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Private Worth's First Battle
cover art Luke Ahearn.

 

 

This novel of the American Civil War traces the story of Jedediah Worth, a teenaged slave who becomes a Union soldier, fighting for the freedom of his people. Book 1 From Slave to Soldier series.

 

 

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Private Worth's First Battle

a Novel of the American Civil War

 

F. W. Abel

 

 

"Once let the black man get upon his person the brass letter U.S., let him get an eagle on his button, and a musket on his shoulder and bullets in his pocket, there is no power on earth that can deny that he has earned the right to citizenship."

Frederick Douglass
August, 1863

 

 

Introduction

Jedediah Worth, 70, Distinguished Soldier & Lawman

One of Langston's most prominent citizens, Jedediah Worth, passed away yesterday peacefully in his sleep, just two months short of his 71st birthday.

Mr. Worth was well-known in Langston City, having served as our sheriff for more than a decade. Before settling here, Mr. Worth had a long and notable career in the United States Army, during which he rose to the highest non-commissioned officer grade, Regimental Sergeant-Major, in the celebrated 10th U. S. Cavalry.

He was the recipient of the highest award the nation bestows for bravery in battle, the Medal of Honor, not once, but twice, a feat almost unique in the annals of the American military. He was the first Negro to be awarded the Medal, for deeds of valor performed during the Rebellion, when he was only seventeen years of age.

A widower when he died, of Mr. Worth's children, two still survive: Jubal, his only son, and Harriet, a daughter. His funeral will be held at 10:00 a. m. tomorrow at the Bethel Baptist Church.

This obituary, clipped from the Langston Herald, gave me deep sadness when it arrived from Oklahoma. For I had the privilege of knowing Jedediah Worth for more than twenty years.

I saw him for the first time in the spring of 1891, when I was a reporter for the Washington Colored American. Sergeant Worth was among the heroes from the Negro regiments sent to Washington as an honor guard in the nation's capital. Our first meeting was brief. Because white soldiers objected so vigorously to their presence, the Negro soldiers were quickly sent back to the frontier.

I met him again in the fall of 1898, when he was the Regimental Sergeant-Major of the 10th United States Cavalry (Colored), the famed "Buffalo Soldiers." The 10th Cavalry had just returned from "the splendid little war" to free Cuba from the Spanish. Because the authorities feared the tropical diseases to which they had been exposed might become epidemic among the general population, soldiers returning from Cuba were quarantined. The men, white and Negro, were kept in a camp established at Montauk Point on Long Island, some 130 miles east of the city of New York.

The Colored American sent me out to Montauk to interview Negro soldiers about their experiences in the war. My editor was concerned that their contributions would not be acknowledged by the white-owned papers. Indeed, if you read only Hearst's New York Journal, you would have thought that the only regiment that did anything of note at all was the 1st United States Volunteer Cavalry, Theodore Roosevelt's headline-grabbing "Rough Riders." The Colored American was determined that the fortitude and pluck of the Negro soldiers be publicized.

(I suppose things have not changed all that much since then, as the paper is sending me off to France with the 15th Regiment, New York National Guard, soon to be re-designated the 369th Infantry Regiment. We are determined that this latest group of Buffalo Soldiers not be ignored, either.)

Upon my arrival at Montauk, the officer acting as the liaison with newspaper reporters and correspondents gave me leave to enter the camp of the 9th and 10th Cavalry Regiments, and the 24th and 25th Regiments of Infantry, all of which were composed entirely of Negro enlisted men. He advised me to make the acquaintance of each regiment's sergeant-major, the highest-ranking enlisted soldier in the regiment. The sergeant-major, even more than the regiment's colonel, was the man who made sure the men were trained and disciplined, sheltered and fed. In short, he was the man responsible for having the men behave and carry themselves like soldiers. In this way, I was re-introduced to Sergeant-Major Worth.

You might expect, given his responsibilities, to find a dour, humorless, authoritarian man, quick to admonish and slow to praise; harsh, even brutal, made narrow-minded by the need to enforce discipline and regulations.

As I interviewed his men, I discovered the affection and respect in which he was held, not only by the soldiers, but by the white officers also. I shy away from the term "legend," but there is no other way to describe the man, as can be intimated from just reading his obituary.

Of course I wanted to find out more about him, but when I approached him for an interview, he refused and insisted that my news reports be about his soldiers, of whom he was intensely proud. But I am a reporter, a "news-hound" if you will, and over the course of several weeks was able to question Sergeant-Major Worth about his life and military career, and learned even more in subsequent meetings through the years.

It took me a long time to get to know the man. Even now, I recall that when I first looked on his weather-worn and war-scarred visage, how I concluded that the crow's-feet around the eyes had to have come from squinting into the Southwestern sun and the lines about the mouth etched by the strain of having to immediately judge the correct course of action during battle. I know now that they were equally the result of laughter.

It is only now, years after I met him and two years after his death, that I am able to set his story down in chronological order. Apart from some endnotes I added in clarification or support of his reminiscences, the words are those of Jedediah Worth, a slave who became a soldier, a soldier who became a hero.

LeOtis Henry
Washington, D.C.
February, 1918

 

Prologue

You're a newspaper man, so why would you want me to tell of events that happened more than thirty years ago? Events so old, they certainly don't qualify as news. But I don't consider them to be history either. I've always been of the opinion that history is what happened in the distant past, not what happened in one's own lifetime. Maybe when I have white hair, not gray, and am sitting in a rocker on a porch, then it will be time to tell my life story. Of course, by then, who'd want to listen to the rambles of a senile old man? There's been a lot of dullness and monotony in my life, just as in any lifetime.

You say that people will be interested, that our young people need to be reminded about the times of slavery. I think that many of us who were slaves might prefer to allow the memory of slavery to fade into oblivion, just as the institution itself has. But I can also see your point that, to fully appreciate freedom, our people perhaps should be reminded what slavery was like.

However, I think that, as our people continue to be discriminated against in so many ways, often with the connivance of the very government for which we fought, we need more to devote our energies to ensuring that our people are free in fact as well as in name. The lesson that should have been learned is that legal freedom was, of itself, no panacea - much to the chagrin of most abolitionists.

But, yes, the very idea of freedom for those of us who were enslaved was a powerful impetus. Witness the great colored pugilist of the early century, Tom Mollineaux. The promise of freedom was enough to raise him almost literally from the dead.

You remark about my use of words. Do you think that journalists are the only people with "nickel" vocabularies? But, I do have to admit that I have gone out of my way to catch your ear. Many civilians, I've found, regard soldiering as being for those too lazy or ignorant to make a go of civilian life, so I wanted to dispel that notion right from the start.

I was lucky to have learned to read while fairly young and thus developed a taste for it as a leisure-time activity, as well as a continuance of education. Sitting in an isolated, dust-scoured fort in the desert allows ample time for reading, a welcome change from the arduous living on the campaign trail and the excitement, and terror, of combat. Reading fills one's mind and occupies one's time and goes a long way in keeping one from becoming a drunk or a deserter, the scourges of the frontier army.

Let me say, though, drunkenness and desertion both occurred far less often in the colored regiments than in white ones - a minor miracle given the undesirable locations in which we were usually posted. The Seventh Cavalry was especially prone to both, understandable given their commanding officer. But I am already rambling.

Yes, I understand that there is a great deal of interest in the War of the Southern Rebellion, especially by those too young to remember it. Witness the popularity with which General Grant's memoir was received-probably read by more people, Americans and foreigners, than any American writer save Mark Twain.

And I can see the need for veterans of the Rebellion to tell our stories, especially in light of the romanticism currently accrued to the Confederate version of the war, their "lost cause," doomed from the start, to defend an honorable way of life and principles of the Constitution. Let us just call it a myth. The Southern planter class led their region into rebellion to protect slavery, and their lower classes followed out of notions of white supremacy. General Grant said it well it his memoir when he said it was one of the worst causes for which men ever fought. In contrast, Unionists fought for the morality of freeing an enslaved people, even if many of them did not see it that way at first. The Northern veteran said it best when he wrote that they fought not just to save the Union, but for a Union worth saving.

I can tell you about the Rebellion as I experienced it, but don't expect a grand view of it, like that depicted by General Grant. His was the unique perspective of the commanding general of all the National armies. My range of vision at its widest was limited to a company, and that was when I was a sergeant. When I was a private, it didn't get much wider than that of a squad. Think of the descriptions of battle found in The Red Badge of Courage.

Of course I have read The Red Badge. It's a remarkable work, especially when you consider Crane's innocence of war. Just about any enlisted man, in any time since the invention of the musket, could read Crane's work and say to himself, "That's just about the way it was." However, that very thing is one of its flaws as a novel about a Northern volunteer, as it does not render the sanctity with which the Northern man regarded the cause for which he fought. Our cause, the freedom of all Americans, was nothing like that of the Southerner, who convinced himself he was defending "states' rights," but was in fact fighting to prolong slavery and white supremacy.

The other flaw as a novel about the Rebellion is that the protagonist is portrayed as believing that he, himself, one soldier, could make a difference. Although by the end of the story, it must be said, he has come to realize his own insignificance and, more importantly, has come to accept the inevitability of his own death, "the great death," as Crane called it. This, in his first battle. I guess I wasn't as precocious, as I didn't come to that acceptance until the night between the first and second days at Nashville, two years after my first battle, and after having been wounded. But in The Red Badge, there's none of the fatalism, almost despair, that afflicted many Union soldiers, especially the volunteers of 1861, during the autumn of '64 and the following winter. That's when ran rampant the chilling thought that all the sacrifices might have been in vain, when it appeared McClellan and the "Peace Democrats" could win the presidential election and end the war by giving the Confederacy its independence. But I've heard that The Red Badge was set fairly early in the war, so maybe it's not such a flaw after all.

That was why the enlistment of colored troops made such a difference to the outcome of the Rebellion. It wasn't just our numbers. It has been said that the best men, on both sides, were those who enlisted in 1861. What they lacked in soldierly skill, they made up for in enthusiasm and determination. The men who followed, the conscripts and the bounty men, just weren't up to their standard.

Except for us. The coloreds who enlisted in '63 and '64 possessed all the enthusiasm and determination of the volunteers of '61. We appeared at a propitious time, when many of the '61 men were war-weary and losing heart, or were dead. If the Confederacy had the wisdom to enlist slaves, promising freedom to those who enlisted, the war might have ended differently. I've often thought the Confederacy was akin to the protagonist in a Shakespearean tragedy, doomed by his own flaws. In the South's case, it was the fatal flaw of slavery. Most colored troops in federal service were from the South. Not only did the South not benefit from the fortitude of their own colored population, the valor of Southern coloreds was turned against the Confederacy. Except for an incident in which I was involved, that occurred in the spring of 1865. The description of that will have to wait until its due time.

On the other hand, coloreds almost didn't get a chance to fight for the Union either. It may seem nonsensical, but powerful forces in the federal government were opposed to colored soldiers, at least at first. For coloreds, who had the most to gain or lose as a result of the outcome of the war, the first battle was for the right to be Union soldiers at all. We had to fight for "Sambo's Right to be Kilt," as that apparently scurrilous, but actually clever, poem was titled, which helped change opinion toward the use of colored soldiers.

You have to understand that, of all the things I've done, I'm most proud of having been in the first battle fought by colored troops during the Rebellion. It was small, so small we didn't even give it a name at the time. It's now called the battle of Island Mound, because it took place on a small island in the Osage River in Missouri. Given what a signal event it was, it's lamentable how few people today even know of it.

It occurred in the autumn of '62. That's right, before President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation. The real wonder of it all was the number of people who simply ignored the federal government and allowed us to soldier in the first place.

My road to Island Mound started with me in bondage in Kentucky. I went with my master's sons when they joined the Confederate army. I was with them at the battles of Belmont and Shiloh. Then I got the chance to run for freedom. While on the run in Tennessee is when I met my best friend, Samson, the African warrior who became Sergeant-Major Miner of the Ninth Cavalry, and Effie, Belle and Josh, who became family.

Even now, as I relate it, I'm astonished at how simple my life seemed then. I suppose that one problem with living past one's youth is the amount of regret one tends to accumulate. I was young, not much more than a boy, really. My boyhood was spent on Wentworth Farm, one of the largest horse-breeding farms in Kentucky. The farm produced some of the finest horses for racing and hunting in a state famous for its horseflesh.

When I call it a "farm," you might get the idea that it was small, but Wentworth Farm covered more than six hundred acres, surrounding a red-brick mansion fronted by six white fluted columns. Although some of it was covered by scrub forest and underbrush, most of it was devoted to large pastures, bound by whitewashed plank faces. Closer to the center of the farm were smaller paddocks, also divided by fences, where single horses roamed; the whole estate was sprinkled with stables and the small cabins in which the servants lived.

"Servants" was the hypocritical term usually employed by our masters, but we were slaves alright, bought or born, and there were more than eighty of us, mostly to care for the horses. There were trainers, jockeys, grooms, stableboys, two blacksmiths and, most expensive of all, a veterinarian. There were field hands to grow hay and vegetables and take care of cattle and pigs and mend fences, and house servants to take care of the four members of the Wentworth family.

The field hands were organized in gangs of ten or a dozen, each under a driver, who was himself a slave, but had the function of making sure that the field work was done. I'm sure that now, many of our people who were not born into slavery, would consider them turncoats to their own people. But a good driver was expected to be the voice of his gang, standing up for them if the master became unreasonable in his demands or harsh in his treatment. The reason I mention it is because many of the non-commissioned officers, the sergeants and corporals, of the first colored regiments had been drivers. They knew how to lead, and they knew how to handle our white officers, many of whom, coming from up North as they did, just didn't know how to deal with us.

I had been bought at the age of twelve, some three years prior, to help with the horses. I was somewhat tall for my age and working with my hands had made my shoulders broad, while riding horses had given me well-muscled legs. Muscle is heavy, and my height and weight caused me some concern, because I wanted to be a jockey, and most jockeys were short and lightweight. But again, I digress.

I guess a good starting point for the story of how, to borrow from Frederick Douglass one of his noted phrases, I got "an eagle on my button," is a day in May of 1861.

Like most days, this day started with me shoveling horse manure. Of course, I would have already gotten dressed and gone out to the privy and then the pump house to clean up. I was then ready to start my chores.

As I said, my first chore concerned the collection and disposal of horse manure. The spring grass was plentiful and lush, and it seemed that the horses barely swallowed it before it came out the other end. The stable I took care of, built for twelve horses, had ten just then, but that was still a lot of manure.

I would then pump the trough full of water, and take the horses, two-by-two, to drink, before turning them out on their paddocks to graze. I would do all this on my own, without any orders or overseers. All of us who worked with horses were "on task" and were trusted to get done whatever needed doing. All that mattered to Mister Wentworth was that the horses were properly cared for.

I recall that, as I awoke that morning, I had no notion it would be such an uncommon day.

 

I

"You're goin' t' the army, Jed," old Gideon told me. "You and Obie both."

"The army? What army?" If I hadn't been so bewildered, I would never have talked back to Gideon, the Farm's head groom, who was in charge of all of us who worked with the master's horses.

"The master's sons're joinin' up. All the young masters in these parts are. Master Brady and Master Wade'll need servants."

Normally, Gideon would never have bothered with an explanation, he would have just cuffed me one, but I guess he knew the news had to have been such a shock.

"You go on up to the main house now," Gideon ordered.

The main house, where Mister Wentworth lived with his family, was normally off-limits to any but the house servants. The front was imposing, with a white portico supported by six white pillars formed from the whole trunks of large, tall pines. Up to that day, I had never seen the inside.

"Yes, sir," I said meekly, although I wanted to ask why.

Gideon again took pity on me and explained. "You're t' be taught how t' cook. The young masters'll be takin' only one servant each, so you and Obie'll have t' know lots besides takin' care o' their horses."

You have to understand that, in those days, no Southern man of stature and family was expected to do menial chores, even as a private in the army.

"Now get on up there."

"Yes, sir."

Normally, after I took care of my morning chores would come breakfast-time. The grooms and stableboys would meet in the clapboard shed behind the main house. Food from the separate cook building would be brought out to the shed and we would all eat together. It was a happy, relaxing time of the day. However, on that day, I hurried to the house and knocked on the kitchen door. The door was opened by Libby, one of the serving girls.

"What d'you want?" she scolded. "You know you're not supposed t' be here. You eat in the shed with the other grooms and stableboys."

"I was told t' come in t' learn how t' cook. When the young massers go t' th' army, I'm goin' wit' 'em, t' take care of 'em."

At the time, I spoke with the soft drawl of the speech of central Kentucky. Most hard sounds at the end of words just dropped off. Words like "don't" and "sure" came out as "doan" and "sho" and everyone - but not whites, you understand - was addressed "you'all."

Libby scowled and made no move to let me in. I just stood, stupidly.

"What're you doin', girl?" snapped a voice, richer, deeper. "You let 'im in right now!"

Libby quickly stepped back and allowed me to enter the kitchen. Maddie, the cook, was the person who had spoken. She looked me up and down with a jaundiced eye.

"The first thin' you need t' learn about cookin' is you better be clean. You get on over t' the sink and scrub your hands right up t' your elbows."

I went to the sink, pumped some water and lathered up with a bar of brown soap.

Maddie inspected my hands carefully before she nodded. "Now get on over there with Obie," she ordered.

Obie was a groom like me, maybe a couple years older. We both tried to outdo each other in taking care of our horses. It was a competition that never went too far, and we were friendly toward each other. Today, I guess we each felt out of place in the kitchen, and so we just nodded to each other.

"One o' the best ways t' learn t' cook is t' do it," Maddie told us, "and then eat what you cooked t' see how it tastes. I'm goin' t' have you fix some ham and eggs and biscuits and coffee." Maddie showed us how to measure flour and milk and baking powder and mix it together to make biscuit dough.

"Ain't goin' t' be no stoves in the army," she told us. "So you'all need t' bake in a Dutch oven over a fire."

While the biscuits were baking, Maddie showed us how to measure and boil coffee, how to slice and fry ham in a skillet and how to fry eggs in lard. I felt like I was "getting over," because eggs were a special treat for us slaves, only served on Christmas and Easter.

The biscuits that we made were a little hard, the eggs that I fried were brown on the bottom and runny on the top, and the coffee was weak, but I think it was a good first try. Maddie sampled our work and told us what we did wrong.

After breakfast, we cleaned the pans and plates and knives and forks we had used. Maddie inspected them all. "The best way t' get th' trots is t' have dirty cookin' gear" she said.

Obie and I both gave a laugh; "the trots" was another name for loose bowels. We abruptly stopped laughing when Maddie turned on us. "Don't you'all be

laughin' about th' trots, you hear? Th' trots likely t' kill you faster'n a Yankee bullet. Plenty are th' people died from th' trots."

No matter if it was called the trots, the runs, the squirts, or more military, the

quick-step, a reading of the casualty lists in almost any war would show how distressingly correct was Maddie's assessment.

"Now you get on outside and finish your mornin' work. When you come back at noon, you'all make sure th' first thin' you do is wash your hands," she called after us, as I raced Obie over to the tack shed to get bridles, saddles and saddle blankets.

The farm bred horses for racing and hunting, as well as for riding and pulling wagons and buggies, so there were a lot of horses, and all needed to be exercised. I was proud of myself, as I was allowed to ride, at least as a warm-up. Only the most trusted grooms were allowed to ride the saddle horses, for they were too valuable and too easily hurt for just anyone ride them. On many of the neighboring farms, a groom was only allowed to put a long halter on a horse and have it run in circles around him while he held the rope.

The other, equally important reason was that a slave might take a horse to try to run away. I remember the time a runaway from a neighboring farm was caught. It was soon after I had come to Wentworth Farm. The masters from the roundabout farms sent their own slaves, mostly the grooms and jockeys, to see what happened to runaways.

The man's hands were tied to a large wagon wheel and his shirt was ripped off his back. An overseer, one of the white men who made sure the slaves did what they were told, instead of a cat-of-nine-tails, took a short, thick bullwhip to the runaway's back.

The man jumped as the first stroke hit him and raised a welt. After the third or fourth stroke, small trickles of blood bubbled up from his skin. By the tenth, blood flowed freely down his back, and by the twentieth, bits of skin began to come off and the man was screaming. By the fiftieth, the man's pinkish-white ribs and backbone were visible, but by then, thankfully for him, he had fainted.

"He's got another fifty comin'," said the overseer, "but we'll save 'em for another time. Be a waste of time if he can't feel nothin'." We were then marched back to our farms and plantations and told to tell the others what we had witnessed.

Maybe it was because I was so young, and so new to the farm, but the horror of that scene has stayed with me. Even now, years later, the memory can still make me skittery.

On the other hand, I should probably mention that a whipping was an exceptional occurrence, at least in the farm country of Kentucky. The generation of coloreds born after Emancipation might think that slavery was how it was depicted in Uncle Tom's Cabin, but most masters would not dream of gratuitous cruelty to a slave, any more than to a horse.

This wasn't necessarily kindness; you have to recall that we slaves were valuable property. The punishment of the runaway had probably meant the loss of most of his value to his owner. A "prime buck" could cost more than two thousand dollars, and those were pre-war gold dollars, not greenbacks, so you see why we were treated the way we were.

In a way, that's the repulsiveness of slavery - the owners had so much money tied up in the institution that, to defend it, they resorted to such horrors as whipping a man half to death, and then to justify that, they invented the notions of inequality that plague us to this day.

When Obie and I reported back to Gideon, I was delighted to learn that I was to exercise Caesar, a three-year old hunter. Hunters were horses trained for cross-country riding and steeplechase racing. They were large and fast, with good endurance, and nimble at jumping obstacles.

As I approached Caesar's stall, I began talking softly. Many thoroughbreds were skittish, but Caesar just looked at me with warm, intelligent eyes and let me put the bit in his mouth, adjust the headstall and saddle him with no kicking, rearing or any trouble at all. I walked him out of the stable and over to a fence. Caesar was a sorrel, and so big that I had to climb to the second rail just to get enough height so as to get my foot in the stirrup.

I walked him over to the training paddock, which had a few hedges and ditches. Of course, I wouldn't take Caesar over the obstacles, I'd just warm him up for Peter, who was the trainer for the hunters.

Peter sat atop the fence, keeping an eye on me as I had Caesar walk a bit, then trot for a while before I had him canter. After about five minutes, Peter motioned to me and I brought Caesar back down to walk for a few minutes. Then I slid out of the saddle and held the stirrup as Peter mounted.

As Peter guided Caesar through the course, I had to admire the effortless grace with which the powerful horse soared over the jumps, bars set at the highest position. After a half dozen circuits, Peter rode back over to the gate. The sweat from his exertions had darkened Caesar's coat to reddish-brown and his sides were heaving, but ever so slightly.

"A few mo' days and he'll be ready fo' a real hunt," Peter said approvingly. "Make sure you cool him down slow an' give 'im a good rubdown. An' give 'im an extra ration o' oats. An' an apple. Be real nice to 'im. He's one o' the horses goin' t' the army wit' you'all."

As I remounted, Tom, another stableboy, began warming up Tucker, a two-year old bay, before Peter put him through the course. I walked Caesar for ten minutes, watching Peter and Tucker. The bars were set to the second lowest position the first two times through. For the third circuit, Peter had Tom up the bars to the third position.

As I dismounted to cover Caesar with a blanket, Peter put spurs to Tucker. But at the first jump, the horse balked, reared and went down. Before the horse could fall on him, Peter had kicked out of the stirrups while, in a flash, I was over the fence, to help him drag himself clear. The iron-shod hoof of a thrashing horse could easily cave in a man's skull. Peter, Tom and I then surrounded Tucker, talking softly to calm him before he could hurt himself.

"Thanks, Jed," Peter told me. "Quick thinkin'. I'll make sure Gideon hears of it. Now you'all go back t' takin' care o' Caesar."

I led Caesar back to the stable and took off the saddle and removed the bit. When I was sure he was cooled down, I led Caesar by the halter over to the trough for a drink. Back at the stable, I sponged out his mouth, nose and dock, and felt his legs and checked his shoes to make sure that there were no problems with either. Then I combed and brushed him until his coat was like brown satin.

When the dinner bell rang for the noon meal, I ran to the kitchen door as fast as my boots would let me. I saw Obie coming, so I waited to knock until he got there. Libby opened the door and let us in, without sassing us this time. Heeding Maddie's words from that morning, Obie and I went over to the sink and scrubbed vigorously with brown soap.

Maddie showed us how to make cornbread in a skillet and fry cuts of beef. She had dried black-eyed peas soaking in water to soften, and showed us how to simmer the peas so they would be ready in time for supper. In between her lessons, Maddie made sure that Libby served the Wentworths properly in the dining room.

While Obie and I ate, we heard snatches of conversation every time Maddie or Libby pushed through the door between the kitchen and the dining room.

Soon we could hear right through the walls as Mr. Wentworth began to shout. "North Carolina seceded on the same day our damned legislature voted to remain neutral. Neutral! The very word leaves a bad taste in my mouth. It means Kentucky doesn't have the damned gumption to support one side or the other."

"Thomas, you can use any language you want outside or in the stables, but I will not have you swearing in this house," said Mrs. Wentworth severely.

"But I was provoked beyond all endurance, my dear. Kentucky is a Southern state and as such, belongs with the Confederacy. Any fool, except maybe those who constitute our legislature, understands that." Mr. Wentworth was not quite shouting, but he still talked loudly.

"Does this mean that Kentucky will not field any soldiers for either army, Father?" asked Brady, the older of the two Wentworth brothers.

Wade, younger by three years, interrupted before his father could reply. "Nothing's goin' to stop me. I'll go to Missouri to join up if I have to."

"Wade, please mind your manners, and do not interrupt your father," said Mrs. Wentworth. "And at seventeen, you're too young to be a soldier."

"But Father said-" Wade began, but Mr. Wentworth hurriedly interrupted.

"Missouri has not yet voted to secede from the Union either. After all the damned trouble Missourians caused in Kansas, Missouri is not doing any more than Kentucky!"

"Thomas, I have already asked you once not to swear in my house!" Mrs. Wentworth was now close to shouting herself.

"Sorry, my dear. I was again provoked beyond all reason. Missouri men, by employing violence to try to force Kansans to permit slavery, greatly added to the ill-feeling between the two regions. The fools in Washington could maybe have patched together another compromise, had not the bigger fools in Missouri spilled blood."

"But Pa! What about John Brown?" demanded Wade. "Not only did he kill Missouri men in cold blood, he tried to start a slave rebellion. Nothing done by the Missourians could have been worse than that!"

The greatest fear of all slave-owners was that their slaves would rise up in a bloody revolt. Revolts did occur from time to time. Cato's rebellion in the last century killed twenty-two whites before a clash with the South Carolina militia resulted in forty-four coloreds and twenty whites dead. Turner's rebellion in Virginia thirty years before saw the death of fifty-seven white men, women and children before it was savagely suppressed. John Brown's raid had occurred only a year and a half prior, and the bitterness it had aroused on both sides was still fresh.

"I'm surprised that John Brown's trial, or rather his hanging, did not start a war sooner," Brady said quietly. "I thought the abolitionists would make him a saint and, under that banner, attack us then."

"Understand that most Yankees are not abolitionists," replied Mr. Wentworth. "Most of them could care less about coloreds. If the abolitionists got their way, coloreds would be free to slave in factories like Yankee workmen, and it's a well-known fact that we treat our livestock better than Yankee factory owners treat their workers. Our servants would be far worse off with the Yankees than they are with us." As I have said, like most Southerners, Mr. Wentworth rarely referred to the people he owned as slaves.

"However," he continued, "the election of Lincoln showed quite clearly that the North will not just allow us to leave the Union without trying to stop us. They believe that states do not have the right to make their own choices in this regard, even though the Constitution gives the states any rights not specifically given to the Federal Government. The states voluntarily entered the Union, therefore they should be able to voluntarily leave it."

"But what about Kentucky, Father?" Brady returned the conversation to his original question. "Does the vote of neutrality mean that the militia will not be called out?"

"I suppose that's exactly what it is intended to mean," replied Mr. Wentworth. "But as your hot-headed brother says, that will not prevent individuals from joining either side, even if they have to go to another state to do so."

"We sure-" Wade began but was again interrupted by Mr. Wentworth.

"Let us finish eating before the food gets cold."

At the time, I knew what a Yankee was, but I had never heard of an abolitionist. I thought Maddie might know, since she lived around the masters all the time, so I asked her.

"You hush!" Maddie whirled around and faced Obie and me. She lowered her voice. "Don't ever let white folks hear you say that word, or even that you know the word, or it's worth a whippin'." Maddie looked over her shoulder, then whispered. "The abolitionists believe that colored people should be free and able t' go do what they want, just like white folks. Now, don't let me hear you ask about that no more. Clean up th' pots and pans and go back t' tendin' th' horses like you should."

That night, Obie and I were moved into the same loft to sleep. Below us was the stable housing those saddle and pack-horses going with us to the army.

As we bedded down, Obie began to talk. "Jed, remember what Maddie said today? What would you do if you were free?"

"I never gave it no thought before. It didn't ever seem possible."

"Why not? There's free coloreds, you know."

"I knew that."

"So what would you do if you were free, Jed? If you didn't have t' tend the master's horses?"

"I like tendin' horses," I replied.

"You don't mean t' say you like shovelin' manure," he said mockingly.

"No, not that part. I guess I'd rather be a jockey or a trainer, and just ride the horses and let someone else shovel the manure."

"That's all? You want nothin' more than that?"

"Well, there ain't no sense spendin' so much thinkin' about it," I said crossly. "You'all might as well go t' sleep, cause there ain't anythin' you can do about it no how, Obie. Freedom's about as real as whatever it is you'll dream tonight."

 

 

Private Worth's First Battle Copyright © 2016. F. W. Abel. All rights reserved by the author. Please do not copy without permission.

 

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Author Bio

F. W. Abel was born in New York. After graduating from Fordham University, he served for eight years as an infantry officer in the U.S. Army and currently works for the federal government. He lives in a suburb of Washington, D.C., within a few hours’ drive of most of the Civil War’s eastern theater battlefields, where he has walked the same ground once trodden by heroes.

TTB titles:

Slave to Soldier series

Private Worth's First Battle
Corporal Worth's Medal of Honor
Corporal Worth's Wound
Sergeant Worth's Victory

Author web site.

 

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  Reviews

"Private Worth's First Battle is one of the best Civil War novels ever. F.W. Abel captures the rhythm of battle as scenes crack like a shot from Jed Worth's Lemat repeater carbine. The strategy and the tactics of the war are masterfully drawn, without overshadowing the human drama of an escaped slave's coming of age and the struggle of soldiers and civilians, both Northern and Southern."

~ S. W. O'Connell, author of The Patriot Spy
 



"In this engaging, well-researched, and emotional historical fiction novel, F. W. Abel relates the story of Jedediah Worth, a colored teen during the Civil War who escapes slavery and joins up with the U.S. Army. Through the eyes of this fictionalized character, the reader is drawn into the harsh reality of war to see firsthand the cost of freedom."

~ Christine Amsden, award-winning author of the Cassie Scot series
 



 

 

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