Showing posts with label Waynesburg Messenger. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Waynesburg Messenger. Show all posts

Monday, December 16, 2019

SW Pennsylvania Invasion Threats Part 7 Gettysburg


The Pittsburgh Gazette
June 12, 1863


In mid-June, coinciding with Morgan's Raid, Robert E. Lee’s Army of the Potomac began to enter central Pennsylvania as a prelude to the Battle of Gettysburg. Communities throughout the lower part of the commonwealth from Pittsburgh to Philadelphia were warned by Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin to prepare for aggressive action on the part of Lee’s army. It was thought that the state capital at Harrisburg was to be a target. In Greene County, the Waynesburg Messenger preached, “No time is to be lost, if you would save the capital of our proud old Commonwealth from the despoiling invader and our fields from devastation.” [117] 
   The Messenger noted that one hundred volunteer militiamen from Greene County were on their way to Pittsburgh under the command of a Waynesburg resident, Lieutenant Levi R. McFann, who had just completed a nine-month enlistment in the 123rd PA. McFann’s volunteers would serve under Major General William T. H. "Bully" Brooks in the newly created Department of the Monongahela. This command was organized to protect western Pennsylvania from Pittsburgh to Johnstown in Cambria County, as well as parts of West Virginia and Ohio. [118]
Wheeling Daily Ingelligencer
         June 18, 1863


General Outline of the Department of the Mononghela
            Western Pennsylvnania, parts of Ohio and (West) Virginia
    LOC

Uniontown had the unlikely benefit of infantry protection from the 27th New Jersey. The nine-month enlistments of these men had expired on June 3 while they were in Louisville, Kentucky. On their way back home to New Jersey, they learned that Lee’s troops had entered central Pennsylvania and that their rail trip back home might be blocked.  Twenty-one year old Colonel George Mindil polled his troops and they collectively agreed to extend their military service while in southwestern Pennsylvania for this emergency. The 27th New Jersey was briefly ordered to guard Uniontown before being shipped to the state capital at Harrisburg.  [119]

         The Army of the Monongahela saw little action in Ohio and West Virginia during the time of the Gettysburg Campaign. Following his defeat at Gettysburg, Lee crossed the Potomac River back into Virginia, and Pennsylvania was not threatened again for the remaining two years of the war.



Sunday, November 24, 2019

SW Pennsylvania Invasion Threats Part 4 Greene County

Greene County PA with the city of Waynesburg
Mongolia County, WV with city of Morgantown
LOC
During the Jones-Imboden Raid by Confederates into western Virginia in the spring of 1863, southwestern Pennsylvania began preparing for the possibility of invasion. Greene County residents were extremely concerned that their horses and cattle would  be confiscated by the raiders, and that the Confederates might move on to Waynesburg to steal bank funds. The Waynesburg
Waitman T. Willey
Photo by Matthew Brady   LOC
Messenger
reported that a courier sent from Morgantown by Waitman T. Willey, newly elected senator-elect from West Virginia, warned Greene Countians of events in Morgantown. Willey, the newspaper said, had escaped capture by fleeing to the Greene County community of Carmichaels. A Committee of Safety of seven prominent Waynesburg citizens was quickly organized with the goal of raising a local militia. After Confederate General Jones occupied Morgantown, the Waynesburg Messenger reported, “In view of this raid and of the fact that we are exposed here on the border to similar rebel incursions, we suggest that measures be immediately set on foot to organize the militia in the several townships.” [Waynesburg Messenger, April 29, 1863, p.3]
Among the community leaders of Waynesburg who were selected to form the Committee of Safety  was James B. Lindsay. Lindsay had been the sergeant major of the 85th Pennsylvania before returning home in early 1862 on permanent medical leave.
Lindsay in fact went on a scouting mission to Morgantown while that community was being occupied. With him was Rufus K. Campbell and Samuel A. Porter, both Union veterans.  Upon returning to Waynesburg, Lindsay reported that his small party had been chased home by Confederate raiders. Lindsay also reported that the Confederates numbers around 1,500 and were presently camped two miles from Morgantown.
Pittsburgh Gazette    April 29, 1863
         It will remembered that after confronting and defeating Jones’ force at Rowlesburg, (West) Virginia, Union Colonel John Showalter decided to withdraw his force to Uniontown and then to Wheeling. Both Waynesburg and Washington (PA) had organized local militias to support Showalter but called off the march to Morgantown when word was received that Showalter had left.
Pennsylvania Governor Andrew Curtin notified Washington, DC in late April of the potential
PA Governor Andrew Gregg Curtin
for raids progressing into Pennsylvania. However, President Lincoln astutely surmised that southwestern Pennsylvania was in no real danger. Lincoln wrote, “I do not think the people of Pennsylvania should be uneasy about an invasion. Doubtless a small force of the enemy is flourishing about in the northern part of Virginia on the ‘screwhorn principle’ on purpose to divert us in another quarter. I believe it is nothing more.” [Baylor, 142]
Word had reached the men in the regiment that some farmers back home tried to use the hilly topography to their advantage by hiding their livestock in deep ravines, while some businessmen hid their merchandise in barns and coal mines. [Robert Van Atta, Pittsburgh Tribune Review, April 9, 2000]
This part of the panic was mocked by some in the regiment, which was stationed on Folly Island near Charleston (SC) Harbor. One soldier who did not take the threat very seriously was Company G’s Mark Gordon of Greene County. In his letters
Marquis Lafayette Gordon
Experiences in the Civil War
home, Gordon had sometimes complained that his and other Union regiments were doing the dirty work for the government while many able-bodied men back home chose to sit out the war for as long as possible, if not permanently. In Gordon’s view, it was fitting that citizens back home were getting a taste of the war that he and his regiment had been attending to for the last 17 months. Gordon wrote, “Our boys had a great time after the arrival of the last mail, laughing over the scare of the people in Greene Co. had at the time of the threatened invasion by the Rebels…Some men…should have shown more pluck than to run off with their horses and cattle and leave their wives and children in the hands of a merciless vagabond band of guerillas.” [M.L. Gordon’s Experiences in the Civil War, p. 34]
Gordon was referring to the panicky atmosphere in Morgantown, just 26 miles from his hometown of Waynesburg. In a letter written by Anne Mathiot Dorsey from her farm a few miles south of Morgantown to her brother several days after the occupation, she wrote that while the raiders helped themselves to all the horses they could find in the town, most of the men had fled, leaving their wives and children to fend for themselves. [Source: Anne Mathiot Dorsey, letter to Jacob D. Mathiot, May 8, 1863, Myron B. Sharp, ed.  “The Confederate Raid at Morgantown,” Historical Society of Western Pennsylvania]
       A correspondent for a Philadelphia newspaper in Uniontown wrote, "Another person came in [from Morgantown] named FIELD and told a thrilling story, but on cross questioning, it appears he had deserted his wife and children to save one horse." (Philadelphia Inquirer, May 1, 1863)
Confederates with Confiscated Livestock
       In any event, by May 6, the Waynesburg Messenger reported that, “all imminent danger of a Rebel incursion having passed away, the Washington [PA] lads returned to their homes and our own people resumed their usual business occupations. At present, all is quiet, and all alarm allayed.


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