Sunday, April 23, 2017

Virginia teen slain by Yankee he captured at Brandy Station

On the reverse of this image, a notation reads,  "Trooper Geo. Williams, 
 12th Va Cavalry, killed Fleetwood, June 9, 1863."  (Library of Congress)
Clark Hall
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In his first post for my blog, Culpeper County (Va.) Civil War expert Clark Hall wrote about the first soldier to die during the Gettysburg Campaign. In this guest post, Hall writes about a young soldier from Virginia who gave the last full measure at Brandy Station, site of the Civil War's greatest cavalry battle.  A Vietnam veteran and former FBI agent, Hall has spent a good chunk of his life helping save that battlefield  from development. In March 2017, he gave me a deluxe tour of the beautiful, rolling hills and farm fields at Brandy Station, near Culpeper, Va.

By Clark B. Hall

Just 17 years old in 1861 and a student at Mossy Creek Academy in the Shenandoah Valley, George Henry Williams pleaded with his widowed mother to grant him permission to enter the army. Finally relenting, Sarah Williams hugged George when he departed Woodstock, Va., as a private in the 10th Virginia Infantry.

Valued as a good soldier, George fought in several early battles. Throughout his first two years of service, Private Williams dutifully corresponded with “Ma,” and he chastised “Sister Mary” for not writing. In expressing the homesick sentiments of soldiers serving in any war, George emphasized, “You don’t know what pleasure it gives me to hear from home.”

Never growing much taller than the musket he toted, the diminutive Williams longed to be a horse soldier. Getting his wish, he transferred to the 12th Virginia Cavalry. In a brief note to his sister from “Culpeper Court House” on June 6, George relayed two hard facts: “We will have work to do in a few days.” And second, “The Yanks are just across the river.” He signed the letter -- his last -- "Your fond brother, George.”

“ The Yanks ... just across the river” opened the Battle of Brandy Station on June 9, 1863, by attacking Jeb Stuart’s cavalry division centered at Fleetwood Hill. The 12th Virginia Cavalry was among the first Southern units to respond to the crisis, and Private Williams joined his mates as they slugged it out with Federal troopers on Beverly’s Ford Road.

After several hours of heavy fighting near St. James Church, General Stuart urgently dispatched the 12th Virginia back to Fleetwood, where a Union division threatened to seize the highest ground on the battlefield. Perhaps desiring to convince his new mates that he was a brave soldier, Private Williams charged out ahead of his company.

Arriving on the northern slope of Fleetwood, George quickly unhorsed a Union trooper in a sword fight. Marching his captive to the rear at the point of a saber, the prisoner suddenly pulled a “pocket pistol” and shot Williams between the eyes. Killed instantly, Private George Williams fell hard to the ground.​

Following the battle, George’s brother identified his brother’s body from among the scores of slain stretched across Fleetwood Hill. Burying his beloved younger brother on Fleetwood, Lieutenant James Williams wrote that “death so often marks for its own the noble and generous ...” James Williams also noted the obvious when he wrote his fiancĂ©, “The old heart of the widowed mother must bleed again...”

In August 1863, Lieutenant Williams returned to Fleetwood, unearthed his brother’s grave and dispatched the body to Woodstock, where George Williams is interred in Massanutten Cemetery.

Postscript: The youngest soldier that I have found to die in the Battle of Brandy Station was Private Benjamin Warner McKown, 12th Virginia Cavalry, who the Richmond Sentinel asserted was “in the 15th year of his age.”

Looking south from Fleetwood Hill. Near here the 12th Virginia Cavalry --
Trooper  Williams' regiment -- encountered the attacking 1st New Jersey Cavalry. 
George Williams probably was killed near the crest. (Photo: Clark Hall)
Gravestone for George Williams in Massanutten Cemetery in Woodstock, Va.
(Find A Grave)

 Have something to add (or correct) in this post? E-mail me here.


SOURCES


-- War-time correspondence of George and James Williams.

5 comments:

  1. Anonymous8:12 AM

    The 12th Virginia Cavalry was formed from 10 of the 29 independent companies formerly under the command of Turner Ashby of the 7th Virginia Cavalry on June 15 and 16, 1862 in Rockingham County between Conrad’s Store and Swift Run Gap.
    The Laurel Brigade was made up at various times of the 2nd, 6th, 7th, 11th (originally 17th Battalion) and 12th Virginia Cavalry Regiments as well as the 35th Virginia Cavalry Battalion and Chew's Artillery Battery.

    Pvt. Charles Prather, Company D, 12th Virginia Cavalry (Great-Great Grandfather)
    Born: December 4, 1839, Description: 5’1”, florid complexion, brown eyes, brown hair. Enlisted: 3/17/62 at Shepherdstown in Company D as Pvt. Wounded while on picket duty at Brandy Station. POW* at Halltown, Jefferson County, WV, 7/15/63 (Fort McHenry in Baltimore; Point Lookout, 8/17/63). To City Point for exchange, 3/17/64. Present July/August 1864. No further record. Paroled at Mt. Jackson 4/18/65. Died by January 6, 1887

    Denton Prather, Company D, 12th Virginia Cavalry: (Great-Great Uncle)

    Born 1844? 5’8”, florid complexion, brown eyes, brown hair. Member of the 67th Regiment, Virginia Militia (Berkeley County). Enlisted at Bunker Hill in Company H (“Letcher Riflemen”) of 2nd Virginia Infantry (“Stonewall Brigade”). AWOL since 10/4/62. No further infantry records. Only record for 12th VA Cavalry is 4/18/65 parole at Mt. Jackson which shows him in Company D as private. Alive at Leetown, WV in 1907. Died 7/31/25. Buried at Christ Reformed Church, Reformed Graveyard established 1774, Shepherdstown, WV.

    David Lewis, Company D, 12th Virginia Cavalry: (Great-Great Uncle)

    Born 1839? 5’ 9”, fair complexion, gray eyes, dark hair. Miller in Berkeley County. Enlisted 10/6/62 at Shepherdstown in Company D as private. POW captured by U.S. 1st Virginia Cavalry in Berkeley County, WV on 11/4/63 (Camp Chase, 11/12/63; Rock Island, Illinois, 1/17/64). Exchanged 2/25/65. Admitted Jackson Hospital at Richmond, 3/6/65; debility. Furloughed 30 days beginning 3/8/65. Readmitted to Jackson Hospital (date not stated). Captured there 4/3/65; typhoid fever. Buried Hollywood Cemetery, Richmond.

    Pvt. George Walton Caton, Company D, 12th Virginia Cavalry: (Great-Great Grandfather)

    Born: 3/4/26. Laborer and then boatman for Samuel Knott and James Flanagan in Jefferson County, Va. Illiterate. Enlisted at Shepherdstown in Company D. Sept-Oct rolls report him absent sick since 9/25/62. Wounded in right ankle near Shepherdstown, WV on 8/24/63. POW in Jefferson County, WV 7/10/63. Paroled in Baltimore 8/23/63 and delivered to City Point for exchange on 8/24/63. Admitted to General Hospital in Petersburg on 8/24/63 for wounded right ankle. Discharged from hospital 8/31/63. AWOL March/April 1864. NFR. Died 12/25/98. Buried in Elmwood Cemetery, Shepherdstown, WV.

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  2. My Great-Great Grandfather, Brisco C. Shull fought with the 12th Va Cav’s and lived on Cedar Creek Rd Middletown, Va

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  3. My great-great grandfather was P.B. Dunn of the 5th Va. Cav. He was from Palmyra, Va.

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  4. Anonymous10:34 PM

    How to print

    ReplyDelete
  5. John McKown10:57 AM

    Benjamin Warner McKown born 01 Nov 1844, died 09 Jun 1863, 18 years old

    ReplyDelete