PAGE 6—THE HERALD, Ahoskie, N. C.—MfLEStONE YEAR 1S59 Orgonized When Federals Hit Area: Five Companies of Served in 68th R-C Soldiers Guarded Homeland Five companies of Roanoke-Cho- wan men, mostly from Hertford, were organized in the electric sum mer of 1863 for the protection of their home counties from the seri ous Union attempt to drive through the area to Weldon and cut the railroad that was known as the “Lifeline of the Confederacy." But these units were soo leave their home county and take up duties elsewhere in North Car olina, doing the odd jobs of the Confederate army. The 68th regiment was one of two hastily-organized infantry units thrown together in eastern North Carolina in July, 1863. Far to the north, in Pennsylvania, the army of General Lee was fall ing back from Gettysburg. Federal commanders in southeastern Vir ginia and eastern North Carolina thought they saw' a chance smash the Confederacy whOe Lee was far away. Determined federal cavalry col umns stabbed into the Roanoke- Chowan, landing at Winton, mov ing toward Weldon and the vital Wilmington-to-Richmond railroad. The 68th regiment was not for mally organized until the winter of 1863. But its component companies gathered hastily that summer to guard the homeland of the soldiers. Companies D, E, and K were organized in Hertford County. Com pany F was composed of Bertie men, and Company I was organ ized from Gates County men who had braved federal control of their county to cross the Chowan River and enlist in the new companies forming in Hertford and Bertie vil lages. Company D of the regiment was organized at Bethlehem Church near HarreUsville. Hilary Taylor became its commander. Levi As kew was a lieutenant. Capt. Langley Taylor of Hertford emmanded the unit that was to become Company E. Ben W'illiam of Bertie and Jphn Britt of Hert ford were elected lieutenant. John T. Mebane was captain of the Bertie unit that was to Company F. These three units bivouaced shots with Union soldiers on board big gunboats which plied the river. Night Action In the late summer, the unit had its first fight, a confused night ac tion at HarreUsville when federal troops landed to destroy large stores of supplies which had been gathered at the village. (HarreUsville was an important store point for food supplies gath ered from the area and destined for the camp stores of the Army of Northern Virginia.) Soon after this battle on their home soil, the small units marched to Jackson, where they went into winter quarters. Here two new Roa noke - Chowan companies joined others to form the 68th regiment. Company I of Gates organized, ■ with Capt. R. H. L. Bond in com mand. Company K, mostly Hert ford and Northampton men, was organized, commanded by Capt. George Thompson of Hertford. In the next year, the regiment was to see service from one end of North Carolina to the other. For a while, it picketed the Roa noke River around Weldon. To Morganton Then, in July, 1864, the unit was ordered to Morganton to guard the western community against at tacks by guerilla fighters of “Kirk’s Army.” Later, the eastern ers marveled at the mountains as they marched all the way to East Tennessee in pursuit of the irregu lar force of Union symphathizers which had stz-uck terror in western North Carolina. During this March, Lt. W. P. Taylor of Company D was wound ed in the thigh. In the fall of 1864, the regiment was ordered to Salisbury, assigned to guard the sprawling prison camp where thousands’ of Union prison ers of war languished. Here, many of the officers and men of the regiment resigned, or slipped quietly away to return to their eastern home. Capt. Taylor of Company D had already resigned in the spring. So had Major Edwards, Capt. Langley Tayloe of Company E re signed in November. John T. Me bane had resigned in June, to be replaced as Company F comman- Colerain under the command of der by WiUiam M. Sutton. Major Joseseph J. Edwards of I James Leary and Nehemiah Hertford. From the bluffs there, I Bunch had become Company F the green soldiers exchanged rifle ' lieutenants. Capt Bond of Company I ed in November, to be replaced by William M. Daughtry. Back East Then, in early December, the regiment came back east. On De cember 12, it saw action, fighting at Butler’s Bridge in Martin Coun ty against a federal force bent on capturing the important Roanoke River fort upstream at Rainbow Banks. In March, 1865, the unit engaged with the enemy near Goldsboro, in one of the many tiny actions that preceded the surrender of the Confederate forces in North Caro lina. Then, the regiment moved slow ly northeastward, men dropped out and headed home as the first days of April 1, 1865, came. Some were ordered home to seek horses as ' the Confederate commander sought for a cavalry force to watch for the advancing federals. The surrender at Appomattox found most of the men of the 68th already in their home counties, hav ing served for two years within the borders of North Carolina. R-C History: War of 1812 Eight companies of Roanoke- Chowan men served in the 'W’ar of 1812, the conflict which once and for all settled the United States’ ascendency in the Western Hemi sphere. In the First Regiment of North Carolina troops called to fight the war, the 7th company was com manded by Captain Thomas Free man. Many of its 72 men were from Gates County. The 8th company of the regi ment was from Hertford County, commanded by Captain Erwin Jenkins. There were 85 men in the company. In the Third Regiment, the 3rd company was from Northampton County. It w a s commanded by Captain James C. Harrison and there were 113 men in the com pany. Bertie County contributed the 3rd company of the Artillery Corps. Captain Joseph H. Bryan was in command and there were 108 men in the unit. Each county of the Roanoke- Chowan contributed one company to the detached militia units which were called into action in 1814, the final year of the war, They included four companies in the First Regiment of militia, Henry Pugh of Gates commandeu a company of 73 men. Captain Jenkins commanded the Hertford Company of 75 men. Captain Jonathan H, Jacocks commanded a Bertie company of 103 men, ana Captain John F. Walker com manded the Northampton c o m- pany of 105 men. These companies were called up in September, 1814, and saw nc action. The war ended shortly thereafter. A Murfreesboro man, militia Brigadier-General Joseph F. Dic kenson, was in command of mili tia troops guarding Norfolk dur ing the early years of the war. Many Captured at Hotteras First Hertford Unit Was in 17th The spring of 1861 came warm and happy to the banks of the Chowan River and the little town of Winton, On one of those bright spring days, several score Hertford Coun ty men arrived in their county seat village to muster into the county’s first volunteer company for the Confederate army. They called themselves the “Hertford Light Infantry.” They were well equipped, with uni forms and guns purchased by a county bond issue. Their officers were local gen- trymen. Thomas H. Sharp was elected captain. William B. Wise, Jesse Perry and Julian Moore were elected lieutenants. R. T. Barnes was first sergeant of the unit, and under him serv ed more than iOO Hertford men. The organization was complete down to a musician, one W. C. Weed, The unit marched off to Ra leigh, where it became Company C of the 17th North Carolina reg iment. Hertford’s contribution to the army of the Confederacy had be gun. Four months later, most of the Hertford men were prisoners of war, victims of the first battle action on North Carolina soil. The regiment was assigned to the incomplete Confederate de fenses on North Carolina’s Outer Banks. In August, a giant federal naval | termarched across the broad east- task force landed a powerful I ern areas. striking unit which quickly over-1 Its headquarters was at Fort ran the southern defenders of Branch, on the Roanoke River Fort Hatteras on the Banks. In the sand-walled fort were the men of Company C. After a brief exchange with the huge landing party, the tiny gar- near Williamston. One member of the regiment, young Lt. Gilbert Elliot, was de tailed to Edwards Ferry near Scotland Neck, and there he su- rison of untrained Confederates perintended the building of the laid down their arms. For the next year, Hertford’s first volunteers were to stay in Union prisoner-of-war stockades. Unit Reorganized Finally, in the spring of 1862, the men were paroled. A few weeks later, the 17th was reor ganized at Camp Mangum near Raleigh. Captain Sharp was given a new task, he became a major. Lt. Wise moved up to the captaincy. Lts. Perry and Moore had transferred to another regiment. William J. Lattimer and William Cary Park er were promoted to lieutenant. Lattimer died two months later, and John Q. Thomas, a member of a Hertford family which had been active in militaiy affairs, was given his officer’s bars. After reorganization, the 17th was assigned to the small force of Confederates guarding North Carolina’s eastern counties from federal forces stationed in cap tured coastal towns. As such, Hertford men of the 17th often got a chance to see home as they marched and coun- famous Confederate ironclad, the “Albemarle.” Some men of Com pany C helped guard the make shift shipyard. Joining their colleagues in Company C, a new unit of Hert ford men joined the regiment during its service in. eastern North Carolina. Company D was commanded by Captain J. M. C. Luke, with Nor man Shaw, Dorsey Taylor and Starkey Sharp as lieutenants. John H. Britt was first sergeant. S. R. Doughtie of Hertford and James A. Bunch of Bertie were company musicians. In February, 1864, the 17th was in the crucial charge as a Con- federate force tried unsuccessful ly to drive Union ti'oops from New Bern. A few months later, in May, 1864, the 17th marched away from its home state, and joined the battered army of General Lee aroimd Petersburg and Richmond. By now, Capt. Wise had resign ed and Lt. Francis Everett had become captain of Company C. Isaac Taylor had become a lieutenant in Company D. Nor man Shaw was promoted captain when Capt. Luke resigned to go home and become a Baptist min ister. Lt. Starkey Sharp had also resigned. For four months, the 17th shar ed the fortunes of the dwindling Army of Northern Virginia as ii fought against the tightening grip of Grant’s army. New Commander Then, in the summer of 1864, the regiment came back to North Carolina, its ranks thinned by the bloody fighting. Thomas Sharp— first captain of Company C—had become Lt. Colonel and com mander of the regiment. The regiment fought off a fed eral attempt to take Fort Fisher in December, and the Hertford men had. sweet revenge for the time in the bright summer of 1861 when they had all lain down their arms before a similar blue- coated group on another sandy shore. But it was only an interlude of victory. In January, another huge fed eral landing force hit the beach and Fort Fisher surrendered. The 17th fought rearguard actions as the Confederate army retreated north from Wilmington. In eaiTy March, the 17th was part of the army of General Jo seph Johnston as it fought Sher man’s federal army at Benton- ■ville in Johnston County, the HENRY KING B'tJRGWYN Col. Henry King Burgwyn of Northampton County was one of the youngest high-ranking officers of the Confederate army. He attended West Point for several years before the war, later fought against his old teacher in action with his 26th North Carolina Regiment. He died at 21 on the first day of the assault at Gettysburg, shot through the lu/igs as his regiment charged Union lines. The 26th suffered more casual ties in the charge than in any Confederate regiment. Son of a famous Northamp ton planter family, Burgwyn was the epitome of the young southern ar-stocrat who offi cered Confederate units. Yet,, he was born in New England, the home of his mother. He is buried now in Raleigh. His sword and uniform are in the Hall of Ilistoi-y in Raleigh. A portrait of Burgwyn, Gover nor Zeb Vance (war governor of North Carolina) and Bur- gwyn’s successor- as commander of the 26th, also is hung there. Burgwyn served as Lt. Colonel of the 26th under Vance until the mountain man was elected governor early in the war. largest action fought on North Carolina soil. The regiment joined in the re treat of the eSA array, and with other members of the force, sur rendered to Sherman at Centre Church in Randolph County. Many Hertford men had al ready peeled off, heading for the home they had left four years be fore to become their county’s first Civil War combatants. SOLDIERS (Continued from Page 1) of a defense force along the upper Blackwater River. During that time, Captain Pip kin led a fouTTCOmpany expedi tion against a federal raiding party which not only stopped the attack, but burned the gunboat headquarters of federal General Benjamin Butler. As spring of 1864 came to Vir ginia in May, the giant Union armies of General Grant closed on Richmond, and the 31st be came engaged in the fierce strug gles of the Army of Northern Vir ginia. The regiment participated in the battle at Dfewry’s Bluff, south of Richmond' as General Butler tried unsuccessfully to smash the Confederate right flank while Grant advanced from the north. Then a few days later, the regi ment was shifted to the northern part of the front to join the main Confederate army as it fought off Grant in the bloody battles of May-June, 1854. Die The 31st . was-in the main de fense line at the battle of Second Cold Harbor, when thousands of Union troops assaulted the rebel lines. R, S. Baker was wounded. Thomas Doughtie died in the holocaust of lead. Sergeant James J. Johns also went down. Walter McFarland, a young Hertford boy who served as company musician, was an other who lost his life in the fear ful fighting. This bloody fighting was the start of real hardship for the Hertford men of Company G. From these battles, the battered regiment took post in the defenses of Petersburg, fought there throughout the winter of 1864. In early 1865, the unit, now reduced to half its size, was ordered to Wilmington. There, it watched helplessly as federal troops finally took that great Confederate sea- coast bastion, fought rearguard actions north of the city. Finally, as Sherman’s great army advanced from the south into North Carolina, Captain Pip kin’s unit was called on for its last action—the battle of Ben- tonville, largest action fought on North Carolina soil. Reduced to a hand full, the company joined the final retreat of the Confederate army of Gen eral Joseph Johnston, and sur rendered at Bush Hill, two miles from High Point, on May 1, 1865. Captain Pipkin returned home to become longtime sheriff of his county. The Lion-Hearted Cor That's Every inch a New Adventure CHRYSLER '59 Pure Gold ... In Ride, Pride and Pleasure 1959 DESOTO IMPERIAL for 1959 A New Tradition Begins ... By Imperial Decree A Square Deal,,, We believe a square has 4 sides to it. . . Quality.. . Service. .. Price. .. Selection. That is just what we offer the folks in the Roanoke-Chovvan Area. 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