James H. Brigham C.S.A. Private, Co. C, 33rd Tennessee Infantry, CSA. September 13, May 1, 1865

Similar documents
Albert C. Brigham C.S.A. Private, Co. B, 1st Tennessee Artillery, CSA. November 21, February 27, 1865

For more information, see: Wiley Sword, Mountains Touched with Fire: Chattanooga Besieged, 1863 (St. Martin s Griffin, 1997) and Arthur M.

Robert Payne Byrd C.S.A. Private, Co. F, 9th/12th Missouri Infantry, CSA. August 2, March 6, 1863

Bailey M. Hill April ? CENSUS RECORDS 1840 Comment: 1850 Comment: 1860

1863: Shifting Tides. Cut out the following cards and hand one card to each of the pairs.

CHESTER AND HENRY BUCKLAND, 72ND OHIO VOLUNTEER INFANTRY CHESTER BUCKLAND

John Vale Marilyn Burbank Rochester Chapter DAR. Submitted by

Notes for Robert Kurtz Staton/Staten:

Arnold Family Papers,

What A Union army, consisting of 28,000 men fought 33,000 Confederates. 1 st battle of the Civil War. When July 21, 1861 Where Bull Run Creek,

Major General Lew Wallace at Shiloh

THE GAINESBORO SENTINAL, GAINESBORO, TN PICTURE SERIES

The Filson Historical Society. Schmidt family Papers,

Analysis of Letter from Hugh Blakeney to Elminey Guess Letter dated March, 1865

John Whitfield Purifoy and Esther Ann Maddux

CHAPTER 4 On to Second Manassas

The Bloody Reality of War - Wilson s Creek Image Analysis - Primary Source Activity

Adam J. Himmel Civil War Letters,

John R. Siperly papers

SOME ROPERS IN TEXAS AND OKLAHOMA By David L. Roper. Henry Franklin Roper s Offspring

Harrison House Collection, 1841-ca (bulk )

Adair County. Pinkston, Peter (4 Jan Nov 1940). Braesher, MO resident all his life. Served in the 50 th EMM., Buried Mt. Tabor Cemetery.

BOWEN, JOHN PERRY, PAPERS,

TYSON (ROBERT A.) DIARY Mss Inventory

The Engineers at Camp Parapet

Courtesy of the Tishomingo County Historical & Genealogical Society Original files are housed in the John Marshall Stone Research Library

The Battles of Spotsylvania Courthouse and Cold Harbor. By Darrell Osburn c 1996

A0940 James Edwin Love ( ) Papers, , no date 2 boxes Processed by Dennis Northcott, February 1999

First Generation Second Generation

DANIEL WAIT HOWE PAPERS,

Mason Family Records. Bob Elder 9/1/2011

The Grapeshot Newsletter

Branch 13. Tony McClenny

Hix Family Cemetery - Hix, Georgia

Vol. 38 No. 2 Spring 2018 Williamson County Genealogical Society P.O. Box 585 Round Rock, Texas

C Colman-Hayter Family Papers, linear feet

Rev. Alpheus F. W. Wooldridge Pioneer of 1852/53 compiled by Stephenie Flora oregonpioneers.com

MOREY, JAMES MARSH ( ) PAPERS

THE PRIDE AND BUNNER FAMILY. Geri's Mother's Side. Submitted by Geraldine Raybuck Smith.

NEWSLETTER JUNE, 2013

Civil War Battles 5 th Grade Table of Contents. Pages 1. Content Essay: Forts Henry and Donelson Content Essay: Shiloh 5-7

Pulaski County Kentucky Daltons

Tarrant County. Civil War Veterans of Northeast Tarrant County. John A. Berry. Compiled by Michael Patterson. Copyright All rights reserved.

BALES Family Newsletter

FITZGERALD-WILLIAMS-GREER FAMILY PAPERS

Jefferson Finis Davis ( )

Head Family Genealogy Notes

Descendants of Thomas Devane

BROTHERS IN REVOLUTIONARY SERVICE John Bradley (c ) / Richard Bradley ( ) / Thomas Bradley ( )

Civil War. July 7,1861. A. Kennedy, Mayor. Frederick Sasse. John D. Plunkett. R. P. Dolman, Clerk

D E S C E N D A N T S O F T H E S T O K E S C O., N C R I D D L E F A M I L Y

JOSIAH KNIGHTON AND FAMILY PAPERS Mss. 651 Inventory

Letter from David J. Jones. Mary Thomas

Private John Powell Graham Company D, South Carolina 4 th Calvary

2. How many days are in this month?

WOOD FAMILY PAPERS,

FICTION by Cherié L. Weible

RUCKER RANGERS. Newsletter Published Monthly December 2011 UPCOMING EVENTS. December

The standard. Sat. December 10, :00 # Long Shall our Banner Brave The breeze - The standard of the free. editor & Proprietor

BROWN, JOSEPH PAPERS,

Genealogy of John Wesley Burleyson. John Wesley Burleyson; The childhood years

He told of his Civil War experiences as follows:

The Webfoot. Patriotic and Progressive. General, John B. Gordon February 6, 1832 January 9, A Monthly Publication In The Interest Of

Boggs Cemetery. Clay, Arkansas. Photo by Leroy Blair. This Cemetery is also known as: None known. GPS Location:

I am cleaning up my family tree and correcting mistakes and making improvements

O BRYAN, JOSEPH BRANCH ( ) PAPERS

OCCGS Civil War Veterans Project. Veteran s Information

JOSEPH WIKERSON, SCIPIO, AND HC. I don t know what HC stands for! In all my searching, all these years, I have

William Peters. pg 1/16


Barner Family Bible Records,

OGS FINDING AIDS OHIO GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY

Family Group Sheet. Wife: Mary Elizabeth Cotterell. CHILDREN 1 Name: Mariah (Marilla/Merrilla) Petty

Lincoln Timeline

Shaver Family Genealogy

Jud Lake, Th.D., D.Min. School of Religion Southern Adventist University

THE GREAT YANKEE ROBINSON

Confederate Veterans in. Stone Mountain A Perspective on Southern Heritage. Chris Davis

Ogle County Historical Society

SCV Calendar. SCV Fighting Joe Wheeler Camp

Hines Family Collection (MSS 91)

Wilbur Foster Creighton, Jr. Collection

The Life & Times of George Edward Cargile, CSA Co. H Alabama Regiment of Volunteers

The truth about Thomas J. Stowers or part of it

Descendants of Ralph Harden From file of Pat Hardin, Mount Holly, NC July 2009

Battles and Leaders of the Civil War

Joel Hughes Civil War Letters

Descendants of John Beasley

Henry Bascom Martin ( )

Glade District, Oglethorpe County, Georgia Location: end of Pea Ridge Road, N W


M 1 WINANS, (William) Papers ( ) Page 1

Dempsey Dubois Crews

- b. d. Ancestry. Record /(~~.:r P,;--G- - ;c/i.f. 2- (t.,,c.~/ See. File No. (Over)

JONATHAN DENNEY/DENNY FAMILY. Bible records list Johnathan Denney as born in Smith County, 29 March 1822,

Master List of Trainings in Oklahoma 4HOnline

Chapter 8 From Colony to Territory to State

I received a.pdf file of the application by from Billy Reeves on 20 Jan 2012, who got it from the National Archives

Descendants of Christopher Threlkeld

The Children of William Faulkner Wilson

Transcription:

James H. Brigham C.S.A. Private, Co. C, 33rd Tennessee Infantry, CSA September 13, 1861 - May 1, 1865 James H. Brigham (b. Jan. 26, 1836) was the fourth oldest son of Albert Clausel Brigham, Sr. (b. Feb. 10, 1800; prob. in Sullivan Co. TN - d. Nov. 30, 1875, Stewart Co. TN) and Mary Polly Byrd (b. 1810 - d. Aug. 17, 1892, Stewart Co. TN). He, along with his 13 brothers and sisters (Horse Ann Caroline, b. Mar. 25, 1827; Mary, b. Jan. 27, 1828; Thomas L., b. Oct. 11, 1829; Samisa, b. Dec. 19, 1830; Quintus C., b. Feb. 4, 1832; Harriet A., b. Mar. 25, 1834; Albert Clausel Jr., b. Feb. 1, 1838; Marion McDonald, b. Apr. 21, 1840; Minerva Jane, b. July 29, 1842; Constantine Polk, b. Sept. 27, 1844; Arcanthus Missouri, b. Aug. 17, 1845; John Wesley, b. Mar. 7, 1848; Elizabeth Tennessee, b. Apr. 15, 1851) was born somewhere in District No. 8 near Lick Creek (now Byrd Creek), Stewart County Tennessee and next to the Tennessee River, in what is now Land Between The Lakes National Recreation Area (LBL). James H. Brigham was also the nephew of Luna Louisa Brigham Byrd (b. 1797, Sullivan Co., TN - d. Dec. 5, 1875, Stewart Co. TN) and therefore first cousin to her sons who also served in the CSA, George Wesley Byrd and Robert Payne Byrd. According to his CSA service and Tennessee State Pension documents, James H. Brigham enlisted in the 33rd Tennessee Infantry in Union City, TN on Sept. 13, 1861 along with his younger brother, Marion McDonald Brigham. His service records indicate that he was continuously present with the 33rd Tennessee Infantry except for a brief period between Mar. 21 and Apr. 4, 1862 when his name appears on a register for the 1st Mississippi CSA Hospital in Jackson, Mississippi; a notation reads "returned to duty April 4, 1862 -- indicating he was indeed present at the horrific battle of Shiloh, TN April 6-7, 1862. Both James and his brother Marion were within Company C of the 33rd Tennessee Infantry and commanded by Captain William Francis Marberry. This company was formed largely of men from Calloway County, KY -- just across the Tennessee River from their home in Stewart Co. TN. Actual muster date for Co. C was apparently on Oct. 18, 1861, but the regiment was not completely mustered in until Nov. 28, 1861; this according to information in Tennesseans In The Civil War, Vol. 1. The 33rd Tennessee Infantry remained in Camp of Instruction near Union City, TN until January of 1862 when it moved to the Confederate fortifications at Columbus, KY; at this time only a few of its companies were partially armed with shotguns and hunting rifles. Also at this time, the commanding officer of the 33rd Tennessee Infantry was Colonel Alex W. Campbell and under overall command of General Leonidas Polk. General Polk wrote to Major General A.S. Johnston on Dec. 30, 1861 in an attempt to get more Pvt. James H. Brigham_StewartCo_TNGenWeb bio_byrd Page 1 of 5

firearms for the 33rd Tennessee Infantry; these arms, mostly flint and steel muskets, did not arrive until a few weeks before the battle of Shiloh. At Shiloh, Pvt. James H. Brigham and his comrades in the 33rd Tennessee Infantry were in Brigadier General Charles Clark s Division and Brigadier General A.P. Stewart s Brigade; this brigade included not only the 33rd Tennessee Infantry, but also the 13th Arkansas Infantry together with the 4th, 5th Tennessee Infantries and Stanford s Artillery Battery. The two Brigham brothers experienced their first combat, together with thousands of Confederate and Federal soldiers, in the early hours of April 6. By 10:30 a.m., Stewart s Brigade had joined in the attack against the reeling Yankees in the area of Water Oaks Pond, at the intersection of the Purdy-Hamburg and Pittsburg-Corinth Roads. The 33rd Tennessee Infantry overran the Federal tents in their pursuit of the desperate Federal soldiers, going against Raith s Brigade. By 11:30 a.m., the victorious Rebels in Stewart s Brigade, along with other units, had captured 18 Federal cannons and complete possession of the Pittsburg-Corinth Road. Fighting was constant as the Confederate onslaught forced the beleaguered Federals to the North and East; by 4:30 p.m. Pvt. James H. Brigham and the 33rd Tennessee Infantry came into the Stacy Field from the northwest along with the 38th Tennessee Infantry, descending upon the die-hard Federals in the Hornet s Nest, already withstanding over 8 charges for the last 6 hours. The Tennesseans cornered the 12th Iowa Infantry just East of the Pittsburg-Corinth Road and South of where it intersects the Hamburg-Savannah Road, helping capture 429 of the Iowans. The 33rd and 5th Tennessee Infantries then participated in a charge upon the so-called Hell s Hollow portion of the Hornet s Nest, wounding the 33 rd Tennessee s Colonel Campbell but leading to the capture of Federal General Prentiss shortly after 5:30 p.m. No doubt the two Brigham brothers feasted, as did thousands of their Confederate comrades, on the food left by the fleeing Federals that night as the rain fell amid the periodic shellings from the Federal gunboats on the Tennessee River. The next morning saw the savage Federal counterattack against the recovering Rebels; reinforced during the night, the now confident Yankees pushed back the Confederate lines with some resistance at certain points. One of these resistance pockets was in the southwest corner of Jones Field, organized by Brigadier General Ruggles and containing approximately 2,500 men -- including the 33rd Tennessee Infantry -- formed around 10:00 a.m. The Federal Division of General Lew Wallace (about 7,500 men) descended upon their position from the northwest while forces commanded by William Tecumseh Sherman attacked from the North. Ruggles wisely withdrew his hastilypatched-together opposition to the South. The 33rd Tennessee Infantry lost 20 killed, 103 wounded, and 17 missing during the two days of Shiloh. After reorganization following Shiloh, Pvt. James H. Brigham and the 33rd Tennessee Infantry saw action at Corinth MS (April-June, 1862), Perryville KY (Oct. 8, 1862), Murfreesboro TN (Dec. 31, 1862-Jan.3, 1863), Tullahoma TN (June 1863), Chickamauga GA (Sept.19-20, 1863), Chattanooga TN (Nov.23-25, 1863), New Hope Church GA, (May 25-June 4, 1864), Kennesaw Mountain GA (June 27, 1864), Peach Tree Creek GA Pvt. James H. Brigham_StewartCo_TNGenWeb bio_byrd Page 2 of 5

(July 20, 1864), Atlanta GA (July 22, 1864), Jonesboro GA (Aug. 31 - Sept.1, 1864), Franklin TN (Nov. 30, 1864), Nashville TN (Dec. 15-16, 1864), and Bentonville NC (Mar. 19-21, 1865). At Chickamauga, Pvt. James H. Brigham and the 33rd Tennessee Infantry were in the brigade of Brigadier General Otho F. Strahl with the 4th/5th, 19th, 24th, and 31st Tennessee Infantries. Strahl s Brigade was in the Division of Major General Benjamin F. Cheatham and the so-called Right Wing of the Confederate Army of Tennessee, commanded by then Lieutenant General Leonidas Polk. Around 2:00 p.m. on Sept. 19, 1863, Strahl s Brigade advanced into the eastern edge of the Brock Field and was met with a ferocious hail of canister and musket fire administered by forces commanded by Federal Brigadier General William B. Hazen. Assuming that his right flank was protected by Maney s Brigade, General Strahl continued to advance his men across Brock Field, where they encountered destructive enfilade fire from Federal soldiers on their right. Now being blasted from in front and from their right side, Strahl s Brigade maneuvered quickly to prevent being flanked and retreated from the field, leaving most of their killed and wounded behind. It was possibly during this time that Pvt. James H. Brigham was wounded, according to his Tennessee State Pension documents. General Strahl stated that his losses from this bloody encounter were near 200 men, with several of his field officers dismounted by their horses being shot from beneath them. At Franklin, on Nov. 30, 1864, Pvt. James H. Brigham and the men of the 33rd Tennessee Infantry were still in Strahl s Brigade, but now in the Division of Major General John C. Brown and the Corps of Major General Benjamin F. Cheatham; these units of the Army of Tennessee were under the overall command of General John Bell Hood. Seemingly to punish his men for letting the Federal army escape his trap at Spring Hill the day before, General Hood ordered a massive frontal assault (20,000 men) against the strongly entrenched Federals at Franklin -- with the men in both Brown s Division and Cleburne s Division leading the way. This assault, larger and farther (~2 miles) that the more famous Pickett s Charge at Gettysburg, proceeded North along the Columbia Pike and began at 4:00 p.m. Brown s Division, including Pvt. James H. Brigham and the 33rd Tennessee Infantry, was on the West side of the pike while Cleburne s Division was immediately next to them on the East side of the roadway. The combined force of Brown s and Cleburne s Divisions (about 8,000 men) quickly overran the 4,000 Federals at the outer line of works; as the awed Federals retreated back towards the main fortifications near the Cotton Gin and Carter House, the men in Brown s and Cleburne s Divisions ran after them and followed them into the main works. As described in Wiley Sword s book, Embrace An Angry Wind, the howling Confederates under Brown and Cleburne burst through the Columbia Pike gap and over the adjacent earthworks of the desperate Federals, capturing a 200-yard front between the Cotton Gin to West of the Columbia Pike and clearing it of Yankee soldiers. At about 4:45 p.m., a semi-controlled counterattack led by Federal Colonel Emerson Opdycke shocked the surging Rebels in Brown s and Cleburne s Divisions. Intense, savage handto-hand fighting using rifles, bayonets, pistols, clubs, and bare hands engulfed both sides in the death zone near the Carter House. Federal canister fire soon joined in and drove Brown s and Cleburne s soldiers back towards the outside perimeter of the Federal Pvt. James H. Brigham_StewartCo_TNGenWeb bio_byrd Page 3 of 5

earthworks, near the Carter garden. The attacking Confederates soon became pinneddown defenders as the rallying Yankees poured enfilade fire upon them; General Strahl was handing loaded muskets to his men in a ditch 50 yards West of the Columbia Pike when he was killed. Major General Patrick Cleburne was killed opposite the Cotton Gin while leading a charge on foot. It was probably sometime during this chaos that Pvt. James H. Brigham suffered his fractured skull, again according to his Tennessee State Pension documents. General Hood continued his assault until well after nightfall; along with 6 Confederate generals killed that day, 6,300 Confederate soldiers were also killed or wounded. Pvt. James H. Brigham survived Franklin and was present when the remnants of the 33rd Tennessee Infantry were consolidated with the 4th, 5th, 19th, 31st, 35th, 38th, and 41st Tennessee Infantries into the 3rd Tennessee Consolidated Infantry on April 9, 1865; this after the battle of Bentonville NC on March 19-21, 1865. On May 1, 1865 both James H. Brigham and his brother Marion were paroled in Greensboro, NC in accordance with the terms of the surrender negotiated between CSA General Joseph E. Johnston and Federal Major General W.T. Sherman on April 26, 1865. Before dying on May 4, 1920, James H. Brigham filed for a Confederate Pension from the State of Tennessee on Aug. 5, 1914. This document, on microfilm in the Tennessee State Archives in Nashville, indicates that he lived in Model, Stewart Co. TN at the time and provides the following information: 1. IN WHAT BATTLE OR BATTLES WERE YOU ENGAGED, AND, IF NOT WOUNDED, STATE WHAT DISABILITIES DID YOU RECEIVE, IF ANY? Wounded in Battle of Chicomoggy and at Franklin Tennessee. 2. WHAT WAS THE PRECISE NATURE OF YOUR WOUND OR DISABILITY, IF ANY? Wounded in Shoulder and Skull fractured. 3. WERE YOU INCAPACITATED FOR SERVICE BY REASON OF SAID WOUND OR DISABILITY INCURRED? Yes. 4. WERE YOU DISCHARGED FROM THE ARMY BY REASON OF SAID WOUND OR DISABILITY? No. 5. WERE YOU PAROLED? IF SO, WHEN AND WHERE? Yes at Greensboro North Carolina. 6. DID YOU TAKE THE OATH OF ALLEGIANCE TO THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT? No. James H. Brigham died May 4, 1920 and is buried in the Brigham Cemetery, Land Between The Lakes NRA with his brothers Marion M. Brigham and Albert C. Brigham Jr. Pvt. James H. Brigham_StewartCo_TNGenWeb bio_byrd Page 4 of 5

Photo image by Kenneth E. Byrd, taken March 2015 August 29, 2015 (updated) by Kenneth E. Byrd 1, Indianapolis, IN and Cleo Cherry Grogan 2, Murray, KY (dec.) 1 Fifth cousin of Pvt. James H. Brigham Jr.;4 th great-nephew of Albert Clausel Brigham, Sr.; 3 rd great-grandson of Luna Louisa Brigham Byrd. 2 Third cousin of Pvt. James H. Brigham Jr.; great-granddaughter of Luna Louisa Brigham Byrd. Pvt. James H. Brigham_StewartCo_TNGenWeb bio_byrd Page 5 of 5