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SHORT
STORIES
Submitted by:
Sharon M. Kouns
NARROW
ESCAPES
SOME EXCITING WAR EXPERIENCES NO. 3
GEN. ENOCH'S AND A. D. CROSSLAND'S EXPERIENCES

Ironton Register, Thursday, December 2, 1886

"I suppose you have observed that the REGISTER is giving some
"Narrow Escapes" of the boys in the war, Gen. Enochs?"
"Yes, indeed," said the General, "I read them with a great deal
of interest. They are a good thing. They remind me of what Gen.
Hayes said to me at Portsmouth, during the reunion. He remarked
that the real history of the war has not yet been written; and
will not be, until the boys have a chance to tell their personal
experiences."
"Well now," said the reporter, "that’s just what I am after, a
"narrow escape" from you."
"Oh, I have none worth relating. I was in a great many battles
and met danger with the rest of the boys, but I have no
distinctively romantic escape to relate. My narrowest escape was
where I didn’t altogether escape. It was at the battle near
Winchester, on the 19th of September 1864--Sheridan’s first great
battle in the Shenandoah Valley. You remember the engagement began
about noon. The 19th corps was on the left; the 6th corps in the
center and the Army of West Va. on the right, and my regiment,
which I commanded that day, was on the extreme right of the whole
line; that is, of the infantry line. Custer’s and Merritt’s
divisions of cavalry still covered our flanks."
"Well, we had driven the rebel forces gradually from the start;
and they were very hard to drive as they fought behind the stone
fences which abound in that country. It was on toward five o’clock
in the evening, and the rebel lines had been driven back from
every point except where the artillery was planted, which was a
strong position. Their cannon was doing fearful execution, and the
musketry from that quarter was very severe. Gen. Duval, who
commanded our brigade, had fallen, and the ranks were much
shattered. I had lost my horse in a swamp soon after the fight
commenced and so was afoot in the battle. Things were in a turmoil
and confusion; nobody seemed to be directing our brigade or
division, so I took hold of our end of the line myself, and
ordered an assault on the rebel artillery. I thought we wouldn’t
be killed any faster going ahead than standing still. Then the
enemy opened on us furiously. Our line as it advanced had a very
ragged edge to it. It was made up almost without any order as to
regiment, a dozen regiments being represented, in some parts of
the line."
"As we approached the rebel position, I happened, at one
moment, to be looking down the line, awfully anxious about its
maintaining itself, when my "narrow escape" came to me in the form
of a minnie ball, and down I went, to figure, as the comrades
around me supposed, among the list of the killed. And I would have
thought so too, possibly, if I had not been knocked senseless.
There I lay insensible, for some time, but finally regained my
thoughts, to find that I couldn’t see. I was blind as a bat for
over an hour; but during that little period, I felt about to
ascertain the extent of my wound, and found a ball sticking in the
side of my head about two inches above the right ear. It had gone
through my hat band and flattened against the skull, which it
bruised badly, and to which it stuck until I pulled it off. The
first man who discovered I wasn’t dead was Lewis Neff, of Rome
township, who gave me a drink from his canteen."
"That was indeed, a very close shave," said the reporter, "but
what of the charge on the artillery?"
"Oh, that was the best part about it," said the General--"the
boys went right on, and captured the rebel works; and that did as
much as any other one thing that day to give us the victory. The
next day, I was all right and took command of my regiment again."
"Where’s the ball?" asked the reporter.
"I carried it for a couple years after, but finally lost it,"
replied the General; "but I can recollect everything about that
fight without the ball as a reminder. It struck me too forcibly to
ever be forgotten."

We have room for another "narrow escape," not a very big one,
but a little laughable one. Lieut. A. D. Crossland, of the old
91st tells it. Everybody knows A. D.-- as brave a fellow and as
jolly as ever went into the army. He said to us on Thanksgiving
day:
"I see you are giving the "narrow escapes" of the boys in the
army-- I want to tell you mine-- it’s a short one. It took place
at the battle of Cloyd mountain-- a mighty hot little fight. You
see I was Quartermaster and didn’t have to fight except in my own
way, but I generally saw the boys through. So at that fight, I got
a musket and run a corps of my own. I cornered a big reb behind a
small tree. I had the advantage, because I had first aim, and as I
saw a part of him, I tried to shoot, but the trigger on the old
musket wouldn’t work, and while I was fussing at it to get it to
go off, the reb. peeped around and surmised the difficulty, and as
I was behind a very small tree that didn’t altogether conceal me,
reb concluded his chance had come; so he raised up, took aim, and
tired. Good gracious, how I was scared! but he missed me, and
immediately I thought the thing to do was to get away from there,
so I jumped from behind the tree and struck northward like greased
lightning, to get with the boys. As soon as I started to run, I
looked back to see if Johnny Reb was coming after me, but how
happy I was, when I saw him climbing in the opposite direction as
fast as his legs could carry him. As soon as he shot, he dropped
his gun and lit out, just as I had done. He was going so fast I
expect he is running yet. Now you can talk of your "narrow
escapes," but I’m athinking that’s a pretty narrow one for a
Quakermaster to get out of, don’t you?" "We do, truly."
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