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XXIV The Merchant's Son1 FATHER had
a store
here in Vicksburg, but the war ruined him. He was getting to be an old
man when
the war began, and after two years of it he had to quit. That was true
of
dozens of other merchants. They couldn’t get goods, and a great many of
their
customers had left town to go to places twenty, thirty, and forty miles
distant
where they thought they would be safer. There was an increasing stringency in merchandise from the time that intercourse with the North ceased. Very soon our coast was blockaded, and then our lack of manufactories became a serious matter. The supplies brought in by blockade runners were scanty in amount and high in price. Clothing of all descriptions, dress-goods, millinery, and shoes were very scarce. So were tinware and crockery and other household utensils. Not much flour was to be had, and no raisins or dates, and seldom any oranges, lemons, or bananas, We were cut off from all kinds of oil and light. Kerosene had come into common use here, and when that was no longer to be had we got out our candle molds and made candles. Some made dipped candles. No one who
wasn’t
here can realize the privations we went through. We made coffee out of
crusts
of bread that we toasted brown and ground up, and we made it out of
burnt
sugar. Rye coffee was quite a drink, and there was sweet potato coffee,
which
was better than nothing at all. I've drank many a cup of it and was
glad to get
it; and I've put many a dab of butter in my coffee instead of milk,
because
milk was so scarce. Lots of people who ordinarily would have used
considerable
flour ate corn bread for months and months and months, Pies and cakes
and
things of that kind were a luxury. At our house we made pound cake by
mixing a
little flour with cornmeal, adding butter, eggs, and sugar, and cooking
it in a
round tin dish. Most of
our young
men joined the army. One crack company of them left here one hundred
and fifty
strong, When that company returned it numbered only twenty-eight. For a long
time we
had large numbers of Confederate troops in or about the city. They were
not a
desirable element in the community. Soldiers never are, even in times
of peace.
Environment is more important than heredity in determining a man's
character.
You cut a man off from his family and home surroundings, and he is not
in his
proper element. With the natural restraints gone man returns to his
brute
instincts. An army is a big drain on the region where it is quartered
or
through which it moves, whether it consists of friends or enemies. And
the
meeting of troops in battle is hell for them, and it is hell for the
people
living there. When
Vicksburg
became a center of military activity troops occupied the courthouse and
were in
tents and hastily-built barracks all around town. Marauders always
abound among
soldiers, and though the officers tried to control their men and
prevent
lawlessness, that was impossible. Our orchards were raided and our
chickens
taken. The soldiers were up to every deviltry you can think of. They
would come
into a store, get hold of the end of a ball of twine, then go outside
and pull
the twine till they had all there was in the ball. Another favorite
joke was to
unscrew a nut from the wheel of a buggy that was standing on the
street. They
put the nut into the buggy, and when the unsuspecting owner got in and
drove
away the wheel would come off. Grant
arrived in
this vicinity in January, 1863, to attempt the task of capturing the
city. The
Mississippi made a great bend opposite Vicksburg, and he tried to dig a
canal
across the peninsula, which was only a mile wide, so that vessels could
go up
and down the river without coming in range of the city guns. But after
six
weeks of the hardest kind of work a flood drowned many of his horses
and forced
the men to fly for their lives. He made other unsuccessful experiments,
and
there was a general demand in the North for his dismissal. At length he
sent
his army below Vicksburg by a route west of the river, and on the night
of
April 16th three supply boats, protected by Admiral Porter's ironclads,
set out
to run past the eight miles of batteries here. All the vessels were
damaged,
but with the exception of one transport that was burned they got away
down the
river. A week later another supply fleet ran past the batteries. The army
met the
boats twenty-five miles south of here, crossed the river, and after a
succession of fierce battles arrived on the heights around the city on
May
18th. They assaulted the works the next day, and again three days
later, but
gained no advantage of consequence and lost many lives. Then they
settled down
to starve us out, and Porter's fleet bombarded the place incessantly. Many of
the streets
were cut through hills, and there were clay banks on either side of
them. These
clay banks offered an opportunity for making caves to shelter us from
the
missiles that the enemy was hurling into the place. So there was much
burrowing
in the earth, and many of us spent a large portion of our time in the
underground domiciles which we made. My home
was on a
hill in the better residence section, and we dug a cave just outside of
the
yard in the bank by the public road. We made the roof out of railroad
iron and
crossties. The iron rails supported the crossties, which were laid
close
together, and the crossties were covered with dirt. The cave was as
large as a
fair-sized room and high enough so a person could stand up. There was a
board
floor and we had mattresses and pillows in there, and several chairs,
including
one rocking-chair. We kept candles in the cave to furnish light. Its
greatest
lack was perhaps in the matter of ventilation, and the atmosphere was
stifling
to some extent. Often we slept in the cave, but we rarely stayed in it
during
the daytime unless there was a hot bombardment. We were
n't afraid
of the big shells. They went over the town, and we'd see them at night
like
shooting stars, As a matter of fact the bombarding was all of it more
spectacular
than dangerous. The Yankees could have shelled Vicksburg till hell
froze over,
or the termination of all time, and not have captured the place. But
think of
all we had to contend with — our lack of food and the shabby equipment
of our
troops. I never have understood why so much credit was given to General
Grant
for capturing the city. We were on
the
verge of starvation. There were no delicacies even for the wounded, and
the
surgeons didn’t have chloroform half the time. Many of the garrison and
the
citizens perished from sickness and exhaustion. So on July
3d,
about the middle of the morning, white flags were unfurled on the
parapet of
our fortifications, and the cannon ceased to roar. Grant and the
Confederate
commander, Pemberton, met that afternoon and arranged the terms of
surrender,
and the next day the Union troops took possession of the city. I recall
that the
Confederate prisoners were driven barefoot through the streets. That
looked
rather rough to us, but I believe the North thought the Union prisoners
who
fell into Southern hands during the war were hardly treated, too.
Probably it
was about six of one and half a dozen of the other. What hurt
us worst
in connection with the war was the aftermath — the days of
reconstruction. Many
of the soldiers came home to a standing chimney. There was no house, no
fences,
no slaves, no anything to do with; but there was a wife and children to
be
supported. Perhaps the man had never worked in his life — didn’t know
how —
that was the tragedy. ___________ |