Robert Edward Lee, gentleman,
scholar, gallant soldier, great general, and true Christian was born in
Westmoreland county, Va., on January 18,1807.
He was the youngest son
of General Henry Lee,
who was familiary known
us "Light Horse Harry"
in the traditions
of the war of the Revolution, and
who possessed the marked
confidence and personal regard of General Washington.
R.E.Lee entered the United
States Military`
Academy in the summer
of 1825, after which
my acquaintance with him
commenced. He was,
as I remember him,
larger and looked more
mature than the average
"pleb," but less so than Mason, who was destined to be the head of his
class. His soldierly bearing and excellent conduct caused him in
due sucession to rise through the several grades and to be the adjutant
of the Corps of Cadets when he graduated. It is stated that he had
not then a "demerit" mark standing against him, which is quite creditable
if all "reports" against him had been cancelled because they were not for
wanton or intentional delinquency.
Though numerically rated
second in his class his
proficiency was such that
he was assigned to the
engineer corps, which for
many years he adorned
both as a military and
civil engineer.
He was of the highest type
of manly beauty, yet
seemingly unconscious of
it, and so respectful
and unassuming as
to make him a general favorite
before his great
powers had an opportunity for manifestation.
His mind led him to analytic,
rather than peceptive
methods of obtaining
results.
From the date of his graduation
in 1829 until
1846 he was engaged in
various professional duties, and had by regular promotion attained
to the grade of captain of engineers. As such he was assigned to duty with
the command of Brigadier-General Wool in the campaign to Chihuahua.
Thence the command proceeded to make a junction with General Z.Taylor in
front of Buena Vista. Here Captain Lee was employed in the
construction of the defensive work, when
General Scott came, armed
with discretionary
orders, and took Lee for
service in the column
which Scott was to
command, with much else
that General Taylor
could ill afford to spare.
Subsequent events proved
that the loss to
General Taylor's army was
more than compenated
by the gain to the
general cause.
Avoiding any encroachment
upon the domain of history in entering upon a description of
campaigns and battles,
I cannot forbear from
referring to a particular
instance of Lee's gallantry
and devotion to duty.
Before the battle of Contrerars General Scott's troops to communicate
instructins to those on the other side of this barrier of rocks and lava.
General Scott says in his report that he had sent seven officeres since
about sundown to communicate instructions; they had
all returned without getting
through, "but the gallant and indefatigable Captain Lee, of the engineers,
who has been constantly with the operating forces, is just in from Shields,
Smith, Cadwallader, " etc. Subsequently General Scott, while giving testimony
before a court of inquiry, said: "Captain Lee, engineers, came to
me from a Contreras with a message from Brigadier-
General Smith, I think,
about the same time (midnight), he having passed over the difficult ground
by daylight found it just possible to return to St. Augustine in the
dark - the greatest feat of physical and moral courage performed
by any individual, in my knowledge, in the pending campaign."
This field of Pedregal as
described was impassible
on horseback, and
crossed with much difficulty by
infantry in daylight. After
consultation with the generals near to Contreras, it being decided
that
an attack must be
made at daylight, Captain Lee, through storm and darkness, undertook
- on foot and alone - to recross the Pedegral, so as to give General Scott
the notice which would insure the co-operation of his divided forces in
the morning's attack. This feat was well entitled to the
commendation that General
Scott bestowed upon it; but the highest praise belongs to Lee's inciting
and sustaining motive - duty. To bear to the commanding general the
needful information he dared and suffered for that which is the crowning
glory of man - he offered himself for the welfare of others.
He went to Mexico with the
rank of captain of engineers, and by gallantry and meritorious conduct
rose to the rank of colonel in the army, commission by brevet. After his
return he resumed his duties as an officer of the engineer corps.
While employed in the construction
of Fort Carroll, near Baltimore,an event occurred which illustrates his
nice sentiment of honor. Some members of the Cuban Junta called upon him
and offered him the command of an expedition to overthrow the Spanish control
of the island. A very large sum of money was to be paid immediately
upon his acceptance of their proposition, and a large sum thenceforward
was to be paid monthly. Lee came to Washington to converse
with me upon the subject. After a brief discussion of the military problem,
he said it was not that he had come to consult me about - the question
he was considering was whether while an officer in the United States army,
and because of any reputation he might have acquired as such, he
could accept a proposition for foreign service against a government with
which the United States were at peace. The conclusion was his decision
to decline any further correspondence
with the Junta.
In 1852 Colonel Lee was
made superintendent of the United States Military Academy - a position
for which he seemed to
be peculiarly fitted as
well by his attainments
as by his fondness for
young people, his fine
personal appearance, and impressive manners. When a year or two
thereafter I visited the
academy, and was
surprised to see
so many gray hairs on his head,
he confessed that the cadets
did exceedingly worry him, and then it was perceptible that his sympathy
with young people was rather an impediment
than a qualification for
the superintendency.
In 1855 four new regiments
were added to the army - two of cavalry and two of infantry. Captain Lee,
of the engineers,
brevet-colonel of the army, was offered the position of lieutenant-colonel
of the Second regiment of cavalry, which he accepted.
He was a bold, graceful
horseman, and the son of Light-Horse Harry now seemed to be in his proper
element; but the chief of engineers endeavored to persuade him that it
was a descent to go from the engineer corps into the cavalry.
Soon after the regiment was organized and assigned to duty in Texas, the
colonel Albert Sidney Johnston, was selected to command an expedition to
Utah, and the command of the regiment and the protection
of the frontier of Texas
against Indian marauders devolved upon Colonel Lee. There,
as in every position he had occupied, diligence, sound judgment,
and soldierly endowment made his service successful. In 1859, being on
leave of absence in Virginia, he was made available for the suppression
of the John Brown raid. As soon as relieved from that special assignment
he returned to his command in Texas, and on April 25,1861, resigned from
the United States army.
Then was his devotion to
principle subjected to a crucial test, the severity of which can
only be
fully realized by a "West-Pointer"
whose life has been spent in the army. That it was to sever the
friendship of youth, to
break up the habits of intercourse, of manners, and of thought, others
many comprehend and estimate; but the which made the change most painful
to Lee, he has partially expressed in the letters he wrote at the time
to his beloved sister and and to his venerated
friend and commander, General
Winfield Scott.
Partizan malignants have
not failed to misrepresent the conduct of Lee, even to the extent of charging
him with treason and desertion; and unable to appreciate his sacrifice
to the allegiance due to Virginia, they have blindly ascribed his action
to selfish ambition. It has been erroneously asserted that he was educated
at the expense of the General Government, and an attempt has been made
then to deduce a special obligation to adhere to it.
The cadets of the United
States Military Academy are approtioned among the States in proportion
to the number of representatives
they severally have in the Congress; that is, one for each congressional
district, with ten additional for the country at large. The annual
appropriations for the of the army and navy include the commissioned, warrant,
and non-commissioned officers, privates, seamen, etc.,etc. The cadets and
middshipmen are warrant officers, and while at the academies are receiving
elementary instruction in and for the public service. At whose expense
are they taught and supported? Surely at that of the people, they who pay
the taxes and imposts to supply the Treasury with means to meet appropriations
as well to pay generals and admirals as cadets and midshipmen. The
cadet's obligation for his place and support was to the State, by virtue
of whose distributive share he was appointed, and whose contributions supplied
the United States Treasury; through the State, as a member of the
Union, allegiance was due to it, and most usefully and nobly did
Lee pay the debt both at home and abroad.
No proposition could be
more absurd than that he was prompted by selfish ambition to join
in the Confederacy. With a small part of his knowledge of the relative
amount of material of war possessed by the North and South, any one must
have seen that the chances of war were against us; but if thrice-armed
Justice should enable the South to maintain her independence, as our fathers
had done, notwithstanding the unequal contest, what selfish advantage
could it bring Lee? If, as some among us yet expected, many hoped,
and all wished, there should be a peaceful separation, he would have left
behind him all he had gained by long and brilliant service, and could not
leave in our small army greater rank than was proffered to him in the larger
one he had left. If active hostilities were prosecuted, his large property
would be so exposed as to incur serious injury if not destruction. His
mother, Virginia, had revoked the grants she had voluntarily made to the
Federal Government,
and asserted the State
sovereignty and independence she had won from the other-country by
the war of the Revolution; and thus, it was regarded, the allegiance
of her sons wholly her own.
Above the voice of his friends
at Washington,
advising and entreating
him to stay with them, rose the cry of Virginia calling her sons to defend
her against threatened invasion. Lee heeded this cry only - alone
he rode forth, as he had crossed the Pedregal, his guiding star being duty,
and offered his sword to Virginia. His offer was ccepted, and he was appointed
to the chief command of the forces of the State. Though his reception was
most flattering, and the confidence manifested in him unlimited, his conduct
was conspicuous for the modesty and moderation which had always been
characteristic of him.
The South had been involved
in war without having made due preparations for it. She was without
a navy, without even a merchant marine commensurate with her wants during
peace; without arsenals, armories, founderies, manufactories, or stores
on hand to supply those wants. Lee exerted himself to the utmost to raise
and organize troops in Virginia, and when the State joined the Confederacy
he was invited to come to Montgomery and explain the condition of
his command; but his engagements were so pressing that he sent his second
officer, General J.E.Johnston, to furnish the desired information.
When the capital of the
Confederacy was removed from Montgomery to Richmond, Lee, under the orders
of the President, was charged with the general direction of army affairs.
In this position the same pleasant relations which had always existed between
them continued, and Lee's indefatigable attention to the details of the
various commands was of
much benefit to the public service. In the meantime disasters,
confusion, and disagreement among the commands in western Virginia made
it necessary to send there an officer of higher rank than any then on duty
in that section. The service was disagreeable, toilsome, and in no
wise promising to give distinction to a commander. Passing by all reference
to others, suffice it to say that at last Lee was asked to go, and, not
counting the cost, he unhesitatingly prepared to start. By concentraing
the troops, and by a judicious selection of the position he
compelled the enemy finally
to retreat.
There is an incident in
this campaign which has never been reported, save as it was orally given
to me by General Lee, with a request that I should take no official notice
of it. A strong division of the enemy was reported to be encamped
in a valley, which one of the colonels said he had found by
reconnoissance could
readily be approached on one side, and he proposed with his regiment to
surprise and attack. General Lee accepted his proposition, but told
him that he himself would,
in the meantime, with several
regiments, ascend the mountain that overlooked the valley on the
other side, and at dawn
of day, on a morning
fixed, the Colonel was
to make his assault. His firing was to be the signal for a
joint attack from three directions. During the night Lee made
a toilsome ascent of the mountain and was in position at the time agreed
upon. The valley was covered by a dense fog. Not hearing the signal,
he went by a winding breakfast and otherwise so engged as to indicate
that they were entirely ignorant of any danger. Lee returned to 'his own
command, told them what he had seen, and though the expected signal had
not been given by which
the attacking regiment
and another detachment were to engage in the assault, he proposed that
the regiments then with him should surprise the camp, which he believed,
under the circumstances, might successfully be done. The colonels went
to consult their men, and returned to inform that they were so cold, wet,
and hungry, as to be unfit for the enterprise. The fog was then lifting,
and it was necessary to attack immediately or to withdraw before being
discovered by the much larger force
in the valley. Lee therefore
withdrew his small command and safely conducted them to his encampment.
The colonel who was to give
the signal for the
joint attack, misapprehending
the purpose, reported that when he arrived upon the ground
he found the encampment
protected by a heavy
abattis, which prevented
him from making a sudden charge, as he had expected, not understanding
that if he had fired his guns at any distance the would have secure the
joint attack
of the other detachments,
and probably brought about an entire victory. Lee generously forebore
to exonerate himself when
the newspapers in Richmond criticised him severely, one denying
him any other consideration
except that which
he enjoyed as "the President's
pet."
It was an embarrassment
to the Executive to be deprived of the advice of General Lee, but it was
deemed necessary again to detach him to look after affairs on the coast
of Carolina and Georgia, and
so violent had been the
unmerited attacks upon him by the Richmond press that it was thought
proper to give him
a letter to the Governor of South Carolina, stating what manner of
man had been sent to him. There his skill as an engineer
was manifested in the defencese
he constructed and devised. On his return to Richmond he
resumed his functions of
general supervisor of military affairs.
In the spring of 1862 Bishop
Meade by dangerously ill. This venerable ecclesiastic had taught General
Lee his catechism when a boy, and when he was announced to the Bishop
the latter asked to have him shown in immediately. He answered Lee's inquiry
as to how he lft by saying: "Nearly gone,
but I wished to see you
once more," and then in a feeble voice added: "God bless you, Robert,and
fit you for your
high and responsible duties!"
The great soldier stood
reverently by the bed of
his early preceptor in
Christianity, but the saintly patriot saw beyond the hero the pious
boy to whom he had taught the catechism; first he gave his dying blessing
to Robert, and then, struggling against exhaustion, invoked Heaven's guidance
for the General.
After the battle of Seven
Pines Lee was assigned
to the command to
the army of Virginia. Thus far his duties had been of a kind to confer
a great benefit, but to be unseen and unappreciated by
the public. Now he had
an opportunity for the employment of his remarkable power of generalization
while attending to the minutest details. The public saw manifestation of
the first, but could not estimate the extent to which the great results
achieved were due to the exact order, systematic economy, and regularity
begotten of
his personal attention
to the proper adjustment of even the smallest part of that mighty machine,
a well-organized, disciplined army. His early instructor, in a published
letter, seemed to regard to boy's labor of finishing a drawing on
a slate as an excess of care. Was it so? No doubt, so far as
the particular task was
concerned; but this
seedling is to be judged
by the fruit the tree bore.
That little drawing on
the slate was the prototype of the exact investigation which crowned with
success his labors as a civil and military engineer as well as a
commander of armies. May it not
have been, not only by
endowment also from these early efforts that his mind became so rounded,
systematic, and complete
that his notes written
on the of expression found
in those written in the quiet of his tent. These incidents an example
for
the emulation of youths
whose admiration of Lee may induce them to follow the toilsome methods
by which he attained to true greatness and enduring fame.
In the early days of June,
1862, General McClellan
treatened the capital Richmond,
which an army
numerically much superior
to that to the command of which Lee had been assigned. A day or two after
he had joined the army I was riding to the front, and saw a number
of horses hitched in front of a house, and among them recognized
General Lee's. Upon dismounting and going in, I found some general officers
engaged in consultation with him as to how McClellan's advance could be
checked, and one of them commenced to explain the disparity of force and
with pencil and paper to show how the enemy could throw out his approach
irresistible. "Stop, stop," said Lee, "if you go to ciphering we are whipped
beforehand." He ordered the construction of earthworks, put guns in a position
for a defensive line on the south side of the Chickahominy, and then commenced
the strategic movement which was the inception of the seven days' battles,
ending in uncovering the capital and driving the enemy to the cover of
his gunboats in the James river.
There was never a greater
mistake than that which was atributed to General Lee what General Charles
Lee, in his reply to General Washington, called the "rascally virtue."
I haved had occasion to remonstrate with General Lee for exposing himself,
as I thought, unnecessarily in reconnoissance,
but he justified himself
by saying he "could not understand things so well unless he saw them."
In the excitement of battle
his natural combativeness would sometimes overcome his
habitual self-control;
thus it twice occurred in the campaing against Grant that the men seized
his bridle to restrain him from his purpose to lead
them in a charge.
He was always careful not
to wound the sensibilities of any one, and sometimes with an exterior jest
or compliment, would give what, if properly appreciated, was instruction
for the better performance of some duty: for example, if he
thought a general officer was not visiting his command as early and as
often as was desirable,
he might admire his horse
and suggest that the
animal would be improved
by more exercise.
He was not of the grave,
formal nature that he seemed to some who only knew him when sas realities
cast dark shadows upon him; but even then the humor natural to him would
occasionally break out. For instance, General Lee called at my office for
a ride to the defence of Richmond, then
under construction. He
was mounted on a stallion which some kind friend had recently sent him.
As
I mounted my horse, his
was restive and kicked at mine. We rode on quietly together, though Lee
was watchful to keep his horse in order. Passing by an encampment,
we saw near a tent two stallions tied
at a safe distance from
one another. "There," said he, "is a man worse off than I am." When
asked
to explain, he said:
"Don't you see, he has two
stallions? I have but one."
His habits had always been
rigidly temperate, and his fare in camp was of the simplest. I remember
on one battle-field riding
past where he and his staff were taking their luncheon. He invited me
to share it, and when I
dismounted for the purpose, it proved to have consisted only of bacon
and corn-bread. The bacon had all been eaten, and ther were only some crusts
of corn-bread left, which, however,having been saturated with the bacon
gravy, were in those hard times altogether acceptable, as General Lee was
assured, in order
to silence his regrets.
While he was on duty in
South Carolina and Georgia, Lee's youngest son, Robert, then a mere
boy, left school and came down to Richmond, announcing his purpose to go
into the army. His older brother, Custis, was a member of my staff,
and after a conference we agreed that it was useless to send the
boy back to school, and that
he probably would not wait
in Richmond for the return of his father, so we selected a battery, which
had been organized in Richmond, and sent Robert to join it. General
Lee told me that at the battle
of Sharpsburg this battery
suffered so much that
it had to be withdrawn
for repairs and some fresh horses, but as he had no troops even to
form a reserve, as soon as the battery could be made useful it was ordered
forward. He said that as it passed him, a boy, mounted as a driver
of one of the guns, much stained with powder, said: "Are you going to put
us in again, General?" After replying to him in the affirmative he was
struck by the voice of the boy, and asked him "Whose son are you?" To which
he answered, "I am Robbie," whereupon his father said, "God bless you,
my son, you must go in."
When General Lee was in
camp near Richmond his
friends frequently
sent him something to improve
his mess-table. A lady,
noted for the very good
bread she made, had frequently
favored him with
some. One day, as we were
riding through the street, she was course, returned. After we had
passed he asked me who she was. I told him she was the lady who sent him
such good bread. He was very sorry he had not known it, but to go back
would prove that he had not recognized her as he should have done.
His habitual avoidance of any seeming harshness, which caused him sometimes,
instead of giving a command to make a suggestion, was probably a defect.
I believe that he had in this manner indicated that suppliese were
to be deposited for him at Amelia Courthouse, but
the testimony of
General Breckenridge, Secretary of War, of General St.John, Commissary
General, and Lewis Harvie, President of the Richmond and Danville Railroad,
conclusively proves that no such requisition was made upon either of the
persons who should have received it; and, further, that there were supplies
both at Danville, and Richmond which could have been sent to Amelia
Courthouse
if information had been
received that they were wanted there.
Much has been written in
regard to the failure to occupy the Round Top at Gettysburg early in the
morning of the second day's battle, to which failure the best judgment
attributes our want of entire success in that battle. Whether this was
due to the order not being
sufficiently positive or not, I will leave to the historians who
are
discussing that important
event. I have said that Lee's natural temper was combative, and to
this may be ascribed his attack on the third day at Gettysburg, when the
opportunity had not been seized which his genius saw was the gate to victory.
It was this last attack to which I have thought he referred when
he said it was all his fault, thereby sparing others from whatever
blame was due for what had previously occurred.
After the close of the war,
while I was in prison
and Lee was on parole,
we were both indicted on
a charge of treason; but,
in hot haste to get in
their work, the indictment
was drawn with the
fatal omission of an overt
act. General Grant interposed in the case of General Lee, on the ground
that he had taken his parole and that he
was, therefore, not subject
to arrest. Another
grand jury was summoned
and a bill was presented against me alone and amended by inserting specifications
of overt acts. General Lee was summoned as a witness before that grand
jury, the object being to prove by him that I was responsible for certain
things done by him during the war. I was in Richmond, having been
released by virtue of the writ of habeas corpus General lee met me very
soon after having given his testimony before the grand jury, and told me
that to the inquiry whether he had not, in the specified cases, acted
under my orders, he said that he had always consulted me when he had the
opportunity, both on the field and elsewhere; that after discussion, if
not before, we had always agreed, and therefore he had done
with my consent and approval
only what he might have done if he had not consulted me, and that
he accepted the full responsibility for his acts. He said he had endeavored
to present the matter as distinctly as he could, and looked up to see what
effect he was producing upon the grand jury. Immediately before him
sat a big black negro, whose head had fallen back on the rail of
the bench he sat on; his mouth was wide open, and he was fast asleep.
General Lee pleasantly added that, if he had any vanity as an orator,
it would have received a rude check.
The evident purpose was
to offer to Lee a chance
to escape by transferring
to me the responsibility for overt acts. No tonly to repel the suggestion,
but
unequivocally to
avow his individual responsibility,
with all that, under existing
circumstances, was implied in this, was the highest reach of moral
courage and gentlemanly pride. Those circumstances were excepionally perilous
to him. He had been indicted for treason; the United
States President had vindictively
threatened to make treason odious; the dregs of society had
been thrown to the surface;
judicial seats were held by political adventures; the United States judge
of the Virginia district
had answered to a committee of Congress that he could pack a jury
so as to convict Davis or Lee - and it was under such surroundings that
he met the grand jury and testified as stated above. Arbitrary power might
pervert justice and trample on right, but could not turn the knightly Lee
from the path of honor and truth.
Descended from a long line
of illustrious warriors
and statesmen, Robert Edward
Lee added new
glory to the name he bore,
and, whether measured by a martial or an intellectual standard, will compare
favorably with those whose reputation
it devolved upon him to
sustain and emulate.
by JEFFERSON DAVIS.
From the Southern Historical
Society Papers
Volume XVII- Jan-Dec, 1889
Pages 362-372.
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