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| 22nd Wisconsin soldiers (Wisconsin Historical Society) |
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But lately, after some deep dives into old newspaper accounts of the long-forgotten Battle of Brentwood, fought March 25, 1863, I won’t be making that trip quite the same way. I’ll be thinking about the 22nd Wisconsin soldiers who were captured there — on ground now buried beneath subdivisions and shopping centers. They had been guarding a depot, while two miles south, comrades held a stockade and a railroad bridge near the Little Harpeth River.
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| A lone historical marker on the heavily developed Brentwood battlefield. |
It’s almost impossible to picture the Brentwood battlefield now, with traffic humming and parking lots filling and emptying, while virtually nothing along Franklin Road hints at what happened here. Only one out-of-the-way historical marker, roughly 10 yards from a service station, commemorates the Brentwood battlefield.
Yet the soldiers left us something better than markers or monuments: their words.“One of the best camping grounds that the 22nd has had the good fortune to encamp on,” a soldier in the 22nd Wisconsin — signing his letter “Goldower” — wrote home in early March 1863 about the small Union garrison at Brentwood. His account appeared in a Racine newspaper, offering a glimpse of life before the battle.
Another soldier in Company F wrote home: “Do not feel alarmed about us, as we have a good stockade to rally on and plenty of cold lead for the rebels.”
But neither cold lead nor the Brentwood stockade protected the 22nd Wisconsin, whose Middle Tennessee experience can best be termed a nightmare. At the Battle of Thompson’s Station on March 5, 1863, Nathan Bedford Forrest captured dozens of 22nd Wisconsin soldiers (and other Midwesterners); at Brentwood, “The Wizard” finished the job. Few U.S. soldiers were killed or wounded, but more than 300 became POWs.
“Gobbling up,” a Wisconsin soldier wrote of the Brentwood mass capture — words we could use today about real estate developers and Middle Tennessee land.
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| 1863 map of Brentwood stockade that guarded a railroad bridge at the Little Harpeth River. (Library of Congress via Wikipedia) |
“Dear Brother,” paroled Private Edward Pullan of Company E wrote, “I write you to let you know I am still in the land of the living.” He went on to tell a harrowing tale of quietly cooking breakfast when the Rebels attacked.
“We had barely formed line of battle, with skirmishers thrown out in front, when the rebels, in overwhelming numbers … pounced upon us,” Pullan wrote. I'll always wonder if this occurred near where my favorite oil change place now stands.In “dilapidated” Columbia, Tennessee, en route to Libby prison in Richmond, Pullan described sleeping among the “filth and vermin” in the courthouse and complained of “blistered feet, tired limbs and empty stomachs.”
Others told similar stories.
“We have seen hardships enough ... to make a young man old," wrote parolee Private Webster C. Pope, then about 19. He described being marched after his capture by the Rebels — “miserable sneaking whelps,” he called them — “across lots and every other way, half the time on the double quick.” He’d be amazed at all the tony Brentwood neighborhoods he’d pass on his way over that ground today.![]() |
| The Brentwood stockade is believed to have stood in the middle distance at right, beyond the railroad track. |
But at least there was one ray of sunshine for Pope, who died of disease in April 1864.
“Through the kindness of a Union woman I got a cup of milk and some warm corn bread for supper,” he wrote.
In another letter to his family, Pullan — who said imprisonment turned him into "skin and bones" — vowed to get even.
"I want to see you all in a few days," he wrote, "and then I am ready to fight those villanous rebels to the death."
"I know," he continued, "just how to hate them."
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| The obscure Brentwood battlefield was long ago lost to development. |
Others focused on the embarrassment of the Brentwood surrender.
“Mother, it was not my wish to surrender at Brentwood,” wrote paroled prisoner Claron I. Miltimore, an adjutant, adding: “We would rather die than surrender.” He also concluded: “I am somewhat wiser in the war question than I was a month ago.”
For some, the aftermath of Brentwood proved even more tragic.
One 22nd Wisconsin soldier pounded his loaded musket against a tree in indignation over the surrender; it discharged into his thigh, and he later died in a Nashville hospital. “Another Brave Boy Gone,” read the headline in a Wisconsin paper atop the story of death of John D. Morgan of Company F.
Others, though, were simply grateful to have survived.
"Free! Free!" adjutant William Bones wrote after weeks of capitivity by "Jeff Davis' rebel horde." "Thank God we are free once more."
Chaplain Caleb D. Pillsbury made a circuitous journey across the Confederacy before his release in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He seemed resigned to it. "War is war," wrote Pillsbury, who had no complaints about his treatment in captivity.
By June, capture, parole and death were apparently distant, ugly memories for at least one soldier in the 22nd Wisconsin. For him, music had replaced mayhem.
“Having lost our instruments at Brentwood, Tenn., when captured, a subscription is being taken up for a new set,” he wrote, “and we shall again have fine music to enhance the pleasure of these fine evenings.”
Perhaps he played a tuba where the cooks now fry tenders at Waldo's.
SOURCES
- Janesville Weekly Gazette, April 21, 24, 1863
- The Beloit [Wis.] Free Press, April 23, 1863
- The Manitowoc [Wis.] Pilot, April 3, 1863
- The Milwaukee Daily, June 13, 1863
- The Racine [Wis.] Advocate, March 4 and 18, 1863
- The Weekly Racine Advocate, April 8, April 27, May 20, 1863


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