From the Southern Confederacy (Atlanta,
Ga.) |
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April 15, 1862 |
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The Great Railroad Chase! |
The Most Extraordinary and Astounding
Adventure of the War !! |
The Most Daring Undertaking That Yankees
Ever Planned or Attempted top Execute! |
Stealing an Engine -- Tearing up the Track
-- Pursued on foot, on Hand Cars, and Engines == Overtaken -- A
Scattering -- The Capture -- The wonderful energy of Messrs. Fuller,
Murphy, and Cain -- Some reflections, &c., &c. |
Full Particulars!! |
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Since our last issue we have
obtained full particulars of the most thrilling Railroad adventure
that ever occurred on the American Continent, as well as the mightiest
and most important in its results, if successful, that has been
conceived by the Lincoln Government since the commencement of this
war. Nothing on so grand a scale has been attempted, and nothing
within the range of possibility could be conceived that would fall
with such a tremendous crushing force upon us, concocted and dependant
on the execution of as the accomplishment of the plans which were the
one whose history we now proceed to narrate. |
Its reality -- what was
actually done -- excels all the extravagant conceptions of
the Arrow-Smith hoax, which fiction created such a profound sensation
in Europe. |
To make the matter more
complete and intelligible, we will take our readers over the same
history of the case which we related in our last, the main features of
which are correct, but are lacking in details, which have since come
to hand. |
We will begin at the breakfast
table of the Big Shanty Hotel at Camp McDonald, on the W. & A. R.
R. {Western & Atlantic RR}, where
several regiments of soldiers are now encamped. The morning mail and
passenger train had left here at 4 A. M. on last Saturday morning as
usual, and had stopped there for breakfast. The conductor, Wm. A.
Fuller, the engineer, J. Cain -- both of this city -- and the
passengers were at the table, when some eight men, having uncoupled
the engine and three empty box cars next to it from the passenger and
baggage cars, mounted the engine, pulled open the valve, put on all
steam, and left conductor, engineer, passengers, spectators, and the
soldiers in the camp hard by, all lost in amazement and dumbfounded at
the strange, startling and daring act. |
This unheard-of act was
doubtless undertaken at that place and time, upon the presumption that
pursuit could not be made by an engine short of Kingston, some thirty
miles above or from this place; and that by cutting down the telegraph
wires as they proceeded, the adventurers could calculate on at least
three or four hours the start of any pursuit it was reasonable to
expect. This was a legitimate calculation, and but for the will,
energy and quick good judgment of Mr. Fuller and Mr. Cain, and Mr.
Anthony Murphy, the intelligent and practical foreman of the wood
department of the State Road shop, who accidentally went on the train
from this place that morning, their calculations would have worked out
as originally contemplated, and the results would have been obtained
long ere this reaches the eyes of our readers -- the most terrible to
us of any that we can conceive as possible, and unequaled by anything
attempted or conceived since this war commenced. |
Now for the chase! |
These three determined men,
without a moment's delay, put out after the flying train -- on
foot, amidst shouts of laughter by the crowd, who, though lost in
amazement at the unexpected and daring act, could not repress their
risibility at seeing three men start after a train on foot, which they
had just witnessed depart at lightning speed. They put on all their
speed, and ran along the track for three miles, when the came across
some track raisers who had a small truck car, which is shoved along by
men so employed on railroads, on which to carry their tools. This
truck and men were at once "impressed." They took it by
turns of two at a time to run behind this truck and push it along all
up grades and level portions of the road, and let it drive at will on
all the down grades. A little way further up the fugitive adventurers
had stopped, cut the telegraph wires and torn up the track. Here the
pursuers were thrown off pell mell, truck and men, upon the side of
the road. Fortunately, "nobody was hurt on our side." The
truck was soon placed on the road again; enough hands were left to
repair the track, and with all the power of determined will and
muscle, they pushed on to Etowah Station, some twenty miles above. |
Here, most fortunately, Major
Cooper's old coal engine, the "Yonah" -- one of the first
engines on the State Road -- was standing out, fired up. This
venerable locomotive was immediately turned upon her old track, and
like an old racer at the tap of the drum, pricked up her ears and made
fine time to Kingston. |
The fugitives, not expecting
such early pursuit, quietly took in wood and water at Cass Station,
and borrowed a schedule from the tank tender upon the plausible plea
that they were running a pressed train, loaded with powder for
Beauregard. The attentive and patriotic tank tender, Mr. Wm. Russell,
said he gave them his schedule, and would have sent the shirt off his
back to Beauregard, if it had been asked for. Here the adventurous
fugitives inquired which end of the switch they should go in on at
Kingston. When they arrived at Kingston, they stopped, went to the
Agent there, told the powder story, readily got the switch key, went
on the upper turn-out, and waited for the down way freight train
to pass. To all inquiries they replied with the same powder story.
When the freight train had passed, the immediately proceeded on to the
next station -- Adairsville -- where they were to meet the regular
down freight train. At some point on the way they had taken on
some fifty cross-ties, and before reaching Adairsville, they stopped
on a curve, tore up the rails, and put seven cross-ties on the track
-- no doubt intending to wreck this down freight train, which would be
along in a few minutes. They had out upon the engine a red
handkerchief as a kind of flag or signal, which, in Railroading, means
another train is behind -- thereby indicating to all that the regular
passenger train would be along presently. They stopped a moment at
Adairsville, and said Fuller, with the regular passenger train was
behind, and would wait at Kingston for the freight train, and told the
conductor thereon to push ahead and meet him at that point. They
passed on to Calhoun, where they met the down passenger train, due
here at 4:20 P. M., and without making any stop, they proceeded -- on,
on, and on. |
But we must return to Fuller
and his party whom we have unconsciously left on the old "Yonah"
making their way to Kingston. |
Arriving there and learning
the adventurers were but twenty minutes ahead, they left the "Yonah"
to blow off, while they mounted the engine of the Rome Branch Road,
which was ready fired up and waiting for the arrival of the passengers
nearly due, when it would have proceeded to Rome. A large party of
gentlemen volunteered for the chase, some at Acworth, Allatoona,
Kingston and other points, taking such arms as they could lay their
hands on at the moment; and with this fresh engine they set out with
all speed but with great "care and caution," as they had
scarcely time to make Adairsville before the down freight train would
leave that point. Sure enough, they discovered this side of
Adairsville three rails torn up and other impediments in the way. They
"took up" in time to prevent an accident, but could proceed
with the train no further. This was most vexatious, and it may have
been in some degree disheartening, but it did not cause the slightest
relaxation of efforts, and as the result proved was but little in the
way of the dead game, pluck and resolutions of Fuller and
Murphy, who left the engine and again put out on foot alone!
After running two miles they met the down freight train, one mile out
from Adairsville. They immediately reversed the train and run
backwards to Adairsville -- put the cars on the siding and pressed
forward, making fine time to Calhoun, where they met the regular down
passenger train. Here they halted a moment, took on board a telegraph
operator, and a number of men who again volunteered, taking their guns
along -- and continued the chase. Mr. Fuller also took on here a
company of track hands to repair the track as they went along. A short
distance above Calhoun they flushed their game on a curve,
where they doubtless supposed themselves out of danger, and were
quietly oiling the engine, taking up the track, &c. Discovering
that they were pursued, they mounted and sped away, throwing out upon
the track as they went along the heavy cross-ties they had prepared
themselves with. This was done by breaking out the end of the hindmost
box car, and pitching them out. Thus, "nip and tuck," they
passed with fearful speed Resaca, Tilton, and on through Dalton. |
The rails which they had taken
up last they took off with them -- besides throwing out cross-ties
upon the track occasionally -- hoping thereby the more surely to
impede the pursuit; but all this was like tow to the touch of fire, to
the now thoroughly aroused, excited and eager pursuers. These men,
though so much excited and influenced by so much determination, still
retained their well-known caution, were looking out for this danger
and discovered it, and though ti was seemingly an insuperable obstacle
to their making any headway in pursuit, was quickly overcome by the
genius of Fuller and Murphy. Coming to where the rails were torn up,
they stopped, tore up rails behind them, and laid them down before,
till they had passed over that obstacle. When the cross ties were
reached, they hauled to and threw them off, and thus proceeded, and
under these difficulties gained on the frightened fugitives. At Dalton
they halted a moment. Fuller put off the telegraph operator, with
instructions to telegraph to Chattanooga to have them stopped, in case
he should fail to overhaul them. |
Fuller pressed on in hot chase
-- sometimes in sight -- as much to prevent their cutting the wires
before the message could be sent, as to catch them. The daring
adventurers stopped just opposite and very near to where Col. Glenn's
regiment is encamped, and cut the wires, but the operator at Dalton had
put the message through about two minutes before. They also again
tore up the track, cut down a telegraph pole, and placed the two ends
of it under the cross ties, and the middle over the rail on the track.
The pursuers stopped again and got over this impediment, in the same
manner they did before -- taking up rails behind and laying them down
before. Once over this, they shot on, and passed through the great
tunnel, at Tunnel Hill, being there only five minutes behind. The
fugitives still finding themselves closely pursued, uncoupled two of
the box cars from the engine, to impede the progress of the pursuers.
Fuller hastily coupled them to the front of his engine, and pushed
them ahead of him, to the first turn-out or siding, where they were
left -- thus preventing the collision the adventurers intended. |
Thus, the engine thieves
passed Ringgold, where they began to fag. They were out of wood,
water, and oil. Their rapid running and inattention to the engine, had
melted all the brass from the journals. They had no time to repair or
refit, for an iron-horse of more bottom was close behind. Fuller and
Murphy and their men soon came within 400 yards of them, when the
fugitives jumped from the engine and left it -- three on the north
side and five on the South -- all fleeing precipitately and scattering
through the thicket. Fuller and his party also took to the woods after
them. |
Some gentlemen, also well
armed, took the engine and some cars of the down passenger train at
Calhoun, and followed up Fuller and Murphy and their party in the
chase but a short distance behind, and reached the place of the
stampede but a very few moments after the first pursuers did. A large
number of men were soon mounted, armed, and scouring the entire
country in search of them. Fortunately, there was a militia muster at
Ringgold. A great many countrymen were in town. Hearing of the chase,
they put out on foot and on horseback in every direction, in search of
the daring but now thoroughly frightened and fugitive men. |
We learn that Fuller, soon
after leaving his engine, in passing a cabin in the country, found a
mule having on a bridle but no saddle, and tied to the fence. "Here's
your mule," he shouted as he leaped upon his back and put out
as fast as a good switch well applied could impart vigor to the
muscles and accelerate the speed of the patient donkey. The cry of
"Here's your mule" and "Where's my mule" have
become national, and are generally heard when, on the one hand no mule
is about, and on the other when no one is hunting a mule. It seems not
to be understood by any one, though it is a peculiar Confederate
phrase and is as popular as Dixie from the Potomac to the Rio Grande.
It remained for Fuller, in the midst of this exciting chase, to solve
the mysterious meaning of this national by-word or phrase, and give it
a practical application. |
All of the eight men were
captured, and are now safely lodged in jail. The particulars of their
capture we have not received. This we hope to obtain in time for a
postscript to this, or for our second edition. They confessed that
they belonged to Lincoln's army, and had been sent down from
Shelbyville to burn the bridges between here and Chattanooga; and that
the whole party consisted of nineteen men, eleven of whom were dropped
at several points on the road as they came down, to assist in the
burning of the bridges as they went back. |
When the morning freight train
which left this city reached Big Shanty, Lieut. Cols. R. F. Maddox and
C. P. Phillips took the engine and a few cars, with fifty picked men,
well armed, and followed on as rapidly as possible. They passed over
all difficulties, and got as far as Calhoun, where they learned the
fugitives had taken the woods, and were pursued by plenty of men with
the means to catch them if it were possible. |
One gentleman who went upon
the train from Calhoun, who has furnished us with many of these
particulars, and who, by the way, is one of the most experienced
Railroad men in Georgia, says, too much praise cannot be bestowed on
Fuller and Murphy, who showed a cool judgment and forethought in this
extraordinary affair, unsurpassed by anything we ever knew in a
Railroad emergency. This gentleman, we learn from another, offered, on
his own account, $100 reward on each man, for the apprehension of the villains. |
We do not know what Gov. Brown
will do in this case, or what is his custom in such matters, but if
such a thing is admissible, we insist on Fuller and Murphy being
promoted to the highest honors on the road -- if not by actually
giving them the highest position, at least, let them be promoted by brevet.
Certainly, their indomitable energy, and quick correct judgment and
decision in the many difficult contingencies connected with this
unheard of emergency, has saved all the Railroad bridges above
Ringgold from being burned; the most daring scheme that this
revolution has developed has been thwarted, and the tremendous results
which, if successful, can scarcely be imagined, much less described,
have been averted. Had they succeeded in burning the bridges, the
enemy at Huntsville would have occupied Chattanooga, before Sunday
night. Yesterday they would have been in Knoxville, and thus had
possession of all East Tennessee, Greenville, and Cumberland Gap,
would, ere this, have been in the hands of the enemy. Lynchburg, Va.,
would have been moved upon at once. This would have given them
possession of the Valley of Virginia, and Stone Wall Jackson could
have been attacked in the rear. They would have possession of the
Railroad leading to Charlottesville, and Orange Court House, as well
as the South Side Railroad leading to Petersburg and Richmond. They
might have been able to unite with McClelland's forces, and attack Jo.
Johnston's army, front and flank. It is not by any means improbable
that our army in Virginia, would have been defeated, captured or
driven out of the State this week. |
Then reinforcements from all
the eastern and south-eastern portion of the country would have been
cut off from Beauregard. The enemy have Huntsville now, and with all
these designs accomplished his army would have been effectually
flanked. The mind and heart shrink back appalled at the bare
contemplation of the awful consequences which wo'd have followed the
success of this one act. When Fuller, Murphy and Cain started from Big
Shanty on foot to catch that fugitive engine, they were
involuntarily laughed at by the crowd, serious as the matter was --
and to most observers it was indeed most ludicrous; but that foot
race saved us, and prevented the consummation of all these
tremendous consequences. |
One fact we must not omit to
mention is the valuable assistance rendered by Peter Bracken, the
engineer on the down freight train which Fuller and Murphy turned
back. He ran his engine fifty and a half miles -- two of them backing
the whole freight train up to Adairsville -- made twelve stops,
coupled to the two cars which the fugitives had dropped, and switched
them off on sidings -- all of this, in one hour and five minutes. |
We doubt if the victory of
Manassas or Corinth were worth as much to us as the frustration of
this grand coup d'etat. It is not by any means certain that the
annihilation of Beauregard's whole army at Corinth would be so fatal a
blow to us as would have been the burning of the bridges at that time
and by these men. |
When we learned by a private
telegraph dispatch a few days ago, that the Yankees had taken
Huntsville, we attached no great importance to it. We regarded it
merely as a dashing foray of a small party to destroy property, tear
up the road, &c., a la Morgan. When an additional telegram
announced the federal force there to be from 17,000 to 20,000, we were
inclined to doubt it -- though coming from a perfectly honorable and
upright gentleman, who would not be apt to seize upon a wild report to
send here to his friends. The coming to that point with a large force,
where they would be flanked on either side by our army, we regarded as
a most stupid and unmilitary act. We now understand it all. They were
to move upon Chattanooga and Knoxville as soon as the bridges were
burnt, and press on into Virginia as far as possible, and take all our
forces in that State in the rear. It was all the deepest laid scheme
and on the grandest scale that ever emanated from the brains of any
number of Yankees combined. It was one that was also, entirely
practicable on almost any day for the last year. There were but two
miscalculations in the whole programme: they did not expect men to
start out afoot to pursue them, and they did not expect these pursuers
on foot to find Maj. Cooper's old "Yonah" standing there all
ready fired up. Their calculations on every other point were dead
certainties, and would have succeeded perfectly. |
This would have eclipsed
anything Capt. Morgan ever attempted. To think of a parcel of Federal
soldiers, officers and privates, coming down into the heart of the
Confederate States -- for they were here in Atlanta and at Marietta --
(some of them got on the train at Marietta that morning and others
were at Big Shanty;) of playing such a serious game on the State Road,
which is under the control of our prompt, energetic and sagacious
Governor, known as such all over America; to seize the passenger train
on his Road, right at Camp McDonald, where he has a number of Georgia
regiments encamped, and run off with it; to burn the bridges on this
same road, and to safely through to the Federal lines -- all this
would have been a feather in the cap of the man or men who executed
it. |
Let this be a warning to the
railroad men and every body else in the Confederate States. Let an
engine never be left alone a moment. Let additional guards be placed
at our bridges. This is a matter we specially urged in the Confederacy
long ago. We hope it will now be heeded. Further: let a sufficient
guard be placed to watch the Government stores in this city; and let
increased vigilance and watchfulness be put forth by the watchmen. We
know one solitary man who is guarding a house of nights in this city,
which contains a lot of bacon. Two or three men could throttle and gag
him and set fire to the house at any time; and worse, he conceives
that there is no necessity for a guard, as is sometimes seen off duty,
for a few moments -- fully long enough for an incendiary to burn the
house he watches. Let Mr. Shackelford, whom we know to be watchful and
attentive to his duties, take the responsibility at once of placing a
well armed guard of sufficient force around every house containing
government stores. Let this be done without waiting for instructions
from Richmond. |
One other thought. The press
is requested by the Government to keep silent about the movements of
the army, and a great many things of the greatest interest to our
people. It has, in the main, patriotically complied. We have complied
in most cases, but our judgment was against it all the while. The plea
is that the enemy will get the news, if it is published in our papers.
Now, we again ask, what's the use? The enemy get what information they
want. They are with us and pass among us almost daily. They find out
from us what they want to know, by passing through our country
unimpeded. It is nonsense: it is folly, to deprive our own people of
knowledge they are entitled to and ought to know, for fear the enemy
will find it out. We ought to have a regular system of passports over
all our roads, and refuse to let any man pass who could not give a
good account of himself -- come well vouched for and make it fully
appear that he is not an enemy, and that he is on legitimate business.
This would keep information from the enemy far more effectively than
any reticence of the press, which ought lay before our people the full
facts in everything of a public nature. |
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