"More Civil War Curiosities" contains strange but true stories
from the four-year conflict that raged across a one-thousand-mile
battle front with more than three million men in uniform. Anything
could and often did happen. Webb Garrison recounts instances of
friendly fire casualties, the unperfected art of spying,
banishments and deportings, grisly tales of missing limbs, name
changes for both people and ships, disguises that worked (and some
that did not), and many "firsts" and "lasts."
Fragging, or purposely killing a fellow soldier, was the
probable cause of the death of Thomas Wilson, a tyrannical Federal
general. He died in action at the battle of Baton Rouge when,
according to one account, he was seized by a group of his own men
who held him in front of a cannon before it was fired at the
enemy.
When Confederate Gen. Jubal Early marched on Frederick,
Maryland, he offered not to torch the town for a payment of
$200,000. It took the townspeople a day to borrow the money―and 87
years to pay it back. When Chambersburg, Pennsylvania, failed to
raise a ransom of $500,000, Early's subordinate, Gen. John
McCausland, burned the town to the ground.
The arm of Confederate Gen. Stonewall Jackson was amputated when
he was wounded at the battle of Chancellorsville. Following the
operation, Jackson's corps chaplain gave the arm a respectful
burial―complete with a gravestone―in his family's cemetery. When
the general died a week later, the rest of him was buried in
Lexington, Virginia.
Hiram Ulysses Grant was mistakenly listed as Ulysses Simpson
Grant by the congressman appointing him to West Point. Grant did
not protest, and the name stayed with him all the way to the
presidency of the United States.
General
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