Culpeper’s Battery
SC 3rd
Palmetto Battalion
In
May of 1863
Capt. Culpeper and his men were reassigned to the
Western Theatre. After
boarding a train in Charleston,
the
men began a long 700 plus mile journey to Jackson, Ms. General Joseph E.
Johnston, Confederate
commander of the Western Theatre, had requested
Culpeper’s Battery to
assist in
defending Vicksburg, Ms. against General Ulysses S.
Grant’s siege of
the city. Culpeper’s men
would remain in
the West and
would not return to South Carolina until war’s end. In
July of 1863
Union Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman laid siege to the
city of Jackson. Culpeper’s
Battery, attached to Gen.
N.G.
Evan’s brigade and Gen. French’s division, took position
on the western
side of
the city. Perry Moses
described in a
letter to his mother in Sumter his experiences during
the siege of
Jackson. He wrote how
his men had
been
under constant Federal bombardment for 8 days. He had fought a battery
of four guns for over an hour
giving them gun
for gun until the axletree of his gun and both wheels
were shot away. None
of his men were killed but some
were
injured. Perry also
mentioned that
the
“yankees” had better guns because their cannon had
longer range. Despite
the odds, Perry said his men
were
prepared to mow down the enemy like ripe oats before a
sharp scythe. In
September 1863,
Culpeper’s Battery, attached to Gen. Evander McNair’s
brigade, was sent
to
northwest Georgia to aid General Braxton Bragg at the
Battle of
Chickamauga. The
Battery fought with
distinction and was instrumental in defeating the Army
of the
Cumberland
commanded by General William S. Rosecrans.
Culpeper’s Battery was strategically located on
the
battlefield at the
very center of the Confederate main assault. The Confederate division
commanded by General James
Longstreet sliced
through the enemy causing the Federals to retreat in
complete disarray. The
battle moved at a fast and furious
pace
forcing Culpeper’s Battery to become detached from its
infantry brigade. Never
the less, Culpeper took out many
“yankee” guns before the Confederate infantry ran over
enemy positions. Gen.
Longstreet personally instructed Capt.
Culpeper in the heat of battle to concentrate his fire
at the remaining
Union
troops along Horseshoe Ridge thereby supporting several
brigades
including that
of General Joseph Kershaw of South Carolina. After a stubborn fight,
the ridge was finally taken and
late that
afternoon the victory was complete.
Several
days later,
President Jefferson Davis visited Bragg’s Army at
Lookout Mtn., Tn. to
commend
his victorious Confederate soldiers for their bravery,
courage and
devotional
service to Country. Culpeper’s
Battery
would
not hear these grand words of praise, because following
the
victory they
had been ordered to return immediately to Mississippi
and face General
Sherman’s Army again. The
Confederate
victory at Chickamauga was so decisive that virtually
all of Bragg’s
generals
thought the War in the west would be won or at the very
least a truce
would be
obtained from President Lincoln. Gen.
Bragg
refused to follow up and capture Gen. Rosecrans’ army in
Chattanooga much
to the dismay of his officers and men.
Bragg’s reluctance would lead eventually to a
Confederate
defeat in
November 1863 at the Battle of Missionary Ridge in
Chattanooga. In
1864 Culpeper’s
Battery was assigned to Mobile Al. to defend the city’s
surroundings
from the
growing threat of Union armies and navies.
The Battery at times became fractured and split
as men
were assigned
different duties in various places around Mobile. Culpeper
for the most part patrolled with the
15th and 16th Confederate cavalry
and skirmished
against
Federal troops. As
the Union army
exerted pressure on Confederate positions around Mobile,
Culpeper’s
Battery was
sent to Ft. Blakeley, Al. on the northeast side of
Mobile Bay. On
April 9, 1865
Ft. Blakeley was attacked by 16,000 Federal troops
running over a
smaller
Confederate force of less than 4,000.
Lt. Joshua L. Moses, who was commanding
Culpeper’s
Battery, was mortally
wounded in front of the fort.
The
Confederate troops had surrendered but Union soldiers
continued firing
as white
flags of surrender were flown.
Lt.
Moses was dying but he uttered these last words: “For
God’s sake spare
my men,
they have surrendered”. The
Battle
of
Ft. Blakeley was the last major conflict of the war. Ironically the battle
had occurred only a
few hours following General Robert E. Lee’s surrender to
General Grant
at
Appomattox. Culpeper’s
soldiers were captured and sent by cattle boats to a
prisoner of war
camp on
Ship Island, Ms. While
at Ship
Island
the Confederate prisoners suffered severe indignities at
the hands of
Union
guards. From Ship Island,
some of
Culpeper’s men were sent to New Orleans and later
discharged from the
war in
May 1865 at Vicksburg. The journey back home to South
Carolina was a
long and
difficult one. Many
tributes were
offered after the war for sacrifices made by Confederate
soldiers, but
maybe
known so eloquently stated as J.W. Brunson of the Pee
Dee Light
Artillery. Brunson
spoke at the
passing of Capt.
Culpeper with these words: “his well-handled Napoleons
won for himself
and his
brave command a high reputation for courage and
efficiency. I was never
with him on the firing line but
am told his courage rose with the tide of battle and at
its climax his
spirit
swelled in that supreme exaltation of soul which cheers
only the brave
when
missiles come thickest. After
the close
of the war he became a successful physician, a
profession most
congenial to his
kind and sympathetic nature. …… the death of our
comrade, James
Culpeper, marks
the passing of a brave confederate soldier, a patriotic
useful citizen,
and
Christian gentleman and adds another knightly name to
the long and
shining roll
of South Carolina’s departed chivalry”. Written
6-15-2004
by Ben Hudson, Gaffney, SC- Descendant of George W.
& John W.
Hudson and
Richard Jennings, all members of Culpeper’s Battery. Email abhudson@bellsouth.net Battles
participated in by Culpeper’s Battery: Coastal
“Charleston” South Carolina Campaigns (1861 to May
1863) Wilmington,
N.C.
Campaign (Nov. 1862 to Feb. 1863) Vicksburg
Campaign
& Jackson Siege, Ms. (June 1863 to Sept. 1863) Battle
of
Chickamauga, Ga. (Sept. 18 – 23, 1863) Gen.
Sherman’s
Jackson to Meridian, Ms. Campaign (Sept. 1863 to Feb.
1864) Mobile
Al.
Campaign (Feb. 1864 to April 9, 1865) Battle
of Fort
Blakeley, Al. (April 9, 1865) Culpeper’s
SC
3rd
Palmetto Battalion Light Artillery Company “C”
Memory
Roll Roster of Sumter District’s Soldiers Moses,
Joshua
L.
(1st
Lieutenant) KIA Moses,
Perry
(2nd
Lieutenant) wounded Lide,
David
F.
(Sergeant) Kirby,
Nelson
S.
(Corporal) KIA Nichols,
James
W.
(Corporal) wounded McRoy,
Wm. H.
(Corporal) Davis,
Wm.
A.H.
(Artificer) David,
Manly
J.
(Guidon) Privates: Ard,
James P.
Ardis,
Abraham P. Ardis,
James L. Ardis,
John W. Ardis,
Robert
Discharged for
Disability Ardis,
Thomas
DOD
hospital Ardis,
Wm. J. Ardis,
Wm. S. Avin,
James R. Bass,
Charles S. Cole,
Charles G. David,
Henry
Wounded at David,
Isaac M. Esdra,
Arthur Geddings,
James S. Geddings,
Job M. Geddings,
Peter
J.
DOD
hospital
/ on way home Geddings,
Samson
J.
DOD hospital Geddings,
Thomas
G.W. Harrington,
Joseph
L. Hodge,
Elijah Hodge,
John G.W. Hudson,
George
W. (no memory/military
records) died
1908 Hudson,
John
W. (received
pension
1919) died 1924 Johnson,
James J. Kirby,
Wm. M. Kolb,
Benjamin
T.
Wounded at Lackey,
Wm. R. Lawrence,
James
J.P. Lawrence,
John A. Lee,
Wm.
Wounded Lowry,
Henry J. McLeod,
Richard T. McRoy,
Linley M. Moses,
David L. Moses,
Horace H. Nesbit,
Stuart E. Newman,
John W. Norton,
Wm. B. Opry,
Erwin G. Osteen,
John
M.
KIA
Phillips,
Wm. H. Scurry,
John J. Thornhill,
James
W. Turner,
Erasmus Turner,
John Turner,
Thomas A. Weeks,
Augustus S. White,
James G. White,
Joseph
B.
Discharged for
disability. Names
were
extracted from Memory Roll S.C. State Archives Prepared
6-15-2004
by Ben Hudson, Email abhudson@bellsouth.net
If you have any
information
to add
to this data, please let us know.
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