I agree that we live in a trying time . . . but there was an earlier period when Americans became so estranged from one another that those in the South saw no valid reason to remain in a united America.
I'll tell you about some direct and collateral ancestors connected to us by blood and DNA, who fought in the American Civil War. But, first, listen to "Two Brothers" by The Weavers HERE
You may have read the series "Gone for a Soldier" that Pat Raney penned about our 2nd great-grandfather Everett Rainey (1844-1891) and his military service with the 91st Indiana Infantry Regiment, fighting to preserve the Union. The series begins HERE. He fought at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, the Siege of Atlanta, the Battle of Lovejoy's Station, the Battle of Spring Hill, the 2nd Battle of Franklin, the Battle of Nashville and the Carolinas Campaign. Despite the family's southern roots in southern Kentucky, I believe they felt the Union must be preserved. Not all southerners fought for the Confederacy.
Powder horns we believe Everett Rainey carried during the Civil War (or so our grandfather claimed), now under Pat Raney's stewardship. |
Reunion of 24th Indiana Infantry Regiment (or so it appeared on the Internet). No date, but woman's dress is from late 1880s |
[The 56th] moved to Tennessee and was attached to Floyd's Brigade, and was captured in the fight at Fort Donelson [Feb 1862 on the Cumberland River in Tennessee]. After being exchanged, the unit returned to Virginia and was assigned to Pickett's, Garnett's, and Hunton's Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia . . . In June 1862, it contained 466 effectives and reported 100 casualties during the Seven Days' Battles. This regiment carried only 40 men into action at Sharpsburg and eight were wounded. Of the 289 engaged at Gettysburg, more than 65 percent were disabled. . . . [O]nly three officers and 26 men surrendered on April 9, 1865. Madison was not one of them. He had been killed on one of the first three days of July 1863 at the Battle of Gettysburg.
Pickett's Charge at Battle of Gettysburg |
Burying the fallen at Gettysburg |
State of Virginia Memorial at Gettysburg |
John J. Rainey, killed August 1864 at Chester Station, Virginia |
Some Raineys left Virginia for Georgia after the Revolutionary War. We match DNA with a descendant of Enoch John Rainey, born 1829 in Bibb County, Georgia. In the 1860 census he was listed as an overseer, probably at the adjacent plantation, whose owner listed his personal property (i.e., slaves) as worth $40,000.00. Enoch joined the 4th Battalion, Georgia Sharpshooters, raised in 1863, its members taken from other units.
Battle of Resaca, Georgia |
In the middle of May, 1864, General Sherman's armies were blocked at Resaca, Georgia by General Johnston's Army of the Tennessee. After two days of maneuvering and intense fighting, Johnston withdrew. Sherman would continue to advance on Atlanta, but take precautions against ordering further massed assaults where high casualties would occur. Enoch Rainey died May 24, 1864, a week after that battle and is buried in the Covington Confederate Cemetery in Georgia. His widow Lucy Ann remarried and lived until 1924.
Enoch Rainey headstone in Georgia |
Another distant cousin, Mark Rainey, son of Benjamin, was born in Georgia in 1828. Married to Sarah Flanders, he was a farmer with two children in the 1860 census. As the Confederacy's position became desperate, it raised the age of conscription to 45. Older than most soldiers, Mark either enlisted or was conscripted into the 64th Regiment, Georgia Infantry, on December 22, 1863. In early May of 1864, the 64th marched north into Virginia. Mark was one of 400 men of the regiment who fought at the Battle of the Crater on July 30th, a horrendous bloodbath. It was there or perhaps two weeks later at Deep Bottom that he was captured. He and other prisoners were carried north to a prisoner of war camp at Elmira, New York, where he died on September 14, 1864, at age 35, the 292nd death there since July. By May 16, 1865, 2963 Confederate prisoners would die from wounds or disease at that prison. He's buried at Woodlawn National Cemetery in Elmira. We match a descendant of his sister, Elizabeth Rainey Cravey.
Confederate Prisoner-of-war Camp, Elmira, New York |
Skulls in aftermath of Battle of the Wilderness, where fire trapped combatants |
Elisha Franklin Rainey |
Originally called Holman's Battalion, the 11th took part in the fighting prior to, and in the Battle of Murfreesboro, December 31, 1862. After the battle, the battalion, under Wheeler’s command, was engaged in scouting and skirmishing along the Cumberland River below Nashville, culminating April 8, 1863, in an attack on Dover, Tennessee by the combined forces of General Wheeler and General Nathan Bedford Forrest. Elisha and his regiment rode into Georgia in late spring 1863, but a short time later were ordered back to middle Tennessee, where they fought with Forrest in the retreat of General Bragg’s Army to Chattanooga in July, and fought in the Battle of Chickamauga. He remained with his unit in east Tennessee until April 1864, when it rejoined the Army of Tennessee near Dalton, Georgia. It eventually returned to Tennessee and participated in the Battles of Franklin and Nashville (as did Everett Rainey on the Federal side), and the retreat from Tennessee. Forrest’s forces returned to Mississippi, and the 11th Regiment remained in his command until the end of the war. It appears Elisha survived the war and died about 1879 in Marshall County, Tennessee. We have a DNA match to a descendant of his aunt, Mary "Polly" Rainey Gault (c1813-1878), whose son, John R. Gault, (b.1836) was killed at Mufreesboro, Rutherford, Tennessee, in early January, 1863, fighting with the 23rd Regiment, Tennessee Infantry (Martin's).
Marcus De Lafayette Raney (he kept this spelling of his surname) may have lied about his age when he joined up because as an old man he claimed to be born Sept. 12, 1848 in Wilson County, Tennessee. His father John Rainey (1817 Kentucky -1880 Tennessee) was a farmer and sometime tailor (and just possibly our James' brother). When Marcus joined Colonel Richard "Dick" Morgan's Regiment in April, 1863, he claimed to be 17. He was five months shy of 15. He was about to have the adventure of a lifetime, for Colonel Morgan's brother was General John Hunt Morgan and in June of 1863, against orders, he launched a guerrilla raid from Tennessee through Kentucky and into Indiana and Ohio. Marcus claimed in his pension application to have ridden in Company D under Captain Payne in Morgan's Brigade of Kentucky Cavalry. Read about the raid HERE
Depiction of Morgan's Raid |
After being with Morgan in the 1863 and '64 raids, he rode with Captain Jerry Stone's Company A in Lyon's Tennessee Cavalry until war's end. Years later, he moved to Fort Worth, Texas, where he died in 1928. We have DNA matches to his direct descendants.
Marcus DeLafayette Raney and his prosperous-looking family |
William Henry Rainey |
In the late spring 1863 he was part of a large contingent outside Vicksburg during its siege by General Grant.
The main body of the 12th Louisiana, led by Colonel Scott who was obeying orders from Brigadier General Abram Buford, withdrew from the battlefield on the night of May 16th and followed the rest of Major General William W. Loring's Division in a 35 mile forced march to Crystal Springs, Mississippi on the New Orleans, Jackson & Great Northern Railroad. Loring's Division quickly reported to General Joseph E. Johnston who was collecting additional troops at Jackson, hoping ultimately to relieve the siege of Vicksburg. Morale among the soldiers in Johnston's army dropped sharply after the surrender of Vicksburg on July 4th and Port Hudson on July 9th. When ordered to retreat from Jackson on the night of July 16th, a large contingent from the 12th Louisiana deserted and went home to Louisiana.
William did not desert. A lad with a strong constitution, he was hospitalized only once.
Illness and temporary hospitalization during June and July 1863 took an additional heavy toll. Of the 659 men who marched away from Baker's Creek to Crystal Springs, only 504 were present for duty when the regiment reached Morton Station, Mississippi in late July at the end of the retreat from Jackson. [This regiment began with 1200 men]
Nine months later, the regiment took 499 men into action at Resaca in northwest Georgia on May 10, 1864. A truly heroic effort requiring determination, courage, and personal sacrifice was made by the men of the 12th Louisiana Infantry during the last full year of the war. Combat casualties became a significant factor in reducing regimental manpower. Between May 10th and September 5th while serving with the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Generals Joseph E. Johnston and John Bell Hood, the 12th Louisiana was in nearly daily contact with elements of the Federal army under Major General William T. Sherman. Battle casualties totaled 106 men: 32 killed or mortally wounded, 65 seriously wounded who required hospitalization, and 9 men captured. Many others were slightly wounded but able to remain on duty with their companies. Disease and exhaustion from combat fatigue forced the long term hospitalization of another 63 men. By September 1864, the number of men present for duty dropped below 360.
William fought at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain at the end of June, 1864, and at the battles of Franklin and Nashville in December 1864 during General Hood's disastrous invasion of Tennessee. Our Everett Rainey shadowed him the entire time on the opposing side.
Site of Battle of Kennesaw Mountain, Georgia |
Transferred to North Carolina, the regiment participated in the last infantry charge of the war made by the Confederate army gathered under General Joseph E. Johnston at Bentonville on March 19th. Documented casualties were 4 killed, 11 wounded, and 1 captured. The regiment was surrendered and paroled at Greensboro, North Carolina under the terms and conditions of an agreement reached between Generals Johnston and Sherman on April 26, 1865 at Durham Station.
William returned home to Louisiana and took up farming. He married Anna Gates in 1868 and they produced a large family. He died in 1908. We have a DNA match to their descendant. Here's a photograph of William and Anna in later years.
We'll finish with another Weavers' song, "Wasn't That a Time." HERE
No comments:
Post a Comment