THE OBSERVER. FAYETTEVILLE. N. C. MONDAY. MAY 25. 1896 E. J HALE, Editor and Proprietor. E. J. HALE, Jr., Business Manager. HON. A. D. McQILL'S MEMORIAL ADDRESS. Delivered May 11th, W96. CONCLUDED. The Federalists claim to have fought for the Union. For what did the men in gray exhibit to the world such prodigies of valor, and endure with such constancy ana devotion the hardships and dangers of these four years of unexampled warfares To perpetuate the institution of slavery, as some suppose ? Oh ! no, not so; but they fought for a greater boon than the reservation of the Union that of main taining the sacred rights and principlea of the! Constitution itself, and the liber ties guaranteed to us thereunder; a thing of infinitely greater importance to trie hu man race. For the maintenance of these orincioles. the South put all of her men into the field in round numbers, from the best authorities obtainable, 600,000 men. The North placed in the field 2, 865,028; these latter figures are absolutely correct, taken as they are from the records of the War Department nearly five to one. The Southern States furnished to the Union armies 423,996 men an army in itself almost equal to that with which Napoleon in 181 2 shook the mighty fabric of the Russian Empire f.om centre to cir cumference. From this it may be seen, that the Southern army did not fight against Yankees alone. And let it be re membered that the 2,865,028 Federals, were not Chinese, Japanese or any of the inferior races ot the earth; but brave men and of the same lineage with us. What a glorious record is this for the Confeder ate soldiery, who, for four long years, poorly equipped, and but scantily sup plied, withstood the shock of such over whelming numbers backed by unlimited resources in men and material with which to replenish and lecruit their armies. I am ,not suprised that the Northern people are proud of the men who wore the blue; they have reason to be, for they con tended with as great a people and as vali ant sol J iers as the world ever saw. For therrreal soldiers, the men who met us on a hundred battle-fields, I have the highest respect and the kindliest feeling, and am not ashamed to call them my fellow-countrymen; but for those canting hypocrites, who since the war have been active in fo menting strife and discord the invin cible in peace and invisible in war I have the utmost contempt. Why' should theijNbrthern people be grieved, or surprised that the people of the toouth are justly proud ot the record of the valiant men who died for their cause ? It is a record of which any people or country should be proud a record which has excited the admiration of the world. No cause ever had more gallant defenders. It is eminently proper, that the fair women of the South should meet together in the hallowed precincts of their heroic dead on every 10th of May, to dec orate their graves with garlands inter twined with the choicest flowers that can be culled from Nature's bounteous store. "Soft be their slumber; in death reposiner, Dreamless and quiet, they -wait the day When time and justice the truth disclosing, , The world shall weep for the men in gray," While we do honor to the memory of those who fell in defense ot the Southern cause, let us not forget the noble women of the South who were just as heroic, true and unwavering in devotion and self sacrifice as the men who fought the bat tles. I believe that the day is not far distant when the people of the North will hold in just as high esteem as we do, the mem orial of our fallen comrades. And why should they not? They were American citizens and contended for principles that can never die. Already I think 1 see the dawning of that auspicious day. But a year ago on western boil, a people hostile during the war, with their own money and of their own volition, erected a monument to commemorate the heroism and fidelity to principle of those Confederates who died in that far off western city, Chicago. Constant they were and unwavering in their devotion, whether in the ranks of their friends or languishing iu a captive's prison. " In the beginning of 1S65, it became evi dent to all that the fortunes of the Con federacy were declining. The most de termined efforts of what. Swinton calls "that incomparable body of infantry which carried tha'fortunes of the Confed eracy upon its bayonets, for four years," could not prevent its downfall, though they were still willing to "die for the land thev could not save." How can I tell you? For no tongue is sufficiently eloquent to describe nor lan guage strong enough to convey to you a just appreciation of the unshaken firm ness and unflinching courage with which these men defended Petersburg, the la&t stronghold of the Confederacy. Suffering the pangs of huuger aud cold for eight long months oh! how long they were! of weary watching and ceaseless fighting day and night, stretched out in Hue for thirty miles, a mere handfull ofmen, worn out with contending against overpowering numb rs, their ranks thinned by death and wounds each hour, no longer able to pre sent even a skirmish line of tattered gray to the deadly missiles of their multitudi nous foes. At last the utmost limit of human endurance was reached and even they could do no more. Cheerfully obey ing the orders of Gen. Lee, sadly they turned away from the city their valor so long and faithfully protected, and filed through the streets of the city at mid night. The scenes of distress and heart rending agony manifested by the ladies and children of Petersburg as we filed through their city can never be forgotten. It brought tears from the stoutest hearts, as with many a "Gd bless you and pro tect you," their quivering lips bade us farewell. The Army of Northern Virginia was re treating; whither we did uot know, being content to follow Lee. The enemy did not press us closely until Thursday, but on that day, as on each succeeding day, they were foiled in all their efforts to arrest the march of-that matchless band. The whale fishermm are careful not to approach the Leviathan in its death struggle: so Grant's veterans, with the caution born or their former experience with Lee's army, deferred the supreme moment to Appomattox. On that field, for the' last time, that heroic army un furled its banners and deployed in line of battle with the same steadiness and pre cision a? of yore. The enemy were ou our front and left and rear. Cox's North Carolina Brigade attacked them in front and drove them for more than a mile, after the flag of truce was in, capturing the last of all the numerous artillery taken during the war, and firing the last volley. Gen. Gordon who witnessed this last uarg, exclaimed: "Gloriously and well done!" North Caroliua first at Bethel and last at Appomattox. SadljT, vet proudly, furling the banners that had floated in the storms of a hundred battles, they turned their back on the fields of theirglory and the graves of their comrades, and set their faes homeward. God bless their memory! Faithful to the last they stood by their colors, though they knew it was a failing cause. Refined in the fiery ordeal through which they had passed, every man of that valiant 8,000 was not only a veteran but a hero ! After the surrender there was no firing of cauuon, no cheering nor other demon stration of joy. But a few minutes after the firing ceaed, Grant's men swarmed into our Hues. One young, good looking fellow came to us laughing, and extended his hand, saying; "How are you boys; I never Wis so glad to meet you before in my lift !" In the fierce struggle thus terminated at Appomattox, Cumberland county, did her full share, furnishing 22 companies, aggregating 2,682 men. General Lane, oue of the ablest of Lee's officers, has paid Maj. Hale, of our county, a very high, and doubtless, deserved compliment. Gen. Lane states that on the last day at Peters burg, "Maj. Hale performed an act of heroism even greater than that, which made Sergeut Jasper famous." The chief engineer of Lee's army paid a personal and formal visit to him on the field of Battle, to thank him for a highly important dis covery in field engineering, and authorized him to apply the same to several miles of field works before Richmond, with re markable results, who, in Cumberland county to day, is not proud to know that Maj. Hale, out county man, lead Lane's Brigade, in which Scale's, Cook's and IMacRae's Brigades participated in tho , famous assault at Reams' station. The officers of the LaFayette Light Infantry Company, the first to leave the county tor the seat of war and among the first in tho South to reach the bcene of conflict, were commissioned ou the 17th of April, 1861, just two days after Presi dent Lincoln's proclamation. But one of these 22 compaius now remain, the gallant old Independent company, an honor to the county and State, still proud to wear the historic gray; itself the living representa tive of three wars, more than a century old and yet apparently with the dew of youth still upon its brow. Cumberland couuty was represented in nearly every battle, and the acts of individual bravery performed by her sons, if they had hap pened under the eagle eye of Napoleon, would have secured for them the Baton of a Field Marshal, notably McKethui, J.W. Atkinson ami others. Many of the brave hearts that constituted these 22 comparies now sleep on the hights of Gettysburg, in the valley of Antietam, on the plains of Manassas, aud Brandy station, in the tangled wilderness of Chaucellorsville and Spottsylvania, in the silent, mysterious swamps of the Chickabominy, beneath the dim pines of Charles City, on the slopes of Malvern flill, on Roanoke Island, Peters burg: and Morris Island. Their graves may be unknown; perhaps no loving hand will ever place a wieath or flower upon their tomb, but their fame is linked with the fame of Lee and Jackson, and is as enduring as tho everlasting bills. Some of them are slumbering on the banks of Cross Creek, McNeill, Strange, McKethan, Hale, Hu-ke and others; it was fitting that these .should be buried here by that historic stream, the song of whose rip pliug w.tiers, having mingled with their boyish glee iu their springtime of life, should be the first to greet them on the morning of the resurrection. Anil now, Mr. President and ladies of the Memorial Association, a word to you and my duty is done. Wnen your invita tion came to me, my first impulse was to decline, because I felt then as I feel now, my insufficiency for so great a task. I expressed to you tears of ray inability to perform the duty assigned me with credit to myself or satisfaction to you; but upon reflection, I felt it was my duty to aid you in your pious labors of keeping alive the memorial of my comrades dead. Aud if the reminisceuses of the men and the days that are gone, shall serve to awaken re newed interest in the cause you represent, I shall feel that my labors have not been in vain. A word now in conclusion to my old comrades here assembled. As soldiers you did your duty fearlessly and well, and a mong the noblest of all your achievements was the rescue of your State from the thralldom of the corrupt political adven turers who infested the country after the termination of the war. Now that our country is again being agitated by corrupt methods in high places, Labor strikes aud troubles, anarchy, and oppression of the weak, the conservative element of our people will naturally turn to you, as the older and more experienced of our citizens, to be guided by your sober judgment and patriotism. As comrades and brothers we stood to gether, shoulder to shoulder, in the long ago in defense of a cause wo believed then, and still behove was right; as good citizens let us continue to stand shoulder to shoulder in defense of the right, aud while we live, at least, endeavor to insure to our country good government, with the least possible admixture of the evils of ignorance aud passtou. It is becoming painfully evident as each year rolls around that our numbers are getting smaller, our ranks are being thinned not by the shell and bullet, but by the scythe of Time. The day will soon come when the Confed erate veteran will no longer be present on these Memorial days; the boys of to-day will be the orators then, and the little girls the matrons and ladies who shall continue the observance of this beautiful custom so happily inaugurated by their mothers. That knightly corps, the Independent Company, will uo longer have the satis faction of acting as escort of honor to the Confederate Veterans; for we shall have answered to the last roll call and passed over the river to rest with our comrades "under the shade of the trees." and. I trust. to receive from the Captain of our Salva tion, as the reward of a !ife well spent, the welcome plaudit Well done!' " - awarded July 1 C nt :hl and preserr. ra mm We are prepared to f urnish" WIRE - SCREENS -AND- D OO Ra Made to Order. fauviu hi once against Flies ana Mosquitos. Call and place your order early, before your homes get full of flies. HUSKE HARDWARE HOUSE. 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