was on duty at West Point. She was a native
of New London, Connecticut, and very handsome.
She began her interview by presenting me a letter
from her husband, who then commanded a division of
the Georgia militia in the rebel army, which had just
quitted Savannah, which letter began, “DEAR SHERMAN:
The fortunes of war, etc-., compel me to leave my wife
in Savannah, and I beg for her your courteous protection,”
etc.,
etc. I inquired where she lived,
and if anybody was troubling her. She said she
was boarding with a lady whose husband had, in like
manner with her own, gone off with Hardee’s
army; that a part of the house had been taken for
the use of Major-General Ward, of Kentucky; that her
landlady was approaching her confinement, and was nervous
at the noise which the younger staff-officers made
at night;
etc. I explained to her that
I could give but little personal attention to such
matters, and referred her to General Slocum, whose
troops occupied the city. I afterward visited
her house, and saw, personally, that she had no reason
to complain. Shortly afterward Mr. Hardee, a
merchant of Savannah, came to me and presented a letter
from his brother, the general, to the same effect,
alleging that his brother was a civilian, had never
taken up arms, and asked of me protection for his
family, his cotton,
etc. To him I gave
the general assurance that no harm was designed to
any of the people of Savannah who would remain quiet
and peaceable, but that I could give him no guarantee
as to his cotton, for over it I had no absolute control;
and yet still later I received a note from the wife
of General A. P. Stewart (who commanded a corps in
Hood’s army), asking me to come to see her.
This I did, and found her to be a native of Cincinnati,
Ohio, wanting protection, and who was naturally anxious
about the fate of her husband, known to be with General
Hood, in Tennessee, retreating before General Thomas.
I remember that I was able to assure her that he
had not been killed or captured, up to that date,
and think that I advised her, instead of attempting
to go in pursuit of her husband, to go to Cincinnati,
to her uncle, Judge Storer, there await the issue of
events.
Before I had reached Savannah, and during our stay
there, the rebel officers and newspapers represented
the conduct of the men of our army as simply infamous;
that we respected neither age nor sex; that we burned
every thing we came across—barns, stables,
cotton-gins, and even dwelling-houses; that we ravished
the women and killed the men, and perpetrated all
manner of outrages on the inhabitants. Therefore
it struck me as strange that Generals Hardee and Smith
should commit their, families to our custody, and
even bespeak our personal care and attention.
These officers knew well that these reports were
exaggerated in the extreme, and yet tacitly assented
to these publications, to arouse the drooping energies
of the people of the South.