Tag Archives: Franklin’s Charge

Franklin community recovers more battlefield land

Just two short years after reclaiming pristine battlefield property on the former Carter grounds, near the Cotton Gin (i.e., the Holt House property), Franklin’s Charge and the Civil War Preservation Trust have combined again to recover additional property right adjacent to the Holt property: it’s called the Fudge House and it currently sits on 111 Cleburne St in Franklin, right behind Dominoe’s Pizza. The property is costing $199,000. The house was built in the 1940s.

Long-terms plans by the preservation community is to move the Holt House and Fudge House so that the land can be restored to it’s battlefield look.  Preservationists also hope to eventually reclaim the land that is currently being used by Dominoes and a small strip retail establishment.

The Federal line went right through the back yard of the Fudge property. The 65th Indiana – Casement’s brigade – took the defensive position here, using repeating rifles, and a portion of the 6th Ohio battery also was placed on this piece of battlefield.

Read more:

  • The 2008 acquisition of the Holt Property
  • Previous posts on the blog related to Franklin’s Charge
  • To donate to this project see the Franklin’s Charge web site
  • Fudge House Property photo gallery

The image below shows the broader battlefield layout with key modern-day buildings and homes.  In the lower right corner you can see the designation Cotton Gin location.  There are three structures in the image to the right of that.  The first structure is the newly acquired Fudge House.

Franklin (TN) community becoming national model for battlefield preservation

Released April 14th, 12:30 p.m., CST.

The Franklin (TN) Civil War preservation community continues to have much to celebrate when it comes to reclaiming hallowed ground, land that played a crucial role during the American Civil War (1861-1865) . In 2007, in partnership with the Civil War Preservation Trust (CWPT), a small portion (i.e.,  one-half acre) of the original Carter family garden was purchased for future posterity and remembrance of the horrific action that took place just 50 feet south of the present Carter House grounds. The half acre of land cost $210,000.00. The Battle of Franklin Trust, which stewards the Carter House grounds property, is hosting a dedication ceremony this Saturday at the site.

Carter garden section of the Battle of Franklin

Preservationist and author Robert Hicks said, “With the creation of the Battle of Franklin Trust and all of it’s plans for the future and with the ongoing work of Franklin’s Charge, as it moves forward to reclaim the battlefield around the cotton gin, reconstruct the gin and the historic trench line, Franklin may prove itself the national model for battlefield preservation it’s often touted to be.”

The Federal or Union defensive line (in discussion here) lay basically across an East-West diagonal line on the western side of Columbia Pike, just 50-60 feet in front of the present day Carter grounds.  That line was an entrenchment that was dug by Union soldiers probably in the early morning hours of November 30th, 1864. The Carter family had a small family vegetable garden that is believed to have originally been a two acre parcel of land, about 50 feet south west of where the slave cabin is presently located.

Location of Carter garden in green box

Many Union soldiers’ letters and diaries record men having spent several hours the morning of the 30th hastily and hurriedly digging trench works along this line.  This defensive line, also known as earthworks, or breastworks, was a significant reason why the Union side at Franklin saw modest casualties-killed (about 150), while the Confederates suffered a staggering amount, (around 1,700), according to Fred Prouty. Historian Eric Jacobson says those numbers are probably even too low.  He believes there were probably 300 Federal killed at Franklin.

During the excavation on the original Carter family garden site, the team also unearthed partial human remains, probably from a Civil War soldier, and other related military items.  Archaeologist Larry McKee has been working on the project and is expected to release his report in a few weeks. Robert Hicks of Franklin’s Charge said, “The fact that human remains were found there simply reminds all of us how hallowed the battlefield — all the battlefield at Franklin — is.”

Carter house grounds, garden was left (west) of the man standing

An army that fought behind defensive earthworks had a distinct advantage against assaulting troops, especially if the defending army also had artillery support. The Union armies at the Battle of Franklin had the advantage of both. Thus, as Jacobson says (p. 374 below), the ” . . . cards were stacked against them [the Rebels] almost from the start”.

I own a letter from a Union soldier who fought at Franklin for the 63rd Indiana (on the far eastern Union flank) named Addison Lee Ewing. His first letter after Franklin states the following:

“There is no quicker way of suffering this war than by having Rebs charge our works when they invariably get whipped.”

Ewing said it well, the Confederates at Franklin “got whipped”, and the biggest reason was because of the defensive earthworks.

Casting the larger significance of the Carter garden section of the battlefield, historian Eric Jacobson captures it best:

“The significance of the western edge of the Carter garden cannot be overstated. Around 4:30 p.m. on November 30, 1864, elements of Gen. John Brown’s Confederate Division ripped through the main Federal line of defense west of Columbia Pike. Among the units forced to withdraw was the 72nd Illinois Infantry, which held the section of the line which cuts through the garden property. The Illinois troops fell back to a reserve line held by the 44th Missouri Infantry. Only a firm stand by the Missourians prevented Brown’s troops from collapsing more of the Federal defensive position. The garden property was enveloped by a hail of relentless fire for hours and three separate charges made by Federal troops to retake the main line were unsuccessful. The Confederates held the outside of the main line until they started to withdraw around 9 p.m.”

Hoosier Lee Ewing paints the picture in vivid language that only a first-hand participant could have described that day:

“Colonels and Generals rode right up to our faces bringing their men in fine style but “blue coats” wouldn’t budge back one inch and there fell victims to their own mad actions. A person could walk over acres of dead  . . . stepping on one dead body to another. It was a terrible slaughter. ”
– Lee Ewing, 63rd Indiana, December 5th, 1864 letter

The Tennessee Wars Commission provided the grant to Franklin’s Charge for the excavation of the Carter garden area. An archaeological team led by Larry McKee – with TRC Garrow Associates Inc. –  found material evidence of that awful day, unearthed just several inches below the surface in the present-day Carter garden. Jacobson says that the team “excavated about 2/3rds of the Federal line that runs diagonally across the property”. They dug down roughly 20 inches and discovered the material evidence including: lots of bullets (Spencers), some fired and some dropped; ram rods, a bayonet, evidence of a fire pot, and human remains.

Among the human remains was “a piece of a skull, a finger, part of an ankle, and portion of femur-leg bone”, according to Fred Prouty.  It would be impossible to know for sure if the human remains were Confederate or Union. However, we do know that it would have been Federal soldiers who would have dug the earthworks and originally manned them.

They dug down from the surface about 18-24 inches and then piled the dirt up in front of the trench, on the south side of the trench.  Soldiers would have then placed head logs, branches, and anything they else they could have found around them (including portions of Carter outbuildings, barns, etc,) on the top of the piled dirt in front. In all, the earthworks would have been roughly five to six feet high, thus giving the Federals a tremendous advantage of protection against the assaulting Confederate troops.

View probably just 20 feet northeast of the original Carter garden location.

The Federals also had the advantage of artillery placed on the line as well as about 50 yards behind the line. As the approaching Rebels came upon the earthworks they faced a terrible blaze of fire from the Federals in this section, some of whom apparently even had Spencer rifles. A Spencer was a ‘repeating rifle’, capable of firing seven .52 cartridges in less than 10 seconds, compared to the standard Enfield rifle that could yield up to three discharges in one minute.

The discovery of the Spencer bullets is interesting as historian Eric Jacobson pointed out. The Illinois troops in that position did not have Spencer rifles. So where did they likely come from?  Jacobson thinks they came from the 28th Kentucky Infantry (U.S.) who was posted a mile out front in Wagner’s brigade (U.S.), before the assault started. Wagner’s entire line made for a hasty retreat immediately upon the start of Hood’s charge and skeedaddled back behind the Union line. As the retreating Union soldiers came flying up and over the entrenchments on the Carter garden they no doubt dropped some Spencer bullets, and many also joined the Illinoisians on the line, discharging their rifles against the coming Rebel onslaught.

https://i0.wp.com/www.packhorsefordrelics.com/B81A.jpg

Spencer bullets

Three weeks after the battle of Franklin, Lee Ewing (63rd Indiana Infantry U.S.) came back through Franklin on the 20th of December, chasing after Hood’s defeated Army of Tennessee retreating to Alabama from Nashville. Ewing may have been standing right near the Carter gardens when he wrote this:

“. . . we was at Franklin where there are hundreds of new made graves filled by the Enemy. I went into the old breastworks where we lay and all over the front of our Brigade which is pretty well dotted over with rebble graves . . . There are dead horses laying around. Some of them almost up over our old works.”
– Lee Ewing, 63rd Indiana, December 22nd, 1864 letter

The Battle of Franklin Trust will host a ceremony and dedication this Saturday, April 17th, to formally open the recaptured tract of land that served as the garden for the Carter family. The public is invited to attend this free event which will be held from 1:00 p.m. – 2:00 p.m.

The Franklin community’s preservation efforts are led and championed by many people, many behind the scenes, and from all over the nation. Robert Hicks said:

Truth is, this hallowed ground — the battlefield at Franklin, like the history of the battle, itself, is our nation’s patrimony. The reclamation of the back portion of the Carter Garden Plot could never have been possible without the passionate work of Thomas Cartwright, the CWPT and a host of individual donors, nation-wide. While it was supported by the many individual preservation organizations in Franklin that make up Franklin’s Charge, along with the collective support from Franklin’s Charge, itself, as we dedicate the garden plot, we are remind, once again that this was a national campaign and its success rests firmly on the shoulders of men and women across the nation.

The excavated Federal line is covered with sand.

Sources:

  1. Eric Jacobson, Battle of Franklin Trust historian and Director of Operations
    Phone interview 4/13/10; email correspondence; and personal conversations.
    Also see Jacobson’s For Cause and For Country, 2006 (Hb): pp. 373-74.
  2. Fred Prouty, Director of Programs for the TN Wars Commission.
    4/12/10 FCWRT, and phone interview 4/13/10
  3. Robert Hicks, Franklin’s Charge, email interview 4/13/10
  4. Kraig McNutt Civil War Collection, letter(s) from A. Lee Ewing, 63rd Indiana.

For more information:

  1. Flickr photo gallery of the Carter garden section
  2. YouTube gallery of videos of the Carter garden section

Franklin’s Charge wants to rebuild the Carter Cotton gin, looking to build on current momentum in Franklin

The Tennessean reported today that Franklin’s Charge hopes to buy more property at the corner of Columbia Ave and Cleburne St (across from the Cleburne Park) where a Dominoe’s Pizza and Four Star Market is currently.

The land purchase would give Franklin’s Charge a large enough tract of green space to rebuild the Carter Cotton Gin on virtually the exact same spot it originally stood. Some of the fiercest action during the Battle of Franklin took place around the Cotton Gin.

bilde by you.

This map shows the location of the strip mall and the Dominoe’s Pizza. Franklin’s Charge recently secured the financing to buy the Holt Property as well

Franklin’s Charge symposium this June 18-20th

The 2009 version of Franklin’s Charge will take place June 18-20th. This year’s theme is “Franklin to Nashville: The last days of the Army of Tennessee“.

I blogged on last year’s event. Check out this link for that content.

Carnton plantation by kwmcnutt.

The FC web site says:

Symposium scholarships are available for teachers and students. Contact us to learn more by calling 615-595-0636.

June 18, 2009, will feature a special teacher’s workshop.

June 19 will focus on the Battle of Franklin and will follow the footsteps of Gen. John Bell Hood. Attendees will visit the Carter House, Carnton Plantation, Winstead Hill and other significant Civil War sites.

June 20 will examine the Battle of Nashville. Attendees will visit Ft. Negley, the Capitol (Union Ft. Johnson) and other important historic venues, culminating a dinner at Glen Leven.