The Last Ninety Days of the War in North Carolina
BY
CORNELIA PHILLIPS SPENCER.
New-York:
WATCHMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY,
W. H. CHASE, PUBLISHING AGENT
1866
THE UNIVERSITY AT CHAPEL HILL — ITS EARLY HISTORY — ITS
CONTINUED GROWTH—THE ARDOR OF THE YOUNG MEN—APPLICATION FOR RELIEF FROM
CONSCRIPTION — GOVERNOR SWAIN TO PRESIDENT DAVIS — ANOTHER DRAFT ON THE BOYS — A
DOZEN BOYS IN COLLEGE WHEN SHERMAN COMES; AND THE BELLS RING ON—"COMMENCEMENT"
IN 1865—ONE GRADUATE—HE PRONOUNCES THE VALEDICTORY—CONCLUSION
CHAPTER XVIII.
As to the State University, perhaps more than a mere reference to its condition
at the close of the war may not unjustly form part of a contribution to our
State history, since its influence and reputation have been second to those of
no similar institution in the country, and its benefits have been widely
diffused through every State of the Confederacy. Its Revolutionary history is
not uninteresting in this connection. At the very time when all our State
interests lay prostrate and exhausted from the Revolutionary struggle, the very
time when a superficial observer would have thought it enough for the people to
get bread to eat and clothes to wear, our far-seeing patriots, who knew well
that without education no state can become great, and that the weaker we were
physically the more need there was for intellectual force and power to enable us
to maintain our stand among the nations—these
wise men projected and laid the foundations of a State literary institution,
which, uncontrolled and uncontaminated by party politics or religious bigotries,
should be an honor and a benefit to the commonwealth through all future
generations. General Davie may be said to have been the father of the
University, though every man of distinction in the State at that time manifested
a deep and cordial interest in its establishment.
Most of my readers are sufficiently familiar with the history of the State to be
aware that, before the Revolution, the mother country would permit no college or
university or school to be established but upon certain conditions utterly
repugnant to principles of civil and religious liberty. The charter of Queen's
College, at Charlotte, Mecklenburg county, (the college, town, and county, all
three being named in loyal compliment to his queen,) was disallowed by George
III., because other than members of the Established Church of England were
appointed among the trustees. This act of tyranny did more to arouse the
revolutionary spirit than the Stamp Act and all other causes combined. The money
that belonged to the common-school fund was squandered by the mother country in
the erection of a palace for the royal governor—the most splendid edifice of the
time on the continent. And at the close of the war for independence, so
impoverished was the country that the General Assembly could contribute nothing
toward the establishment of the University, beyond endowing it with doubtful
debts, escheats, and derelict property. So
that if aid had not been given from private sources, it would never have
struggled into existence. At the first meeting of the trustees, Colonel Benjamin
Smith, the aid-de-camp of General Washington and subsequent Governor of the
State, made a donation of twenty thousand acres of Chickasaw lands. Major
Charles Girard, who had served throughout the perils of the war, childless in
the providence of God, adopted the newly-born University, and bestowed on it
property supposed to be equal in value to forty thousand dollars. General Thomas
Person, the old chief of the Regulators, gave in cash ten hundred and
twenty-five dollars* to the completion of one of the buildings; and Girard Hall,
Person Hall, and Smith Hall, preserve in their names the grateful remembrance of
the earliest and most munificent patrons of the institution. It is a striking
evidence of the poverty of the times that the ladies of the chief city of
North-Carolina were able to present only a quadrant in token of their interest
in the new undertaking, and the ladies of Raleigh a small pair of globes.
In 1795, the first student arrived, and from that day to this the whole course
of the University has been one of great and steadily increasing reputation and
usefulness. Dr. Joseph Caldwell was president from 1796 to 1835, (with the
exception of four years, when Rev. Dr. Chapman presided,) when the Hon. David L.
Swain was appointed his successor, and he still remains at the head, the oldest
college president in the
* There was then, as now, no money in the country, and this was the largest cash
donation ever received by the University.
United States, and one of the most successful. It is a remarkable fact, and one
strongly illustrative of the conservative tone of our society, and of our
North-Carolina people in general, that for the long period of seventy years
there have been virtually but two presidents—that two of the senior professors
have remained for forty years each, one of them occupying the same chair for
that whole period. Another professor has held his chair for twenty-eight years,
another for twenty-four, another for seventeen years. I doubt if any other
college in the country can show a similar record. During the five years
immediately preceding the war, the average number of students was about four
hundred and twenty-five — a larger number than was registered at any similar
institution in the Union except Yale. The average receipts for tuition exceeded
twenty thousand dollars per annum; and it is another circumstance which probably
has no parallel in American colleges, that with a meagre endowment, the
munificent patronage of the public enabled the authorities of the institution to
make permanent improvements in the edifices and grounds, and additions to the
library and apparatus, amounting in value, as exhibited by the reports of the
trustees, to the sum of more than a hundred thousand dollars! This was effected
by skillful financiering, and by giving the faculty very moderate salaries, and
is a striking illustration at least of North-Carolina thrift and careful
management. Since 1837, moreover, the faculty have been authorized to receive
without charge for tuition or room-rent, any native of the State possessed
of the requisite endowments, natural and acquired, whose circumstances may make
such assistance necessary. About ten young men annually have availed themselves
of this privilege, and these have in numerous instances won the highest honors
of the University, and attained like distinction in the various walks of life.
Two remarkable cases of this character, presented during the discussion of the
proposition to extend temporary relief to the University, in the last General
Assembly, must be fresh in the remembrance of many of my readers. In addition to
the beneficence of this general ordinance, the two Literary Societies of the
institution have each annually defrayed the entire expenses of one or more
beneficiaries, during the time referred to, and these recipients of their bounty
have rendered service and occupy positions of eminence and usefulness which
offer the highest encouragement to perseverance in such benefactions. An account
current between the State and the University for the past quarter of a century,
will show the amount of the tuition and room-rent of those young men, added to
the benefactions of the Societies, is greatly in excess of all the direct
contributions for its support derived from the public authorities. Nay, more,
that these sums, added to the hundred thousand dollars resulting from the net
earnings of the institution, were quite equal in amount to the entire endowment
now annihilated by the repudiation of the war-debt, and the consequent
insolvency of the Bank of North-Carolina, in the stock of which more than the
entire endowment was invested.
Can any other College in the United States say as much?
At the opening of the war, the ardor with which the young men rushed into the
military service may be inferred from the fact that of the eighty members of the
Freshman class, but one remained to continue his education, and he was
incapacitated by feeble health from joining his comrades in the field. Five
members of the faculty volunteered for the war; and those who remained in their
chairs, being incapacitated by age or by their sacred profession from serving
their country otherwise than as teachers, resolved to keep the doors of the
University open as long as a dozen boys could be found amid the din of arms who
might be able to profit by it. When conscription was resorted to, to fill up the
depleted armies of the South, the trustees resolved to appeal to President Davis
in behalf of the University, lest it should be entirely broken up by too rigid
an enforcement of the law. The results were an important part of our State
history during the war, and embodied facts which had a significant influence at
the close.
“Raleigh, October 8, 1863.
“At a meeting of the Board of Trustees of the University this day, present: His
Excellency Governor Vance, President; W. A. Graham, Jonathan Worth, D. M.
Barringer, P. H. Winston, Thomas Ruffin, J. H. Bryan, K. P. Battle, Charles
Manly.
“Resolved, That the President of the University be authorized to correspond with
the President of the
Confederate States, asking a suspension of any order or regulation which may
have been issued for the conscription of students of the University, until the
end of the present session, and also with a view to a general examption of young
men advanced in liberal studies, until they shall complete their college course.
“That the President of the University open correspondence with the heads of
other literary institutions of the Confederacy, proposing the adoption of a
general regulation, exempting for a limited time from military service the
members of the two higher classes of our colleges, to enable them to attain the
degree of Bachelor of Arts.
“Charles Manly, Secretary.”
In accordance with this resolution, Governor Swain addressed the following
letter to President Davis, which will be read with interest, as presenting some
very remarkable statements in regard to the University and the village of Chapel
Hill:
“University of North-Carolina,
Chapel Hill, Oct. 15, 1863.
“To His Excellency, Jefferson Davis, President of the Confederate States:
“Sir: The accompanying resolutions, adopted by the trustees of this institution
at their meeting in Raleigh, on the eighth instant, make it my duty to open a
correspondence with you on the subject to which they relate.
“A simple statement of the facts, which seem to me to be pertinent, without any
attempt to illustrate and
enforce them by argument, will, I suppose, sufficiently accomplish the purposes
of the trustees.
“At the close of the collegiate year 1859-60, (June seventh, 1860,) the whole
number of students on our catalogue was four hundred and thirty. Of these, two
hundred and forty-five were from North-Carolina, twenty-nine from Tennessee,
twenty-eight from Louisiana, twenty-eight from Mississippi, twenty-six from
Alabama, twenty-four from South-Carolina, seventeen from Texas, fourteen from
Georgia, five from Virginia, four from Florida, two from Arkansas, two from
Kentucky, two from Missouri, two from California, one from Iowa, one from
New-Mexico, one from Ohio. They were distributed in the four classes as follows:
Seniors eighty-four, Juniors one hundred and two, Sophomores one hundred and
twenty-five, Freshmen eighty.
“Of the eight young men who received the first distinction in the Senior class,
four are in their graves, (soldiers’ graves,) and a fifth a wounded prisoner.
More than a seventh of these graduates are known to have fallen in battle.
“The Freshmen class of eighty members pressed into the service with such
impetuosity that but a single individual remained to graduate at the last
commencement; and he in the intervening time had entered the army, been
discharged on account of impaired health, and was permitted by special favor to
rejoin his class.
“The Faculty at that time was composed of fourteen members, no one of whom was
liable to conscription.
Five of the fourteen were permitted by the trustees to volunteer. One of these
has recently returned from long imprisonment in Ohio, with a ruined
constitution. A second is a wounded prisoner, now at Baltimore. A third fell at
Gettysburgh. The remaining two are in active field-service at present.
“The nine gentlemen who now constitute the corps of instructors are, with a
single exception, clergymen, or laymen beyond the age of conscription. No one of
them has a son of the requisite age who has not entered the service as a
volunteer. Five of the eight sons of members of the faculty are now in active
service; one fell mortally wounded at Gettysburgh, another at South-Mountain.
“The village of Chapel Hill owes its existence to the University, and is of
course materially affected by the prosperity or decline of the institution. The
young men of the village responded to the call of the country with the same
alacrity which characterized the college classes; and fifteen of them—a larger
proportion than is exhibited in any other town or village in the State—have
already fallen in battle. The departed are more numerous than the survivors; and
the melancholy fact is prominent with respect to both the village and the
University, that the most promising young men have been the earliest victims.
“Without entering into further details, permit me to assure you, as the result
of extensive and careful observation and inquiry, that I know of no similar
institution or community in the Confederacy that has rendered greater services
or endured greater losses
and privations than the University of North-Carolina, and the village of Chapel
Hill.
“The number of students at present here is sixty-three; of whom fifty-five are
from North-Carolina, four from Virginia, two from South-Carolina, and one from
Alabama; nine Seniors, thirteen Juniors, fourteen Sophomores, and twenty-seven
Freshmen.
“A rigid enforcement of the Conscription Act may take from us nine or ten young
men with physical constitutions in general better suited to the quiet pursuits
of literature and science than to military service. They can make no appreciable
addition to the strength of the army; but their withdrawal may very seriously
affect our organization, and in its ultimate effects compel us to close the
doors of the oldest University at present accessible to the students of the
Confederacy.
“It can scarcely be necessary to intimate that with a slender endowment and a
diminution of more than twenty thousand dollars in the annual receipts for
tuition, it is at present very difficult and may soon be impossible to sustain
the institution. The exemption of professors from the operation of the Conscript
Act is a sufficient indication that the annihilation of the best established
colleges in the country was not the purpose of our Congress; and I can but hope
with the eminent gentlemen who have made me their organ on this occasion, that
it will never be permitted to produce effects which I am satisfied no one would
more deeply deplore than yourself.
“I have the honor to be, with the highest consideration, your obedient servant,
D. L. Swain.”
The result of this application was that orders were issued from the Conscript
Office to grant the exemption requested. President Davis is reported to have
said in the beginning of the war in reference to the drafting of college boys,
that it should not be done; "that the seed-corn must not be ground up."
But as the exigencies of the country became more and more pressing, the wisdom
of this precept was lost sight of. In the spring of 1864, in reply to a second
application in behalf of the two lower classes, Mr. Seddon returned the
following opinion to the Conscript Bureau:
“I can not see in the grounds presented such peculiar or exceptional
circumstances as will justify departure from the rules acted on in many similar
instances. Youths under eighteen will be allowed to continue their studies.
Those over, capable of military service, will best discharge their duty and find
their highest training in defending the country in the field.
"March 10, 1864."
In compliance with this opinion, the Conscript Act was finally enforced at the
University; the classes were still further reduced by the withdrawal of such as
came within the requirements of the act, or who were determined to share at all
hazards the fate of their comrades in the army. The University, however, still
struggled on; and when General Sherman's forces entered the place, there were
some ten or twelve boys still keeping up the name of a college. The bell was
rung by one of the professors, and morning and
evening prayers attended to during the stay of the United States forces. The
students present, with two or three exceptions, were those whose homes were in
the village. The two or three who were from a distance, left on the advent of
the Federals, walking to their homes in neighboring counties, there being no
other means of locomotion in those days. But one Senior, Mr. W. C. Prout,
graduated at the ensuing commencement, having taken the whole course. There were
three others who received diplomas at the same time. For the first time in
thirty years, the President was absent from these exercises, having been
summoned by President Johnson to Washington City, to confer with him and with
other North-Carolina gentlemen on the condition of affairs in the State. Not a
single visitor from abroad attended the commencement, with the exception of some
thirty gentlemen dressed in blue, who had been delegated to remain here and keep
order. The residents of the village were the only audience to hear the
valedictory pronounced by the sole remaining representative of his class. Where
were the hundreds who had thronged these halls four years before? Virginia, and
Maryland, and Pennsylvania, and Tennessee, and Georgia were heaving with their
graves! In every State that had felt the tread of armies, and wherever the rough
edge of the battle had joined, there had been found the foster-children of
North-Carolina's University;*
* It is stated upon good authority, and is confidently believed, that there was
not a single regiment in the entire Confederate service in which could not be
found one or more old students of Chapel Hill.
and now, sitting discrowned and childless, she might well have taken up the old
lamentations which come to us in these later days more and more audibly across
the centuries, “Oh! that my head were waters, and mine eyes a fountain of tears,
that I might weep day and night for the slain of the daughter of my people!”
There is not a prettier village in the South than that which lies around the
University, and has grown up with it and has been sustained and elevated by it.
And not a village in the South gave more freely of its best blood in the war,
not one suffered more severely in proportion to its population. Thirty-five of
our young men died in the service. Some of them left wives and little ones; some
were the only support and blessing of aged parents; all were, with very few
exceptions, the very flower of our families, and were representatives of every
walk and condition of life. The first company that left the place in May, 1861,
commanded by Captain R. J. Ashe, was attached to the famous First North-Carolina
regiment, which so distinguished itself at the memorable battle of Bethel, June
tenth of that year. Upon the disbanding of this regiment, the members of the
Orange Light Infantry attached themselves to other companies—for no fewer than
four were raised here and in the vicinity—and many of them were among those who
dragged themselves home on foot from Lee's last field.
The decline of the University threw many of our citizens out of employment, and
the privations endured here tell as sad a story as can be met with anywhere.
There was some alleviation of the general distress for those who had houses or
furniture to rent; for every vacant room was crowded at one time by refugee
families from the eastern part of the State, from Norfolk, and latterly from
Petersburg. And this was the case with every town in the interior of the State.
Some of these settled here permanently during the war, attracted by the beauty
and secluded quiet of the place, and by the libraries—best society of all! Some
of them merely alighted here in the first hurry of their flight, and afterward
sought other homes, as birds flit uneasily from bough to bough when driven from
their nests. These families were generally representatives of the best and most
highly cultivated of our Southern aristocracy. They fled hither stripped of all
their earthly possessions, except a few of their negroes. Many came not only
having left their beautiful homes in the hands of invaders, but with heads bowed
down with mourning for gallant sons who had fallen in vain defense of those
homes. Some of them, the elders among them, closed their wearied eyes here, and
were laid to rest among strangers, glad to die and exchange their uncertain
citizenship in a torn and distracted country for that city which hath
foundations.
The benefits of the war in our State should not be overlooked in summing up even
a slight record concerning it. It brought all classes nearer to each other. The
rich and the poor met together. A common cause became a common bond of sympathy
and kind feeling. Charity was more freely dispensed, pride of station was
forgotten. The Supreme Court judges and the ex-governors, whose sons had marched
away in the ranks side by side with those of the day-laborer, felt a closer tie
henceforth to their neighbor. When a whole village poured in and around one
church building to hear the ministers of every denomination pray the parting
prayers and invoke the farewell blessings in unison on the village boys, there
was little room for sectarian feeling. Christians of every name drew nearer to
each other. People who wept, and prayed, and rejoiced together as we did for
four years, learned to love each other more. The higher and nobler and more
generous impulses of our nature were brought constantly into action, stimulated
by the heroic endurance and splendid gallantry of our soldiers, and the general
enthusiasm which prevailed among us. Heaven forbid we should forget the good
which the war brought us, amid such incalculable evils; and Heaven forbid we
should ever forget its lessons—industry, economy, ingenuity, patience, faith,
charity, and above all, and finally, humility, and a firm resolve henceforth to
let well alone.
That North-Carolina has within herself all the elements of a larger life and
hope, and a more diffused prosperity than she has ever known, is not to be
doubted by those who are acquainted with the wealth of her internal resources
and the consummate honesty, industry, and resolution of her people. Time will
heal these wounds yet raw and bleeding; the tide of a new and nobler life will
yet fill her veins and throb in all her pulses; and taught in the school of
adversity the noblest of all lessons, our people will rise from their present
dejection when their civil rights have been restored them, and with renewed hope
in God will go on to do their whole duty as heretofore. Silently they will help
to clear the wreck and right the ship; silently they will do their duty to the
dead and to the living, and to those who shall come after them; silently and
with the modesty of all true heroism they will do great things, and leave it to
others to publish them. Remarkable as North-Carolinians have ever been for
reticence and sobriety of speech and action, it is reserved for such epochs as
those of May twentieth, 1776, and May twentieth, 1861, and for such great
conflicts as succeeded them, to show what a fire can leap forth from this grave,
impassive people—what a flame is kindled in generous sympathy, what ardor burns
in defense of right and liberty. They are now to show the world what true and
ennobling dignity may accompany defeat, surrender, and submission.