116th
INFANTRY
(Transcribed by Sharon Wick)
The ONE
HUNDRED AND SIXTEENTH INFANTRY was recruited almost wholly from
Macon county numbering 980 officers and men when it started from
Decatur for the front on November 8, 1862.
Company F was
from McLean county, Company H from Christian and Shelby counties.
The Regiment, with the noble and brave Colonel Nathan W. Tupper
in command, went into Camp Macon near Decatur, and was mustered into
United States service September 30, 1862 by Captain Wainwright of the
regular army.
The Regiment
remained in Camp Macon until November 8th, when it was
ordered to Memphis via Cairo to join General W. T. Sherman’s
Fifteenth Army Corps, and was assigned to the First Brigade, Second
Division (the same which General Sherman commanded at Shiloh) and the
one he selected from his whole army subsequently near Savannah,
Georgia to storm Fort McAllister, to open his cracker line, as the
General facetiously put it.
From Memphis the
Regiment marched to the Tallahatchie River, reaching it on December
13, returned to Memphis and started down the Mississippi on the 20th,
and on the 26th reached the Yazoo River and ascended it 15
miles.
During the
following three days the Regiment received its first baptism of fire,
engaging in the battle of Chickasaw Bayou, the officers and men
fighting so gallantly as to receive the highest
compliments from the veterans of the older regiments in the
Brigade. General Morgan
L. Smith was wounded in this engagement.
On January 1,
1863, passed down the Yazoo to the Mississippi River, and up that and
the Arkansas River to Arkansas Post, where on the 10th and
11th of January it fought its second battle, sustaining
very heavy losses. Here
Captain Lewis Eyman, of Company E, and Lieutenant John S. Taylor of
Company B, were killed. The
casualties in Company B were particularly severe, the company coming
out of the battle with but 25 men, in command of Fifth Sergeant,
afterward Lieutenant and Captain Christian Riebsame.
In the month of
March the One Hundred and Sixteenth went up the Black Bayou and Deer
Creek in company with the Eighth Missouri, to save Admiral Porter’s
fleet and gunboats worth $3,000,000 from the clutches of the rebels
which was done after a hard fight, General Sherman in person and on
foot with his own Regiment, the Thirteenth Regulars, coming up at a
critical moment to assist in accomplishing the object.
The Regiment
engaged in the battles of Champion Hills and Black River Bridge and in
the bloody charges on May 18th and 22nd and lost
very heavily. Among the
losses and casualties were these:
Lieutenant Colonel Jas. P. Boyd was shot through the lungs and
died of this wound at home in Decatur, Captain Gustin F. Hardy, of
Company A, was mortally wounded and died in the hospital.
Lieutenant Nathan W. Wheeler, of Company K, was killed May 22d.
Captain Joseph Lingle, of Company D, was wounded and died at
home, and Captain William Grason, of Company A, was shot through the
breast, but recovered. Captain
Austin McClurg, of Company B, was wounded, recovered and promoted
Major. Then followed the long siege of Vicksburg which ended by the
surrender of that stronghold on the 4th of July.
The following day
started in pursuit of General Jos. E. Johnston, and chased the enemy
to and beyond Jackson, Mississippi, and across Pearl River.
On July 25, went
into Camp Sherman, near Black River, enjoying a season of rest until
after the battle of Chickamauga, when General Grant sent for his trusty
lieutenant, General Sherman, and his veterans to come to Chattanooga.
The One Hundred
and Sixteenth embarked at Vicksburg in October for Memphis; from
thence marched via Corinth to Chattanooga, which was reached on the 21st
of November. During the
night of November 23, the One Hundred and Sixteenth Illinois and Sixth
Missouri Regiments, under General Giles A. Smith, floated down the
Tennessee River in pontoon boats to the mouth of Chicamauga Creek,
capturing the rebel pickets and holding the position until the whole
Corps had crossed over.
On November 23,
advanced to the foot of Missionary Ridge, after a lively skirmish,
during which General Giles A. Smith was severely wounded. (The
General’s death after the war was the result of the wound received
that day.)
The great battle
of Missionary Ridge, Tunnel Hill and Lookout Mountain was fought next
day, November 25.
The One Hundred
and Sixteenth, with the other Regiments of the Brigade, formed the
extreme left of General Sherman’s Army, and obtained the credit of
turning the enemy’s right flank on that bloody day.
Colonel N. W.
Tupper, after General Smith was disabled, assumed command of the
Brigade, and proved that he was the right man in the right place.
When disease, contracted in the service of his country, and of
which he died on the 10th day of March 1864, compelled him
to leave the army, every man in the One Hundred and Sixteenth felt
that he had lost a friend and the nation a patriot.
After the victory
of Chattanooga, and without being permitted to return to camp across
the Tennessee for blankets or overcoats, the One Hundred and
Sixteenth, with other of Sherman’s Army, was hurried forward to
Knoxville to the relief of Burnside.
The winter was a very cold one, and while the boys could keep
warm marching twenty-five to thirty miles during the days, they
suffered greatly while camping at night.
They would build big fires and hug them close, but the other
side would be chilled to the marrow of the bone; rations, also were
very short, and when at last the Regiment went into winter quarters on
January 9, 1864, at Larkinsville, Ala, the men all felt that they have
been on the hardest campaign during their service.
The march from
Missionary Ridge to Knoxville, and back to Larkinsville via Tellico
and Strawberry Plains and Chattanooga, will never be forgotten by
Sherman’s boys who were along.
In May, the One
Hundred and Sixteenth, with the rest of the Army of the Tennessee,
moved against the enemy, and found him at Resaca, GA., when, on the 14th
of May, the Regiment was hotly engaged, losing heavily, but driving
the enemy across the creek, and planting their colors upon the rebel
works. The One Hundred
and Sixteenth was repeatedly attacked, but could not be driven from
the position gained. It
was in this battle that Major Anderson Froman was wounded, and he died
in the field hospital.
Then followed in
quick succession the battles of Dallas, Big Shanty and Kenesaw
Mountain. Captain Thomas
White, of Company C, commanding the Regiment, was killed on the
skirmish line May 26 at Dallas, and Captain James N. Glore, Company K,
was wounded about the same time. The Regiment lost heavily on June 27,
1864, in the assault on Kennesaw Mountain.
Among the wounded was Lieut. John H. Miller, of Company H.
Crossing the
Chattahoochie, engaged the enemy at Stone Mountain, driving him to the
vicinity of Atlanta. Fought in the battle of Atlanta, July 22, where its Army
Commander, General McPherson, fell, and with the Fifteenth Corps,
General Loga, the hot battle of Ezra Chapel, July 28.
Captain George T.
Milmine, Company D, and Lieutenant Samuel R. Riggs, Company F, were
wounded before Atlanta in August 1864
August 31 and
September 1, was hotly engaged with the enemy at Jonesboro.
After the fall of
Atlanta, and when Hood started for General Sherman’s rear, the One
Hundred and Sixteenth assisted in the pursuit of the enemy as far as
Gradston, when, leaving the rebels to the care of General Thomas,
marched back to Atlanta and on the 15th day of November
went with Uncle Sherman from Atlanta to the Sea, arriving at Fort
McAllister, GA, near Savannah, December 12.
The next day,
December 13, General W. B. Hazen, commanding Division, selected nine
regiments, including the One Hundred and Sixteenth, to carry the fort,
and within five minutes after the sound of the bugle “Forward” the
Regimental colors were on the works and the garrison captured.
Lieutenant Isom Simmons, of Company H, was killed in this
charge.
(SHARON WICK’S NOTE:
It was during this winter on December 9th, 1864 that
my great great grandfather, Charles Grennel died.)
After a few days
rest in the beautiful city of Savannah, we started on the campaign of
the Carolinas, hunting the enemy and finding him first near the swamps
of Pocotaligo, chased him through creeks and across rivers,
skirmishing constantly until nearing Colombia, S. C., where the
Fifteenth Corps, the One Hundred and Sixteenth included, run short of
chewing tobacco. Learning
that there was an ample supply of the article in the City of Columbia,
paid that city a visit on the 17th of February 1865, and
replenished stock. After
a few days rest resumed march, facing home, crossing the great Pedee
River at Cheraw, S. C., then to Fayetteville, N.C., and to
Bentonville, where the One Hundred and Sixteenth for the last time
encountered its old foe, General Jos. E. Johnston’s Army, and fought
its last battle. From
Goldsboro, where the army was re-equipped (and it was in need of
everything except the musket and forty rounds), the Regiment started
picnicking for Washington via Raleigh, Richmond and Alexandria,
participating in the grad review before the President in May 1865,
being finally mustered out near Washington on June 7, 1865.
The history of
the One Hundred and Sixteenth Infantry is identical with that of the
Army of the Tennessee from Memphis, 1862, to Washington, 1865.
It was never on detached service, but always with the moving
column.
The Regiment was
peculiarly fortunate in retaining through its eventful history the
very efficient services of its medical staff, and the members had
plenty of work to do. Major
Ira N. Barnes, M.D., Decatur, Ill; Assistant Surgeon John A. Heckelman,
M. D., St. Louis, and Assistant Surgeon J. H. I. Hostettler, M.D.,
Decatur, all served to the end of the war, and every one of the 350
survivors in 1865 had cause to feel grateful to them.
The esprit du
corps of the Regiment, under the command of Colonel Tupper, was
splendid, and under such Brigade Commanders as General Giles A. Smith,
and Division Commanders as W. B. Hazen, retained it to the end of the
war. <116th
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