27 June 2012

Riverside Cemetery Honors Civil War Veterans The Blue and the Gray


Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes:
1861-1865

Riverside Cemetery Honors Civil War Veterans
The Blue and the Gray

By Ken Robison
For The River Press
May 30, 2012

This continues a monthly series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War and the veterans that settled in Central Montana.

Beautiful Riverside Cemetery on the northern bluffs above Fort Benton was formed in 1883, in time for Decoration Day on May 30. That Decoration Day the River Press reported:
     “Decoration Day is here again, diverting our thoughts once more from the present and calling us to an affectionate remembrance of the brave men who laid down their lives so willingly in the great civil war. It is not the privilege of many of us here to lay wreaths upon the graves of friends or relatives who fell in the mighty conflict. The roar of the blood-red tide of war was hardly heard in this distant country. The bones of our dead soldiers repose thousands of miles away, under the thickets of the wilderness, upon the slopes of Gettysburg, about Vicksburg, and at Shiloh . . . It is not our privilege . . . to scatter flowers over their honored graves. We can, however, upon this day, when time has subdued and chastened grief, when animosities are silenced, look back calmly upon the war. If many perished, what splendid valor was displayed; if many suffered, what nobility of character was developed; if blood and treasure were squandered, what glory was won; if hearts were broken, what a glorious principle was established. The evil effects have passed away. Peace, and good fellowship and brotherly love have returned; and may their benign influence never be dispelled by the words of scheming demagogues. To the boys in blue, and the boys in gray, who so nobly gave their lives for the maintenance of principle and country, our minds should go back with equal love and admiration.”
            “Under the rain and dew,
            Waiting the Judgment day,
              Under the roses the Blue,
            Under the lilies the Gray.”

Memorial Day was originally called Decoration Day, a day to remember those who died in service during the Civil War. This day of honor was first observed May 30, 1868 when flowers were placed on the graves of Union and Confederate soldiers at Arlington National Cemetery. Originally, the South held separate days to honor their fallen soldiers, but by 1886 the River Press reported:
     “The beautiful custom of decorating the graves of the soldiers who died during the great civil war has now become a national affair and is observed by both north and south alike. Its observance has done as much to heal the breach between the opposing sections as any other one thing. “One touch of nature makes the whole world kin,” and the graves of northern soldiers who are buried on southern soil are receiving the same kind attention that is bestowed on the Confederate dead. The southern soldier who fought for a principle and whose body is interred in the north is not passed by, and the flowers surmount his tomb. Sectional feeling is giving way to the idea of one country.”

On Decoration Day 1890 Fort Benton went all out with an impressive procession and Line of March through town. Marshal of the Day Tom. J. Todd led the formation followed by the Twentieth Infantry band from Fort Assinniboine under Chief Musician J. Kunzel; members of G. K. Warren Post No. 20, G. A. R, under Post Commander J. C. Duff; 1st platoon, George W. Crane commanding and Comrades Whalen, Patten, Culbertson, Smith, Dutro and Hilton; 2nd platoon W. Gould Smith commanding and Comrades Hamilton, Clark, Peters, Parsons, Lytton and Terhofstedde; 3rd platoon, T. A. Cummings commanding and Comrades McCord, Coatsworth, Murphy, Dexter, Fulkoot, and Kennedy; Choteau Hose Company under Foreman J. P. Lee; Juvenile Hose Company under Assistant Foreman H. P. Stanford; Pupils of the public school in charge of Professor Danks.; citizens on foot and in carriages. The procession proceeded to the school buildings. From there carriages took the band, the G. A. R. and others to Riverside cemetery where the decoration of the graves of the veterans of the Civil War under the impressive ceremonies of the G. A. R. the archway leading into the cemetery was festooned with evergreens and the graves of the dead veterans covered with the same emblems of eternal life.

In October 1891, five government headstones were received to mark the graves of Union soldiers in Riverside cemetery The names of those whose graves they were to mark: Col. George Clendenin, Dr. William E. Turner, Thomas McDonald, Thomas Mussell, and Patrick Fallon.

By 1892 the River Press began using the name Memorial Day in place of Decoration Day. That Memorial Day a large crowd assembled for memorial exercises at the cemetery and assisted in paying tribute to the memory of the nation’s departed dead. G. K. Warren Post of the Grand Army of the Republic (G. A. R.) and the Woman’s Relief Corps performed Memorial rites, flowers were strewn on veterans’ graves. In the evening a crowd filled the court house to overflowing to hear a program of addresses, vocal music, and recitations. Fort Benton children participated with Miss Flora Dutro singing a solo, Eddie Davis and Mabel Culbertson sang, and Mrs. Dr. Crutcher recited John Greenleaf Whittier’s poem “Barbara Frietchie.” Judge Pierce, Rev. Wadsworth, and Judge John J. Tattan made short addresses.

By the end of the 19th century, veterans had died in the Indian Wars and in the Spanish American War and Philippines Insurrection, and Memorial Day broadened to honored all veterans of all wars.

Today on this Memorial Day 2012, 129 years after opening, Riverside Cemetery is home to veterans from many wars. Many of these veterans of later wars are buried in Military Plot where there are gravestones from the Spanish American, World War I, World War II, Vietnam, and Persian Gulf. No Civil War veterans are buried in the Military Plot, but a walk around the cemetery will find the white marble curved top stones of many Civil War Union veterans such as Thomas Coatsworth, Co. I,  46th Wisconsin Infantry; George W. Crane, Co. I, 26th Illinois Infantry; Robert S. Culbertson, Co. A, 6th Ohio Infantry; Thomas A. Cummings, Battery C, New York Light Artillery; Wheeler O. Dexter, Co. F, 16th New York Heavy Artillery; Patrick Fallon, Co. I, 7th U. S. Infantry; John Grant, Co. A, 3rd Missouri Infantry; Lewis, Edward W., Co. B, 113th Illinois Infantry; Thomas McDonald, Co. A, 25th Iowa Infantry; Andrew W. Mussell, Co. D, 7th U. S. Artillery; C. P. Niles, Co. G, 25th Wisconsin Infantry; Chapman Pennock, Co. C, 18th New York Cavalry; Richard Smith, Co. A, 191 New York Infantry; William E. Turner, Asst. Surgeon, 40th Illinois Infantry; Patrick Whalen, Co. F, 151st Indiana Infantry; James F. White, 24th Iowa Infantry. Confederate veterans like Paul Schoonover, Co I, 28th Virginia Infantry have angled top stones. The well cared for grounds of Riverside Cemetery are a fine home for the Blue and the Gray from Chouteau County.

Note: If you have Civil War veterans in your family who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories and photographs that we can share with our readers. Send your Civil War stories to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442.

Sources: [BRW 30 Nov 1882; BRW 14 Apr 1883; BRW 12 May 1883; BRW 2 Jun 1883; BRW 12 Sep 1883; BRW 29 Sep 1883; FBRPW 2 Jun 1886; FBRPW 4 Jun 1890; FBRPW 3 Jun 1891; FBRPW 7 Oct 1891; FBRPW 1 Jun 1892]
  
Photos:
1.     Entrance to Riverside Cemetery
2.     Military Plot, Riverside Cemetery

27 April 2012

Private Alexander Branson, First Black Warrior in the North

Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes: 1861-1865


Private Alexander Branson, First Black Warrior in the North—Part I 


 By Ken Robison For The River Press April 25, 2012 


This continues a monthly series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War and the veterans that settled in Central Montana. 


Alexander Branson claimed to be the first African American to enlist in the North during the Civil War, and he might well have been. He was the first to enlist in the famed 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, lived though the desperate assault at Fort Wagner, fought through other battles and skirmishes until the end of the war, and came to the Montana frontier to settle in Lewistown in the 1880s. Alex Branson lived over 40 years in the Judith Basin, earning the respect of his fellow veterans and the affection of his community where he was known as “Uncle Alex.” 


Born in 1840 in the slave-owning society of Charleston, Virginia (today’s West Virginia), Alex Branson likely was born into slavery. He was free before the beginning of the Civil War, although how he attained his freedom is not known. In the early 1860s he made his way to Philadelphia, Pa., where in February 1863 he was working as a barber. From Civil War records we know that he was 5’ 3” in height with a light complexion, black eyes and hair. 


In early 1863 just after the Emancipation Proclamation was issued, Governor John A. Andrew, war governor of Massachusetts and a passionate opponent of slavery, succeeded in obtaining the permission of President Lincoln to recruit a regiment of “colored” men in his state. Only three colored regiments had been recruited prior to that time: Brigadier General Rufus Saxton formed the First South Carolina Volunteers (Union) from contrabands (escaped slaves freed in the South by Union forces) in August 1862; Major General Benjamin F. Butler began organizing the 1st Regiment, Louisiana Native Guards from free blacks in September 1862; and Colonel James M. Williams mustered in the First Kansas Colored Infantry in January 1863. 


The 54th Regiment Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry was the first military unit composed of men of African descent to be raised in the North. Twenty-seven men, the nucleus of the organization, assembled at Camp Meigs, Readville, Mass. on Feb. 21, 1863. The companies were mustered in on various dates between March 30 and May 13, the recruits coming from all parts of Massachusetts and many from outside the state. Since more enlistments were secured than were needed, the surplus became the nucleus of a second regiment, the 55th Massachusetts. 


When Governor Andrew received his order from Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, he immediately set about organizing the regiment and at once appointed Captain Robert Gould Shaw of his state as Colonel, and Captain Norwood P. Hallowell to the post of Lieutenant Colonel. Both men accepted but were on duty in the South at the time. Captain Hallowell was the first to start north to help organize the new regiment. He stopped en route to Boston to visit relatives at Philadelphia for a few days and while there he recruited a number of colored men for the new Massachusetts regiment.


Alexander Branson was one of eight men signed up by Captain Hallowell on Feb. 18th, his first day of recruiting, and Branson claimed to be the first in line to sign on for a three year term as Private. Since no recruiting had yet been started in Boston, these eight men were in fact, the first recruits of the 54th Massachusetts. Samuel Branson, a Philadelphia shoemaker, was also among the first eight recruits, and he may have been Alexander’s brother. 


So great was the sentiment in the North against allowing black men to take up arms that Captain Hallowell was compelled to slip his recruits out of Philadelphia by stealth, singly or in small squads, and the Bransons were in the first squad to be sent to Boston. Upon reaching there, the early recruits were mustered at Camp Meigs, at Readville (now part of Boston), and on March 30, Alexander and Samuel Branson were assigned to Company B, 54th Massachusetts under company commander Captain Robert R. Newell. All the commissioned officers of the regiment were white men as the regiment began training. 


Leaving camp May 28, 1863 the 54th Massachusetts, led by Colonel Shaw and with Private Alexander Branson proudly holding his new Enfield rifle, passed in review by Governor Andrew on Boston Common before the largest crowd in Boston history. The regiment embarked the same day on the transport ship DeMolay bound for combat action along the coast of South Carolina. Touching at Hilton Head, June 3, the transport proceeded the same day to Beaufort. During the month of June the 54th visited New Frederica, St. Simon's Island, and St. Helena Island. Embarking July 8, the regiment proceeded to Stono Inlet, where it became a part of General Alfred Terry's expedition to James Island near Charleston, S. C. Near Secessionville on July 16, the Union forces were attacked by a Confederate Brigade under Brigadier General Alfred H. Colquitt, and in the battle that followed the 54th lost 14 killed, 18 wounded, and three missing. The 54th had seen its first combat, and soon more would come. 


Ordered to report to Brigadier General George C. Strong on Morris Island, S. C., July 18, the 54th Massachusetts was chosen to lead an assault on Fort Wagner, a strategic bastion protecting the approach to Charleston. Colonel Shaw deployed his 624 men in two wings, five companies on the left and five on the right with Company B on the right flank of the right wing. At 7: 45 p.m. Shaw raised his sword and addressed his men, “Move in quick time until within a hundred yards of the fort; then double quick and charge! . . . Forward!” The 54th Massachusetts advanced to the storming before charged down the beach and into history. 


The assault of the 54th Massachusetts Infantry on Fort Wagner became legend, most recently honored in the movie Glory. Their Brigade commander Gen. Strong reported, "Under cover of darkness [the 54th] stormed the fort, faced a stream of fire, faltered not till the ranks were broken by shot and shell; and in all these severe tests, which would have tried even veteran troops, they fully met my expectations, for many were killed, wounded, or captured on the walls of the fort." 


The 54th suffered 272 casualties in their tactical defeat, yet their bravery under withering fire was acclaimed throughout the North. Among the casualties were Col. Robert Gould Shaw, two Captains, and about 133 men killed or missing and Lt. Col. Edward N. Hallowell (who earlier had replaced his brother), ten commissioned officers, and 125 men wounded. Despite the staggering losses, Private Alex Branson and the 54th proved to the North that black troops would fight, and not only would they fight, but they could be effective soldiers. 


All through the month of August the regiment was occupied constructing entrenchments and parallels gradually pushing up to within a short distance of Fort Wagner eventually forcing evacuation by Confederates forces on Sept. 7. The 54th Massachusetts was given the honor of being the first regiment to enter the earth works and occupy Fort Wagner. 


The autumn of 1863 was occupied in the reconstruction of Forts Wagner and Gregg so that they would face toward Fort Sumter and Charleston, and in erecting other fortifications. By Oct. 17 Lieut. Col. E. N. Hallowell had overcome his wounds and now promoted to colonel, returned and assumed command of the 54th. In late January 1864, the 54th was assigned to an expedition on the Florida coast commanded by Major General Truman Seymour. It broke camp on Morris Island, Jan. 29, reported next day at Hilton Head, and sailed Feb. 5, for Jacksonville. Arriving Feb. 7, about a week later it accompanied an expedition into the interior. On Feb. 20, it was engaged with the enemy near Olustee, Fla., while covering the retirement of Gen. Seymour's force from that place, losing 13 killed, 66 wounded, and eight missing. Olustee was the largest battle fought in Florida during the Civil War. 


The regiment remained at Jacksonville until April 17, when it returned to Morris Island in front of Charleston, S. C. Now commanded by Lieut. Col. Henry N. Hooper, it spent the summer and fall of 1864 in the fortifications on James and Morris Islands. 


On Nov. 27, eight companies, under command of Lieut. Col. Hooper, were transported to Hilton Head, and attached to Hartwell's (3d) Brigade, Hatch's Coast Division. Six of these companies were engaged at Honey Hill, Nov. 30, losing three killed, 38 wounded, and four missing. On Dec. 6 they were engaged at Deveau's Neck without loss. From Dec. 19, 1864 to Feb. 12, 1865 the 54th, as a part of Hatch's Division, was on guard duty near Pocotaligo, S. C., Sherman's base of supplies, and making frequent demonstrations along the Cambahee River. About Feb. 13 it was reported that the Confederates had retired to the Ashepoo River in the direction of Charleston. Hatch's Division soon followed, crossing the Combahee, Feb. 16, the Ashepoo on the 20th, and reached a position on the Ashley opposite Charleston Feb. 23. Here they found that the city was already in the possession of the Union forces, mostly from Morris Island, and among them Private Alexander Branson and Company B as well as Company F of the 54th which had been detached from the rest of the regiment since the preceding November. The Confederates had evacuated the place the night of Feb. 17, first setting fire to the bridge across the Ashley River and to all buildings in the city that were used as storehouses for cotton, and the following morning the place was occupied by the Federal forces. The main body of the 54th was ferried over the Ashley and entered Charleston Feb. 27, and now the separated companies of the regiment were reunited. 


The 54th remained in Charleston until March 12th when it was sent by transport to Savannah, Ga. From there, on the 27th, it was sent to Georgetown, S. C., arriving on the 31st. Here it was attached to Hallowell's Brigade of Potter's Division, and on April 5 set out on a raid into the interior. At Boykin's Mills, April 18, the 54th was engaged with the enemy, losing three killed and 24 wounded. On April 25 the regiment returned to Georgetown, the close of hostilities having been announced four days previously.


Returning to Charleston, May 6, a large part of the regiment was distributed at various points in South Carolina. District Headquarters detailed Private Branson on May 12 as an orderly in the Mayor’s office. Branson and the regiment assembled at Mount Pleasant on Aug. 17, to be mustered out on Aug. 20. Embarking the following day on the transports C. F. Thomas and Ashland, it reached Galloup's Island, Boston Harbor, Aug. 27 and 28. The men were paid off Sept. 1, and on the following day, after being reviewed by the governor, and having paraded in the vicinity of Boston Common and Beacon Hill, the regiment was disbanded. Private Alex Branson received $38.89 pay and a bounty of $100. 


An important chapter in the history of the 54th was its fight for the regular soldier's pay of $13 per month. At the outset Governor Andrew assured the men that they would receive the same pay and emoluments as all other volunteer soldiers. But in July 1863 an order came from Washington fixing the compensation of colored soldiers at $10 per month, and several times an offer was made to the men of the 54th of this amount, but each time this was declined. Refusing their reduced pay became a point of honor for the men of the 54th. 


In Nov. 1863, the legislature of Massachusetts passed an act providing that the difference of $3 per month should be made up by the State, but the men of the regiment refused to accept this money. They demanded that they receive their full soldier pay from the national government. For eighteen months after the first companies entered the service the men received nothing for their services and sufferings. Finally, in Sept. 1864 the federal government met their demand and all members of the regiment received full pay from the time of their enlistment. 


Battles Fought by the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment: 
 Fought on 16 Jul 1863 at James Island, SC. 
Fought on 18 Jul 1863 at Fort Wagner, SC. 
Fought on 17 Aug 1863 at Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 4 Sep 1863 at Fort Wagner, SC. 
Fought on 5 Sep 1863 at Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 28 Sep 1863 at Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 28 Sep 1863 at Fort Chatfiled, Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 9 Oct 1863 at Fort Wagner, SC. 
Fought on 30 Nov 1863 at Honey Hill, SC. 
Fought on 7 Feb 1864 at Jacksonville, FL. 
Fought on 8 Feb 1864 at Jacksonville, FL. 
Fought on 20 Feb 1864 at Olustee, FL. 
Fought on 1 Apr 1864 at Jacksonville, FL. 
Fought on 2 Jul 1864 at James Island, SC. 
Fought on 15 Jul 1864 at 
In A Camp At Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 16 Jul 1864 at Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 30 Nov 1864 at Honey Hill, SC. 
Fought on 10 Dec 1864 at Honey Hill, SC. 
Fought on 10 Feb 1865 at Secessionville, SC. 
Fought on 10 Feb 1865 at Morris Island, SC. 
Fought on 12 Feb 1865 at Salkehatchie, SC. 
Fought on 7 Apr 1865 at Eppes' Bridge, SC. 
Fought on 10 Apr 1865 at Sumter, SC. 
Fought on 16 Apr 1865 at Near Camden, SC. 
Fought on 18 Apr 1865 at Near Camden, SC.
Fought on 18 Apr 1865 at Boykin's Mills, SC. 
Fought on 30 Apr 1865 at Georgetown, SC. 
Fought on 9 Jul 1865 at Charleston, SC. 


 The 54th Massachusetts Regiment was widely acclaimed for its valor during the battle of Fort Wagner. Their actions proved that black men would fight and die in defense of their country. Their valor helped encourage the further enlistment and mobilization of some 300,000 African-American troops, a key development that President Abraham Lincoln once noted as helping to secure the final victory. 


 The legacy of the 54th Massachusetts since the Civil War has been remarkable. In 1867 the new fort in the Sun River Valley in Montana Territory was named Fort Shaw as a tribute to Col. Robert Gould Shaw. A monument, constructed 1884–1898 by Augustus Saint-Gaudens on Boston Common, is part of the Boston Black Heritage Trail. A famous composition by Charles Ives, "Col. Shaw and his Colored Regiment," the opening movement of Three Places in New England (Orchestral Set No. 1), is based both on the monument and the regiment. Colonel Shaw and his men also feature prominently in Robert Lowell's Civil War Centennial poem "For the Union Dead" (1964). Most recently, the film Glory won the 1989 Academy Award and re-established the now-popular image of the role African Americans played in the Civil war. Private Alexander Branson had served bravely throughout the Civil War with the most famous black regiment. 


 To be continued next week.   


Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes: 1861-1865 


Private Alexander Branson, First Black Warrior in the North—Part II 


By Ken Robison For The River Press May 2, 2012 


This continues with the second part of the story of Civil War veteran Alexander Branson. Part I covered Branson’s early years and his service with the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment during the Civil War. 


Private Alexander Branson survived the carnage of the battle of Fort Wagner, South Carolina, that had decimated his 54th Massachusetts Regiment, but proven the valor of this African American Regiment. Branson survived the other skirmishes and battles through the end of the Civil War. After his discharge Aug. 20, 1865 he returned to Philadelphia, Pa. and worked there during the 1870s as a barber. Little is known of his life during this period, but he probably joined with his fellow veterans, black and white, in the Union veterans’ organization, the Grand Army of the Republic (G. A. R.). 


By 1880 the U.S. Census recorded that Alex had moved west to Sioux City, Iowa on the Missouri River where he worked as a barber. It is not clear when Alex Branson came to Montana Territory. A biographic sketch written in 1924, states that he came to Montana in 1872 and lived for some time in Helena. It is more likely that he came up the Missouri River to Fort Benton by steamboat in 1881 and settled in the Judith Basin, before there was a town of Lewistown. During this period the bison herds had been reduced and cattle ranching was taking over the Judith. 


For some time, Branson engaged in stock raising. When the town began to grow after 1883 he moved into Lewistown and started a barbershop. In July 1887, Alex Branson filed claim for a 160 acre homestead on the west fork of Beaver Creek southwest of Lewistown. The 1890 US Census Veterans Schedule recorded 26 Union veterans living in Lewistown, with Private “Elick” Branson, Company B of the 54th Massachusetts Regiment listed first. 


In February 1891, Branson’s barbershop burned to the ground in a building he owned in a late night fire that also destroyed four other buildings. Insurance covered most of his loss, and he quickly began work on a frame building to house his shop. The building was completed in early July, and Alex moved into his new barbershop with the help of at least one other barber. Ads ran in the Fergus County Argus for the new shop, “Gem Shaving Parlors Alexander Branson, Proprietor Main Street, Lewistown, Montana Best appointed shop in eastern Montana.” 


On New Year’s Eve 1891, when the James A. Shields Post No. 19 of the G. A. R. met to select new officers. Alex Branson was named Surgeon, one of fifteen named to office. Throughout his years in Lewistown, Branson remained active in the G. A. R. during many public events including annual Memorial Day observances. In February 1892 the Republican Party of Lewistown organized a Lincoln Club with Alex Branson listed among the members. In May the Fergus County Argus observed that Lewistown “promises to become a town of wind mills. George M. Stafford, James H. Moe, D. J. Kane, Alex Branson and R. von Tobel are to have mills erected soon. How the sight of them would vex Don Quixote were he to pass through astride Rocinante.” 


On July 11,1892 Branson completed proving up his homestead and received patent to 160 acres. He had other land in the same area and operated a ranch at the head of Little Rock Creek. Active in ranching, business, and politics, African American Alexander Branson had gained the respect of the Lewistown community. 


In May 1894 he was named with three other G. A. R. members to arrange Memorial Day activities. Sunday, May 26th, the Shields Post No. 19 of the G. A. R. and its camp attended church in a body with the Memorial Sermon preached by Rev. U. F. Hawk at the Methodist Episcopal Church. The Lewistown band played that day and on May 30th, meeting with the post and camp at the band room on Sunday at 10 o’clock a. m. and marching from there to the church. On the 30th the band, post and camp met at Jackson’s hall at 1 o’clock p. m. and marched from there to the court house, where the exercises were held on that day. At the court house the following program was carried out: 
Selection by the Band. 
Prayer. 
Song by Musical Assembly. 
Address of Welcome, B. C. White. 
G. A. R. Services. 
Selection by the Band. 
Oration by Wm. E. Cort. 
Song by Musical Assembly. 
Recitation by Miss Blodgett. 
Address by Prof. J. M. Parrent. 
 Selection by Prof. T. J. Load. 
Selection by the Band. 
March to Cemetery and Decoration of Graves. 
All business houses were closed during the services. 


Although his Civil War service record reported no battle wounds, Branson suffered early from rheumatism, and in July 1896 was granted a Civil War invalid pension, which was renewed in 1903. Perhaps because of his ailments, in December 1896, Alex Branson opened a hospital in the DeFrate building on Main Street. The Argus reported Branson’s hospital was “prepared to take care of anyone who desires to come to Lewistown for treatment. The rates, including room, board, nursing etc., will be $15 per week, a saving of nearly fifty per cent from that incurred at the hotels. Patients may have any physician they choose, the local doctors all having offered to aid Mr. Branson in caring for patients. A hospital has long been needed in Lewistown, but it is very doubtful if the number requiring such a retreat will be sufficient to make it pay. While no one wishes that men may become afflicted or accidents occur in order that a hospital may be supported, if those desiring the advantages will avail themselves of the opportunity afforded by this venture, it will be a favor to many who really need the attention only to be afforded by a hospital.” 


 By 1898 Branson was a partner of Mr. Danioth operating the Occidental Restaurant serving “fresh oysters, fresh fish and all delicacies of the season.” The following year, when Lewistown held a grand reception to welcome home their veterans of the Spanish-American War, Alex Branson was the Veterans Color-Bearer in the line of march into the city. 


In 1900 Alex served as a trial juror in the District Court, making him one of the early blacks to serve on jury duty in Montana. Ever active and in the news, when Charles Williams of Lewistown received a shipment of six raccoons from friends in Indiana, the Argus observed, “Alec Branson is already negotiating for one, probably with an eye to a Christmas dinner.” 


 Alexander Branson left Lewistown in late Sept. 1902 en route to Washington, D. C., to be present at the encampment of the G. A. R., held there from October 6th to 11th. The Argus reported, “Alex. Branson is a well known citizen of Lewistown and is one of the G. A. R. veterans left in this section of the state. He served during the war with the 54th Mass. Regiment in the capacity of color bearer. The regiment did excellent service and was the first colored regiment recruited in the north. It was under the command of Col. Shaw, after whom old Fort Shaw was named.” The G. A. R. Thirty-sixth National Encampment was held at Camp Roosevelt in the shadow of the Washington Monument Oct. 9-10, 1902. 


 By 1903, Branson was operating a saloon at the end of Main Street. On New Year’s Eve 1904, Alex left his First and Last Chance Saloon before 1 a.m. to go up town for supper. In his absence his saloon was robbed of $50 cash. Over the next two decades, Alex Branson remained active although he was slowed by age and ailments and eventually forced to retired when he was about 80 years old. He lived comfortably with the property he had accumulated and his invalid pension from the government. His great desire was to attend the National Encampment of the G. A. R. in Boston in 1924 to see one last time Boston Commons where he had paraded with his regiment on their way to war and mustered out nearly 60 years before. Unfortunately during the winter of 1923-24 his rheumatism reached a stage where he was unable to care for himself. 


“Uncle Alex” Branson left Lewistown in the fall of 1924 to spend his remaining days in peace and happiness with a niece, Mrs. Roy Hamit, in Pittsburgh, Pa. Lewistown lost a respected resident who had earned the good will of the entire community. Montana lost an honored Civil War veteran when Alexander Branson passed away in Philadelphia at age 94 on Dec. 26 1934. Today, Private Alexander Branson rests in Philadelphia National Cemetery. 


 Note: If you have Civil War veterans in your family who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories and photographs that we can share with our readers. Send your Civil War stories to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442. 


 [Sources: Massachusetts Soldiers, Sailors & Marines in the Civil War; Luis F. Emilio, A Brave Black regiment: the history of the Fifty-Fourth Regiment of Massachusetts Volunteer Infantry, 1863-1865; American Civil War Regiments; Civil War Trust Maps; Montana Newspaper Association 13 Oct 1924 Judith Basin County Press; US Census 1880-1930; Philadelphia City Directory 1872-77; GLO Patent Alexander Branson; Fergus Co Argus 21 May 1891; Fergus County Argus 5 Feb 1891, 23 Apr 1891, 20 May 1891, 31 Dec 1891, 4 Feb 1892, 23 Nov 1893, 17 May 1894, 15 Dec 1897, 26 Oct 1898, 1 Nov 1899, 18 Sep 1901, 1 Oct 1902, 6 Jan 1904] 


 Photos for Part I: 
 1. Statue by Augustus Saint-Gaudens on Boston Commons Honoring the 54th Massachusetts Regiment 
2. Battle Map of Fort Wagner Assault 
3. Alexander Branson in his Grand Army of the Republic Uniform 


 Photos for Part II: 
1. Alex Branson in Lewistown with Mrs. Reed and her children. 
2. Private Alexander Branson Grave in Philadelphia National Cemetery

27 March 2012

Private James W. “Diamond R” Brown, An Exceptional Warrior

Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes:
1861-1865

Private James W. “Diamond R” Brown, An Exceptional Warrior
Part 1

By Ken Robison
For The River Press
March 28, 2012

This continues a monthly series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War.

James W. Brown II was a survivor. Wounded at Fort Donelson in February 1862, wounded two months later at the bloody battle of Shiloh, and wounded a third time at the decisive battle at Vicksburg, James W. Brown survived the war and came west to Montana territory to become a legendary freighting wagon boss on the rugged Montana frontier.

Born at Hillsboro, Ohio, September 5, 1841 Brown’s parents James W. and Elizabeth Cooper Brown, both of Pennsylvania Dutch ancestry, had earlier moved from Virginia to Ohio. His father died in 1850 and after attending the public schools of Hillsboro, young James left home in 1858 to work as a farm hand in Illinois. At the first call for troops in the Civil war, James Brown enlisted June 13, 1861 at Joliet, Illinois for a term of three years as Private in Company C of the Twentieth Illinois Infantry. He was 21 years of age, 5’ 6” in height with hazel eyes and dark hair. Brown served from June 1861 until July 1864 through extended periods of hard fighting, suffering wounds at Fort Donelson, Shiloh, and Vicksburg, three major battles in the Western Theater of the Civil War.

Fort Donelson was located on the left bank of the vital Cumberland River in a strategic position in northwestern Tennessee. It was a bastioned earthwork, on a bluff about 100 feet above the water and commanded the river for several miles down stream. During February 13-16, 1862, a 27,000-man army under General Ulysses S. Grant, supported by ironclad gunboats under Commodore Andrew Foote, attacked and captured Fort Donelson, During this battle, Private Brown’s 20th Illinois Infantry was part of Col. W. H. L. Wallace's 2d Brigade in Brig.-Gen. John A. McClernand's First Division. Portions of the battle report give us insight into the experiences of the Private Brown and his 20th Illinois regiment in the chaos and fury of the Battle of Fort Donelson:

[On Feb. 13th] “McClernand's division, preceded by cavalry, had the advance on both roads [leading to Fort Donelson]. About noon the head of the column commenced skirmishing with the enemy's pickets, the rest of the day being passed in feeling the Confederate position and in learning the nature of the ground, which was full of ravines and ridges and thickly wooded . . . All of the 13th was spent in maneuvering for position and making demonstrations to draw the fire of the enemy's batteries, with a view of locating the weak points in the line of defenses.

[Feb. 14th] “Skirmishers exchanged shots at intervals during the day and from time to time the gunners in the batteries fired a few rounds to try the range of the guns. . .
[During the afternoon the naval gunboats attacked, and were repulsed by Confederate shore batteries.] This repulse of the gunboats made it plain that the fort, if it was taken at all, must be taken by the land forces, and preparations were at
once commenced for an attack on the following morning. Other transports had arrived during the day with additional troops, which were assigned to positions in the line . . . as it was feared the enemy might attempt to cut his way out at that point; batteries were brought up and placed in the most advantageous positions, rations and ammunition were issued to the men, and when night came the men bivouacked without fires, resting on their arms so as to begin the assault as soon as the command might be given . . .

[Also on Feb. 14, another Union force had moved into position near Fort Donelson] “With this command were Birge's sharpshooters, armed with long range Henry rifles, and every man a skilled marksman. All day on the 14th this band of intrepid Missourians kept up from behind rocks and trees a continual fire, making it unsafe for a Confederate to show his head above the works.

[During the 14th the Confederate command, realizing that Fort Donelson was indefensible and that they would be starved into submission, began planning to cut their way out.]

[Feb. 15th] “[Confederate Gen.] Pillow was to begin the attack on McClernand's right, and this was to be followed by [Gen.] Buckner in an assault on the center of the division, driving it back . . . and opening the way to the road, after which Buckner was to cover the retreat. Accordingly at 6 a.m. [the Confederate attack began and a] brigade next moved forward through a depression in the ground and succeeded in turning McClernand's right. McClernand sent . . . for assistance and [a] brigade was ordered to the right, where it managed to check the enemy and for a time held its position . . . Deeming that the time had come for him to act, [Confederate Gen.] Buckner advanced a part of his division [forward. This was] countered by McClernand . . . [with artillery] batteries . . . and Buckner failed to break the line, his troops retiring before the destructive fire of the artillery. Fresh regiments were now hurled against [a part of the Union line], whose ammunition was exhausted, and [they] began to fall back. The enemy swept around [the] flank and appeared in the rear, isolating [a Union] brigade, which also retired. One regiment . . . held on after the others retreated and continued the fight until every cartridge box was empty . . .

“Up to this point the sortie had been successful. Pillow had opened the way for the Confederates to escape, but the escape was not made. This was due to Pillow's erroneous notion of the victory he had won. When he saw the broken ranks of the Union right wing falling back in confusion before him he believed Grant's entire army was in full retreat [but Gen. Pillow was wrong. The Union forces regrouped and] behind this line McClernand's brigades rallied and refilled their cartridge
boxes. Wood's battery was brought up and placed where it could sweep the road. These preparations were barely completed when the Confederates came swarming up the road and through the woods on both sides of it.

[The Union lines held on the 15th] The road . . . was closed and the opportunity to escape had passed. That night the Confederate generals held another council
of war. The session was somewhat stormy, the criminations and recriminations between Buckner and Pillow growing at times especially bitter. Scouts were sent out to ascertain the position of the Federals and came back with the information
that the Union lines occupied the same position as before the sortie. Some of the generals doubted the correctness of this statement and other scouts were sent out who came back with the report that every foot of ground from which the Federals
had been driven in the morning had been reoccupied. Pillow still clung to the notion that they could cut their way out. After canvassing the situation in all of its aspects the command was turned over to Buckner, who immediately announced
his determination to surrender the fort.

[16 Feb. Gen. Pillow and Cavalry Col. Nathan B. Forrest refused to surrender, and about 3,000 Confederates escaped Fort Donelson in the early morning hours.]
“Shortly after daybreak [on the 16th] the notes of a bugle were heard in the direction of the fort, announcing the approach of an officer with a communication from [Gen.] Buckner, asking for an armistice until noon and the appointment of commissioners to agree on the terms of capitulation. Then it was that [Gen. Ulysses S.] Grant sent his famous message, viz: "No terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be accepted. I propose to move immediately upon your works."
[Thus was born the name, “Unconditional Surrender Grant.”]

“Having no alternative Buckner was forced to comply, and the Union forces marched in and took possession. The Union loss at Fort Donelson was 500 killed, 2,108 wounded and 224 missing. [Confederate losses were estimated at about 1,500 while some 13,300 surrendered.] The most important result of the fall of Fort Donelson was the opening of the Cumberland river to the passage of the Union gunboats and transports and the breaking of the line of defense to Nashville.”

As a result of the fall of Forts Henry and Donelson, Confederate Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston, the commander in the area, was forced to fall back, giving up Kentucky and much of West and Middle Tennessee. Private James Brown had been wounded during the capture of Fort Donelson. His wounds, however, did not keep him out of action seven weeks later when the 20th Illinois Cavalry were again part of McClernand's First Division as Gen. Grant’s Army of the Tennessee arrived at Pittsburgh Landing on the west bank of the Tennessee River a few miles south of Savannah, Tennessee. The army camped and awaited the arrival of Gen. Don Carlos Buell's army (expected late the next day) before moving on. The Union forces did not set up defenses or even send out pickets as no Confederates were believed to be nearby.

Unknown to the Union forces, Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston had assembled his Army of Mississippi and was moving north to intercept and destroy Grant's army and capture all his supplies before Buell's army arrived. The battle began early April 6 with the Confederate forces streaming out of the woods and totally surprising the Union troops. Grant's army fell back before the attackers putting up stubborn resistance at a sunken road known later as the "Hornet's Nest." The determined resistance at the Hornet's Nest threw off the timetable of the advancing Confederates and likely saved the rest of Grant's army. During the fighting, Confederate General Johnston was killed while leading his troops and command fell to Gen. P. G. T. Beauregard. By the end of the day, the Confederates had pushed the Union army back into a small pocket next to the river where the Union gunboats could offer some protection.

During the night, Union Gen. Buell's Army of the Ohio arrived and the troops were ferried across the river to the west bank. At the end of that bloody day, Gen. William T. Sherman approached Gen. Grant who was smoking one of his cigars, "Well, Grant, we've had the devil's own day, haven't we?" Gen. Grant looked up. "Yes," he replied, followed by a puff. "Yes. Lick 'em tomorrow, though." Meanwhile, Confederate Gen. Beauregard completely misread the situation, sending a telegram a telegram to President Jefferson Davis announcing "A COMPLETE VICTORY."

At daybreak on April 7, the newly reinforced Union army attacked and over the course of the day completely pushed the Confederates back across the battlefield of the previous day. The Confederates were forced to retreat from the bloodiest battle in United States history up to that time, ending their hopes that they could block the Union advance into northern Mississippi.

The Battle of Shiloh is named for a small church located in the central portion of the battlefield. The battle is also known as the Battle of Pittsburg Landing. The Union loss at Shiloh was 1,754 killed, 8,408 wounded and 2,885 captured or missing. Once more Private Brown was wounded during the battle. On the Confederate side the loss was reported as 1,728 killed, 8,012 wounded and 959 missing. In the words of Union Gen. M. F. Force, “The battle sobered both armies.” The battle was the first of many large battles during the war that had in excess of 20,000 casualties and was an omen that the war would last for a much longer time and be far bloodier in casualties than anyone had anticipated.

One year later in 1863, the 20th Illinois Infantry participated in the long Vicksburg Campaign from May 18 to July 4, a series of maneuvers and battles in the Western Theater directed against Vicksburg, Mississippi, a fortress city that dominated the last Confederate-controlled section of the Mississippi River. The Union Army of the Tennessee under Gen. Grant gained control of the river by capturing this stronghold and the Confederate forces stationed there. Although the Confederate killed and wounded in the battle and siege of Vicksburg were a relatively small 2,872, and Union 4,910, Grant captured his second Confederate army in its entirety (the first being at Fort Donelson) and 29,495 surrendered.

This was the second major blow to the Confederacy in the summer of 1863. On July 3, Gen. Robert E. Lee's invasion of the North collapsed at Gettysburg. On July 4, the Stars and Stripes rose over Vicksburg. The most significant result of this campaign was control of the Mississippi River. The Confederacy was now cut in two; one week later, an unarmed steamboat arrived in Union-held New Orleans from St. Louis after an uneventful trip down the river. President Lincoln announced, "The Father of Waters again goes unvexed to the sea.”

Private James Brown was wounded for the third time at Vicksburg. He was discharged in July 1864 at Nashville, Tenn. Amazingly, he had not had enough of war, and in February 1865 he re-enlisted for a year in the Fourth Veteran Regiment of Gen. Winfield S. Hancock’s First Veterans Corps to provide security for the federal capitol. Private Brown was in camp at Alexandria, Virginia across the Potomac River at the time of the assassination of President Lincoln, April 14, 1865. His regiment was immediately placed on provost duty in Washington, and continued that service until after July 7, 1865, the day execution for Mrs. Mary Surratt, David Herold, Lewis Powell and George Atzerodt, all convicted of complicity in that awful tragedy. In the fall of 1855 Private James Brown went to Camp Chase, Columbus, Ohio and was mustered out of service on February 7, 1866. Wounded, but unbowed, he had survived the Civil War.

To be continued next week.


Private James W. “Diamond R” Brown, An Exceptional Warrior
Part 2

By Ken Robison
For The River Press
April 4, 2012

This continues with the second part of the story of James W. “Diamond R” Brown. Part 1 covered Brown’s early years and his service during the Civil War.

Just months after the end of James W. Brown II’s service in the Civil War in February, 1866 this exceptional man of adventure headed west in summer of that same year. Engaged as a “bull whacker” driving an ox team between Nebraska City and Salt Lake City, he arrived there in August and immediately loaded freight for Helena, Montana Territory. Reaching Helena in September, he sold his ox team to Carroll, Steele & Hubbell, and in exchange was given the position of wagon master. He then went from Helena to St. Peter’s mission, loaded his teams with hay for the new military post Camp Cooke at the mouth of Judith River. The hay sold for $125 a ton!

At Camp Cooke, Brown loaded with government freight to Fort Benton, receiving ten cents a pound for hauling, and making two trips during the fall. After turning the cattle out for the winter, in February 1867 Mr. Brown engaged with I. G. Baker & Co., to take charge of a pack train to carry provisions to Fort Hawley, on the Missouri River 20 miles above the mouth of the Musselshell. The trip down was made without special incident other than heavy snowstorms and severe cold on the return trip at Camp Cooke. There he found the soldiers in a deplorable condition. A sentinel had been killed while on duty the night before. Major Clinton, then commanding officer, had for several days been trying to get the mail through to Benton, but the party returned, with several of them badly frozen.

Major Clinton asked Brown if he would guide a party through to Benton, and he agreed if he would be furnished with three horses for himself and his men. He was given the pick of the stables and started the following morning, making the trip safely to Benton in two days, arriving there on February 22, 1867. The weather was intensely cold, the river being frozen to the depth of four feet. With the thermometer so low, and a terrific ice-cold blizzard raging over the wide sweep of level country, old-timers who had experience understood what this trip from Camp Cooke to Fort Benton must have been like. No amount of clothing kept them warm, yet under Brown’s leadership they arrived at Fort Benton.

In the spring of 1867 James Brown engaged with the overland freighting firm of John J. Roe & Company, known as the Diamond R, for $150 per month, and moved government stores from Fort Benton to Fort Shaw. During the fall he transferred stores from Fort Shaw to Fort Ellis, thence going to Fort Hawley for oats left there by a stranded steamer. The Indians were decidedly hostile at this time and the train in charge of Brown presented a warlike appearance, having two small cannon and an arsenal of small arms. Fort Hawley had been established in 1866 by Louis Rivet of the Northwest Fur Co to trade with the River Crows. It was named for A. F. Hawley a partner in the company.

In the spring of 1868 Mathew Carroll, George Steele, and C. A. Broadwater bought the Diamond R Freighting Company, and from that point on the moniker “Diamond R” Brown was born. In 1868 Brown secured a contract to remove the stores of Fort C. S. Smith to Fort Ellis in southern Montana. The preparations for this work were elaborate, comprising thirty-eight teams in charge of Brown, James C. Adams and Thomas Clary and accompanied by a company of soldiers, all under the supervision of Major George Steele. On their arrival at Fort Smith they discovered that the major portion of the property had been sold. A part of it had been promised to the Indians who, pronouncing that some tobacco had been stolen, declared war. An investigation revealed that a soldier had stolen it, and upon his being properly punished peace was restored.

In 1868 James Brown married Sarah Bull, daughter of Piegan Blackfeet Melting Marrow (Bull) and Bird Sailing This Way, in Fort Benton in the “Indian custom.” Later in 1888-89 a Priest at Holy Family Mission blessed this marriage. Sarah was born at Pierre Chouteau & Co.’s trading post Fort Benton in May 1854. She became mother to seven children: Geneva Adeline, James William III, Joseph W., Gerusia [died age 13], Josephine [died in childhood], Jesse J., and Leo McKinley. Mrs. Sarah Brown died December 3, 1912 at Browning.

In the spring of 1869 Brown located a ranch at Eight Mile Spring near Fort Benton, but ranch life was not for him at that time. In July of 1869 Brown and Joseph Kipp had a thrilling experience while searching for sixty head of cattle that had escaped from their owner. The cattle were recovered 150 miles from Fort Benton and safely returned, but not until Brown and Kipp had experienced many hardships and had formed a friendship.

Mr. Brown remained with the Diamond R Company until 1870, and in the spring of 1871 he arranged with Joe Kipp to do freighting on shares. Going into Canada over the Whoop-Up Trail Kipp and Brown built a trading post on the Belly River. In December of that year, Brown left Benton with a load of goods for the Belly River post. Soon after starting, his train was overtaken by a terrific snowstorm, accompanied by intense cold. The snow got so deep they could hardly move, and some days advanced not more than one mile, while on other days they could not move at all. Finally they reached the “medicine line,” near the Rocky Spring ridge, where the storm compelled them to remain. The cold was almost unendurable. Whiskey froze solid, coal oil became a thick slush and no food could be obtained for the horses, nor could they be protected from the weather. The horses ate the wagon boxes and also a dozen brooms which were packed in one of the wagons. Twenty horses were frozen to death in this camp. The storm abated on the February 18th and with the remaining horses Brown pushed on to the trading post, having been over two months covering a distance of just 230 miles.

Wagon roads, the lifelines of the northern plains, radiated like a spider-web in every direction from Fort Benton during Montana’s territorial days. “Diamond R” Brown left this account of freighting on the Whoop-Up Trail in a short manuscript that today is in the Montana Historical Society:
“When I came to Montana in 1866, the only road on the reservation was called the Red River Half Breed Cart Trail [part of the Old North Trail], which ran from Edmonton to Fort Benton. It ran along at the foot of the mountains on the east side just outside the timber. It passed through [later] Glacier National Park below the railroad station of the Great Northern. It then kept along the foot of the mountains clear to Fort Edmonton. In 1871 quite a trade sprung up here between the Fort Benton people and the northern Indians. Those of us who engaged in it at that time laid out another road leading from Fort Benton through to Canada. It came up the Teton about 25 miles then left the Teton through the Knees and went on to the Marias. It struck the Marias a little below where the Great Northern Railway now crosses the river. Leaving the Marias it came up Medicine Rock Hill, as it is now called, and from this hill crossed the bench to about where Shelby now is, and down onto the Alkali Flat. It followed up the flat for 15 miles in a northerly direction, when it left the flat and continued along what is called the Rocky Spring ridge. From Rocky Spring ridge it ran on north to what is known as Red River or Dry Gulch.
“. . . After leaving Red River, the road kept on to what was called John Joe’s Spring, and from there on to Milk River. Still going north, it crossed Eighteen Mile Coulee, continuing to Middle Coulee, north to Kipp’s Coulee. Leaving Kipp’s Coulee it went on until it struck St. Mary’s between St. Mary’s and the forks of the Belly, which it forded at Old Fort Whoop-up, a branch running to what is called Standoff at the present time. This is the first wagon road . . . When the Mounted Police came in 1874, there was another road laid out from Fort Shaw to Macleod, a mail route.
“Mule teams were used some on the Whoop-Up trail, the ratio was approximately one mule to every four oxen. They were not used as extensively since they were more expensive and couldn’t carry as much freight. A good mule would cost $300. However, these teams were considerably faster and so would be used for hauling lighter goods, sometime the contraband whisky. They could cover twice the distance in a day as the oxen and could make the whole trip in eight to 10 days. Drivers were proud of their mules and would stop and deck them out with bells before coming into a settlement so they would jingle as they arrived.
“Horses were never used extensively for freighting on the Whoop-Up Trail. After the police arrived they were used for mail and passenger stages. They could make the trip in the fastest time of all, four to six days.
“The establishment of the railway ended the freighting days of the Whoop-Up Trail. As the robe trade had diminished the bull-trains had picked up other freight such as coal. The first train loaded of this commodity, thirty-six tons, arrived in Fort Benton in November, 1880. Over the years the cargoes reflected the economic interests of the area, food, supplies and clothing for the Indians (and whisky); pemmican for Southern Alberta settlers, including the police; and robes and coal to Benton, to name the most important. Goods went to the traders, the Indians, back to the merchants in Benton, to the Mounted police in Canada and the army in Montana.”

In 1872 Brown and Kipp erected a post store at Fort Kipp, at the mouth of Old Man’s River and another at High river, where they traded profitably with the Indians, supplying them with goods brought from Fort Benton in exchange for furs. In the summer of 1874 Diamond R Brown began trading on his own account at Old Man’s River, Canada, and from 1875 to 1881 was in the service of merchant Tom. C. Power as manager of Kipp trading store, and spend part of the time in Fort Benton and Fort Macleod.

In 1890 Brown and his family moved to Choteau where he served for three years as assistant farmer at the Blackfeet Old Agency. In 1893, he secured a ranch of 1,000 acres on South Fork of the Milk River on the Blackfeet reservation where he raised cattle and racehorses. After his wife passed away in 1912, Brown moved to Browning and made his home with daughter Geneva.

Historical writer Martha Edgerton Plassmann visited Browning in 1925 and wrote a biographic sketch of Brown:
“I was charged by no means to neglect interviewing James W. Brown who resided there, and who is one of the oldest pioneers of Montana. With this laudable purpose in prospect, I started out one afternoon. I made arrangements for an interview with him the following day. That night he was taken seriously ill, and it was feared the attack might prove fatal. Notwithstanding his condition, the old gentleman did not forget to send me data concerning his life, which has been unusually eventful. From this I gathered what I could, that is necessarily barren of anecdotes which, had he been well, he would have furnished to adorn the tale.
“. . . One who has known James W. Brown for many years, says of him that he was a man of upright character who earned the respect of all who knew him. He neither gambled nor drank, and never chose his associates from the rough element found here in the early days. While not of a quarrelsome disposition, he was perfectly capable of upholding his rights. He attended strictly to his own affairs, not attempting to interfere with other persons’ business.”

Mrs. Plassmann wrote of Brown’s marriage, “He married a Piegan woman, and by her had several children. Unlike some others in the northwest, the influx of the whites did not lead him to put away the mother of his children to take a white wife—on the contrary he remained true to her until her death a few years ago, and by so doing earned the respect of all right-thinking persons.”

James W. “Diamond R” Brown II passed away December 23, 1927 in Browning. He lived a life of adventure and hardship, surviving wounds in three major battles of the Civil War and the many dangers of the harsh life of an overland freighter on the Montana frontier. His memory lives on through many descendants and the striking image of old “Diamond R” Brown guiding his wagon train up the bluffs from Fort Benton in Charles M. Russell’s powerful tribute to the overland freighters, the painting Wagon Boss.

Note: If you have Civil War veterans in your family who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories and photographs that we can share with our readers. Send your Civil War stories to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442.

[Sources: GFLD 27 Apr 1899, p. 2; Montana Newspaper Association The Browning Citizen 21 Dec 1925; FBRPW 24 Nov 1982; U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles; American Civil War Regiments; Progressive Men of Montana p. 1507; Blackfeet Heritage 1907-08.]

Photos for Part 1:
1. James W. “Diamond R” Brown.
2. Map of American Civil War Western Theater of Operations.
3. Map of the Battle of Fort Donelson.
4. Execution of Lincoln’s assassination plotters.

Photos for Part 2:
1. An ox-train freighting on the Whoop-Up Trail
2. James W. Brown Civil War Gravestone, at St. Michael’s Cemetery, Browning, MT [Courtesy of Find-a-Grave].
3. Diamond R Brown leading a wagon train in Charles M. Russell’s Wagon Boss.

28 February 2012

Private Chapman Pennock, a Canadian Yank

By Ken Robison
For The River Press February 29, 2012

This continues a monthly series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War. A special thanks to Edward J. Snider of Harlem, MT for sharing photographs and information on his ancestor, Chapman Pennock.

Many foreigners fought on both sides during our American Civil War. Chapman Pennock, a Canadian, fought for the Union, later came west to Montana and today rests at Riverside Cemetery, Fort Benton. Pennock was born March 24, 1843 in South Crosby, Leeds County, Ontario, Canada. He was the eldest of seven children born to Arthur W. and Phoebe Ann Woodard Pennock. As a young man he worked on a farm and learned the carpentry trade. He found employment in a sash and door factory at Sandy Creek, New York, and when President Abraham Lincoln issued a call for 300,000 volunteers to serve for the duration of the Civil War, Pennock quit work at the factory and at the age of 20 enlisted into the Union Army on June 17, 1863. Chapman was enrolled as a Private in Company C 18th Cavalry Regiment New York, just two weeks before the Battle of Gettysburg.

Pennock’s company was sent to Camp Dudorf on New York’s Staten Island for basic training. Upon completion of training, Chapman’s regiment saw action almost immediately in New York in helping to quell draft riots. The draft riots of July 13-16, 1863 have been described as the worst outbreak of urban unrest in U.S. history. On Monday, July 13th five days of mayhem and bloodshed began that would be known as the Civil War Draft Riots. The rioters initially targeted only military and governmental buildings, symbols of the “unfairness” of a new conscription law. Mobs attacked only individuals who interfered with their actions, but by afternoon of the first day, some of the rioters turned to attacks on African Americans, and on all things symbolic of black political, economic, and social power. As the violence escalated, armed mobs of white workers rampaged throughout the streets and fought police, the remaining militia still in New York, and the newly trained 18th Cavalry in pitched battles. They burned government buildings, the Colored Orphan Asylum, many businesses, and attacked black men and women, with special violence for black workers including eleven lynchings.

The 18th New York Cavalry then deployed to Camp Stoneman near Washington D. C. for further training and to perform patrol and guard duty in the capital city. Chapman Pennock saw President Abraham Lincoln several times, and he recalled seeing “Lincoln, passing in review of Union Troops, riding a white horse with his feet barely off the ground and his tall hat bobbing as he nodded to the troops. Quite a comical site [sic]!”

Leaving Washington under command of General Nathaniel Prentiss Banks, the 18th Cavalry received orders to the Department of the Gulf of Mexico on February 16, 1864 and then to the Red River Campaign [March 10-May 22, 1864]. The Red River Campaign had several goals: confiscate southern cotton for New England mills; destroy Confederate supply lines; deter the threat of a French-Mexican military force and supplies from joining the Confederates; protect any loyal Union population in Texas; and finally bring Texas back into the Union.

Following the course of the Red River, the Union Army and Navy progressed with little opposition through Alexandria reaching Natchitoches by early April 1864. At Natchitoches the Army veered away from the Red River, going toward Shreveport by way of Mansfield, which left them without naval support. This and another tactical blunder on the part of General Banks and a series of skillful maneuvers by General Richard Taylor (son of President Zachary Taylor), who commanded the Confederate forces, were decisive factors to the final outcome of the battle.

Pennock later described this campaign and what it was like to endure combat action:
“I cannot recall the exact dates of those minor fights but I was in all of them and came thru unharmed but wished many times I was honorably out of it. After leaving Natchitoches, Gen. Banks thought to reach Shreveport, La. Without much fighting and after several days marching and a few skirmishes and loosing [sic] but a few men, on the morning of April 8, 1864 at Pleasant Hill we were suddenly faced by the main Rebel Army and a fight was on. We had several men killed, two by my side, namely, Thos. Oliver and John Fay. I was badly frightened and excited. I felt as tho I had all the war I wanted but had gotten into it and was determined to make the best of it. Expecting to be killed any minute causes strange feelings to come over one that no can realize until he has been there.
“Our next fight was at Mansfield and both parties were determined to hold the field. After noon the Rebels began to weaken and fall back towards the Cross Roads, and tho they were beaten, some fighting was continued all night. The rebels, during the night, had received reinforcements and outnumbered us by many hundreds. The battle continued all day and men lay dead in some places two deep. As night came we had to return to Pleasant Hill were we got some rest but by daybreak the fight was on for the second day and by night we were badly beaten. Our supply train and everything was gone. Gen. Banks was discouraged. We were short about six thousand men, all our supplies and artillery. Banks ordered a general retreat and turned our faces towards New Orleans. Ragged, dirty and hungry before we reached the Mississippi River across from Baton Rouge, there we got new supplies of food and clothing and were thankful to be alive.
“After resting a few days at Baton Rouge, Company C’s horses were turned over to the government and we were ordered to New Orleans to do guard and patrol duty in the city, not mounted. After about ten days, Company C was sent up to Fort Carey to drill, both infantry and artillery. I got very tired of that kind of drilling, but that was orders and had to be done, regardless of our feelings. We remained there four weeks, and were then returned to New Orleans, mounted and put on patrol duty in and around the city.
“At this time some of the boys were applying for furloughs, or leave of absence. I, not feeling very well, sent in my application and received my furlough and transportation to Watertown, New York, good for thirty days. I left New Orleans, September 15th on board the S. S. Campana, had good weather and landed at New York, six days and six hours from the time I left New Orleans. I arrived at Watertown two days later. I met with many old friends, all eager to know about the war. After a few days, I turned my attention to getting over into Canada, to the home of my parents. I met with many difficulties but finally reached home where I remained until time to return to Watertown where I got my transportation papers and passport to New York. On arriving, I found I could not get a boat to New Orleans for several days, so went to the Soldiers Home and the officer in charge wired headquarters that I was there.
“On my return, waiting for the transport ship, after about ten days I was put aboard the S. S. Continental. I had a very rough voyage to New Orleans. On arriving, I found the 18th Cavalry was then at Thipodox [Tribodaux], some seventy miles, from there. I went to headquarters and got transportation on the Algers R. R. which run near Thipodox. On arrival there, I was furnished with a horse and equipment and again took up duty with Company C, 18th New York Cavalry. I cannot recall the exact date but in the year of 1864, after being on duty at Thipodox for several days in continual cold rain, the Regiment was ordered back to New Orleans, where we were dismounted and sent eight miles into winter quarters and remained there thru cold and rainy weather until about the middle of January 1865.”

In a reorganized command under General Edward Richard Sprigg Canby, who had relieved General Banks, Private Pennock took part in another march on Shreveport in January, 1865, but the news of General Lee’s surrender came before they reached that city. The rigors of the campaign, especially the cold, damp weather, having weakened his health, Pennock was confined in a hospital in New Orleans for sometime after the close of the war, and he was honorably discharged January 14, 1866.

Following his discharge Chapman Pennock returned to Canada and married Clarissa Brown in Ontario in 1866, and to this union eight children were born. At this time he engaged in the mercantile business at Fort Williams, Ontario. He sold out there, tried faming in North Dakota for two years, and in 1888 came to Montana to work on the St. Paul, Minneapolis, & Manitoba [later Great Northern] railway. Two years later Pennock located at Fort Benton, and for a time was employed by Henry J. O’Hanlon as manager for the O’Hanlon Livestock Company. On April 16, 1907, Clarissa Pennock died of cancer and was interred in Riverside Cemetery.

Shortly after the death of his wife, Chapman Pennock moved from Fort Benton to the Ralph B. Snider Ranch, thirteen miles southwest of Hogeland, then part of Choteau County [now Blaine County]. He lived with his daughter Elizabeth Ann Pennock Snider and her husband Ralph until the latter’s death in 1910. Chapman helped his daughter raise her three small children and manage the cattle and horses on the ranch. For three more decades Chapman lived with his daughter, and she cared for him. On Memorial Day 1937 at the Snider Ranch, American Legion Posts #59 Hogeland and #109 Turner and a large gathering of friends and neighbors honored Private Pennock as the last remaining Civil War veteran in Blaine County.

On February 10, 1940 Chapman Pennock, age 97, passed way at the Snider Ranch. A military funeral service was held at the Hogeland Lutheran Church with Harlem and Big Flat ex-servicemen attending. An escort accompanied the remains to Fort Benton where the American Legion Post held graveside services. Chapman Pennock, Civil War veteran rests next to his wife, Clarissa Brown Pennock and son, Richard, in Fort Benton Riverside Cemetery.

Sources: [Photos and Family History provided by Edward J. Snider; FBRPW 14 Feb 1940, p. 1; 21 Feb 1940, p. 8; FBRPW 17 Apr 1907, p. 5; Thunderstorms And Tumbleweeds 1887-1987 East Blaine County, pp. 232, 442, 513; Riverside Cemetery Records; U.S. Civil War Soldier Records and Profiles; American Civil War Regiments 18th New York Cavalry; New York Civil War Muster Roll Abstracts; A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion, Vol. 2]

Note: If you have Civil War veterans in your family who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories and photographs that we can share with our readers. Send your Civil War stories to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442.

Photos:
1. Young Chapman Pennock. [Courtesy of Edward J. Snider]
2. New York Draft Riots, July 13-16.
3. Chapman and Clarissa A. Brown Pennock. [Courtesy of Thunderstorms And Tumbleweeds]
4. Civil War Veteran Champman Pennock, age 94, Memorial Day 1937 at the Snider Ranch in Blaine County. [Courtesy of Edward J. Snider]
5. Chapman Pennock Civil War Gravestone, Riverside Cemetery.

28 January 2012

Larger Than Life Frontier Character, Colonel John J. Donnelly

Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes:
1861-1865

Larger Than Life Frontier Character, Colonel John J. Donnelly

By Ken Robison
For The River Press
January 25, 2012

This continues a monthly series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War.

Frontier Fort Benton was a town of colorful characters, but they broke the mold with John J. Donnelly. In the span of six decades, Colonel Donnelly fought with distinction through the Civil War, led Irish Fenian Army invasions of Canada, led a civilian army in the Nez Perce War, served as Fenian agitator, Louis Riel advisor, attorney, county clerk and recorder, and probate judge, and was elected Speaker of the Montana House of Representatives. After this extraordinary career, even in the end, he died a uniquely spectacular death.

Who was this man of triumph and tragedy in frontier Montana? John J. Donnelly was born November 15, 1838 at Providence, Rhode Island of Irish immigrant parents. He was educated in schools of Providence and the College of the Holy Cross, Worcester, Massachusetts. Moving west to Michigan, he studied law in the office of Sylvester Larned, of Detroit, Michigan, and was admitted to practice in November 1860 on the eve of the Civil War.

On November 18, 1861 at the age of 23, John J. Donnelly enlisted in the service of the United States and raised an infantry company. As Captain of Company G, his regiment, the Fourteenth Michigan Infantry, with 925 officers and men, was mustered into service February 13, 1862 at Ypsilanti, Michigan under Colonel Robert P. Sinclair.

The Fourteenth left Michigan on the 17th of April 1862 for St. Louis, Mo., and joined General Grant's army at Pittsburg Landing. It participated in the siege of Corinth, Miss., and when the enemy evacuated, the Fourteenth formed a part of
General Buell's army in the famous race with the Confederate army under General Bragg, to Louisville, Ky.

At Nashville, Tenn., the Fourteenth Michigan Infantry Regiment was assigned to the First Brigade, Second Division, Fourteenth Corps of the Army of the Cumberland, and served in that corps for the rest of the war. In November the regiment had a sharp encounter with Alabama troops at Lavergne, Tenn., when it captured a fort and took a large number of prisoners. After a series of marches and victories the regiment was at Stone River, Tenn., in January 1863 when it took part in that engagement.

Captain Donnelly led Company G until he was appointed engineer officer on the staff of Major General George H. Thomas, Commander of the Fourteenth Corps. Promoted to Lieutenant Colonel, Donnelly served with General Thomas during 1863-64, while Thomas was gaining fame with his stout defense at the Battle of Chickamauga in 1863, saved the Union Army from being completely routed, earning him his most famous nickname, the "Rock of Chickamauga." General Thomas followed soon after with a dramatic breakthrough on Missionary Ridge in the Battle of Chattanooga. In the Franklin-Nashville Campaign of 1864, he achieved one of the most decisive victories of the war, destroying the army of Confederate General John Bell Hood, at the Battle of Nashville.
By 1864, Major General John M. Palmer had taken command of the Fourteenth Corps, and on August 5th, Lieutenant Colonel Donnelly was promoted to Full Aide-de-Camp on General Palmer’s staff. In the Civil War an Aide-de-Camp was a confidential officer appointed by general officers to their staffs. An aide-de-camp reported directly to his commander and took orders only from him. In a position of great responsibility, an aide was required to write orders, deliver them personally if necessary, and be thoroughly knowledgeable about troop positions, maneuvers, columns, orders of corps, routes, and the locations of officers’ quarters.

General Palmer effectively commanded the 14th Corps of the Army of the Cumberland in the Atlanta Campaign. Palmer's corps was a part of General William T. Sherman’s March to the Sea and the actions to capture Savannah, Georgia, late 1864. During the March to the Sea, Colonel Donnelly was appointed assistant general superintendent of the military railway service in General Sherman’s department.
Throughout the war until his discharge March 14, 1865 Colonel Donnelly took part in many of the principal engagements of that great conflict, and was twice wounded, at Corinth and Resaca. One of his obituaries reads, “A braver soldier never drew his sword in any cause, and such is the testimonial of his superior officers and of the men who served under him.”
As the Civil War drew to an end, Treasury Secretary Chase appointed Colonel Donnelly as special agent of the Treasury department. During reconstruction days he settled all war claims against the United States government in the Carolinas and part of Georgia and handled enormous sums of money without any suspicion of malfeasance.

Little is known of this period in Donnelly’s life, except that Colonel Donnelly engaged in the wholesale grocery and commission business at Savannah, Georgia. In 1866 Colonel Donnelly closed out his business and came north to Michigan on account of the death of his wife, to whom he was married but a few days before entering the service in 1861.

Entering a new phase of his life, Colonel Donnelly plunged headlong into the Fenian movement, which was then at its highest, becoming one of the most prominent figures in the subsequent “invasions” of Canada. The Fenian Brotherhood was an Irish republican organization founded in the United States in 1858 by John O'Mahony and Michael Doheny. Members were commonly known as "Fenians". O'Mahony, who was a Celtic scholar, named his organization after the Fianna, the legendary band of Irish warriors led by Fionn mac Cumhaill.

In 1866 together with many other Irish Civil War veterans Colonel Donnelly joined the Fenian movement to invade Canada to punish the English for their occupation of Ireland. The Fenians dreamed of capturing Canada, forcing the English to free Ireland in exchange for return of Canada. A thousand strong force of Fenian troops took the field in June, 1866, crossed the Niagara River into Ontario, defeated a company of Queen’s Own Rifles of Toronto, and captured Fort Erie. Shortly afterward the Battle of Pigeon Hill practically ended this outbreak. In this battle Col. Donnelly had 200 men in his command, and was able to hold his position from 9 o’clock a. m. until sundown, with 2,300 men opposing him. He had twelve men killed and seventeen wounded, with Donnelly among the wounded. He was captured, but escaped, and a large reward was offered for him.

We are the Fenian Brotherhood, skilled in the arts of war,
And we're going to fight for Ireland, the land we adore,
Many battles we have won, along with the boys in blue,
And we'll go and capture Canada, for we've nothing else to do.
— "Fenian soldier's song"

After the defeat at Pigeon Hill, Col. Donnelly drifted west and had a role in the Red River Rebellion of 1870, in which Louis Riel was the leader of the Metis and Cree. This collapsed as did another Fenian raid at Pembina, N. D. the next year. Donnelly came to Montana from Pembina, at the time of the boundary line survey, traveling with the survey party but not part of it. He settled in Fort Benton in 1872 to resume his practice of law.

In Fort Benton Colonel John J. Donnelly became a spokesman for the many Irish Democats of the town that included among others the Healy brothers, Matthew Carroll, John Tattan, and John Evans. Donnelly played a prominent part in the aftermath of the Cypress Hill massacre of 1873, when in 1875 Bentonites were arrested by federal officials and troops for an extradition hearing in Helena. The so-called “Extradition Prisoners” were released, and upon their triumphant return to Fort Benton, were welcomed by Colonel Donnelly with an eloquent speech, condemning governmental actions to surround the town and patrol the streets with armed soldiers, “while five of its most respected citizens were seized, chained together, and thrown into a military prison.”

In 1877 as Chief Joseph’s Nez Perce turned north from the Musselshell in their flight toward Canada, trader James Wells from Fort Claggett raised the alarm in Fort Benton. Col. Donnelly, warrior and leader of men, raised a company of 50 civilian mounted volunteers to hasten down the Missouri to the Cow Island. The men of Donnelly’s Company were tough men, experienced in the hard and dangerous life of frontier Montana. At least four, and likely more, of Donnelly’s men had extensive Civil War service, and three had recent service in the Seventh Infantry. At least three were Army scouts.

Donnelly’s Company arrived at Cow Island just after the Nez Perce had crossed the Missouri and were moving up Cow Creek. On September 27, 1877, Donnelly’s men engaged elements of the Nez Perce in a three-hour battle, with one man, African American Edmund Bradley killed. Fortunately for Donnelly’s Company the main Nez Perce camp was moving northward toward their fate at Snake Creek.

Popular and capable, Col Donnelly served Choteau County as Clerk and Recorder and Probate Judge, and was elected a member of the Twelfth Montana Territorial Legislative Assembly in 1881, being chosen Speaker of the House of Representatives. Throughout his time in Montana, Donnelly engaged in the practice of the law, and his last law partner in the 1890s became the talented young Charles N. Pray.

By 1885, Fort Benton was home for many Civil War veterans, and in early August of that year, Union veterans signed a petition to form a Grand Army of the Republic (G. A. R.) post. Among those signing this list was “J. J. Donnelly, Lieut. Colonel, 14th Michigan.”
Although not well documented, during 1883-84 when Louis Riel, leader of the Canadian Metis, was in exile in Montana, he spent time with Col. Donnelly. According to writer Joseph Kinsey Howard, Donnelly offered his support and advice, and the two met several times in Fort Benton. Donnelly advised him on the wording of petitions and military strategy and told Riel that he considered Riel’s dream of Metis freedom in western Canada a splendid dream. Riel’s 1885 invasion, defeat, and hanging must have been very hard on the old Fenian Donnelly.

Donnelly never remarried, and as he advanced in age his memories of battles lost and won in the Civil War, loss of his young wife, defeats in his glorious Fenian cause, loss of many of his Fort Benton Irish friends, the defeat of the Metis and loss of Riel, all must have weighed heavily on his mind. In November 1897, Donnelly was found lying in his bedroom with his throat badly cut and unconscious from loss of blood. Although he eventually recovered, the end was nearing for the old warrior. Yet, his drinking increased.

Two years later, in September 1899, friends became concerned over his strange absence from his usual haunts for several days. A search began, and Finlay Tower discovered footprints leading down to the water’s edge at the wing-dam at the end of Whalen bottom, and could find no place where anyone had come out. When last seen Donnelly had been drunk, and friends became concerned that the Colonel had met with some mishap. For weeks the search continued, but it was about a month later that remains were found on a sandbar on the south side of the Missouri river at the upper end of the Lansing ranch, having floated some 60 miles from the place where the tragedy occurred. Although badly decomposed, the remains were recognized as Donnelly. The remains indicated a determined case of suicide. He had filled his pockets with about 14 pounds of rocks, cut his throat from ear to ear, and completed his work of self-destruction by drowning. The coroner’s jury returned a verdict of death by drowning and self-inflicted injuries.

After a special requiem mass, the remains of the late Col. John J. Donnelly were interred in Riverside cemetery by pallbearers Judges DuBose and Tattan, Jere Sullivan, H. J. O’Hanlon, and G. A. R. veterans T. A. Cummings and R. S. Culbertson. A large number of his old friends attended the simple ceremonies at the graveside.

Joseph Kinsey Howard, in Strange Empire, eulogized Civil War veteran and Fenian leader Colonel Donnelly, “In September, 1899, the last of the Pembina plotters, last of the irreconcilables, perhaps last of the Fenian fighting men, joined his comrades. General Donnelly walked down to the Fort Benton levee, filled his pockets with fourteen pounds of rocks, slit his throat from ear to ear, and marched unfalteringly into the Missouri river.” And we might add, Colonel John J. Donnelly, Civil War hero, marched into history.

Note: If you have Civil War veterans in your family who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories and photographs that we can share with our readers. Send your Civil War stories to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442.

Photos:
1. The goal of the Fenian Brotherhood is reflected in this patriotic lithograph, "Freedom to Ireland," by Currier & Ives, New York, ca 1866.
2. The Battle of Eccles Hill was part of a Fenian raid into Canada in May 1870. This scene is located near the site of the Battle of Pigeon Hill where Colonel Donnelly was wounded in the 1866 Fenian invasion.
3. This portrait of John J. Donnelly is the only image of the famed Irishman in the Overholser Historical Research Center.
4. Civil War Gravestone of Captain John J. Donnelly at Highland Cemetery.

29 December 2011

Remembering Our Civil War Heritage and Heroes

Since April 2011, the beginning of the first year of the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War, I've been watching to see what Montana is doing to commemorate that transforming struggle. While the Billing Gazette published a good early one-time article, I decided Montana needs to do better that that. I have begun writing articles for two separate Montana Civil War series. Both, focus on Civil War veterans, Union and Confederate, who came to Montana after the war. Each article tells about their early life, their experiences during the war, and their new life in Montana. The first series began in the Great Falls Tribune in September, 2011 and is published the last Sunday of each month in the Sunday Life section. This series focuses on Civil War veterans who came to Montana and settled in the north central Montana area. My second series started this week in the Fort Benton River Press and will focus on Civil War veterans who came to Chouteau County area.

Both of my Montana Civil War series are available on-line with the Tribune carrying a link to each article in the series. You can access the Tribune series by entering "Remembering our Civil War heritage and heroes - Great Falls Tribune" in Google.

An electronic edition of the River Press is now available, through subscription, on-line. Since the River Press requires subscription, I'll be posting these articles on my blog with the first in the series below:

Chouteau County Civil War Veterans and the Grand Army of the Republic

By Ken Robison
For The River Press
December 28, 2011

This begins a series commemorating the 150th Anniversary of the Civil War.

From April 1861 to April 1865, our nation fought the most brutal and decisive war in our history—the American Civil War. This year, as we commemorate the 150th anniversary of the Civil War, let us pause to reflect, “How did the Civil War affect us?” Some might think this is a curious question since that monumental struggle was fought between “The States” more than two decades before Montana became a state. Yet, the real answer lies in the profound impact the Civil War had on our state, our country and its people.

The Civil War answered vital fundamental questions—there would be a unified United States of America, and there would no longer be millions of enslaved Americans. The Civil War directly affected every section, every community, every family, and every individual. The war came at a time when the American West was undergoing settlement by non-natives although Fort Benton had long been a fur trading outpost on the Upper Missouri. Gold strikes in western Montana (then Washington Territory) in 1862 led to the rapid formation of Montana Territory in 1864, and the extracted gold and other mineral wealth helped pay the costs of war. The Civil War dislocated and relocated countless Americans from North and South—many came to the new Montana Territory to escape the ravages of war and to seek a brighter future.

The old saying that Montana was settled by “the left wing of General Pap Price’s Confederate Army,” was true only in part. Many veterans, both Union and Confederate, came to head of navigation on the Missouri to start new lives. In the coming months, this series of articles will showcase Union and Confederate veterans that had an impact on Chouteau County in the aftermath of the Civil War. Names like Robert S. Culbertson, Thomas A. Cummings, Dan Dutro, Thomas Coatsworth, John J. Donnelly, Winfield Scott Wetzel, George Crane, and others will be featured with their stories. Who were these men, how did they participate in the war, and what do we know of their lives and the lives of their families here in Montana?

By 1885, Fort Benton was home for many Civil War veterans, and in early August of that year, Union veterans signed a petition to form a Grand Army of the Republic (G. A. R.) post. Signing this list were the following veterans with their rank and regiment:
J. J. Donnelly, Lieut. Colonel, 14th Michigan
M. J. Leaming, Major, 6th Tennessee Cavalry
J. H. Rice, Captain, 27th New York
William McQueen, Regimental Quartermaster, 1st Iowa
J. L. Stuart, Command Sergeant, 6th Ohio
Max. Waterman, Sergeant, 35th Iowa
Dan Dutro, Musician, 150th Illinois
W. S. Wetzel, Corporal, 25th Iowa
George W. Crane, Corporal, 26th Illinois
T. A. Cummings, Battery C, 1st New York Artillery
E. W. Lewis, Private, 113th Illinois
George M. Bell, Private, 13th Maine
Thomas Coatsworth, Private, 46th Wisconsin
Frank Coombs, Private, 129th Indiana
James Werrick, Private, 129th Indiana
R. S. Culbertson, Private, 6th Ohio

The Fort Benton post was approved by the Montana G. A. R. and designated the G. K. Warren Post No. 20, G. A. R., Fort Benton. The name honored Brigadier General G. K. Warren, a hero at Little Round Top durig the Battle of Gettysburg.

At a critical point in the battle Union General Meade sent his chief engineer, Brig. Gen. Gouverneur K. Warren, to find a way to block the advance of Confederate forces on the flank of Union forces. Climbing Little Round Top, Warren found only a small Signal Corps station there. He saw the glint of bayonets in the sun to the southwest and realized that a Confederate assault into the Union flank was imminent. He hurriedly sent officers to find help from any available units in the vicinity. Col. Strong Vincent, commander of the Third Brigade seized the initiative and directed his four regiments to Little Round Top. Upon arrival, Vincent received fire from Confederate batteries almost immediately. On the western slope he placed the 16th Michigan, and then proceeding counterclockwise were the 44th New York, the 83rd Pennsylvania, and finally, at the end of the line on the southern slope, the 20th Maine. Arriving only ten minutes before the Confederates, Vincent ordered his brigade to take cover and wait, and he ordered Col. Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain, commander of the 20th Maine, to hold his position, the extreme left flank of the Army of the Potomac, at all costs. Chamberlain and his 385 men waited for what was to come. For their heroic actions Chamberlain received the Medal of Honor for his conduct in the defense of Little Round Top. The citation read the medal was awarded for "daring heroism and great tenacity in holding his position on the Little Round Top against repeated assaults, and carrying the advance position on the Great Round Top. The 1974 novel The Killer Angels and its 1993 film adaptation, Gettysburg, depicted a portion of the important Battle of Little Round Top.

In December 1890, G. K. Warren Post No. 20, G. A. R., of Fort Benton inaugurated a series of campfires for social enjoyment during the winter. Lecturers from other parts of the state were secured at intervals to entertain the members. At a meeting held December 8, 1890, the following comrades were elected to the stations of office: John C. Duff, Commander; George W. Crane, Senior Vice Commander; Daniel Dutro, Junior Vice Commander; Thos A. Cummings, Officer of the Day; C. B. Hamilton, Quartermaster; Patrick Whalen, Officer of the Guard. The post was inspected by Assistant Inspector John J. Donnelly and everything found in regulation order. Col. Donnelly delivered a brief speech to his veteran comrades, which was highly appreciated and applauded.

The G. A. R was a fraternal organization composed of veterans of the Union Army, US Navy, US Marines and US Revenue Cutter Service who served in the Civil War. Founded in 1866 in Decatur, Illinois, it was dissolved in 1956 when its last member died. Linking men through their experience of the war, the G. A. R became among the first organized advocacy groups in American politics, supporting voting rights for black veterans, lobbying the US Congress to establish veterans' pensions, and supporting Republican political candidates. Its peak membership was more than 400,000 in 1890, a high point of Civil War commemorative ceremonies. The G. A. R was organized into "Departments" at the state level and "Posts" at the community level, and military-style uniforms were worn by its members. There were posts in every state in the U.S., and several posts overseas. The G. A. R. maintained a strong presence in the Fort Benton community for many years as the aging veterans of the Civil War slowly passed from the scene. As this series develops, we hope to determine the last Civil War veteran in this area.

We have identified some 64 Civil War Union and Confederate veterans who lived in the Fort Benton, Big Sandy, Highwood, and Geraldine areas. We’ll begin next month with one of the most colorful Union veterans, John J. Donnelly. If you have Civil War veterans in your family, who settled in this area, we would be pleased to hear from you with copies of stories or photographs that we can share with our readers and add to our Research Center. We heard recently from Edward J. Snider who shared some great stories and photos of his Civil War ancestor Chapman Pennock, who is buried in Riverside Cemetery. We’ll feature Private Pennock of Company C, 18th New York Cavalry in the coming months. In addition, we’ll share photos of Civil War veterans with Muncie Morger for her Veterans display project. Send your Civil War stories or comments to mtcivilwar@yahoo.com or to the Overholser Historical Research Center, Box 262, Fort Benton, MT 59442.


Photos:
1. Brig. Gen. G. K. Warren, hero of the battle of Little Round Top, Gettysburg, and namesake for Fort Benton G. A. R. Post 20.
2. The menacing heights of Little Round Top in 1863.
3. G. A. R. Medal authorized by Congress for members of the G. A. R.