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The
Sixth South Carolina at Seven Pines.

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The following address was
delivered by General John Bratton on the battlefield of Seven Pines,
Virginia, on the 6th of August, 1885 to the survivors of the Sixth
Regiment, South Carolina Volunteers. |

About the 26th May, 1862 we moved up to camp nearer
Richmond, not far from where the Confederate Cemetery is
located. At daybreak on the 31st we moved out in accordance
with orders to the Williamsburg Road, were halted near a
farm or fruit-nursery, (name of owner forgotten). It was
here that I learned that the Yankees were a short distance
down the road, and we were expected to attack in a few
minutes. We waited there, however, for hours, and it was
certainly as late as one o'clock P. M. when we moved on
slowly through the mud and slush, and soon evidences of
conflict were apparent. We were told that ‘D. H. Hill was
driving them down the road,’ and ordered to push on. This we
did as briskly as the condition of the road would allow,
passing for some distance through a thickly-wooded section
of scrubby growth, when we reached a field of considerable
extent on the left of the road. When the head of the Sixth,
the rear regiment of Anderson's Brigade, reached the
opening, I was ordered to form ‘on right by file into line’
on the left of the road and follow the regiments of the
brigade which preceded me. While my regiment was forming, a
glance at the field showed a line of works on the other side
of it, extending across the road and across the field into
the woods on the left. The view on the right was limited,
being shut off by the woods, which continued on the right of
the road farther down and nearer to the works. The regiments
of our brigade were moving down one after the other to this
line, which was evidently occupied by our troops. There was
a redoubt near the road, from which artillery was slowly
firing. I was told that D. H. Hill had taken that line and
was himself at that moment in the redoubt. As we moved down
on the track of the regiments preceding us, they, apparently
in close column of regiments near the works, moved by the
left flank along the line towards where it passed through
the woods. On approaching the woods they received a volley,
which was undoubtedly a surprise, and for the moment created
some confusion in the heads of these columns. I at once
ordered a change of direction to the left. (It was there
that the memorable amendment to Hardee's version was made,
which seemed ever to be remembered against me and doubtless
many now present can recall—‘Big left wheel.’) We were in
the act of changing direction sufficiently to present a
direct front to the fire of the enemy when I received an
order from General Anderson ‘to sweep the enemy out of those
woods.’ Without halting, the order was given to fix
bayonets, and we moved on to an abattis that was made of
slashings in the edge of the woods. As we were about to
enter the abattis, I halted the line for a moment to
investigate a line of men with white rags on their hats,
found lying down on our side of the abattis to the left of
where we were going in. They proved to be the Twenty-seventh
Georgia Regiment (Colonel Zachry), of D. H. Hill's command.
I told the colonel what my orders were, and he proposed to
join us. Replying that we would be glad to have him do so,
we were about to advance when he informed me that a regiment
of our friends (South Carolinians, he thought,) were coming
up on his left, and requested us to wait for them. I at
first acceded to this request, but after waiting for a few
minutes, told the commander of the Georgians that I was
afraid my orders would not justify me in waiting. I would,
therefore, continue my advance, feeling strengthened by the
assurance of his support, and at once ordered the regiment
forward. As we entered the abattis the enemy poured in their
volley, but our line moved on without halt or check and
drove them through the woods, into and through a large camp;
so large that the regiment did not cover half of it, and
were pressing them routed and in full flight, beyond, when a
fire on my right and rear from this portion of the camp,
untouched by us in the advance, admonished me to halt long
enough to take our bearings, and at least see if it was
necessary to turn upon those still in camp before proceeding
farther. On looking back I saw a regiment coming up from the
rear, and finding it to be the Fifth South Carolina (Colonel
Giles), directed its charge through the portion of the camp
still occupied by the enemy. Without using any superlatives
in regard to this noble regiment, I need only say to you
comrades of the Sixth, who were associated with them on so
many battlefields, that they put in this their first work,
under my eye in that not merely gallant but effective style
which characterized their conduct throughout the war. They
made a clean sweep of the camp and pressed on, coming up on
our right in good order. We were in the act of moving on
after the flying enemy when I received an order from Colonel
Jenkins to halt until he could join us with his regiment,
the Palmetto Sharpshooters. On looking back I saw the
regiment coming up from the rear, on the left of the camp
through which I had passed and towards my left. Anxious to
press forward so as to pass through a formidable abattis
immediately in our front as nearly as possible with the
routed enemy, and thus prevent their formation on the other
side, I sent him a request urging him to move up as we were
losing precious time, and posted myself between my regiment
and the Fifth, that I might give the signal to Giles to
advance as soon as Jenkins arrived on our line. He halted,
however, thirty or forty paces in rear of our line and sent
an order to align ourselves on his right. His front was
directed considerably to the left of ours, while ours
fronted on the direct line of the flight of the enemy. Just
then General Anderson rode up and, conducting him a few
paces to the front, I pointed out the situation; the abattis
or slashings on slightly declining ground much wider and
more formidable than the first, with thick growth of scrubby
trees on the other edge, screening completely what might be
there. By this time not an enemy was in sight, not a gun was
being fired in my front. General Anderson quietly said,
‘Move your regiment across the abattis and take position on
that crest beyond,’ pointing towards it, and added, ‘unless
you jump the game on the way.’ Feeling sure that it would be
jumped on the other edge of the slashings, I asked, ‘What
then?’ He answered, ‘Press them.’ I told him that
embarrassment as to my flank and rear had prevented me from
crossing the abattis pretty much with them, at least in
close pursuit, and asked if I should succeed again, will you
look to flanks and rear? His answer was, ‘press them.’ We at
once entered the abattis, the Fifth regiment, Colonel Giles,
moving with us on our right. I did not see where the
sharpshooters went. When about half way across a grand
volley was poured upon us from the thicket beyond, and
although nobody cried ‘Lie down,’ the entire regiment
squatted involuntarily in the brush. As the crash of the
volley died away I shouted ‘Forward,’ but none seemed to
hear it save our color-bearer, and before it could be
repeated the roar and rattle of the regular battle-fire
opened upon us and drowned human utterances. He advanced on
and over the obstructions, as he could not move under even
the highest without lowering his colors, alone, with a
stride unnaturally steady, considering the character of his
footing. None who saw it can ever forget the splendid
picture presented by our glorious and handsome boy, John
Rabb, on this occasion. Never were colors borne with a
loftier devotion to duty or a quieter disdain of danger. He
advanced thus alone, nearly halfway to the enemy, and it
looked as though our colors would be handed over to them,
when our entire regiment seemed simultaneously to take in
the situation and made a desperate rush to overtake them.
Our line poured like a wave over and under and through the
obstructions, and coming up with the colors, continued the
impetuous advance until we swept over theirs.
They retired hastily beyond the crest not far distant. We
consequently did not kill many of them here, but captured a
few prisoners. Emerging from the thicket from which they
were driven, and hastily readjusting our ranks, we pushed on
towards the crest, and soon encountered the most formidable
line, and became engaged in the fiercest fight of the day.
The ground over which we passed was thinly studded with
sapling pine growth, affording no obstruction to speak of
either to the bullets or to the view of either side, and it
was the same, though apparently more broken, for a long
distance to our right; to our left, woods of thick growth
seemed not more than a hundred yards or so distant. As we
approached the crest, their line could be seen extending
from the woods on our left across our front and to the right
for several hundred yards, as far as I could see on both
sides. They opened upon us a terrific fire, direct from the
front and oblique from both sides, but we continued steadily
to advance until within thirty or forty yards of them, when
our line was staggered, checked, and finally borne down by
the weight of this converging fire. The men, checked though
they were, and borne down by force when they wished to
proceed, were nevertheless unhacked, and opened a fierce and
rapid fire on the enemy in front. Not knowing at the time
why the Fifth had not come out of the abattis with us (their
gallant Colonel was killed by the volley we met there, and
they were embarrassed and delayed by his fall), I looked
anxiously for them to come up and relieve us from a portion
of the fire, but neither they nor any other help were in
sight. I was unwilling to undertake a retreat over such
ground as was in our rear, and determined to make another
effort to break through the enemy's line. Amid the roar of
that fierce storm no human voice could have been heard by
even a company, and to secure that unity of action which the
emergency demanded, it was necessary to convey to the
commanders of companies instructions to notify their men and
have them prepared to rise up at a concerted signal, and
push through the line in front. This consumed time, and held
our men under this destructive fire longer than was
desirable, but it could not be helped. As soon as possible
the signal was given. All, except the dead and dying (who,
unhappily for us, were numerous enough to mark our line from
one end to the other, after we left it), rose and moved,
though crouching as they breasted the pelting storm,
steadily and unfalteringly forward without firing a gun,
until the enemy gave way, when we poured in our volley of
buck and ball at close range and with telling effect.
Although their lines were broken and shattered, they yielded
the ground with great reluctance. They for some time made
strenuous efforts to reform close in our front, and
repeatedly gathered in groups about their colors and around
their officers, who made heroic efforts to rally them, only
to be piled in heaps by the shot and ball belched from our
old smooth bores. These efforts they stubbornly continued
until there seemed not a standard left, not an officer to
rally them. While we were pressing this, the most valiant
foe that we had yet met, being apprehensive of attack from
the enemy on either the right or left of the point of their
line penetrated by us, or on both, which, promptly made,
would certainly and easily have crushed us before our
supports could come up, I was anxiously looking to both, and
it was with much satisfaction that I saw on our right five
columns with five stands of colors double-quicking to the
rear in beautiful order. They disappeared across the
Williamsburg road in the direction of White Oak Swamp. I
could not see for the woods what those on the left were
doing, but the regiments on the right, acting evidently
under the impression that the Confederates were in force on
their right flank, suggested the idea that those on the left
were under a similar impression as to their left flank.
It was with a great sense of relief that I again gave my
entire attention to the brief but explicit and satisfactory
order of our General, ‘Press them.’ When, however, the
gallant foemen in our front gave up all hope, ceased their
stubborn futile efforts at resistance, and incontinently
fled, the regiment for the first time that day lost its
order, and the men broke away in a wild chase after them.
Unable to stop the foremost, the only way to keep them at
all together was by urging the hindmost forward. We struck
the Williamsburg road obliquely, our right touching it near
Seven Pines House, when a regiment posted in the edge of a
pine thicket on the other side of the road, their line being
parallel to the road, opened fire on our right flank. About
two companies on our right were stopped by it, and forming
in the road engaged this new enemy. The balance of the
regiment rushed on in pursuit into the woods, down the road,
making a wide interval between them and the companies on
their right. I sent Sergeant-Major Beverly Means, who was at
hand, to catch our wild boys on the left, and order them to
form on the two companies in the road, and urged dispatch,
as I feared that the enemy might charge us in that
condition. To prevent this, our men who stopped near the
house were formed in the road and ordered to keep up as
brisk a fire as possible. My brave men, individually, as
they got the orders, ran promptly back up the road, into and
under fire at less than one hundred yards, formed as it were
by file on our men fighting there, and thus by their
individual pluck and devotion to duty enabled us to meet the
emergency and avert the danger in the shortest and of course
the best way. If we had taken the usual course under such
circumstances, and fallen back to reform, we would have lost
ground, lost time, and have effected less at a perhaps
greater cost of life.
While this formation in the very front of the battle and in
the teeth of the enemy was going on, I was looking with
anxiety for the Fifth regiment to come up, still not knowing
the cause of its delay— the fall of its heroic Colonel—when
I saw a regiment moving up from the rear and directly
towards the gap in my line. I sent an urgent request that it
move up promptly. It proved to be the Palmetto
Sharpshooters, and Colonel Jenkins replied that he would be
with me in a moment. When in about two hundred yards of the
road, however, he changed front forward on the twelfth
company, and although the balls fired at us, forming and
fighting on the road, dipped into them with destructive
effect, it was done in a style rarely equalled on the drill
field. This was followed by a change of front on the first
company, executed in the same admirable manner in view and
under fire of the enemy, which brought them in position to
form on our left. Before these two evolutions were
completed, our Sergeant-Major reported that all of our men
were in line on the road, but some of them were not in their
proper places, or even in their companies, and wanted to
know if that would do. Glancing along the line I saw every
man who was out of place looking back towards me, and
answered their question by a motion of my hand, waving them
down where they were, saying, although they could not hear
me, ‘We are all right now, lie down where you are.’ Our
Sergeant-Major exclaimed with suppressed enthusiasm, ‘Isn't
that glorious! The old regiment is surely more than filling
her measure to-day.’ His countenance was all aglow with that
peculiar light often seen in the faces of brave men in
battle, and which is so inspiring to the beholder. I ordered
him to lie down behind the line, as I wanted everybody as
much under shelter as possible, while we were waiting for
Jenkins to come up on our left. A moment afterwards the
fatal bullet pierced his breast. It was thus that Beverly
Means, who, in peace, was as gentle and modest as a woman,
met death. It was about this time that I found that the
shells and cannon balls that had been whirling over us and
plunging amongst us during our disorderly pursuit, and now
enfilading our line on the road, were coming from the
direction of the battery taken by D. H. Hill. I sent a
messenger to stop its fire on us, but he probably never
reached it, as it continued to fire as long as I remained on
the field.
As soon as Colonel Jenkins arrived on the line with his
regiment he gave me the order, ‘Advance your regiment and I
will support you.’ Remembering that I had been notified
before we reached the battlefield that he was in command of
the brigade I promptly obeyed his order. Looking along my
battered line, now about half its original length, with half
of its captains knocked out, I had reason to be anxious lest
some irregularity of movement might place the regiment at
disadvantage. To prevent this and ensure unity and order in
their advance I walked across the road to the front and
waving my cap to attract the attention of all, officers and
men, ordered the line forward. Rising from the road in which
they had been lying they advanced deliberately, steadily and
firmly, closing gaps promptly until the enemy broke, when
they poured in their volley and rushed on them, sweeping
them from the field. This was perhaps the fairest fight we
had that day; there was no great disparity of numbers
between their regiment and ours; they seemed to be about
equal; but we had the advantage of the immediate presence of
the Sharpshooters. Our disadvantages were our battered
condition, loss of officers and men in previous fights, our
lying so long under their fire, a part of the time not
returning it, that they recovered from the excitement of the
first onset and directed their fire with a better aim. Most
of their balls were on a line with us, fewer of them passed
over our heads than in any previous attack. We met this line
of fire when we rose up in the road, and it continued
without abatement, aided by the shot and shell plunging into
and about us from the battery on the right, until we were
within twenty-five yards of them, when I was shot. So steady
was their fire and unshaken their line that the result even
then was doubtful; and those near me, who naturally came to
my assistance, were peremptorily ordered to the front where
every bayonet was needed. My eyesight failed, a premonition
of the fainting that followed, and I could not see you my
comrades, but I heard the volley which you delivered as you
passed over me, and the ‘yell,’ receding from me as you
advanced, relieved the anxiety which was intensified by my
condition, and gave assurance that you had again swept the
field. When my sight returned you were seen in line with the
Sharpshooters in the edge of the woods on the left, fronting
down the road. When last seen by me the whole line seemed to
be moving by the left flank across the road. And here the
story of your movements and conduct on this field, as seen
and known by me, necessarily ends. I learn from others that
the regiment, led by its Lieutenant-Colonel, the truly good
and brave Steadman, had still another engagement with the
enemy before the battle closed, with the result to which it
was now becoming accustomed, and, crippled and torn as it
was, added new laurels to those already won that day. (cont...)
Continued...
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