Click 👉Today in History (general history) Oct. 15.
On This Day in Confederate History, Oct. 15.
1863: Confederate
submarine C.S.S. Hunley tragically sank during a training accident in
Charleston Harbor, S.C. drowning its inventor Captain Horace Hunley, and
seven other crew members. The other crewmen who died in that sinking were Robert Brockbank, Joseph Patterson, Thomas W. Park, Charles McHugh, Henry Baird, John Marshall, and Charles L. Sprague. There was also a prior sinking in a training exercise in which five crewmen died and three survived.
Also on this day, the second day of the Battle of Buzzard's Prairie, La. takes place. Early in the morning of the 15th of October, Brig. Gen. Tom Green advanced
the 4th, 5th, and 7th Texas cavalry regiments to a plantation fence
bordering the prairie. He placed Semmes' Battery on the left and the
Valverde Battery on the right. Col. William Polk "Gotch" Hardeman of the
4th Texas, led a contingent of skirmishers, made up of one company from
each regiment, out onto the prairie to lure two Federal divisions into
attacking the strong Confederate position. General William Franklin took
the bait and ordered out Brig. Gen. Godfrey Weitzel's Division to
attack across the open prairie, supported by artillery batteries.
Advancing in full battle order with flags flying, the Federals crossed
the prairie and easily pushed the Confederate skirmishers back to the
fence line.
The
horse soldiers of the 4th, 5th, and 7th Texas cavalry regiments then
made a wild dash and full-throated "Rebel Yell" on the right of
Weitzel's line. The soldiers from New York and Massachusetts became
panic-stricken and the Yankee right collapsed. Coming to the rescue for
the Federals was Lt. William Marland of Nim's Battery who stopped the
rout and drove the Confederates back with grape and canister, as well as
exploding an ammunition chest of Semmes' Battery.
Pvt. Simeon J. Crews
Co. F, 7th Tex. Cav.
(Liljenquisit Collection, Library of Congress)
The battle then settled into an exchange of musket and cannon fire
that lasted several hours. While the Federals had overwhelming numbers,
Franklin didn't order another full-strength attack until about 10
o'clock that morning, led by the Mid-Westerners of Burbridge's Brigade.
The Confederates withdrew behind Bayou Bourbeau while Hardeman had the
7th Texas Cavalry slow down the Yankees from concealed positions, around
the Chretien Plantation. The 7th then withdrew across the bayou and the
4th and 5th Texas began skirmishing with the Mid-Westerners to slow
their advance. Green's men were driven off, but he accomplished his goal
of taking the measure of the Federal Army's strength.
Confederate General Birthdays, Oct. 15.
Major General Thomas Lafayette Rosser was
born on this day in 1836 in Campbell County, Virginia. He attended West
Point but left in 1861 to enlist in the Confederate Army as a first
lieutenant and commanded the Second Company, Washington Artillery of New
Orleans in the First Battle of Manassas. Rosser rose through the ranks
to major general by November 1864. His battles included First Manassas,
the Seven Days Battles, Mechanicsville, Second Manassas, South Mountain,
Sharpsburg, Kelly's Ford, Hanover, Gettysburg, the Wilderness,
Trevillian Station, Cedar Creek, Tom's Brook, Petersburg, Appomattox.
After the war, he worked for an express company, and a railroad, worked
to have Confederate monuments constructed, bought a plantation, and was a
brigadier general of U.S. volunteers in the Spanish-American War.
Rosser died March 29, 1910, in Charlottesville, Va., and was buried
there in Riverview Cemetery.
Maj. Thomas L. Rosser
👱
Brigadier General Henry Harrison Walker was
born on October 15, 1832, in Sussex County, Virginia. He graduated from
West Point in 1853 ranking 41st in a class of 53 cadets. Walker
resigned from the U.S. Army on May 3, 1861, and joined the Confederate
Army and served as the lieutenant colonel of the 40th Virginia Infantry.
He was appointed a brigadier general on July 1, 1863. His battles
included Gaines' Mill where he was wounded twice, Bristoe Station, Mine
Run, lost a foot at Spotsylvania Court House, Siege of Petersburg, and
was paroled May 7, 1865. Following the war, Walker became a stockbroker
in New Jersey and died March 22, 1912, in Morristown and was buried
there in Evergreen Cemetery.
Brig. Gen. Henry H. Walker 👋