|
Right side data begins here
Home | Union Regiments
1st West Virginia Cavalry
| History | Service | Losses | Bibliography |
More information on the 1st West Virginia Cavalry
Courtesy of Linda Cunningham Fluharty and David A. Aeberli
HISTORY
[Source: Loyal West Virginia from 1861 to 1865, by Theodore F. Lang,
The Deutsch Publishing Co., Baltimore, Maryland, 1895]
Dr. Henry Capehart is by birth and education a Pennsylvanian, born in the
county of Cambria, March 18, 1825. He located as a physician in Bridgeport,
Ohio, in September, 1849, from whence he entered the military service, and
was commissioned surgeon of the First West Virginia Cavalry, September 10,1861.
He was a fine horseman, and an ardent admirer of the noble animal.
The regiment was recruited from the western counties of Pennsylvania, eastern
Ohio, and western Virginia, at a time when the Government was not organizing
cavalry regiments. It was composed of superior material, mostly young men
from the farms, experienced horsemen and marksmen, who could break and tame
the wildest colt, or pierce the head of a squirrel in the top of the tallest
hickory with a rife bullet. When the regiment entered the field mounted and
equipped, with its complement of field, staff and line officers, and led
by Prof. Carl Colby's famous silver cornet band, all mounted on milk-white
horses, the regiment well caparisoned, with jingling and flapping trappings,
the riders all young and handsome, it was a beautiful and inspiring an
organization as ever graced the armies of the United States. This the citizens
of Clarksburg, Cumberland, Martinsburg and Winchester will no doubt cordially
admit, though the uniforms may not have been their favorite color.
Its first active service was in the mountains of West Virginia, by detachments,
scouting and doing picket and outpost duty to the various infantry commands
holding the mountain passes and guarding the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad.
These duties in the wild, mountainous region, infested with Confederate scouts,
guerrillas and bushwhackers, soon developed in the officers and men that
individuality, courage and daring which distinguished them throughout the
period of their service.
In the spring of 1862, it was brigaded with other cavalry regiments, under
the command of General Hatch, and participated in the operations in the valley
of the Shenandoah and its neighborhood under General Shields, Banks, McDowell,
Schenck and Fremont, though some of the companies were separated. Capt. C.C.
Krepps, with a company of the regiment, put the enemy's cavalry, panic stricken,
to flight, and gained possession of the bridge at Port Republic, and but
for orders to the contrary, would have destroyed it, thereby cutting off
the retreat of Stonewall Jackson. In the darkness of night preceding the
battle of Cedar Mountain, Captains Steele and C.C. Krepps, with two companies,
rode through General Jackson's camps, creating great apprehension and confusion,
at the same time capturing a number of prisoners. As our army was retreating
from second Bull Run, the regiment met the then famous Black Horse Cavalry
in a hand-to-hand charge, and damaged it so badly that it was never again
heard of under that name. This marked the regiment for outpost duty in the
defenses of Washington, and Fairfax Court House, Centerville and Chantilly,
with frequent reconnoissances to Warrenton, Salem, Aldie, and Upperville.
The brilliant Colonel Mosby, while at Warrenton Junction, his favorite stamping
ground, once fell upon the regiment (in a surprise) when the men were preparing
their mid-day meal and grazing their horses, but, springing to arms, fighting
at a disadvantage, on foot and utterly unprepared, repulsed and drove Mosby's
command, capturing some thirty prisoners, including the celebrated Lieutenant
Dick Moran, mortally wounded, when we followed him (Mosby) in a horse race
for several miles.
In the spring of 1863 the regiment received its Spencer rifles, which added
materially to its efficiency in its subsequent fights under the reckless
and dashing Kilpatrick. It bore the leading part in repelling a charge of
General J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry in the streets of Hanover, Pennsylvania,
taking Colonel Payne and over a hundred of his men prisoners. It covered
and held out guns against Stuart's charge at Hunterstown, Pennsylvania. It
was conspicuous for holding the low gap at the left of Round Top the last
day's fight at Gettysburg, against vastly superior numbers; repeatedly repelling
assaults, and finally forming an important part of the charging column under
the glorious Farnsworth, who penetrated the enemy lines near the Devil's
Den, and hastened the retreat of the Confederate army from the battlefield
of Gettysburg. It was also foremost in the charging and fighting of Kilpatrick's
division in its pursuit of Lee's army. At the pass at Monterey, single-handedly,
during the night of the 4th of July, under Major Charles E Capehart, it captured
or destroyed upward of eight miles of Lee's ammunition and supply train,
and took as prisoners an entire Confederate brigade, with its commanding
general. It also fought with the best at Boonesboro, Hagerstown, Williamsport
and Falling Waters.
In the Mine Run campaign the regiment did its full share of duty. The army
going into winter quarters the regiment was sent home on veteran furlough.
To speak of individual acts of gallantry would be to mention almost every
officer and private in the regiment. It may be said, too, that it was always
accorded the first rank in every command with which it was associated. It
was always conspicuous in the advance against the enemy, covering the rear
in a dangerous retreat, and led in more than one forlorn hope. It was never
in retreat except before overwhelming numbers, while on no occasion did it
lose its organization, and was as nearly invincible as any body of men ever
was. Indeed, at a banquet to the regiment in Wheeling at this time, one of
the speakers, a minister of the gospel, remarked that 'the bare thought of
the boys paring their nails made him sad for he regarded it as a waste of
so much brave material.'
General Davies, of Kilpatrick's division, having reported that Surgeon Capehart,
through a knowledge of the country roads, and some adroit strategy, as well
as fighting, had saved his command from capture on Meade's retreat from Mine
Run, and with recommendations from Kilpatrick, Custer, Pleasonton and others
for exceptional military aptitude, the surgeon became the colonel of the
veteran First West Virginia Cavalry. Recruited to the strength of 1200, the
regiment took part under General Crook and Averell in the raid against the
railroads of southwestern Virginia. At the same time General Sigel moved
up the Shenandoah Valley, which was part of the grand movement of all the
armies under Grant. Sigel was defeated by Breckinridge; Colonel Strother,
the celebrated author, facetiously remarked: "Crook was tearing up the railroads
and Sigel was tearing down the turnpike." In General Hunter's movement on
Lynchburg, the regiment charged round the city. In the retiring movement,
it recaptured artillery that had been taken from our army, drove the enemy
by hard blows from the gaps on the line of march, and in not a few desperate
encounters covered the retreat of Hunter's famine-stricken and wasting army,
and so punishing the enemy as to cause him to abandon pursuit. It resumed
the struggle in the valley of the Shenandoah, on its return from Hunter's
ill-starred campaign; met the enemy's cavalry at Bunker's Hill, drove it
to Stephenson's Depot, and when the infantry arrived, fought and carried
the left of the line against cavalry and infantry in the brilliant and
hard-contested victory of General Duval over General Ramseur, capturing many
prisoners. Two days later it reconnoitered as far as Cedar Creek, and made
its way back to Winchester in complete order, though hotly pursued all the
way by a much larger force of the enemy's cavalry. Had the information obtained
been accepted by General Crook, his retreat across the Potomac a day or two
later would have been avoided. In the engagement and retreat out of the valley
the cavalry covered the flank and rear of Crook's army.
The enemy's cavalry, under General Bradley T. Johnston, Imboden and McCausland,
having invaded Maryland and Pennsylvania, and burnt Chambersburg, General
Averell was sent to intercept them. After recrossing the Potomac, the enemy
passed south of Cumberland, captured and destroyed our station of supplies
at New Creek, and reached Moorefield, where they rested in fancied security,
enjoying the rich fruits of the raid. Averell was ordered from Washington
to pursue and attack them to the death wherever found. Their outpost and
picket was captured by day by the First West Virginia Cavalry without firing
a shot. They were then charged and routed on one side of the river at early
dawn. Fording the river, the First West Virginia Cavalry charged Imboden
and McCausland on the other side, who had now become aroused, and formed
to meet us. We swept the enemy's battle-line from the wheatfield and their
ambush in the cornfield and timber, chased them rapidly up the slope, through
the woods, crowded them on to the narrow mountain road, pursuing the remnants
over six miles. The enemy believed that no quarter would be given on account
of having burned Chambersburg, hence, comparatively few offered to surrender,
and an unexplained number, therefore, were killed outright, though many were
wounded and hundred were taken prisoners, while all the booty with which
they had been laden, from a spool of cotton to a bolt of silk, was spilled,
leaving in our hands artillery, flags, guns and equipage.
In Sheridan's victory at Opequon, or Winchester, over Early, the cavalry
played an important and decisive part; Custer's bugles sounding the charge
revived the drooping spirits of the somewhat discouraged infantry; the First
West Virginia Cavalry carried everything in its front, scaling the heights
and taking the forts. It was here that the brilliant and daring fighter
Lieutenant Donnelly fell.
After the battle of Fisher's Hill, General Sheridan relieved General Averell
from the command of the division. Whereupon Col. William H. Powell was placed
in command of the division, and Colonel Henry Capehart transferred to the
Third Brigade, composed of the First, Second and Third West Virginia and
the First New York Lincoln Cavalry, all tried regiments; the First New York,
as well as the West Virginia regiments, having gained unusual distinction.
The colonel's brother, Major Charles E Capehart, who succeeded to the command
of the First West Virginia, came from the West, soon after recovering from
sounds received at Donelson. An athlete and of great physical strength, with
a keen eye and a cool head, and an accomplished swordsman, probably no one
else in the either army rode harder or straighter or wielded a more deadly
sabre, or who could dare or do more with a regiment than he could with the
First West Virginia Cavalry. Later, General Sheridan was pleased to designate
it as "Capehart's Fighting Brigade."
The brilliant cavalryman and author, Captain King, writing recently of the
brigade, says that "he envied its leader his command," and that "its doings
were as familiar to him as household words." Under its new leader it soon
became conspicuous in the army, and the pride of West Virginia; but a mark
for the slings and detestations of disloyal Virginia. On the first day of
its new leadership it knocked out General Imboden, Johnston and McCausland,
and drove them on the run for fifteen miles, capturing many prisoners, and
everything they had on wheels. At Nineva, it met the brigade of General Tibbits
in flight down the valley before General McCausland. Taking the fight off
Tibbits' hands, the West Virginia Brigade brought McCausland's onward career
to a very sudden termination; whipped him to disorderly flight, captured
over 400 prisoners, including 21 commissioned officers; took his artillery,
battle flags and ambulances, and hunted him eight miles in less than forty
minutes. This Sheridan pronounced the cleanest victory of the Shenandoah.
In the morning of the "phenomenal battle" of Cedar Creek, it held securely
all the fords from Buckton to Front Royal, without allowing so much as a
hoof of the enemy's cavalry to pass over, not, however, without killing and
wounding a number of them as day was breaking - much to Early's disappointment,
as he counted on their cooperation. Later in the day it rode with Custer
on the left, and also with him on the right, in the charge that was decisive
of the battle. After several important reconnoissances, it went into winter
quarters near Winchester for a brief period.
The bold Colonel Mosby has certainly no good reason for recalling a certain
Thanksgiving Day about this time with any pleasurable or glorious emotions.
"The boys" had just finished dinner, supplied by the U.S. Sanitary Commission,
and were reveling in the happy sensations produced by the consumption (with
a perfect appetite) of turkey and cranberry sauce, prime roast beef, plum
pudding and other things, at this time particularly appreciated by them.
Mosby, having either captured or routed a foraging part of the Sixth Corps,
came riding down in hot pursuit; drove in the cavalry division picket, and
even fired into General Tibbits' headquarter tents. First in the saddle,
the First West Virginia fell upon the bold marauder, forced him to disgorge
his captures of men and wagons, took some of his men, and drove him for ten
or twelve miles, when not a vestige of him or his command was visible, escaping
by the by-ways, the ravines and the woods; his escape was due to the fleetness
of his steeds. In winter quarters the regiment reached its highest state
of discipline and drill, equaling any in the service. General Sheridan not
only pronounced it his "fighting brigade," but, on seeing still more of it,
claimed it to be the most efficient brigade of cavalry in the service of
the United States.
As the movement of Grant, at Petersburg, was beginning, the brigade was assigned
to the division commanded by General Custer. On the third day's march, taken
out of its proper place in the column, the brigade started, at three o'clock
in the morning, in the lead of Sheridan's 12,000 cavalry, moving up the valley,
with orders to move with great caution, as the enemy was known to be near
and in considerable force. Camp was hardly more than cleared before the blaze
of rifles from either side illuminated the woods in the gloom of an extremely
dark morning. A sweep forward and General Rosser was again running for dear
life. The crossing at Mount Crawford was fortified, and the bridge, with
the flooring taken up, was prepared for burning by the enemy. Swimming the
swollen river, the First West Virginia and First New York attacked the enemy
in flank and put him to rout, taking many prisoners, when the flames were
subdued, the floor of the bridge relaid, and the column, with its artillery
and wagons, passed on undisturbed. General Rosser was pursed on the run for
twenty miles, and so closely that he failed to burn or injure the bridge
over Middle River. General Early now collected all the force he had at his
disposal, in a stronghold at Waynesborough, where he had erected substantial
fortifications, well supplied with cannon, and resolved to defend the position
to the last extremity. Custer, with his division alone, appeared in his front.
Sending a brigade to demonstrate on the flank, at the sound of Custer's
bugle-blast the rest moved for the works; Capehart's brigade charging through
the enemy and fording the river, reached their rear. Dazed and confounded
by Custer's brilliant audacity, they threw their hats in the air, cheering
and applauding the deed, and surrendered to the extent of some 1400, with
their fortifications, cannon and equipments; the unquestionably courageous
Early (Rosser with him) escaping in flight.
Under orders from Custer, Capehart passed Rock Fish Gap, a position of such
strength that it might have been held against great odds for an indefinite
period, and continuing, at Greenwood, a depot of supplies, we captured a
locomotive and cars, with several pieces of artillery. General Early having
reached Greenwood Station, left there accompanied by a salute from the rifles
of the advance of the First West Virginia. The affair was all over before
Sheridan heard of it. When he came up, he threw his arms around Custer's
neck, thanking him effusively, adding that it had taken a load from his mind,
as he expected considerable difficulty in getting possession of the Gap,
and anticipated a delay of at least some days before accomplishing it. The
West Virginia Brigade camped for the night at Afton Station, where its colonel,
with his staff, had the felicity of partaking of a wedding supper with the
bride, bridesmaids and other charming ladies, in a cottage draped with clinging
vines, amid rocks and trees, all of which was enlivened by the beautiful
music of the brigade band.
The tempting viands, untouched by the groom and his male companions, who
had levanted at the approach of the detested West Virginians, were tastefully
laid on the table in the dining room. The airy spirit of the fair ladies
was at first decidedly chilly and forbidding, corresponding well with the
cold, drizzling rain, of freezing mud and darkness without. Their hearts
soon melted, however, before the warm-hearted and attractive young soldiers;
brave all of them, in war, but mild in peace, who had in a measure forced
their company upon the fair ladies, and with song, music and dance, all went
merry as a marriage bell till break of day, when the boys were again in the
saddle on the march. The continuation of the movement was comparatively an
unobstructed, triumphal progress, through leaving more or less of terror,
and the destruction of public buildings, railroads, and the canal in its
path, carrying thousands of slaves, men, women and babes to freedom. Passing
hard by the gates of the Confederate capital, in view of the stupendous
fortification of Richmond and Petersburg, Grant's great guns from his works
boomed out on the air in recognition of Sheridan's arrival, which must have
fallen on Lee's ears as portents of his fast-coming doom. Waiting for a supply
train, now necessary in the altered circumstances, having hitherto lived
on the enemy, Custer's troops, at least, met with profuse hospitality from
their comrades of the cavalry of the Army of the Potomac.
We were freely reminded that we would meet a superior class of troops, in
the veteran regiments of the Confederate army, as compared with those we
had vanquished in the Shenandoah. We replied that such things like that had
no terror for us, we simply proposed to whip Lee's cavalry wherever we met
them. Approaching Dinwiddie C.H., the West Virginia Brigade was in charge
of the supply train, which had literally to be carried through the deep mud
and quicksand of that region. A hurrying aide relieved or brigade of this
duty by another force, and ordered us to report with all possible haste to
General Sheridan - near the Court House. When near there, General Custer
came galloping down the White Oak road from General Sheridan, and pulling
up his horse, communicated orders to move the brigade up the road to oppose
the advancing enemy, and said at the same time, laughing, "General Sheridan
and those fellows up there don't know whether school is going to keep or
not," to which the West Virginia colonel replied: "Well, General, it will
keep a while, anyway, when the boys get there." Most of Sheridan's force
(the infantry not yet up) was retreating before the enemy, both infantry
and cavalry, and some of it badly scorched and cut up, and all in a bad enough
way. Our West Virginia brigade took position at the intersection of the
Chamberlain Creek and White Oaks roads, repulsed the enemy's cavalry charge
with heavy slaughter, and stood there like a fortress, repelling repeated
attacks of both infantry and cavalry. During the night it held the extreme
advance single-handedly, while its band enlivened the darkness and gave the
impression to the enemy of an infantry reinforcement, the enemy sullenly
retiring before morning. At Five Forks, one of the most important battles
of the war, as to its far-reaching effect, that was fought, the brigade,
with Well's brigade, charged (mounted) the enemy's right flank, where were
Fitzhugh Lee, R.H. Lee and Rosser, and quickly routed them, to which, as
Custer says, "the victory was mainly due." Lieutenant W.W. Blackmar, who
was transferred from the cavalry in the southwest, and commissioned in the
First W.Va. cavalry, and now of Capehart's staff, was promoted by Custer
on the field of Five Forks for brilliant personal daring; during the entire
engagement he rode in the front rank in the thickest of the fight, and without
a superior for ability.
General Sheridan, however, more than a mile away, has it that the cavalry
here was held in check; and through some inexplicable blunder has Coppinger
marked on the map in his memoirs as in command of the West Virginia Brigade,
instead of commander Capehart. Coppinger never had any connection with the
West Virginia Brigade, and never was in command of the brigade, while it
is not probably that he led a mounted charge during his career. In the
preparation of Sheridan's memoirs (made hastily), he also commits several
important errors. In regard to the extraordinary success at Little Sailor's
Creek, relating to the cavalry, Sheridan was over two miles distant; here
he has the opposing forces in entirely different positions from the true
ones (of course inadvertently). The record, however, if meager, due to the
rush of events, confirms the facts as here given. In the morning, not without
some fighting and loss of life, the First West Virginia, cut out from Lee's
army an immense train and 13 pieces of splendid artillery, some of it never
having been fired, and imported from England. In the afternoon Ewell's Corps
was facing the rear, toward Richmond, and the Sixth Corps was battering away
with artillery, at pretty long range, with little or no effect, Ewell being
in a strong position on high ground on the opposite side of the creek. In
the assault afterwards the Sixth Corps met a bloody repulse, which General
Sheridan, back to General Wright, was overlooking. On the same side of the
creek with Ewell, and in his rear, at right angles to him, was Anderson's
Corps, in triple line, with some temporary intrenchments of rails and earth,
preparing to sweep the cavalry from the line of retreat. Anderson's Corps
was composed in part of Pickett's Division, immortal for the charge at
Gettysburg. None of the Union Cavalry, excepting the West Virginia Brigade,
was in close proximity to the enemy, or in the death, though the First New
Jersey, of Crook's Division, made a gallant, if ill-directed charge off on
the left, but was swept off the field with heavy loss; and Anderson's road
was clear, though of course threatened. The West Virginia Brigade, under
cover of a declivity, got within short rifle-range of Anderson's Corps, and
was breathing the horses. The Colonel (a solitary horseman is seldom fired
on by a large body of men) passed over the brow of the hill and was making
a circuit to reconnoiter the enemy, when, to his surprise, Anderson's men
rose and delivered a fire, and in looking back he saw it was directed at
Custer, who had unexpectedly arrived with his bodyguard, carrying fluttering
battle-flags captured from the enemy, his horse was just falling to the ground
and giving the peculiar shriek of death, with a bullet through its heart.
The Colonel hurrying up to Custer, suggested that the moment was opportune
for a charge, the enemy's muskets being in considerable part empty, to which
he answered, with the characteristic smile of battle on his face: "Charge
'em, charge 'em."
The command numbered about 1400. The formation, already made, one regiment
in line, supported in the center by two regiments in column of squadrons,
and one regiment supporting the right line, also in column of squadrons.
The undertaking, on onset against seven or eight times its number of Lee's
veterans. Colonel Capehart in the forefront, with his bugler, Tom Custer
and Colonel Allen, of the Second West Virginia, on either side; at the blast
of the bugle, 5000 iron hoofs were in motion. The speed increasing from a
trot to a mad run, though the order perfect, the troopers, with sabres flashing,
the firing of pistols and carbines, shouts and yells - with all the noise
and uproar possible - surged over the works and rode smashing through the
battle-lines, sabering and shooting all who offered resistance; the Confederates,
thrown off their balance and panic stricken, the little handful ten times
magnified in its audacity, the enemy began throwing down their arms and
surrendering wholesale, though not without several isolated encounters to
the death, in one of which Tom Custer received a bullet in the cheek, which
came out near the near; shooting his antagonist dead, he came smiling , and
waving his captured battle flag.
Captain Stevens, of the First New York, took in General Ewell and staff,
who stood in the rear of his own corps, confronting the Sixth, across the
creek, and Anderson's left. On the colonel of the brigade coming up, he now
with the cavalry in rear and the Sixth Corps in front, and the truce men
communicating to the Sixth Corps, Ewell's command laid down its arms to the
West Virginia Brigade; the full numbers surrendering, with those from Anderson,
to the brigade, amounting to about 8000, including Ewell and seven other
general officers; an event that at any other time would have sent the North
wild with enthusiasm, but with the events pending, exciting but little attention.
The Sixth Corps took no prisoners and the rest of the cavalry comparatively
few, and those mostly stragglers. Ewell's command having fought off the Sixth
Corps with Sheridan and Wright, more or less successfully, and marched off
the field of officers of the West Virginia Brigade, was for the most part
unaware of its surrender until it was ordered to stack arms and had marched
some distance from them to a meadow on the Harper farm. It will, however,
be admitted that the Sixth Corps has the most brilliant history of any corps
in the army, if it was not in it with Custer's men. Custer, prevented by
the death of his horse from riding in the charge with his bodyguard, soon
came up and engaged in a somewhat prolonged conversation with General Ewell,
who believed the end was near. Generals Kershaw and Pickett, the latter of
Gettysburg fame, were among the captured. Pickett remarked to General Ewell
in regard to the West Virginia Brigade: "General, this cavalry pays no more
attention to battlelines than if we were men of straw." In recognition of
the kindness and courtesy of Captain Stevens to General Ewell, his distinguished
captive presented him with his field glass, accompanied with a kindly note.
From Nomozine Church to Deep Creek the brigade had the advance and drove
the cavalry before it, while taking many prisoners. Custer marched both by
night and by day. In a sharp skirmish with the First and Second Brigades,
at Appomattox Station, he captured the trains of supplies coming up from
Lynchburg on the railroad to meet Lee, the West Virginia Brigade supplying
the engineers to run off the trains.
On the approach of night, Custer learned that Lee's reserve artillery and
trains lay directly in his front, on the road to Lynchburg, whither Lee was
directing his wasting and famishing army. Guarding this reserve was a strong
force of infantry and artillery. Forming line, the West Virginia Brigade
moved in intense darkness through the forest until nearing a field, when
it was met by a blaze of canister and musketry, which developed the position
of the enemy's guns and battle line, and proved the signal for a charge,
with the result of driving the enemy from the field in disorder, taking many
prisoners and the guns. Following up the success rapidly, the brigade rode
over the reserve with little or no opposition; taking possession of the numerous
wagons and cannon, with the teams of horses all attached ready to move, and
now across Lee's line of retreat, it picketed well out towards Appomattox
Court House and within a short distance of the Confederate army. Relieved
by Smith's Brigade, of Crook's Division, it partook of coffee and an hour
or two's rest.
In the gray of morning, the West Virginia Brigade is again in the saddle.
Custer's Division is probably the most efficient body of horse for its numbers
the world has ever seen; horses and men are worn and jaded by constant hard
marching and hard fighting, both by night and by day, and the uniforms and
accoutrements are worn, battered and tarnished by hard knocks, exposure to
all sorts of weather and mud; but hope beats high and nerves both horses
and men to deeds of reckless daring, even those most faint of heart. You
see Custer at the head of the column: he with the long, flowing, yellow hair
- a model of a cavalryman - if wearing more gold lace than is customary,
and finer dress; but he wears it well, and his bodyguard is till in his train,
with the fluttering battle flags taken from the enemy. He is conducting the
division out along the higher ground to Clover Hill, on Lee's flank, with
the intention of leading a charge into the Confederate army. The sun at
Appomattox is beginning to light up the scene, over the somewhat depressed
plain, in which lies Appomattox Court House and the army of the doomed
Confederacy. At some distance to the rear and right of Custer, you see another
large body of cavalry. It is the division of the slower and more conservative,
but sturdy, Devin, which is supporting Custer. Now look somewhat further
to Custer's rear, slightly southwest of the court house. They are Birney's
colored troops, on the double quick, - somewhat obscured by the woods, their
tongues out and white eyes bulging, and panting from their rapid march, looking
more determined than the blood hounds of the enemy that have hunted their
race in the preceding generations. Birney, under Sheridan's orders, is placing
them facing the court house and across the highway to Lynchburg, by which
Lee hopes to make his retreat; the remainder of the 24th Corps following
near by.
General Smith, with his command, is considerably to the front of the colored
troops, his artillery injudiciously advanced. The Fifth Corps, under the
splendid and untiring Griffin, are marching as if their lives depend upon
it; they had been marching and fighting since reaching the Peninsula - three
years ago - when, at Gaines' Mill, single handed, they fought Lee's army
to a drawn battle; and at Malvern Hill, with no more than their original
numbers, routed Lee in confusion, and if their leader had had his way, Lee
would have been destroyed. Away across the woods, nearly east of the court
house, and out of sight, is the Second Corps, under the brave and accomplished
soldier Humphreys, in close proximity to Lee's rear, and ready to spring
on him at a word, they who had waded through fire and blood under Hancock.
Not far away, under the fine soldier of Wright, is the Sixth Corps, whose
record for hard marching and hard fighting is unexcelled, if equaled, part
of whom stood alone with the cavalry in stemming Jubal Early's victorious
tide at Cedar Creek.
The sun at Appomattox is now out in full force, its rays reflecting from
the bayonets, guns and equipment of the vast array. And all the panoply of
war is seen - horse, foot and artillery - with its various attendants. Yet,
to an onlooker taking in the general scene, all is silent as death - quiet
enjoined on either side and the ground more or less yielding; not so much
as the curling smoke or the sound of a solitary rife shot. The troops are
seemingly moving to their appointed places as stalking phantoms of the dead
and gone armies marshaling for the Last Judgment.
General Gordon, in the van of the Confederate army, has been quietly preparing
to break through and sweep their enemy from Lee's way of retreat. Almost
without a sign of warning, and hardly expected, rifles are cracking and cannon
are roaring. Gordon is making his assault. Smith, before pointed out, comes
tumbling back with the loss of artillery and some killed and wounded, and
is passing away to the left, while Lee's cavalry is driving Crook back with
the remainder of his command in more or less confusion. But staggering before
the hot fire of Birney's colored troops, who swarm out to meet him, with
other infantry confronting, Devin and Custer in flank and rear, the latter
saluted by Confederate batteries, Gordon is tumbling back broken and disordered,
all hope gone; and even pursued in some cases, with the capture of some of
his officers, greatly to the wounding of their dignity - by colored troops.
But see! A white flag is up. The mounted officer who bears it is coming from
the direction of the court house, towards Custer's column. He reaches it
at the head of the West Virginia Brigade. Colonel Capehart and the officer
proceed along the column to Custer. He said to Custer: "I have the honor
to bear compliments of General Longstreet to the officer in command, and
to say that General Lee and Grant are in correspondence touching the surrender
of the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia, and to request a cessation
of hostilities until the result is made known." If that is so, it seems a
breach of good faith that they have been trying to fight their way out in
the meantime. Custer, his face beaming with animation, gripping the rim of
his hat with his right hand and giving it a few spasmotic jerks, as is his
habit, replies: "Tell General Longstreet that I am not in command of all
the forces here, but that I am on his flank and rear with a large cavalry
force, and that I will accept nothing but unconditional surrender." But,
turning to Colonel E.W. Whitaker, his chief of staff, he says to him: "Go
over with this officer and bear my message to General Longstreet." Becoming
impatient, Custer turns over the command to Capehart (who commands the division
to the end, Custer's authority having been enlarged, leads in the finale,
grand review at Washington) and says to him: "I am going over to see what
is going on," following his chief of staff, having communicated what had
occurred to Sheridan. On taking command, Capehart throws out a skirmish line
to the outer edge of the timber between him and the enemy, which becomes
immediately engaged in a brisk fusillade. The advance brigade is promptly
ordered to their support; and a charge is on the point of being made. The
fire reaching Sheridan's ears, he is saying to some Rebel officers, considerably
to the left rear of Capehart's column: "Oh, that's some of Merritt's" (Merritt
commanding the cavalry nominally) "cavalry making a charge" as if he would
rather fight than not; and a man or two killed of no moment anyway. But the
rattle-headed Confederate colonel in front of Capehart, swearing and talking
of death in the "last ditch" in preference to surrender, is finally squelched
by peaceful means, with the assistance of the same officer who had appeared
with the flag truce, and all is again tranquil.
Custer is having words somewhat warm with Longstreet, and more or less suspecting
that there may be a scheme on foot to gain time and make another attempt
to break the meshes in which Lee is enveloped, and demands from Longstreet
immediate surrender or direful consequences; Longstreet parleying and fencing,
unwilling to surrender to Sheridan, much less to Custer, or giving the cavalry
the credit of bringing it about, only desirous of having it effected by Lee
and Grant themselves.
Make way! Grant, the great commander of all the armies of the Republic, is
coming through the lines; unassuming, muddy, shabby in dress, and mounted
on his well known pony, though as daring a rider as any in all his hosts,
with his staff, all in finer array than himself. The impetuous Sheridan,
his Irish blood at boiling point, is suspicious of some unfair play, and
is desirous to cut the knot by the sword. Grant, more wise, and always perfected
balanced, quiets him down, and proceeds with him and other high officers
in his train to meet Lee (resplendent in a new and gorgeous uniform), at
the McLean house. The surrender is consummated and the war practically ended.
To give even the leading results in the career of the regiments composing
the West Virginia Brigade, not forgetting the exceptionally gallant regiment,
the 1st N.Y. Lincoln, would require a volume. Colonel Capehart, in
his congratulatory order and farewell address to the division, which had
captured in the final campaign more men, cannon, battle-flags and other material
of war than all the rest of the army combined, said: "All I ask of the historian
is that he write me the commander of the Third Cavalry Division." And
it may be said that the West Virginia colonel who succeeded him, uses in
his office the chair in which Grant sat while conferring with Lee, and drawing
and signing the terms of the surrender at the McLean house.
Grant had brought the greatest war of modern times to a close within a year;
and would doubtless have captured or destroyed Lee during that memorable
summer, but for some of those purely accidental circumstances to which war
is proverbially subject, with the failure of certain subordinates to meet
reasonable expectations.
And while Sheridan and Sherman have sounded their own trumpets; and not always
with a full measure of justice to Grant, as well as their subordinates, Grant
was the genius, the reliance, the tenacity and courage, the electric power
that strengthened all, from Sherman and Sheridan to the private in the ranks,
to fight on and endure to the end.
The following are Custer's recommendations for Capehart's promotion and his
order, printed from the autograph, assigning the command of the division
to him:
[Extract.]
Headquarters 3d Cavalry Division
Middle Military Division, April 18, 1865
Hon. E. M. Stanton, Secretary of War.
I have the honor to submit the following recommendation for the promotion
of officers of my command.
First. That Colonel H. Capehart, 1st Virginia Cavalry, Commanding
3d Brigade of this Division, be promoted with full rank of Brigadier-General
U.S. Volunteers, to date from March 1, 1865. Colonel Capehart, by his
skill in handling his brigade, and in the personal gallantry displayed in
the engagement at Mt. Crawford, on the 1st of March, by which the enemy were
driven with heavy loss from the burning bridge and the way opened before
us in our march up the valley, was the first to inaugurate that series of
successes which characterized our movement to the James River. At
Waynesboro, he bore a leading part in effecting the rout and capture of Early's
forces. In the late campaign from Petersburg to Appomattox Court House,
Colonel Capehart has been second to none in the display of marked ability,
untiring zeal and energy, as well as unsurpassed personal gallantry and daring.
At Dinwiddie Court House he was particularly conspicuous. At
Five Forks I attribute our success mainly due to the unified efforts of Colonels
Capehart and Wells. While at Sailor's Creek the brunt of the engagement
was born by Colonel Capehart's Brigade, which in every charge was led by
its gallant commander. At Appomattox Station, the 8th inst., Colonel
Capehart again rendered himself conspicuous by his skill and bravery, and
to him is much of the credit due, for the successful termination of that
obstinate engagement, which resulted in our capturing twenty four pieces
of artillery, beside a large number of prisoners, wagons, etc., to say nothing
of the influence this engagement had in deciding the fortunes of the following
day.
I earnestly trust this recommendation will be favorably considered.
G. A. Custer, Brevet Major-General.
Headquarters 3d Cavalry Division,
Appomattox Court House, April 9, 1865.
Colonel Capehart, Commanding 3d Brigade.
Colonel: In accordance with orders from Major-General Sheridan, I have
been placed in command of the 1st and 3rd Divisions of Cavalry. You
will, on receipt of this order, assume command of the 3d Cavalry Division.
Very Respectfully,
G. A. Custer, Brevet Major-General
SERVICE
[Source: Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, by Frederick Dyer]
Organized at Wheeling, Clarksburg and Morgantown July 10 to November 25,
1861. Attached to Cheat Mountain District, W. Va., to January, 1862. Landers'
Division, Army of the Potomac, to March, 1862. Shields' 2nd Division, Banks'
5th Corps, and Dept. of the Shenandoah to May, 1862 (8 Cos.). Milroy's Cheat
Mountain District, W. Va., to June, 1862 (4 Cos.). Shields' Division, Dept.
of the Rappahannock, to June, 1862 (8 Cos.). Buford's Cavalry Brigade, 2nd
Army Corps, Army of Virginia, to September, 1862 (8 Cos.). Milroy's Independent
Brigade, 1st Army Corps, Army of Virginia, to September, 1862 (4 Cos.).
Unassigned, Defences of Washington, D. C., to February, 1863. Price's Cavalry
Brigade, Defences of Washington, D. C., and 22nd Army Corps, to April, 1863.
3rd Brigade, Stahel's Cavalry Division, 22nd Army Corps, to June, 1863. 1st
Brigade, 3rd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac, to December, 1863.
Unassigned, Dept. of West Virginia, to March, 1864. 2nd Brigade, 2nd Cavalry
Division, W. Va., to May, 1864. 3rd Brigade, 2nd Cavalry Division, W. Va.,
to June, 1864. 2nd Brigade, 2nd Cavalry Division, W. Va., to November, 1864.
2nd Brigade, 2nd Division, Cavalry Corps, Middle Military Division, to February,
1865. 3rd Brigade, 3rd Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of the Potomac, to July,
1865. (Co. "A" attached to Averill's 4th Separate Brigade, 8th Army Corps,
Middle Department, March to June, 1863. Averill's 4th Separate Brigade, W.
Va., to December, 1863. 2nd Brigade, 4th Division, W. Va., to April, 1864.
Kelly's Command, Reserve Division, W. Va., to April, 1865. 1st Brigade, 1st
Infantry Division, W. Va., to July, 1865.)
SERVICE.--Action at Carnifex Ferry, W. Va., September 10, 1861 (Detachment).
Romney, W. Va., October 26 (Co. "A"). Guyandotte, W. Va., November 10
(Detachment). Wirt Court House November 19. Capture of Suttonville, Braxton
Court House, November 29. In support of Garfield's operations in Eastern
Kentucky against Humphrey Marshall December 23, 1861, to January 30, 1862
(Detachment). Skirmishes in Clay, Braxton and Webster Counties December 29-31.
Jennies Creek, Ky., January 7, 1862 (Detachment). Regiment engaged in scouting,
picket and outpost duty and guarding Baltimore & Ohio Railroad in West
Virginia till March, 1862. Expedition to Blue's Gap January 6-7. Hanging
Rock Pass, Romney, January 7. Bloomery Gap February 13. Bloomen February
15. Advance on Winchester, Va., March 5-12 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Phillippi
March 20 (4 Cos.). Battle of Winchester March 23. Monterey April 12 (Cos.
"C," "E" and "L"). Buffalo Gap May 3 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). McDowell May
7 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Scouts to Roane and Clay Counties May 8-21. Giles
Court House May 10 (Detachment). Strasburg June 1. Cross Keys June 8. Port
Republic June 9. White Plains June 10. Expedition to Madison Court House,
Culpeper Court House and Orange Court House July 12-17. Near Culpeper July
12. Cedar Mountain August 9 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Orange Court House August
13. Pope's Campaign in Northern Virginia August 16-September 2. Rapidan August
18. Freeman's Ford, Hazel River, August 22 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Kelly's
Ford August 22. Sulphur Springs August 23. Waterloo Bridge August 23-25.
Buckland Bridge, near Gainesville, August 28 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Groveton
August 29 (Cos. "C," "E" and "L"). Bull Run August 30 (Cos. "C," "E" and
"L"). Lewis Ford August 30. Chantilly September 1. (2 Cos. at Antietam, Md.,
September 16-17.) Ashby's Gap September 22. Expedition to Thoroughfare Gap
October 17-18. Gainesville October 18. Near Warrenton November 4. Reconnoissance
to Snicker's Ferry and Berryville November 28-30. Snicker's Ferry November
30. Moorefield, W. Va., December 3 (1 Co.). Near Moorefield, W. Va., January
5, 1863. Cockletown, Pocahontas County, W. Va., January 22. Scout from
Centreville to Falmouth February 27-28. Beverly April 24 (Co. "A"). Warrenton
Junction May 3 (Detachment). Winchester June 13-15 (Cos. "C" and "K"). Hanover,
Pa., June 30. Gettysburg, Pa., July 1-3. Hunterstown July 2. Monterey Gap
July 4. Smithburg July 5. Hagerstown July 6. Boonsboro July 8. Hagerstown
July 11-13. Falling Water July 14. Expedition from Fayetteville, W. Va.,
to Wytheville July 13-15 (2 Cos.). Shanghai July 16 (Co. "A"). Wytheville
July 18-19 (Co. "A"). Near Hedgesville and Martinsburg July 18-19 (Co. "A").
Near Gaines' Cross Roads July 23. McConnellsburg, Pa., July 30. Averill's
Raid through Hardy, Pendleton, Highland, Bath, Greenfield and Pocahontas
Counties, W. Va., August 25-31 (Co. "A"). Rocky Gap, near White Sulphur Springs,
August 26-27 (Co.. "A"). Expedition to Port Conway September 1-3. Culpeper
Court House September 13. Raccoon Ford September 14-16. Robertson's Station
September 16. Raccoon Ford September 17-18. White's Ford September 22-23.
Bristoe Campaign October 9-22. James City and Bethesda Church October
10. Near Culpeper, Brandy Station and Griffinsburg October 11. Gainesville
October 14. Groveton October 17-18. Gainesville, New Baltimore, Buckland's
Mill and Haymarket October 19. Catlett's Station November 7. Mine Run Campaign
November 26-December 2. Raccoon Ford November 26-27. Averill's Raid from
Lewisburg to Virginia & Tennessee Railroad November 1-17 (Co. "A"). Droop
Mountain November 6 (Co. "A"). Averill's Raid from New Creek to Salem December
8-25 (Co. "A"). Regiment on duty at various points in West Virginia till
May, 1864. Averill's Raid on Virginia & Tennessee Railroad May 5-19.
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, between Bloomfield and Piedmont, May 5. Abb's
Valley, Jeffersonville, May 8. Grassy Lick, Cove Mountain, near Wytheville,
May 10. Doublin Station May 12. Rude's Hill and New Market May 14. Lewisburg
May 20 (Detachment). Hunter's Raid on Lynchburg May 26-July 1. Staunton June
8. White Sulphur Springs June 10. Lexington June 11. Scout around Lynchburg
June 13-15. Near Buchanan June 13. New London June 16. Diamond Hill June
17. Lynchburg June 17-18. Snicker's Ford June 18. Liberty June 19. Buford's
Gap June 20. Catawba Mountains and about Salem June 21. Snicker's Ferry,
Va., July 17-18. Carter's Farm, near Stephenson's Depot, July 20. Newtown
July 22. Kernstown, Winchester, July 24. Falling Waters July 24. Martinsburg
July 25. Hagerstown July 29. Hancock July 31. Williamsport and Hagerstown
August 5. Near Moorefield August 7. Williamsport August 26. Martinsburg August
31. Bunker Hill September 3-4. Stephenson's Depot September 5. Darkesville
September 10. Bunker Hill September 13. Berryville and near Brentsville September
14. Centreville September 14. Charlestown September 17. Winchester September
19. Fisher's Hill September 22. Mt. Jackson September 23-24. Forest Hill
or Timberville September 24. Brown's Gap September 26. Weyer's Cave September
26-27. Battle of Cedar Creek October 19. Dry Run October 23 (Detachment).
Milford October 25 (Detachment). Nineveh November 12. Rude's Hill, near Mt.
Jackson, November 22. Expedition to Gordonsville December 19-28. Gordonsville
December 23. Sheridan's Raid from Winchester February 25-March 25, 1865.
Mt. Crawford February 28. Waynesboro March 2. Charlottesville March 3. Augusta
Court House March 10. Haydensville March 12. Beaver Dam Station March 15.
White House March 26. Appomattox Campaign March 28-April 9, Dinwiddie Court
House March 29-31. Five Forks April 1. Namozine Church and Scott's Corners
April 2. Jettersville April 4. Amelia Court House April 5. Sailor's Creek
April 6. Stony Point April 7. Appomattox Station April 8. Appomattox Court
House April 9. Surrender of Lee and his army. Expedition to Danville April
23-29. March to Washington, D.C., May. Grand Review May 23. Mustered out
July 8, 1865.
LOSSES
[Source: Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, by Frederick Dyer]
Regiment lost during service 10 Officers and 71 Enlisted men killed and mortally
wounded and 126 Enlisted men by disease. Total 207.
BIBLIOGRAPHY
U.S. Army Military History Institute References:
Dyer, Frederick H.; A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion. Vol. 2. Dayton, OH: Morningside, 1979. Ref.
See pp. 1655-1656 (2 photocopied pages) for a concise summary of the regiment's service.
Lang, Theodore F.; Loyal West Virginia from 1861 to 1865.... Baltimore: Deutsch, 1895. E536L27.
See pp. 159-76 (18 photocopied pages) for a roster of officers and brief regimental history.
Photo Archive includes images of individuals of this unit.
The following pertinent personal papers are in the Institute's Manuscript Archive:
Description of service at Gettysburg - BrakeColl
Abraham, James - CWTIColl
Wilkin, William - CWMiscColl
Other References:
Right side data ends here
|