Men
of the Light Division
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In the past few years I’m sure you all have heard
J.D. or me talk about the greatest army of all times,
The Army of Northern Virginia, commanded by General Robert
E. Lee. Some may think I’m bragging, but we all
can be proud of the defenders of our South. Many history
books will back me up.
I am humbled every time I read of the hardships and sacrifices
these soldiers made. The South gave all of her young men
while the majority of the North only read about the war
in their daily newspapers, but it brought death and grief
to almost every family in Stanly county.
The South gave all of her manufacturing trade and farms
to the War effort, but the Northern economy was never
even tested. I believe the History books would also say
the South could never have won a war against a nation
with such a strong manufacturing economy and unlimited
man power. The only way the Confederate States survived
for four years was by the dedication of the soldiers and
leadership of Godly men such as Robert E. Lee and Thomas
“Stonewall” Jackson. Volumes have been written
about these two men, but more needs to be written about
the soldiers that made all the South’s victories
possible.
On my first visit to Gettysburg Battlefield National Park
I joined a tour group at the Rock Wall where a park ranger
was giving an explanation of how and why the battle happened
the way it did. The Ranger posed a question to the crowd,
“Why would a General like Robert E. Lee attack a
fortified line, out numbering his troops by thousands,
and attack over an open area where his soldiers would
be in full view and in the line of fire for a mile?”
The crowd was silent. The Ranger concluded, “Because
General Lee thought his men were invincible.” As
soon as the words came out of his mouth I turned and left
this group. I didn’t stay to hear the rest. I didn’t
like his explanation any better than I liked his accent,
but that was 11 years ago and since then I have read and
studied many hours of these events. I now think the park
Ranger’s explanation was correct. General Lee’s
men were invincible, but sadly not immortal and could
not be replaced as they fell. They had always accomplished
the seemingly impossible. This can be seen in a report
written by Gen. Lee to General Samuel Cooper the Inspector
General in Richmond. Read the following report and you
can see that General Lee knew of his soldiers needs but
had full confidence in their invincibility, enough to
attack with less that 40,000 men (many were barefoot)
against Union forces of 87,164 (well equipped) troops
waiting for them in Sharpsburg MD.
“To
prolong a state of affairs in every way desirable,
and not to permit the season for active operations
to pass without endeavoring to inflict further injury
upon the enemy, the best course appeared to be the
transfer of the army into Maryland. Although not properly
equipped for invasion, lacking much of the material
of war, and feeble in transportation, the troops poorly
provided with clothing, and thousands of them destitute
of shoes, it was yet believed to be strong enough
to detain the enemy upon the northern frontier until
the approach of winter should render his advance into
Virginia difficult, if not impracticable.” Signed
Robert E. Lee.
In the Valley Campaign General Thomas Jackson earned the
name “Stonewall” and his troops became known
as “Foot Cavalry”. Jackson’s Corp. operated
in the Shenandoah Valley with three divisions, one of
these divisions from the start stood head and shoulders
above the others, “The Light Division” of
A. P. Hill. This division contained six brigades. The
Branch/Lane Brigade of North Carolina; Pender’s
Brigade of North Carolina; Thomas’ Brigade of Georgia;
Gregg’s Brigade of South Carolina; Archer’s
Brigade of Tennessee, Alabama and Georgia; and Field’s
Brigade of Virginia.
Our Burleson family and Stanly County were well represented
in the Branch/Lane Brigade. In the 28th Regiment there
were two companies from Stanly County. Here we find Adam
Burleson who joined in late 1864, John Wesley Burleson
who served until Sept. 1863, David Almond surrendered
at Appomattox, his brother, Harris Almond, died in Sept.
1862, Howell Harwood served until 1865, his brother, Wesley
Harwood, who died in Sept. 1864 and Ebin Burleyson who
served from the first day of Co. K, 28th (15 March 1862)
until it’s first and only defeat. That was the fall
of the Confederate Line at Petersburg, Virginia on April
2, 1865. This was the final blow to General Robert E.
Lee’s Army and he was forced to surrender seven
days later.
Ebin’s
surviving pay voucher does not give any notice of Ebin
having time out for wounds or hospital stays, and certainly
no leaves from his three years in Virginia. The Gettysburg
Ranger’s words were, “ Lee thought his men
were invincible,” and invincible was the best description
of Ebin Burleyson. His physical description was fair complexion,
red hair, blue eyes and he stood five feet five and three
quarters inches high. His description was that of an average
twenty-two year old in 1862, but the ordeals and hardships
of his next three years in the Light Division took their
toll.
After Ebin’s capture on 2 April, 1865 he was sent
to Point Lookout Prison until 23 June 1865, nearly three
months after the end of the war. Ebin survived Point Lookout
Prison but suffered sun blindness from the glaring sand
and sea because there was no shelter of any kind for the
prisoners. After his release, the 500-mile trip home must
have been another ordeal, but when Ebin was lead up to
his front porch at last, he was still invincible. He recovered
his sight soon afterward. Was it luck that Ebin endured
all the ordeals that the Army of Northern Virginia asked
him to participate in? Maybe a small amount. Was it good
training? Definitely not, there was little training if
any. Was it experience? Definitely, the private learned
what it took to survive. Each battle was another lesson.
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Men like Ebin made up the 28th NC. The 28th NC,
7th NC, 18th NC, 33rd NC, and 37th NC made up The
Branch/Lane Brigade. The Branch/Lane Brigade was
one of the six brigades that made up the famous
“Light Division”. Time does not allow
me to mention the numerous battles where the Light
Division displayed a heroic effort. I will be happy
to show one example of how the brigade under General
Lawrence O’Brien Branch saved Jackson and
his brigade at Second Manassas in Branch’s
own words from his official report to General Lee.
“Friday
we passed through Orange Court-House and stopped
within 2 miles of it on the Rapidan to wait
for the commissary wagons to bring up something
to eat.
Saturday morning at 1 o'clock we were roused
by picket-firing in front and the brigade was
immediately under arms. In a few minutes I received
an order to march forward. Continued the march
[without] stopping until about 2 o'clock in
the evening, when our advance came up with the
enemy, posted and really to give us battle.
General Jackson was present in person to command
on our side. General Ewell was ordered to take
possession of a mountain on our right.
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General
Jackson's own division, commanded by General Winder,
was on the left. General Hill's division was placed
behind General Jackson's to support it. The battle
commenced and raged for a short time, when General
Jackson came to me and told me his left was beaten
and broken, and the enemy was turning him and he wished
me to advance. I was already in line of battle and
instantly gave the order "Forward, march."
I had not gone 100 yards through the woods before
we met the celebrated Stonewall Brigade utterly routed
and fleeing as fast as they could run. After proceeding
a short distance farther we met the enemy pursuing.
My brigade opened upon them arid quickly drove the
enemy back from the woods into a large field. Following
up to the edge of the field, I came in view of large
bodies of the enemy, and having a very fine position,
I opened upon them with great effect. The enemy's
cavalry attempted to charge us in two columns, but
the fire soon broke them and sent them fleeing across
the field in every direction. The infantry then retreated
also. Advancing into the field, I halted near the
middle of it, in doubt which direction to take. Just
at that moment General Jackson came riding up from
my rear alone. I reported my brigade as being solid
and asked for orders. My men recognized him and raised
a terrific shout as he rode along the line with his
hat off. He evidently knew how to appreciate a brigade
that had gone through a hot battle and was then following
the retreating enemy without having broken its line
of battle, and remained with me directing my movements
until the pursuit ceased. We returned and slept on
the battlefield among the dead and wounded.
After remaining there and near by until Monday at
dark, we were ordered to light large camp-fires, and
immediately after dark the army commenced moving back,
and our division reached this place last night.
We
gained a splendid victory and the credit of it is
due to my brigade. I was among my men all through
the fight and they were brave and cool. Most of my
cowards have been got rid of in one way and another.”
Signed General Lawrence O’Brien Branch.
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This incident surely made an impression on Jackson. On
another occasion, in the Maryland Campaign at the Battle
of Sharpsburg, General Lee’s Army was only two separate
corps. Commanded by General Jackson and General James
Longstreet. After this encounter, General Lee was forced
to give up his plan of threatening Washington, D.C. and
demanding recognition of the Confederate States. The daylong
battle known as The Battle of Antietam in the North, on
the 17 September 1862 produced more casualties in one
day than any other battle of the entire War. The Union
suffered losses of 12,410 men and the South suffered losses
of 11,172 men in the campaign. This was more than one
quarter of General Lee’s army. The total surely
would have been more if not for the arrival and attack
of the Light Division that saved Generals Lee, Longstreet,
and Jackson from certain destruction.
Here is what General Longstreet said a few years after,
“Nearly one-forth of the troops who went into the
battle were killed or wounded. We were so badly crushed
that at the close of the day ten thousand fresh troops
could have come in and taken Lee’s Army and everything
it had. But (Union General) McClellan did not know it.”
Keep
in mind the Union did not use but 60,000 troops in the
fight. They did not need to send for fresh reinforcements
as they had over 27,000 fresh troops on the battlefield
then. General Lee at day’s end had only about 27,000
remaining and they were the worn survivors of the original
40,000 that started in the morning, their ammo and food
supply exhausted by dark with no hope of reinforcements.
General Longstreet was correct; Lee’s Army was whipped.
At 3 PM the Union Army’s, left wing, had successfully
taken and crossed the Burnside Bridge on Antietam Creek
that the Confederates had kept between the two armies
all day. By 3:30 PM the Confederates right wing had been
pushed back with the Potomac River to their back. The
Army of Northern Virginia could not stop or slow the overpowering
force of the blue clad Troops. General Lee was very aware
of his dilemma. In another 15 minutes his whole right
wing would be pushed into the river to die or surrender
now. There was no escape. General Lee had sent for Hill
who was 17 miles away in Harper’s Ferry, but could
he bring his Light Division in time?
Lee and Jackson’s only hope was for the Light Division
to travel the 17 miles from Harper’s Ferry in record
time. General Lee was waiting at Boteler’s Ford
on the Potomac River as the Light Division arrived. In
the lead was the Branch/Lane Brigade commanded by Lawrence
O’Brien Branch. Correct protocol would be for General
Lee to issue an order of his needs to first General Hill,
Hill would direct General Branch, General Branch would
position Col. Lane into the desired position. That would
be correct protocol, General Lee instructed General Hill
to take the first regiment across the River which was
the 28th NC commanded by Col. James H. Lane to block the
lead union division advancing through Lee’s line.
The 28th, including Ebin Burleyson was still wet from
fording the waist deep river and without slowing, stopping
or missing a step, fired volley into the advancing blue
line. Ebin and the others of Co. K did not need any further
orders. They knew why they had marched with their 11 lb.
Springfield rifles those 17 miles. Their work had just
begun, fire, reload, keep marching, fire, and reload.
While
General Hill was placing the 28th to meet the most urgent
threat General Branch was directing the remaining regiments
into position to have the most effect. Sadly General Branch
was killed at this moment.
Immediately with the first volley from the 28th the Union
advance stopped. Within minutes the rest of the Light
Division was firing into the stalled line of Union troops.
This sudden shock turned the Union attack into a retreat.
The day was saved for General Lee and Jackson and they
successfully escaped the following day back into Virginia.
General McClellan had had enough after the attack of the
Light Division and wanted no more of the Army of Northern
Virginia. He was happy to lick his wounds and watch General
Lee return to Virginia.
Would this timely forced march and direct attack without
stopping from Harper’s Ferry, by A. P. Hill’s
Light Division, be so important to General Lee and General
Jackson that the Light Division was on their mind until
their last breath? In the memoirs of Robert E. Lee written
by A. L. Long who was formerly Military Secretary to General
Lee, afterward Brigade General and Chief of Artillery
Second Corp., Army of Northern Virginia, wrote this of
General Lee’s last moments of his life,
“The
great mind sank to its last repose almost with the
equal poise of health. The few broken utterances that
evinced at times a wandering intellect were spoken
under the influence of the remedies administered;
But as long as consciousness lasted there was evidence
that all the high controlling influences of his whole
life still ruled; and even stupor was laying its cold
hand on the intellectual perceptions, the moral nature
complete orb of duties and affections, still asserted
itself. A southern poet has celebrated in song those
last significant words, ‘Strike the Tent!’
And a thousand voices were raised to give meaning
to the uncertain sound when the dying man said, with
emphasis ‘Tell Hill he must come up!’
These sentences serve to show most touchingly through
what fields the imagination was passing; but generally
his words, though few, were coherent, and for the
most part his silence was unbroken.”
General
Thomas Jackson’s last moments are best recorded
in the book They Called Him Stonewall by Burke Davis.
Davis describes the last hours of General Jackson’s
life as Jackson was told by his wife Anna and Doctors
that he had only two hours to live. I will pick up Davis’
narrative at that point, |
“At one thirty, the doctors told him he
had two hours to live, and he seemed to understand.
Feebly he said, ‘All right. Very good.
It’s all right.’ A short time later
he shouted, ‘Tell A. P. Hill to prepare
for action!…Pass the infantry to the front’.
Soon a faint smile, almost sweet, passed across
the pale lips under the beard. Anna and the
men leaned forward to the bed, ‘Let us
cross over the river and rest under the shade
of the trees.’
He was gone. It was three fifteen in the afternoon.”
I
believe I have made my point of how well respected
the Light Division of General A. P. Hill was to
Lee and Jackson. Many of Stanly County’s finest
including Ebin Burleyson were in the forefront of
the unit until the end.
If anyone does not accept Generals Lee’s and
Jackson’s dying words of highest respect for
the Light Division, I suppose I could give you 90,000
plus eyewitnesses from the Union Army. The sight
of the Light Division approaching ---was the last
sight ---their eyes ---witnessed.
Humbly submitted,
John Hoyle Burleson
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Our
regular monthly meeting was Monday night, July 7, 2003
at Lena’s Farm House. We had a great time with about
25 present. Several people brought interesting items to
share with the group. Calvin Burleson, grandson of Ebin
Burleson, brought a medal that Ebin received for attending
a reunion of Confederate Veterans. Ebin was very active
and enjoyed attending these reunions and meetings. In
a conversation with Mae Burleson Moore, Ebin’s daughter
she said that she could remember Ebin getting the whole
family together in a wagon pulled by a horse and traveling
to Salisbury to attend one of these reunions. She was
young when Ebin died, but that was one of the things she
said he really enjoyed. Here is a picture of the Medal. |

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