Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 18 October 1883 — Page 5
ARMY OF THE TENNESSEE. The Veterans Assemble in Annual Reunion at Cleveland. A Street Parade and a Visit to tlie Tomb o f tJarlieUi —The Reception Speeches and Responses. Brief Addresses by Governor Foster and General Sherman. Bishop Fallows, in a Beautiful Oration, Recalls War Scenes, and Talks of the Principle of the Struggle.
PRELIMINARY. Tne Procession and the Business MeetingReports and Routine Business. Cleveland, Oct. 17.—The sixteenth annual reunion of the Society of the Army of the Tennessee began to-day, with a large attendance of members. General Grant, who was eaid to have arrived last night, is not present, but is expected to-clay or to-morrow. The society formed at the Kennard House at 10:30 this morning, and inarched in procession, about 200 in number, with a band of music, Major Howe and Captain Barber carrying the society’s colors, and Generals Sherman and Leggett, arm-in-arm, at the head of the column, to the Ontario-street Tabernacle, where a business meeting was held. General Sherman, president of the society, on calling it to order, tendered congratulations on the large attendance, the apparent good health of the members, and the auspicious circumstances surrounding the beginning of the reunion. “Though eighteen years have elapsed,” said he, ‘‘since we ceased using arms and took up the pen and the tongue, this is one of our largest reunions. The original date for the meeting was fixed for Oct. 4, the anniversary of the extraordinarily brave and gallant defense of Corinth, in 1862; but I was obliged to go on a long trip in the far West, and the meeting was postponed on my account, for Which I feel profoundly grateful, as it enables me once more to meet with my old comrades in arms. General Rosecrans said he was exceedingly anxious to be here, but was prevented by illness of his wife. He commissioned me, personally, to apologize for his absence. General Gresham, too, is kept away by pressing business. General Grant has just telegraphed that he hopes to be here. The weather is beautiful, the people seem pleased to see their old war heroes, and I am truly glad to see so many of my old comrades in this beautiful city.” Committees were appointed to select officers, orator and place of next meeting. The annual reports were submitted, and other routine business transacted. Letters of regret were read from Generals Hancock, Crook, Prior, Harrison and others. The committee to consider the question of holding the next leunion in Yellowstone Park reported that satisfactory arrangements had not been made with the railroads, and the matter was recommitted. A resolution to wear uniforms at reunions and society badges at all times, was tabled by a decisive vote. A telegram was read inviting the society to meet at Cincinnati next week with the Society of the Army of the Cumberland. General Sherman, in reading the telegram, said it would be impossible for him to be there, but he hoped all who could would attend and represent this society. He said that the two armies were closely related—were almost Siamese twins. Colonel Dayton, the secretary, was instructed by a vote to telegraph the sympathy of the society to General Rosecrans. Among those present are Generals Sherman, Logan, Leggett, Hickenlooper, Fellows, Fairchild, Noyes, dSuckland. Fletcher, Hutchins, Pease, Waicutt, Baldwin. Poe, Belknap, Strong, Chettlain and others. The members of the society went this afternoon by special train and carriages to Lake View Cemetery, where they visited Garfield’s tomb and the site for the proposed monument.
THE RECEPTION. * The Musical Exercises and Speeches at Euclld-Avenue Opera-House. Cleveland, Oct. 17.—Euclid-avenue Operahouse was crowded in every part this evening. The body of the house was elaborately decorated with flags and shields with inscriptions, showing th£ principal battles in which the army participated—Belmont, Donalson, Shiloh, Corinth, luka, Chickasaw, Arkansas Post, Port Gibson, Raymond, Jackson, Miss., Champion Hills, Big Black River, Vicksburg, Missionary Ridge, Dallas, Kenesaw, Atlanta, Savannah, Bentonville, Nashville. At the front of the stage was a portrait of General McPherson, wreathed with laurel and immortelles and draped with a flag. At 8:30 o’clock reveille was sounded by bugles behind the scenes, alter which the curtain was raised, disclosing seated on the stage Generals Sherman, Fellows, Leggett, Logan, Lowe, Fairchild, Belknap, Hickenlooper. Strong, Force, Fuller, Governors Foster and Fairchild, and others. Miss Dora Henninges sang the "Star spangled banner.” The Arion Quartette joined in the chorus, at the conclusion of which a magnificent floral ship was presented Miss Henninges. In response, she and the Arions sang “Tenting to-night on the old campground.” General Sherman then rose to announce the order of exercises. He was greeted with loud applause, ending with three cheers. He briefly and wittily stated that the society would come to order, stay in order, and proceed to business, not charging him with previous delay. He introduced Rev. Capt. John Mitchell, who offered prayer. The long-roll was sounded, and scenes were shown disclosing a realistic representation of the battle of Shiloh, which were received with wild cheering. Governor Foster then made an address welcoming the society to Ohio. Having paid a warm tribute to the generals and soldiers of that army, he declared that in later generations the heroes of the war of the rebellion will be held in higher esteem and greater veneration than even the fathers of the revolution, for the result of their warfare is that both victors and vanquished are equally satisfied, glad that the Union was preserved, and that slavery was destroyed; both follow the same flag, and both are ready at the drop of a hat to fight together for that flag against the whole world, if need be. Mayor Farley next formally welcomed the society in a few words. gen. sherman’s response. After a soug by the Arions, Gen. Sherman happily responded to the welcoming addresses. He said: “It is my pleasant duty to acknowledgej iu behalf of this society, the compliments
paid the society by the Governor of the j the great State of Ohio and the mayor of this I beautiful city. We thank you from our hearts for your cordial words of welcome. We are no longer soldiers; we long since laid aside our armor, and are nothing more tiian ardent, loyal physicians of the body and soul; we no longer wear the sword and spurs; we are simply, like J’ou, citizens of this country, at present sojourning in the peaceful State of Ohio. 1 may pile phrases and figures of speech higher than yonder dome, but even then I couid add nothing to the simple words, we thank you for your hearty welcome, a welcome, not of words alone, but also of deeds, for we realize that every home in this great city of charming homes is open to our members; with heart and soul, again we thank you." General Sherman was about to sit down amid vociferous applause, when a huge camp-kettle in flowers was presented to him, and the cheering was renewed. When he could be heard he turned to those oil the stage, remarking, “I suppose we must keep tne pot boiling,” and then addressed a few words of thanks to the two gentlemen who placed the floral gift before him. Cries of “Louder” came from the audience, to which the General turned, saying: “Never mind, boys, I wasn’t speaking to you; I was only thanking the gentlemen who brought me a kettle Ailed with flowers instead of cabbage. I suppose they thought I would like it better.” He then presented Miss Alice S. Mitchell, of Chicago, who sang “The Battle Hymn of the Republic,” assisted in the chorus by the Arions.
THE ORATION OF THE DAY. A Comprehensive ami Eloquent Address by Rev. Bishop Fallows. Cleveland, Oct. 17. —After the welcoming address, and the response by General Sherman, Rev. Bishop Fallows, of Chicago, was introduced as the orator of the morning, General Sherman remarking that “He was a general, and is a bishop; you can take your choice of titles. I kuow he was a brave and gallant man in war; he is eloquent in peace, and I hope you will give him your close attention.” Bishop Fallows spoke at considerable length, and was freouently interrupted by the heartiest applause. Liberal extracts from his oration are appended. Tne Bishop said: “Our meeting at this time commemorates one of the most important battles of the war —the battle of Corinth. It was a battle in which the most splendid heroism was displayed by the soldiers of the North and the soldiers of the South. It was a struggle never exceeded during our civil contest, in the concentrated determination and desperate valor of the heroes and partisans of the Confederacy against the heroes and patriots of the Union. “Over 30,000 Confederate troops were hurled against 18,000 men of the Army of the Tennessee. Here we have vividly brought before us (referring to a large picture on the stage, 20x24 feet, representing Fort Robinette, ‘the key to Corinth.’ “Around it the fiery surges of that sanguinary conflict raged. To hold it meant victory for us; to lose it meant victory for them. One line of the Confederates sweep onward to the village. Stormed at by shot and shell, raked by grape and canister in front and left, rained upon with bullets, still they come, ‘with their faces averted, like men striving to protect themselves against a driving storm of hail.’ Nothing can resist the sheer momentum of that mass of men with faces of flint, with nerves of steei, with purpose of adamant. The conflict is now hand to hand. Sword clashes against sword, bayonet locks and tugs with bayonet. Muskets are clubs. The hand of many a one, dropping sword and musket, grasps the throat of the foe. Steadily backward go our forces, overwhelmed by the might of numbers. Fort Richardson is the enemy's. General Rosecrans’ headquarters are theirs. Shouts and yells seem to proclaim the victory theirs also. "But the Army of the Tennessee goes backward only to go forward. Animated bv the cheering presence and voice of their brave commander, General Rosecrans, who leads them in person, they spring forward at the command ‘Charge bayonets,’ with a resistless energy. Back to the headquarters, back to Fort Richardson, forward toward the enemy’s camping-ground they go. High above all the roar of the conflict isneard the Union shout of triumph, as Price’s column, shattered and scattered, seek the friendly timber’s protection. But the victory is not won. “The other line advances toward Fort Robinette. That must be taken at all hazards. Yst so fearful is the risk to face those murderous batteries of death, and those unyielding men behind them, who feel the very destinies of the nation may lie in their ability to hold their position, that General Price would not order the movement, but called for volunteers to make the charge. “Colonel Rogers and Colonel Ross at once step forward and tender their brigades of Texans and Mississippians for the attack. On they come, never flinching. Gaps are plowed in their massive columns; they fill them up. On they come. In flank and front winrows of the dead and dying are piled up. On they come. They are now but 150 feet from the fort, when, full in their faces, the up-spring-ing Ohio brigade pour their deadly musketry fire and sweep them back. But on they come! (Oh, intrepid men, if treason could ever have been redeemed by valor, it would have been redeemed in that wild, magnificent charge you made.) On they come, to the base of the fort; on they come. They are on the parapet. They plant their Hag on its very summit. They catcli it as it is shot down, and wave it with its splintered staff. They are inside the fort. They have won the key! Not yet. The Ohio brigade repels them. “Charge!” is thundered to the Eleventh Missouri and the Twenty-seventh Ohio. Back they go. Back to the base of tlie fort, back over the parapet, back to the woods; broken like a wave dashed upon the rock, and another star gleams in the crown of the Army of the Tennessee. * * # THE PRINCIPLE OF THE WAR. “Principles take the lead and strike the key-note of all our gatherings, and principles nave no modesty,' we are told. They are bottommost, uppermost, foremost, and perpetual by their own inherent and everasserting royalty. And principles speaking with kingly authority through the persons whom they rule with despotic sway in these soldiers' assemblies say, ‘We are here to put an everlasting premium upon patriotism, and and everlasting discount upon disloyalty.’ The men who are here to-night to take each other by the hand and live over again the eventful past went to the defense of the people's government. They went from the people and returned, covered with honor and glory, to the people, whose great heart never failed nor was discouraged—the people who did not so much reflect as create tlie sentiments of their chosen rulers. The most daring, chivalrous soldier simply caught a portion of the grander spirit of that heroic people, who, in the strength of God, determined that since tlie issue was forced upon them, there should be ‘no State out of the Union, and no slave in it.’ When General Grant’s health wa3 proposed on the Fourth of July, at Hamburg, in his tour around the world, as‘the man who saved the country,’ he said in his response, ‘What saved the country was the coming forward of the young men of the nation. They came from their homes and their fields, as they did in the time of the revolution, giving everything to their country. To their devotion we owe the salvation of the Union. The humblest soldier who carried a musket is entitled
THE INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 18, ISS3.
to as much credit for the results of the war as those who were in command. So long as our young men are animated by this spirit there will be no fear of the Union.’ “It is our pride to reflect that it was our citizen soldiery that challenged to mortal combat any despairing faith in the nation’s honor or the nation’s existence. Such a soldiery for intelligence and intrepidity never maintained, ‘without guile and with a pure purpose,’ such a cause before. It was true to the very letter as President Lincoln said: ‘There is scarcely a regiment from which there could not be selected a President, a cabinet, a Congress, and perhaps a court, abundantly competent to administer the government itself.’ That, certainly, was true of every Ohio regiment. Tlie lost cause embodied false, principles, and therefore, went where it ought to go, though defended with the despera.ion of despair, ‘into the last ditch.’ * * * The pure and incorruptible statesman, the laureled scholar, the knightly soldier, the grandly patient and suffering hero, who followed Lincoln in the I honors and responsibilities of the presidency, ! and then followed him by the martyr’s pang ! to the martyr’s palm, cried out in the nation’s deepest sorrow and dread despair, ‘God reigns and the government at Washington still lives.’
“I have a pity well nigh bordering upon contemut for the man who, in the profesjed interests of peace, with a false sentimentalism begotten by a trembling, superannuated courage from a perverted view of things earthly and divine, attempts to disparage or degrade the sphere or duty of the American soldier. The humblest private in the ranks is the incarnation of the nation’s digliity, honor and power, and compels due recognition and respect. I do deeply sympathize with those who wish to glory in the thought and in the fact that the American nation is the ‘unarmed nation of the earth.’ Unarmed it surely ought to be, as the opposite of the armed nations of the old world. We want no such armies as they have, drawing like cancers the very life from the body politic. Our standing army is the great army of workers and thinkers on the farm, in the workshop, in the store, at the bar, in the pulpit, in the schools, conquering the secrets of nature, subduing her vast fertile plains, leading captive at the chariot wheels of invention her principalities and powers, all cheered on in the march of progress with the silvery song of children, the enthusiastic shouts of youth, the gladsome smiles of woman, and the benedictions of old age. In the common schools of our land we must have not only nurseries but the real West Points and Fort Leavenworths of the republic. From them is to come the ever-flowing stream of our fresh young soldiery, who shall maintain from generation to generation the integrity and glory of the state. * * * “The gospel of liberty could not be proclaimed in our day without that ‘fiery gospel writ in burnished rows of steel’ proclaimed by the armies of the Union. Tlie pen of Lincoln, ‘greatest of our mighty dead,’ wrote the emancipation proclamation —the emancipation of serfhood and chattelhood to selfhood and citizenship. But our swords rewrote it, our cannon thundered it, our musketry echoed it, our bayonets punctuated it, and our final shout of victory put the irreversible amen to it. In the common grave where lie tlie soldiers who fought in blue and who fought in gray we buried—without tlie honors of war but with tlie rejoicings of peace—tlie common enemies which had brought them face to face in conflict—the Siamese twins of slavery and State supremacy. These linked workers of mischief were unlovely and unpleasant in their lives, ‘and in their death they were not divided.’ The ghost of the one flickers like a lambent flame over the place of entombment, and the ghost of the other, by stretching the shadowy band which fastens it to its disuniting companion, is attempting to steal abroad again. But the power which buried their unhallowed forms in the nation’s consecrated ground shall make them ‘down at its bidding,’ and lay them to rest to await no resurrection morning.
JEFF. DAVIS, “A gentleman very prominent ill ‘the late unpleasantness 1 has been endeavoring to play the part of ghost-raiser—Mr. Jefferson Davis. He has been as unsuccessful in his combat with that illustrious, intellectual gladiator and uncompromising friend of the Union, Judge Jere. S. Black, as he was with the armies of the United States. It is one of the most marvelous exhibitions of the magnanimity and assured strength and position of a mighty nation that it permits the leader of the great confederate movement, which convulsed the continent and shook the earth, to write a book in two volumes on “The history of the Confederacy,” and enjoy the profits of the sale—that it allows him to reopen the questions which led to our civil war, and to attempt to prove, in spite of the logic of reason and of the logic of events, that South Carolina in the position it assumed before the war was all right and the government all wrong. When w T e remember that regiments, brigades, divisions, and whole army corps once marched along singing, ‘We’ll hang Jeff. Davis to a sour apple tree,’ and that the only reason why the sentiment of the song was not put into execution was the sheer inability, as things then were, to make the connection between the tree and the subject of the song. Mr. Davis must certainly share in the feelings of the pious old woman who, whenever she heard of any one who had felt the halter draw, was wont to exclaim most earnestly, ‘What a mercy I’m still alive.’ It does seem like a voice from the grave when Mr. Davis claims that it was unconstitutional for the government to call for volunteers to interfere with the designs and deeds of South Carolina; that it ought to have called out the militia of South Carolina to attend to the matter, on the requisition of the Governor of the State. But if the government had done that where would have been the Army of the Tennessee? On the same principle the warden of a prison might as well call out the prisoners to suppress an insurrection of their jailers. He claims that the government ought to have abandoned peaceably Forts Moultrie and Sumter, in order that the inhabitants of South Carolina might feel sure that there was no intention on its part to hurt them if they should occupy the forts and tear down the stars and stripes. The government, however, did not act on the principle that a man well armed, when politely or roughly asked by a foot-pad, whose revolver was at home, to surrender his property, should quietly lay down his weapons, in the interests of peace and the tender feelings of the robber’s heart, and permit himself to be relieved of his valuables. We can afford to be magnanimous so long as it is nothing but the phantom shade of State sovereignity that so feebly and strugglingly comes to view in the post-mortem efforts of Mr. Davis. THE GENERAL OF THE ARMY. “Gentlemen, before another meeting of this society, its honored President will have retired from his position as General of the Army of the United States—a General whose very name quickens onr pulses; whose perpersonal magnetism has drawn our hearts; whose brilliancy of military genius has never been surpassed; whose short military vocabulary the Army of the Tennessee learned so well that they never could forget it: First find the enemy, then follow him. It is an unspeakable privilege to us tonight to have with us his distinguished predecessor, our first commander, and his distinguished successor, worthy to be the commander of any army on whose flashing swords and gleaming bayonets the sun has ever shone. Happy, indeed, is our president to come to the day of retirement, with his natural strength unabated and with his eye undiinmed, better prepared were the necessity to arise, to lead the armies of freedom to glorious victory than when we first took the word of command from his lips. The
present state of the nation is a fitting conclusion to that unsurpassed military carreer which really began with his ringing words to the Governor of Louisiana, when secession was threatened in 1861: ‘lf Louisiana withdraws from the federal union I prefer to maintain my allegiance to the constitution as long as a fragment of it survives. On no earthly account will Ido any act or think any thought, hostile to or in defiance of the old government of the United States.’ Thank God, the only fragment that does not survive is that by which it was sought to deprive 4,000,000 of people of a country and a flag. The old government of the United States still lives, stronger, better, purer than when the madness of secession brought William T. Sherman to the front to defend it. I repeat, the present state of the nation is a fitting conclusion to his active military life. What a joy to him to behold tlie nation (not a confederacy) at peace with the world and with itself! A nation honored, respected, admired and feared as no other nation beneath the skies. A nation with its indestructible life growing richer, deeper, grander with every beating of its pulse. A nation wheeled by the strong right hand of omnipotence as a central burning sun in the world’s firmament, whose going forth is from tlie end of the heaven, and his circuit unto the height of it, and there is nothing hid front the heat thereof. Long delayed indeed may be that monument of marble or bronze which a grateful nation will raise to his memory. A monument which no sculptor can fashion cr genius conceive will be erected in tlie hearts of the increasing millions of tlie American people. But the noblest monument Oi till 13 that built up in the deathless affection and heroic devotion of these noble men and the tens of thousands they represent, who know him best and who, under his splendid leadership, made immortal the name and tlie fame of that army which never met defeat, the Army of the Tennessee.” The regular programme was then completed, and General Sherman announced that it would be in order to call upon those on the stage for short, pithy remarks. General John A. Logan was the first called, and was followed by General Belknap, General Noyes, Governor Fairchild, General Leggett, Governor Fletcher and General Force. There will be a business meeting to-morrow forenoon. The reunion closes with a banquet to-morrow night.
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