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- Charles Edmiston Wilden and the Civil War
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- Nathan Mousselli
- Mr. Kott
- June 8, 1996
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- The Color Bearer Tradition
- The War Between the States was the heyday of American battleflags and their bearers. The
- colors of a Civil War regiment embodied its honor, and the men chosen to bear them made up
- an elite. Tall, muscular men were preferred, because holding aloft a large, heavy banner, to
- keep it visible through battle smoke and at a distance, demanded physical strength. Courage
- was likewise required to carry a flag into combat, as the colors "drew lead like a magnet."
- South Carolina's Palmetto Sharpshooters, for example, lost 10 out of 11 of its bearers and
- color guard at the Battle of Seven Pines, the flag passing through four hands without
- touching the ground. Birth and Early Life in Charleston Born in Charleston in 1824, Charles
- Edmiston and his twin sister, Ellen Ann, were the third son and second daughter,
- respectively, of newspaper editor Joseph Whilden and his wife, Elizabeth Gilbert Whilden.
- The births of two more sons, Richard Furman in 1826 and William Gilbert in 1828, would
- complete the family, making seven children in all. Young Charles' roots ran deep into the
- soil of the lowcountry. His Whilden ancestors had settled in the Charleston area in the
- 1690's, and an ancestor on his mother's side, the Rev. William Screven, had arrived in
- South Carolina even earlier, establishing the First Baptist Church of Charleston in 1683,
- today the oldest church in the Southern Baptist Convention. Like many Southerners who came
- of age in the late antebellum period, Charles Whilden took pride in his ancestors' role in
- the American Revolution, especially his grandfather, Joseph Whilden, who, at 18, had run
- away from his family's plantation in Christ Church Parish to join the forces under Brigadier
- General Francis "Swamp Fox" Marion fighting the British. At the time of Charles' birth, the
- family of Joseph and Elizabeth Whilden lived comfortably in their home on Magazine Street,
- attended by their devoted slave, Juno Waller Seymour, energetic black woman known as
- "Maumer Juno." The prosperity of Joseph Whilden and his family would prove less enduring,
- however, and business reversals, beginning in the late 1820's, combined with Joseph's stroke
- a few years later and his eventual death in 1838, would reduce his family to genteel
- poverty. To help make ends meet, Maumer Juno took in ironing. Despite a lack of money for
- college, young Charles managed to obtain a good education. Charles' admission to the South
- Carolina bar at Columbia in 1845 is further evidence of a triumph of intellect and effort
- over financial adversity. In the closing decades of the antebellum period, when Charles
- Whilden was growing up in Charleston, the city was the commercial and cultural center of the
- lowcountry as well as South Carolina's manufacturing center and most cosmopolitan city. By
- the time Charles Whilden reached adulthood, however, the Charleston economy was in decline,
- and the city's population would actually diminish during the decade of the 1850's. Not
- surprisingly, after a brief attempt to establish a law practice in Charleston, Attorney
- Whilden chose to seek his fortune outside his home town. But the practice of law in the
- upcountry town of Pendleton also failed to pan out for Whilden. Confronted with a major
- career decision, Whilden elected not only to leave the law but also to leave the Palmetto
- State for the north. The 1850 federal censustakers found Charles Whilden living in a
- boarding house in Detroit, Michigan, where he worked as a clerk. Speculation in copper
- stocks and land on Lake Superior soon left Charles deeply in debt to his youngest brother,
- William, who had built up a successful merchandising business back home in Charleston.
- Desperate to get out of debt, and perhaps longing for adventure, in the spring of 1855
- Charles Whilden signed on as a civilian employee of the U.S. Army. After an arduous
- two-month trek from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Whilden arrived in the old Spanish city of
- Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory, on August 27, 1855, where he took up his duties as civilian
- private secretary to the local garrison commander, Colonel John Breckinridge Grayson of
- Kentucky, who would later serve the Confederacy as a brigadier general in Florida. Life in
- New Mexico Territory When Whilden arrived in Santa Fe, the city had been under U.S.
- jurisdiction for only a few years, and the population was overwhelmingly Hispanic and Roman
- Catholic, causing the Baptist Whilden to complain, in an early letter to his brother William
- in Charleston, that "there are so many Saints days among these Hottentots, that it is hard
- to recollect them." So isolated was Santa Fe from the U.S. that mail reached the city only
- once a month from Missouri. Looking on the bright side of his cultural and geographic
- isolation in New Mexico Territory, Charles expressed his intention to remain in New Mexico
- until "I have paid up all my debts, for I can do it better out here, than in the States."
- Whilden's duties as Colonel Grayson's secretary were relatively light, leaving him ample
- time for other. His April 30, 1857 letter home to Charleston states: "In addition to the
- offices I hold in this Territory of Warden of a Masonic Lodge, President of a Literary
- Society, member of a Territorial Democratic Central Committee &c ..., I have lately added
- that of Farmer." Dreaming of making enough money to satisfy his debts to William and to
- establish a law practice in Texas, Charles had purchased a 16 acre truck farm near Sante Fe,
- establishing his claim as a "farmer." Alas, the farm would prove to be unprofitable. In his
- spare time, Whilden also occasionally edited the Santa Fe newspaper when the regular editor
- was busy. During the Presidential election campaign of 1856, Whilden penned an editorial
- supporting the renomination of President Franklin Pierce, a pro-Southern Democrat, and he
- expressed the hope in a letter to William that Pierce would be re-elected and "give me a fat
- office." Whilden's hope for a political sinecure also proved to be a dream.
- After his own marriage in 1850, William Whilden badgeredhis elder brother to end his
- bachelorhood and to settle down. In December 1854, when he was stillin Detroit and aged 30,
- a friend had tried to interest Charles in marrying his fiftyish, red-headed aunt. Seizing
- the opportunity to turn the tables on William, Charles wrote to William not to be surprised
- if he married the woman and took up William on his standing offer to permit Charles to
- honeymoon at William's stylish new home in Charleston.
- However boring it may have been, life in Santa Fe also afforded Whilden time for puffing his
- meerschaum pipe, reading his subscriptions to the peppery Charleston Mercury newspaper and
- thehighbrow Russells Magazine and reflecting on the mounting sectional tensions of the
- prewar years. In a letter to William dated March 26, 1856, Charles complained that the
- "Government is becoming more abolition every day" and he predicted that the "Union may last
- a few years longer, but unless a decided change takes place in Northern politics, it must at
- last go under." The War Begins Events would prove Whilden correct. On December 20, 1860,
- delegates to the so-called Secession Convention, meeting in Institute Hall in downtown
- Charleston, only a short distance from Charles Whilden's boyhood home on Magazine Street,
- unanimously adopted the Ordinance of Secession, taking South Carolina out of the Union. The
- bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor four months later heralded the beginning of
- the shooting war. A lesser man than Charles Whilden might have been content to sit out the
- war in New Mexico Territory. After all, Whilden had been gone from the South for more than a
- decade. He was fast approaching 40. Whilden's frequent denunciations of abolitionism in his
- letters were based on principle, not political expediency or financial self-interest. Apart
- from a nominal, undivided interest in his beloved Maumer Juno that he shared with his
- siblings, Charles held no slave property. Furthermore, he was more than 1,000 miles from
- South Carolina, with little money for travel. But Charles Whilden was no ordinary man.
- Undeterred by the obstacles confronting him, Whilden resolved to answer South Carolina's
- call to arms. According to a reminiscence written in 1969 by his grand niece, Miss Elizabeth
- Whilden Hard of Greenville, South Carolina, the "only way he could get back to Charleston
- was by the Bahamas, and on his way back to Charleston the ship was wrecked, he spent some
- time in an open boat, suffered sunstroke, and as a result had epileptic attacks." The date
- of Whilden's harrowing return to Charleston is conjectural, as none of his correspondence
- from the early war years has survived, but the likely date is late 1861 or early 1862.
- Whilden's Confederate service records in the National Archives in Washington, D.C. commence
- with his enlistment in 1864, but Miss Hard's reminiscence may be correct that her Great
- Uncle Charles "enlisted a number of times, but when he had an [epileptic] attack would be
- discharged. Then he would go somewhere else and enlist again." Confederate service records
- are notoriously incomplete, and it stands to reason that Charles Whilden would not have
- risked life and limb returning to Charleston only to avoid military service once home.
- Irrespective of whether or not he had seen prior service, Whilden demonstrably enlisted "for
- the war" at Charleston on February 6, 1864, as a private in Company I (known as the
- Richardson Guards) of the 1st Regiment, South Carolina Volunteers. Lieutenant Wallace Delph
- enlisted Whilden, and the lieutenant can be forgiven if he looked askance at his new
- recruit. By most standards, Whilden was a marginal recruit. Though intelligent and
- patriotic, Whilden was also in his 40th year, the red hair of his youth turned grey. His
- urban background and string of sedentary occupations better suited him for a Richmond
- clerkship than active service in the field. On top of everything else, Whilden was
- epileptic. Whilden's new regiment was a proud outfit. The 1st Regiment, South Carolina
- Volunteers, was known popularly as "Gregg's lst South Carolina" after its first colonel,
- Maxcy Gregg, in order to distinguish the regiment from several other South Carolina
- infantry regiments also identified numerically as the "lst Regiment." The successor to a
- regiment organized by Col. Gregg in December 1860 for six-months service, the 1st Regiment,
- SCV, was arguably the very first Rebel infantry regiment. At the time of Whilden's
- enlistment, the regiment was part of Brigadier General Samuel McGowan's brigade in the Army
- of Northern Virginia. At one time part of A.P. Hill's vaunted Light Division, McGowan's
- South Carolinians had won a reputation for hard fighting on many a bloody field. That
- reputation was shortly to be put to its sternest test at a strategic Virginia crossroads
- village known as Spotsylvania Court House. The Fight at the Mule Shoe Following his repulse
- at the Wilderness on May 5 and 6, 1864, Union General in Chief Ulysses S. Grant ordered the
- Army of the Potomac to move southeast about 12 miles to the vicinity of Spotsylvania Court
- House (NPS Web Site), hoping to get between the Army of Northern Virginia and Richmond.
- General Robert E. Lee, however, was quicker, and elements of the Confederate First Corps
- arrived at Spotsylvania Court House just ahead of the Federals. Over the next few days a
- series of collisions in the area occurred as both sides took up positions and brought up
- additional units. The Army of Northern Virginia settled into a defensive line at
- Spotsylvania that bulged northward in the center to form a salient or "mule-shoe," with
- elements of Lieutenant General Richard Ewell's Second Corps defending the mule-shoe. At
- first light on May 12, nearly 19,000 men of the Union II Corps, taking advantage of ground
- fog, attacked the tip or apex of the mule-shoe, quickly overwhelming Major General Edward
- Johnson's 4,000-man division defending the apex. Once inside the mule-shoe, the Federals
- threatened to advance southward like a tidal wave. Only their own disorganization and a
- series of desperate Confederate counterattacks halted the Union advance before it resulted
- in a general rout. With most of Johnson's Division dead or prisoners, a considerable segment
- of the works inside the apex of the mule-shoe was unoccupied by any Confederate troops. To
- correct this, General Lee forwarded two brigades from the Third Corps, Harris's
- Mississippians and McGowan's South Carolinians, during the mid-morning hours of the 12th.
- With a cheer and at the double quick, McGowan's Brigade advanced towards the tip of the
- mule-shoe in support of Harris's Brigade, sloshing through rain and mud and under heavy
- fire. At the head of each of the brigade's five regiments, two soldiers carried the
- regimental state flag and the national battleflag. The blue silk state flag featured a
- palmetto tree encircled with a wreath of oak and laurel leaves; the national battleflag
- displayed the familiar blue, starred St.Andrew's cross dividing a red field. When the
- regular color bearer was shot, Whilden insisted upon bearing his regiment's national colors
- into the fight, although he was not a member of Company K, the regiment's color company.
- Lieutenant James Armstrong, the commander of CompanyK and Whilden's messmate, relented,
- though, according to Armstrong's postwar account, Whilden was "feeble in health and totally
- unfitted for active service.... In fact, he was stumbling at every step." Watching Whilden
- struggle to keep up with his command, Armstrong offered to relieve Whilden of the flag and
- to carry it himself. Whilden relinquished the flag to the lieutenant, but only after
- Armstrong had promised to restore it to him when the regiment halted. As the command arrived
- at the next line, "Whilden came rushing up, took the flag and bravely bore it throughout the
- fight," Armstrong recalled. The lieutenant was being literal when he wrote that Whilden
- "bore" the flag, because, when the top of his flag staff was shot away during the advance,
- Whilden tied the battleflag around his waist and continued forward. When Whilden and his
- comrades finally halted in the late forenoon, they fell into trenches west of the mule-shoe
- tip. Perhaps two hundred yards of the salient's defenses then remained in Federal hands. In
- his recent book on Grant's Overland Campaign, Noah Trudeau writes: "Along those two hundred
- yards of mutually held trenches, men now killed each other with zealous abandon. In a war
- that had birthed its share of bloody angles, this day and the morning of the next at
- Spotsylvania would give birth to the bloodiest of them all." For the next 17 hours or so,
- McGowan's Brigade would hold its position along the apex of the salient front and would
- maintain a more or less continuous fire. At times the two sides were only a few yards apart.
- Now and then a hundred or so Yankees would surge forward over the Confederate trenches, only
- to be immediately hurled back in desperate hand-to-hand fighting. Rain fell intermittently
- during the afternoon of the 12th, adding to the misery of the combatants. About 10 o'clock
- that evening, a large oak, some 22 inches in diameter and cut almost in half by Federal
- rifle fire, fell down on works manned by Whilden's regiment, wounding several men and
- startling a great many more. While this desperate fighting took place, other Confederates
- were constructing a new defensive line across the base of the mule-shoe about a mile to the
- rear of the Mississippians and South Carolinians. Finally, at 4 o'clock in the morning of
- May13, the brigades of Harris and McGowan withdrew to the new line. Thus ended the longest
- sustained hand-to-hand combat of the war. The toll on McGowan's Brigade had been heavy.
- General McGowan was wounded early in the advance, and the commander of Gregg's 1st South
- Carolina, Col.C.W. McCreary, fell wounded almost in Whilden's arms. Total casualties within
- the brigade exceeded 40 percent. One of these casualties was the impromptu flag bearer,
- Private Charles Whilden. At some point before McGowan's Brigade retired to the relative
- safety of the new defensive line, a bullet tore open Whilden's shirt, inflicting a wound to
- his shoulder. With the flag still tied around his waist, Whilden was carried to a field
- hospital. For all intents and purposes, the war was over for him. The next day, May l4,
- Charles hurriedly wrote a letter to his brother, William, who was then serving as an
- artillery officer near Charleston. After describing the fighting of the preceding two days
- and the heavy losses of his brigade, Charles turned to a more personal subject. "If it
- should be the decree of the Almighty that I should lose my life in this War," he wrote, then
- William should have his meerschaum pipe and his sisters-in-law should draw for his watch and
- chain. What little remained of his property, Charles wrote, should be "equally divided
- between Sisters Charlotte & Ellen Ann-I promised dear Mother that they should never want if
- I could prevent it." Sent to the General Hospital at Camp Winder in Richmond to recover his
- health, Whilden was furloughed to Charleston in late August. Listed as "absent sick at
- Charleston" on the muster rolls of his regiment for September through December 1864, Whilden
- never recovered sufficiently to return to active service. After the War In common with other
- Confederate veterans, Charles Whilden struggled to put his life back together after the war.
- He might have succeeded, but on September 25, 1866 he died suddenly in Charleston at age 42.
- According to Elizabeth Hard, her Great Uncle Charles "died without fame or glory, as on an
- early morning walk he suffered an [epileptic] attack and fell in a pool of water from rain
- collected on the pavement." The man who had survived the Bloody Angle at Spotsylvania
- drowned back home in a few inches of ground water. The story of the flag that Charles
- Whilden carried so courageously at Spotsylvania does not end with his death. After Whilden
- was wounded at Spotsylvania and hospitalized, the flag was stored with his other effects.
- Given to Whilden when he was furloughed to Charleston in August 1864, the flag was in his
- possession when he died about two years thereafter. About 15 years after the war, Edward
- McCrady, Jr., a prominent Charleston lawyer who had captained the color company of Gregg's
- 1st South Carolina early in the war and had later risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel of
- the regiment, petitioned William Whilden to turn over the battleflag that he had inherited
- from his brother Charles. McCrady had possession of the regiment's blue state colors, and he
- professed a desire to reunite the two flags. In a letter written on New Year's Day, 1880,
- McCrady pled his best case, pointing out that his regiment had carried the battleflag "in
- every battle until May 1864" and that, for years during the war, he had "lived with the flag
- in [his] tent, and slept with it by [his] side in the bivouac." After consulting his three
- surviving brothers, two of whom were Baptist ministers, William Whilden declined McCrady's
- request, essentially on the grounds that McCrady had no higher claim to the flag than any
- other veteran of the regiment. In declining, however, Whilden indicated a willingness to
- entrust the flag to a collection of Confederate relics. Following William Whilden's death in
- 1896, custody of the battleflag passed to William's daughter, Mrs. Charles Hard of
- Greenville. In 1906, Mrs. Hard delivered up the flag to her Uncle Charles' old friend and
- messmate, James Armstrong, a postwar harbor master of Charleston who had commanded the color
- company of Gregg's 1st South Carolina at Spotsylvania. In his letter to Mrs. Hard
- expressing his appreciation for the flag, Armstrong promised to "communicate with the other
- officers of the Regiment in regard to sending the flag to the State House to be placed
- alongside of the blue State flag." Armstrong assured Mrs. Hard that, "[u]ntil sent there it
- will be kept in a fire proof vault." Time passed, and the battleflag remained with the aging
- Armstrong. Finally, in 1920, Mrs. Hard wrote to Armstrong about the flag. Rose McKevlin,
- Armstrong's nurse, responded, informing Mrs. Hard that Armstrong's leg had been amputated
- the prior month as a result of a wound he had suffered at Spotsylvania more than half a
- century previously. The letter explained that Armstrong had tried to convene a meeting of
- the surviving officers to discuss the flag but that he had failed to do so, and it concluded
- with the promise that Armstrong, being the senior of the two surviving officers of the
- regiment, would send the flag to the Secretary of State in Columbia to be placed alongside
- the blue state colors of the regiment already there. Although the evidence is not
- conclusive, the old soldier evidently made good on his nurse's promise on his behalf by
- turning over the battleflag to the state before he died.
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- Bibliography
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- 1. James Armstrong and Varina D. Brown, "McGowan's Brigade at Spotsylvania," Confederate
- Veteran, vol. 33 (1925), pp. 376- 379.
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- 2. Caldwell, The History of a Brigade of South Carolinians, Known First as "Gregg's," and
- Subsequently as "McGowan's Brigade" (Dayton, Ohio: Morningside Press, 1984 reprint of 1866
- ed.).
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- 3. Fairfax Downey, The Color-Bearers (Mattituck, NY: J. M. Carroll & Company, 1984).
-
- 4. Bureau of the Census, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850, City of Detroit, Wayne
- County, Michigan, Schedule1- Free Inhabitants, National Archives Microfilm Pub. No.T-6, Reel
- No.146, p.8 (reverse).
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- 5. CharlesE. Whilden Letters, 1855-1856, MSS in the South Caroliniana Library, University of
- South Carolina, Columbia, SC.
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-