Monday, November 25, 2013

A Man of Honor and Integrity



The Life and Civil War Service of Albert Eads

     Albert Eads was born in Knoxville, Illinois on April 23rd, 1842, the son of John and Mary Anderson Eads, who had made their way to Illinois from Kentucky and North Carolina respectively.  Any thoughts of a stable and happy family life in Knoxville were shattered when Albert’s mother died when he was three years old, a tragedy that necessitated his being sent to live with his grandfather’s family in Morgan County until he turned twelve.  He then rejoined his father in Knoxville, and there attended school and received his education until 1860, when he travelled to attend school in East Hampton, Massachusetts for a year before he returned home to Illinois.

     War fervor affected him as it did many of the young men in Illinois, and in the fall months of 1861 he began to raise men in Knox County to serve in Waters McChesney’s “Rock Island”  Regiment.   When that regiment was moved, still in its formative stages, to Camp Douglas in Chicago, the 225 men that had been raised were distributed to other regiments.   December of 1861 he was formally enlisted in Company C. of the 51st Illinois Infantry.  His height is given as 5’6 ½’, a dark complexioned young man with brown hair and hazel eyes.  His comrades, recognizing his latent leadership abilities so amply demonstrated by the number of men that he was able to recruit to the cause, elected him to the position of second lieutenant.  Performing those responsibilities well, he was promoted to 1st Lieutenant, still having not reached his 21st birthday. 

       During the Battle of Stone’s River, a bloody contest that was waged near Murfreesboro , Tennessee, young Albert Eads performed nobly.  It was a hard fought battle, the ferocity of which is best described in a letter written by the regiment’s colonel, Luther Bradley, the day after it ended.

     “I write you a letter from the battlefield to assure you of my safety.   We have had three days hard fighting, in 2 of which my regiment has been engaged.  We have suffered severely, but by God’s mercv I have been preserved.  Our loss is 65 killed and wounded and is smaller than any other Regiment in the Brigade.  The Brigade fought splendidly and lost a third of its number.

     On the morning of December 31st we formed a line of battle at daylight and were hotly engaged ‘till noon.  For the first hour we drove the Rebels, but finally they outflanked us, owing to the division on our right giving way.  They were new troops and could not stand the fire.  From this time our division had the whole right to protect & for three hours we fought Hardee’s whole “Army Corps,” holding our position until our ammunition was expended and we had lost a third our number.  Every colonel in the brigade fell except myself.  My good horse, Charley, was killed by a shell which burst at his side and carried off his leg and hip.  I was on his back at the time but was not touched.  Major Davis lost his right arm, Lt. Keith was killed, and 2 Captains and 3 lieutenants of the 51st were wounded.  Both my color bearers were killed, & a shell passed through the Regt. Flag.”

     During the hard fought battle, with vision obscured by smoke and one’s position hard to ascertain at times due to the ebb and flow of the fighting, Albert Eads, his 2nd Lieutenant and 16 men managed to cut off and capture Lieutenant Dunlap of the Confederate Army along with 35 of his men.  The Rebel officer surrendered his sword to young Albert Eads, who for many years treasured it as a souvenir of the battle.  Many years later,  when he was travelling in the south, he was invited to a gathering of Confederate veterans.  He introduced himself to the gathering and shared his reminiscences about the war with his former foes.  During the course of the evening, Mr. Eads recounted his story of the capture of the sword and stated that if he ever could learn the whereabouts of the officer to whom it had formerly belonged, he would be glad to return it to him.  This generous offer touched the Confederate veterans who were present, and they made certain that the story went out to local newspapers.  Eventually the news of  the generous offer got back to Lieutenant Dunlap, who contacted Mr. Eads and was sent the sword.

     In his gracious acknowledgment of the swords return, Lieutenant Dunlap urged the Eads family to call on him if they ever journeyed to Mississippi.  Eventually Albert made a trip down to Blue Springs in the Magnolia State, and there had a cordial visit with his former foe.  This was before the ready access to automobiles or telephones, which was regrettable, because Lieutenant Dunlap later wrote Albert Eads that many of his neighbors heard of his visit and wanted to meet and pay their respects to the Yankee who returned the sword to its owner, but by the time they had arrived at Dunlap’s home, Eads had already left to resume his travels.

     Returning to the war years:  In June of 1863 Eads fell ill enough to have to take leave to enter a hospital in Nashville.  He returned to the regiment in September of that year, the day after the bloody battle of Chickamauga.  He assumed the role of regimental adjutant, replacing an officer who had been severely wounded the previous day.  His first task was to painstakingly record each of the regiment’s 149 casualties from that battle, and the nature of the casualty, fro, “wounded slightly,” to “seriously wounded,” to “missing,” or “killed.”

     In March of 1864 Albert fell prey to illness again.  He returned to Illinois during the February/March re-enlistment furlough of the regiment and was allowed to remain in the Prairie State to help recoup his strength and to aid in recruiting more men to help to put down the rebellion.  He returned to his regiment in July, and given the toll his illness had taken upon his health he was assigned to light “non-field” duty as a “military conductor.”  This was supposed to be a”non-combatant” job, but it was a responsible job.  He would be responsible for security and order on military trains.  It was a job that called for good judgment, good administrative skills and at times, the ability to make quick decisions.

     In September of 1864 Nathan Bedford Forrest and his men made a foray into the region and began to do their best to disrupt the Union lines of communication.  They tore up railroad track, burned bridges, and destroyed rolling stock whenever they could.  On the 24th of September  Eads was part of a train that was bringing men from the 18th Michigan and the 102nd Ohio to relieve the current Union garrison at Athens, Alabama.  By this time Forrest and his men had surrounded the garrison and were demanding its surrender.  The train that Eads was on pulled up near a blockhouse along the tracks and began to attempt to fight their way to reinforce the besieged Athens garrison.  They met fierce resistance from troops led by Confederate General Abraham Buford, taking over 100 casualties, a quarter of their force.  Still they persevered, and were within sight of the beleaguered fort when the flag was lowered.   An after action report filed by the officers that were surrendered to Forrest (including the troops who fought so gallantly to relieve the fort) addresses most vehemently their opposition to the decision to surrender.

     Colonel Campbell, after reviewing the forces of the enemy, returned to the fort saying “the jig is up.  Pull down the flag,” thus surrendering the best fortification on the line of the Nashville and Decatur Railroad.  We also feel that it is our duty to make mention of the bearing and disposition of the soldiers in the fort, both white and black.  It was everything that any officer could wish of any set of men.  So far from there being any disposition to surrender or to avoid a fight, it was just the reverse.  Officers had to exert all their authority, even to threatening to shoot their own men, to restrain them from exposing themselves.  The soldiers were anxious to try conclusions with General Forrest, believing that in such a work they could not be taken by ten times their number.  When told that their fort had been surrendered, and that they were prisoners, they could scarcely believe themselves, and in tears, demanded that the fight should go on, preferring to die in the fort that they had made to being transferred to the tender mercies of General Forrest and his men.  Another thing should be taken into consideration, which is that we were on the point of receiving reinforcements.  While the truce was in operation and during the time occupied by Colonel Campbell in viewing the enemy’s force, firing was heard on the Nashville and Decatur Railroad.  This came from a force of our troops sent to our relief from Decatur……These brave men had forced their way through three lines of the enemy, and were within musket range of the fort when our flag was lowered.  The surrender of the fort allowed General Forrest to throw a portion of his force between the fort and them, thus compelling them to surrender after a hard fight of three hours’ duration, during which they lost one-third of their number in killed and wounded, and after they had arrived almost at the gates of our fort…….In conclusion we do not hesitate to say over our signatures that the surrender was uncalled for by the circumstances, was against our wishes, and ought not to have been made.  We also respectfully request that a thorough and immediate investigation of the above statements be made, that our names may not be placed on the list of cowards in general summing up of our Nation’s history…….Very respectfully, OFFICERS THAT WERE SURRENDERED

     General Forrest paid tribute to the bravery and determination of the reinforcements in the report that he filed shortly after the battle.

     The reinforcements…..fought with great gallantry and desperation.  They pressed on, but found the 21st Tennessee, commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Forrest, between them and the fort.  This gallant regiment opened fire upon the advancing enemy, and it was during this engagement that Lieutenant Colonel Forrest fell severely wounded.  I ordered Colonel Nixon and Colonel Carter, with their respective commands to move rapidly to the aid of Colonel Wilson.  They did so, and after a short engagement the reinforcements surrendered and marched up just in time to see the garrison march out of the fort and stack their arms.

     By the terms of the surrender as dictated by General Forrest, all “white soldiers” were to be treated as prisoners of war and “the negroes returned to their masters.”  Commissioned officers (including Albert Eads) were to be sent to Meridian, Mississippi until formalities could be worked out to release them on parole at Memphis.  After his parole, Eads immediately reported to Benton Barracks parole camp in St. Louis, and from there was granted a furlough to return home until a prisoner exchange could be worked out.  This arrangement worked to the benefit of the Confederacy, as it removed able-bodied men from combat without having to spare precious and dwindling resources to guard and feed them.

     The November 30th, 1864 issue of the Knox Republican reports of Albert Ead’s return home in time to join his family to give thanks, and talks of his capture at Athens and the parole agreement that allowed him to return home until he was formally exchanged.  The article went on to quote Eads at length about what he saw and experienced during his time as a Rebel prisoner.

      While confined in the stockade at Meridian, our men were much annoyed at being exhibited to the populace, who would crowd the gates in great numbers for the purpose of viewing what they termed to be Northern vandals.  The most bitter of these visitors were ladies, who would laugh at and make sport of our brave men in the true style of the chivalry.   Our men soon, however, hit upon a way to rid themselves of this nuisance in grapevine.  They selected the best singers in the stockade, and when the ladies again appeared, they were greeted with the “Star Spangled Banner” sung as only prisoners in Dixie can sing it.  This was an unexpected proceeding, and so exasperated one fair damsel that she seized the musket of the guard, making threatening demonstrations with it, and declaring that it would give her great satisfaction to run the bayonet through their Yankee bodies.  But the ladies soon left in the greatest disgust and did not again annoy our men. 

     Our prisoners managed to live well, notwithstanding the poor quality and quantity of the rations issued to them.  Some of the prisoners had a few greenbacks which they managed to keep from the robbers.  Lieutenant Eads had two watches, the two costing here $100, which he sold for $1000 in Confederate notes.  Extra provisions were bought when wanted.  Sweet potatoes first sold at $10, but afterwards went down to $5 per bushel.  Beef; $1.50 per pound; bacon, $3  per pound; ham, $5 per pound; cotton hose; $15 per pair; flannel shirts such as our issued by our government at 99 cents, $75 apiece.  Greenbacks brought them $5 and $10 for one and gold $20 for one.

     The article went on to say that Lieutenant Eads noted a great deal of dissatisfaction existing among the people in the region of the South that he was in, and he believed that if a referendum was put forth to them at this point in the war offering them a chance to return to the Union, that it would be adopted by an overwhelming majority. 

     Albert Eads was formally exchanged for a Confederate prisoner of equal rank on December 30th, 1864, after which he returned to his regiment.  By this time the fighting days of his regiment were over.  His term of service expired in early January of 1865, and on the 14th of that month he was mustered out of the service in Huntsville, Alabama.

     After the war Albert Eads returned to Knoxville, but in the hopes of getting an education that would serve him in good stead left for New York, where he studied in Eastman’s Business College.  During 1866-67 he opened a mercantile store in Topeka, Kansas.  In early 1868 he returned to Macomb and married Mary Tinsley whose father operated a packinghouse in the early 18 in what is now Chandler Park before the city fathers passed an ordinance in 1852 that prohibited slaughter operations within the city limits.    He later owned two steam powered mills and after the Civil War founded and was chairman of the Union Bank.  Albert’s tie to such a powerful and wealthy family made it easy for him to assimilate into his adopted community.

     Albert opened a dry goods store in Macomb and also devoted himself to farming for the next few years.  In 1876 he entered his father-in-law’s bank as a bookkeeper.  He soon earned a promotion to cashier, and eventually worked his way up to becoming the President of the bank; he also was appointed President of the banks at Colchester and Industry as well. 

     Albert Eads also left his mark upon education in Macomb.   He was one of the leaders in the effort to locate the Illinois State Normal School in Macomb.  According to his obituary this was one of the most bitterly contested effort that he’d ever undertaken and was always a great source of pride to him.  At one point the school was seriously overcrowded, and a 1904 appropriation for its enlargement that had been passed by the state legislature was vetoed by the governor.  Mr. Eads and several other public-spirited citizens came to the rescue by donating generously. Their efforts enabled the struggling young educational facility to add six new rooms to the complex.  Eads’ contribution is said to have been $1000, a hefty sum in 1904.  Western Illinois University’s success and continued presence in Macomb owes much to Eads and his fellow citizen’s support of its early predecessor.

     In 1904 Albert Eads, his wife, a daughter and a grandson made a trip south.  His typewritten account of the trip is held in the WIU Library archives.  It was a moving experience for the old soldier.  Upon arriving at Nashville they toured Andrew Jackson’s home, the Hermitage, and drove out to the national Cemetery, where he left carnations at the graves of soldiers from his Company.  He also saw the burial site of Mrs. James K. Polk on the Capitol grounds, and reminisced about visiting with her on several occasions when he was stationed in Nashville.  He travelled to Stone’s River and visited the battle sites and the cemetery which held the hallowed remains of 11 casualties from his regiment, then to the battlefields at Chattanooga and Chickamauga.  From there they followed the same railroad that he was captured on while he was serving as a conductor, and it was at a meeting with some Confederate veterans, including the Bank’s President, a Mr. C.C. Harris at the First National bank in Decatur, Alabama that he again recounted the story about the sword that he had been given as a token of surrender.   He also had the opportunity to meet with F. L. Mitchell, of Memphis, Tennessee, a Confederate veteran who had been present in Athens the day Eads was captured by Forrest’s men.  Mr. Eads gave a talk about his journey, the people that he met, and his impressions of the old battlefields at a Grand Army of the Republic meeting that he attended later that year.

      When one walks in tranquil Chandler Park today (hard to believe it was once the site of a thriving packing house), one can pause at another legacy that Albert Eads left for his community.  On the hundredth anniversary of the Battles of Plattsburgh and Lake Champlain, Albert Eads donated the funds to erect a monument to honor the naval commander, Thomas Macdonough, for whom the county is named, and Alexander Macomb, the commander of the American forces at Plattsburgh, for whom the city is named.  This monument will celebrate its century on the square and the battles their bi-centennial, in 2014.

     Mr. Eads always identified with the Democratic party until 1896, when he opted for the fiscally conservative business-backed William McKinley rather than for what some felt were the radical views of the then progressive William Jennings Bryan.  Mr. Eads never voiced any desire to hold a political office.  In religion he was a member of the Presbyterian Church.  He was a very active Mason, serving as the Master of the Blue Lodge for 11 years and achieving the 32nd degree.  He was also a member of the Mystic Shriners of Chicago (Medinah Temple) and of the MacDonough County Post of the Grand Army of the Republic and the Loyal Legion.  His life was one that included many instances of service to his community.

     Albert Eads died on May 9th, 1922, 60 years to the day after he first faced enemy fire during a small skirmish with the rebels outside of Farmington, Mississippi.  His death was sudden, but his constitution had been weakened by a fall that fractured his hip about 3 ½ months earlier.  For those of you who might wish to make a pilgrimage to the old warrior’s grave, he is buried in Macomb’s Oakwood Cemetery.  The tall grey granite monument that dwarfs his little GAR stone is a tribute to both the Eads family and the Tinsley family that he married into.  Both families left a rich legacy of accomplishment in their wake and deserve to be remembered.

Bibliography

Here to Stay, Reflections on the Dead in a Small-Town Cemetery              John E. Hallwas

1904 Civil War Account by Albert Eads                           Western Illinois University Library Archives

May 10th1922 Macomb Journal                                        Albert Eads Obituary

Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois & McDonough County 1907         Bateman and Shelby

1895 McDonough County History

The Campaigns of Lt. Genl. Nathan B. Forrest & Forrest’s Cavalry           Jordan and Pryor

http;//www.51illinois.org/eads.html

Civil War Muster and Descriptive Rolls Database

The Knox County Republican, November 30th, 1864

Macomb, a Pictorial History                               John E. Hallwas

Letter of Luther Bradley, January 2nd, 1863

Orders of the Rebellion: The Stone’s River Campaign

I also have to acknowledge a debt, and thank very much Kathy Nichols from the Western Illinois University Library, who was very gracious, diligent and enthusiastic about sending me material she thought might be useful.  She seemed to embrace the subject as her own, and her assistance was much appreciated.  Also to the George Hartmann of the WIU Visual production Center who provided me with an excellent picture of Mr. Eads to use with the article.

    

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