the lady said.
"Alas!" he almost sobbed: "das!
alas! Why will people who are other
wise fairly intelligent make such wo
ful assaults upon our beloved Eng
lish? Ton said,'I think you will find
work around the corner.' Mark the
misuse of the word 'will.' If you had
said, I think you may (or might) find
workaround-' "
But she let the dog out just then and
the leoture was off.-Chioago Record.
Nothing so thoroughly removes dis
ease germs from the system as Prickly
Ash Bitters. It gives life and aotion
to the torpid liver, strengthens and
assists the kidneys to properly oloanse
the blood, gives tone to the stomaoh.
purifies the bowels, and promotes good
-appetite, vigor and cheerfulness.
Evans Pharmacy
- A girl never really appreciates
the attentions of young men until
some other girl trios to get a oorner
on thom.
Bloating after Bating, indigestion,
flatulence or water brash, may be
?uiokly oorrcoted through the use of
'riokly Ash Bitters. It strengthens
digestion, cleanses and regulates the
bowels. Evans Pharmacy.
- After having reached tho aero
mark a society girl's age resembles
the locomotion of a orab-it goes
backward.
To Care a Cold In One Day?
Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tab
lets. All druggists refund the mone
if it fails to ourc. E. W. Grove'y
signature on every box. 25o.
- Man was made to mourn, but
probably it was never intended that
he should spend so muoh of his time
at it.
- Wise is he who knows where his
knowledge ends and bis ignorance
begins.
- Taking a stout girl out riding in
a light buggy is suggestive of a spring
meeting.
The Kin; of Italy and the Peasant.
There is & little story about the
young King of Italy which is being
printed in the Italian papers, and
which ia worth reproducing. The
King was staying in the country at his
palace in Raocrrig!. He is little
known to tho people there, for io his
walks about the neighborhood he al
ways strives to preserve his incognito.
Henoe come some curious adventures.
One day, while out tramping, he got
very thirsty, and seeing a woman
milking a cow in a field near-by, he
went up to her and asked her for a
glass of milk.
"I can't gi ve you any of this," said
the woman, "but if you'll mind the
cow I'll go to the house and get you
some."
So the king minded the cow till the
woman returned with a glass of cool
milk. Then he asked her where all
the farm hands had gone.
"Oh, they're always running away
now to try to S-?O the King," answered
the woman.
"And why do you not go? Don't
you want to seo the King?"
"Some ono must stay and look after
things."
"Well, little mother," smiled the
guest, "you see the King without run
ning away from your work."
"You're joking!" exclaimed the wo
man, who could not believe that a
monaroh could be so quietly dressed.
But when the King put a gold coin
into her haud she fell on her knees,
while he oontinued his walk, laugh
ing over the incident.-Maroh Wo
man's Home Companion.
She Lost Nothing.
A distinguished naval officer was
telling this story on himself the other
evening to a gathering of his friends.
At the time of his marriage he had
been through the Civil War and had
had many harrowing experiences
aboard ship, through all of whioh he
kept his courage and remained as calm
as a brave man should. As the time
for the ceremony o*me on, however,
his calmness gradually gave way. At
the altar, amid the blaze of brass but
tons and gold laoe marking the naval
wedding, the officer was all but stam
peded, and what went on there seemed
very muoh mixed to him. Fearing
the excitement of the moment would
temporarily take him oft his feet, the
officer had learned the marriage cere
mony letter perfect, as he thought,
and he remembered repeating the
words after the minister in a mechan
ical sort of way.
After the ceremony was over and
all was serene again, including the
officer's state of mind, the kindly,
clergyman came up to him and touch
ed him on the shoulder.
"Look here, old man," he said,
'Von didn't endow your wife with any
woildly goods."
"Vhat's that?" asked the bride
groom, with something of astonish
ment in his voice.
"Why, I repeated the sen ten o o
4With all my worldly goods I thee
endov?' several times, and despite my
efforts you would not say it after me."
The bridegroom seemed perturbed
for a moment, and then a beaming
light came into his faoe.
"Never mind, sir," he said, "she
didn't lose a blessed thing by my fail
ure."-Washington Star.
He Knew his Own.
Carlyle, speaking of America, onoe
said i!-ut the North ours ed the negro
and bar-e him be free, and the South
blessed him and bade him be a slave.
His theory gives point to a story told
in the Arkansas Thomas Oat.
One of the old-time Southern ne
groes went to Boston to make his for
tune. After a week of walking up
and down, he found himself penniless
and no work in sight. Then he went
from house to house.
"Ef yo' please, sah," he began,
when his ring at the front door was
answered, "oan't yo* gib a p'or culled
man wuk ter do, or oom pia to eat?"
And the polite answer invariably
was, "No mister; very sorry, but have
nothing for you."
All who answered his ring addressed
him us "Mr.," but shut their doors
and hearts against him. Finally he
rang tho bell at a brownstone front.
A gentleman appeared, and tho "'.d
man began, "Boss, I is s tar vin'.
Can't yo' gimme some viotuals?"
"You black, kinky-headod rasoall"
exclaimed the gentleman. "How dare
you ring the bell at my front door?
Go round the backyard way to the
kitchen and the cook'll give you some
thing, you blaok-"
But just there the old man fell on
his knees, exclaiming, "Thank de
Lawd, I foun' mah own white folks at
lasM Thank de Lawd, I foun' 'em-I
foun' 'eml"
- A New York institution gets its
name "chair house," from the faot
that hu*aan beings BO poor they can
not buy a lodging at tho cheapest
Bowery resorts, puts up firo centa for
achanooto oooupy a ohair for (he
eight. By ll o'clook the night's eon
ti?g??it is fast asieop in the chairs,
tho usual number being 25 or 30 tuen,
of all kinds and degrees of decrepit
poverty.
Subduing a Bully.
The following story of how a bully
waa oowed on a railroad train by a
nervy eonduotor is told by D. Eldridge
Monro?), of the Baltimore bar: 0
"I was coming eastward over the
Santa Fe railroad one night in the fall
of 1877. The train stopped at Dodge
City, which was iuvu the most impor
tant point for the shipment of cattle
in southwestern Kansas. Some of the
worst characters on the frontier made
their headquarters there. Quite a
numuer of passengers of the true fron
tier type boarded the train. Among
them was a fellow who particularly
attraoted my attention, because of his
burly form and coarse, and I could
not help but think cowardly, features.
He was dressed in typical eowboy style.
He wore a suit of deerskin, profusely
adorned with tassels made of the
same material. 'Bully' was written
in his unattractive faoe and was
shown in his every movement. The
eonduotor of the train, a very cour
teous and efficient man, rather small
of stature, named Bender, some time
after leaving Dodge, came through the
oar collecting fares. Bender had
some nasal trouble, which made it
appear when he spoke that be was
talking through his nose. He drawled
out his words very slowly, and alto
gether his utterances were rather droll.
He approached the Doc^e City bully
and asked him for his ticket.
" ' Got no ticket,' he surlily re
plied.
** 'Where are you going?' drawled
Bender.
" 'Goin' whore I please, and it's
none of your business where I'm
goin," replied the bully.
"You've got to pay your fare or get
off this train; and I want to know
how far on this line you're going/
again demanded Bender.
" 'I tell you I'm not teilin' you or
any one else where I'm goin', replied
the bully, at the same time plaoing
his right hand on one of tho two pistols
of large oalibre conspicuously display
ing in the holsters attached to his
belt.
"The bully during the oolloquy had
emphasized his words with the coars
est profanity. The other passengers
in the oar beoame not a little ezoited
and were evidently curious to see
what the end would be.
"When the bully thus threatingly
gave his ultimatum Bender eyed him
coolly for a moment in silence, then
passed on collecting hi a fares. In per
haps a half-hour Bender came into the
oar from the direction of the express
ear with a double-barrel shotgun cook
ed, and before the bully had time to' j
offer any show of def enoe, Bender had
him covered, the mossie of the gun
being within two feet of the bully's
face.
" 'Now where are you going?" asked
Bender, coolly drawing out the ques- j
tion through his nose.
" 'I-I'm goin' to get off/ replied
the thoroughly oowed bolly.
"A brakeman pulled the bell cord,
and the train esme to a halt. Bender,
keeping his man eovered with the
cooked gun, followed him until he
saw him jump from the steps of the
oar into the darkness, at least 20 miles
from the nearest station. Then the
train moved on and the passengers re
sumed their normal quiet."-Balti
more Sun.
i- ? sa
- Some of the late Lord Bandolph
Churohill'u friends once tried to have
Lord Salisbury reinstate his erratio
lieutenant. Saiiobury listened io
them patiently and then asked: "Have
any of you ever had a oarbunele on
the baok of your neek?" "No," was
the reply. "Well, I have/' retorted
his lordship, "and I don'* want anoth
er.'.'
Strong Aflato.
The woman who knowe the full value
of health ia the woman who has lost it
and regained it: the woman who from
being weak ana sickly ia once again
made a strong woman. Rolf a million
weak and sickly
women have been ffflrn
made strong and {WinflA
well by the aid of ?82y*>S
Dr. Pierce and his ?SpMfcQ vVj
R Favorite Pre scrip- /VflB Ya
tton.* It eurea the ?
Ula which weaken ifff!
women.. It regtt- t?rT???y"V2^
lates the p?riode, m tjyf B?k
dr ie s enfeebling flnaTrij. J^S?j
draina, heals in- P^fiS?SftiiW88^
fiammatlon and ul- ]fi* SSfH
ceration, and eurea llaauwsgy 15
female weakness. EjSKB?tW 159
It nourishes the BgBMgfr. Sm
nerves and so cures /SS SBB^O*
nervousness. It ((mSiWf
promotes a healthy IBBBtuiJt^E ft
daces refreshing B 8?
?X had tousle trouble ffTBjffjnT'lll
tor eight rea.-*," writes S^toMHfft R V
Mrs. I* 1. Dennfct, of /NNHt Vii
SJS BastOotlsge Street, I I w , itt .11%
Jacksonville. Ula. /ll U| III
"Words cannot cs- /JA IB 111
pron what X eaflated. /. I ?3 im_? \ 1
lona*tor eJesth to^ttaxve^nd w^^W^tu^^^^fcr-'
lng. I hsdlaternsl tnftamnatkm, a cHspgrce
atSe ArtSn hMrintr-down Dhu. and saab disQreea
every S?ntb. .bal sow I MT? haw a .(tala-do
alJj^rp wc?1?^1 mia m ?ireog ana nesxay
Ute Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets with
"Favorite Prescription* if the Dowala
aro inactive or irregular.
?SSSlBSlli)
slmQaUng iteFoodaMfiegu?a
?ng uteStoaadto aialBowls of
IM ANIS ' < lill 1VKI.N
Promotes DigesUonJCheerfuf
ness andRestContalns neither
ODiuin,MorD?iinfi nortfios?aL
KOT "NA?C OTIC .
Jbape cfOldfrS?ltUEISmitlER
JfimiJc'm Semi- v
Abc's***** I
i&kdis&Uk- j
A perfect Remedy for Cons ups
ilon , Sour Stomach,Diarrhoea
Worms ,Corwuisions .Feverish
ness and Loss O?r SLEEP.
Facsimile Signature of
NEW YDHK.
.\ i \> 111 ? mili-? t ? i ii
J ) 1 ) o s:? &.~'rf. ] ) C i ST s
EXACTCASTROP WHaSKK
4?
UHd IURUI
Ppr Infants and CMidreB.
?Tbs Kind You Have
Always Bought
.iv -:
Bears the
Signature
of
1
Use
For Over
Thirty Years
THE onmua COB wir. nt? nu?
A Well Jr'ornished Home
Ia not necessarily an expensively
tarnished one, as at TOLLY'S hand
some, even sumptuous, FURNITURE
is procurable without great outlay
Not that we deal in knocked-together
raade-to-sell sort, but because 'we are
content with a reasonable profit on
really good articles of Furniture
Our best witness ia the Gooda them*
selves.
Tours truly
G, fr. TOLLY & SON,
The Old Reliable Furnitur-Dealers, Depot St, Anderson, B. 0.
Strut 1
HIS DAYS ABB
NUMBERED?
He is big, but none too big to fill the roomy, white enam*
el oven of a Buck's Stove. .
Do You Owe Me ?
?'.v.
If so come in at onoe and settle, aa I mast make oolloo*
tiona at once, and save expense of coming to see you.
Respectfully,
JOHN T. BURRI88.
A. C. STRIORL???B,
DEFTEST.
OFFICE-Front Booms over Farm
era and merchants Bank.
The opposite cut illustrates Con
tlnuoua ,Gnm Teeth. The Ideal
Platen-more cleanly than the natu
ral teefh- No had taste or breath
from Pla?*? of this kind*
fHH?|A LONG LOOK AHEAD
wangal A man thinks it ia when the matter of lifo
HHHjlKBPfiBHlHBi insurance suggests itself-'hut ciroumsJaa*
WMBBH ces of late nave shown haw life hangs by a
Iffi^jMHS thread when war, flood, hurricane and fire
M suddenly overtakes you, and tho only war
K^WfeSB SS td be sure that your family is protected m
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