IRONTON REGISTER
Thursday 19 Jan 1888
NARROW ESCAPES
Interesting War Experiences
Submitted by Barbara Madden

J.O. BINGHAM was a member of the ....Ohio, first of D. and
after when veteranised, of Co. A. He was in the service 4 years
and 7 months, which was about as long as a fellow could get in.
Col. KINNEY first commanded the Regiment, and afterwards the noted
Col. RAYNOR.
The Register scribe scouted Mr. Bingham as he was sailing up
Center St. one day last week, and asked him to fish up a "narrow
escape" from his long experience in the army.
"Well," said he, "about the most interesting experience I had in
the war took place during BANKS' ill fated Red river expedition. I
had just veteranised, and was promised a good furlough home, when
the expedition started, and as they ordered our regiment on the
expedition, of course all the vets went; they didn't like to go
home just as things were getting romantic; so they joined in and
kept themselves happy by thinking of the furlough they'd get when
they returned. I'll not tell of the Banks demonstration-you can
read that in the history; only speak of our return from Alexandra
on the Red river to New Orleans. Our regiment, 300 of us, started
on the transport, John Warner, down the river. Banks was falling
back, and we were only preceding him. There were with us, also,
two little musket gunboats. The rebs were thick all along the
river. When we got down to Snaggy Point, and were going around a
bend, a masked battery opened on us and swept our boat badly-tore
off the pilot house, severed pipes, mashed wheels; in fact,
completely disabled us, so that we were swinging with the current.
The rebs were on the right side of the river. They kept the fire
hot on us with artillery and muskets. Col. Raynor ordered a man to
swim with a rope to the left shore, and the man succeeded in doing
it. This brought our boat on the opposite side from the rebels".
"While we were thus swinging around, a shell crashed
through our boat, went under the floor, taking off the soles of
one man's shoes, and the feet of the next man to him. The former
was Thomas COX and the latter Sergeant WOODS of Gallipolis. Woods
fell into the hands of the rebs and died a week after. When the
shell exploded it wounded Jas ODELL and Esra ARTHER, and as I was
standing right next to them but got off with a mere scratch."
"Our company got behind some cotton bales on the right
side of the boat, and so, when Col. Raynor ordered the men from
the craft, we didn't hear the order, and he got the rest of the
regiment up the bank and in the woods before he missed us. Then he
came back for us and while getting us off, was himself badly
wounded in the leg; so in addition to getting ourselves out, we
had to carry him up the bank, and we were under fire all the time,
both of cannon and musketry. However, we got out of that without
further loss; and laid in the woods while the reb battery plugged
at our little protecting gunboats. These were soon disabled too,
and ran up the white flag and surrendered. After we got Raynor
from the transport, he was taken back to one of the gunboats,
thinking they would protect themselves, and when they surrendered
they took him too. That was the second time he was made prisoner.
The Register some weeks ago told of the first time."
"Well, when the rebs had taken the gunboats, and our
regiment of 300 had to look out for themselves, Colonel Henry
JONES, who had succeeded to the command, started down the river to
Ft. De Russe, about 30 miles away. He left the three wounded men
whom we had, in the woods in the care of myself and another man,
scaly (scary?) for us, for we hadn't a bite to eat, nothing to
drink with or cook with, and very hungry and sleepy to begin with.
I thought at first to surrender. We could hear the rebs on our
boats, and at one time I crept through the woods to the edge of
the bank intending to surrender, but when I got a good view of
them, they looked so revengeful, that I concluded to sneak back;
when I returned, I told the boys I couldn't muster up courage to
surrender; so we would have to get out of there. Two of the
wounded could get along well, but the other man, my associate, and
I had to take the turns in carrying; and thus, we started on our
weary march through the woods and swamps toward Ft. De Russe. You
had better believe it was bitter work, going as we did without
food or rest, and half the time carrying a man. We suffered very
much for water, as we did not dare to go to the bank of the river,
for the reb troops were all along the other side. We had no cups
or canteens, and but one hat that would hold water. After we had
been on the go for two or three hours and when it was about noon I
took the hat to get some water for the wounded boys I crept
through the underbrush at he edge off the riverbank and then made
a rush to the water, but as bad luck would have it, just as I
started, my foot caught on a rope and I tripped and went sprawling
toward the water and couldn't stop until I went right into the
river headfirst. I got a good drink, you had better believe, but
by this time some musket balls started whizzing around so I got a
hat full of water and skipped out of there."
"Well, about the middle of the afternoon, we ran into a
Frenchman living in the woods He was a Union man and was hiding
from the Rebels, for fear of being conscripted. He was very kind
to us, and warned us to be very quiet, for just then the rebs had
a picket post right opposite them, on the other side of the Red
river. We were very quiet and stayed there until dark, and for a
very good reason too. The rebs at the picket post had a canoe,
tied at the water's edge opposite us, and the Frenchman said he'd
swim across after dark, steal the canoe, bring it over to us, and
in that and under the cover of night we could float down the river
to Fort De Russe. Now wasn't that a grand scheme? And the
Frenchman carried out the program precisely. He swam the river,
got the canoe, brought it over to us, and at 9 o'clock at night,
we started down the river, It would only hold four. I got in with
the three wounded men because I was an expert at paddling; and my
associate walked along the bank. Thus we proceeded during the
long, weary, toilsome night, and at daybreak we caught sight of
the Union flag floating over Ft. De Russe. Never in my life did I
see such a glorious sight, and never was my heart so light as I
paddled that canoe under the fort; and never was my body so heavy.
Tired was no name for it. I dragged myself to the fort; laid down
under a cannon and went to sleep, and didn't wake til the middle
of the afternoon, though the boys declared that cannon was fired
off four times while I was sleeping under it."
"Well, that is the end of my narrow escape, or rather the
succession of narrow escapes. The next day, I went to New Orleans,
got my furlough, and my visit home was the happier because of the
marked contrast between home scenes and that awful Red river
trip."
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