[en] | Hazen Brigade Monument

The Hazen Brigade Monument at Stones River National Battlefield, Murfreesboro, Tennessee, is the oldest American Civil War monument remaining in its original battlefield location.[1]

The Hazen Brigade at the Battle of Stones River

On December 31, 1862, the first day of the Battle of Stones River, Confederate General Braxton Bragg made a surprise advance on his left and drove the right of the Union army of Major General William S. Rosecrans back three miles. At that point the Union line was nearly at right angles to its original position.[2] The brigade of Col. William Babcock Hazen defended a 4-acre (16,000 m2) clump of cedars—known locally as the Round Forest—at a salient in the line just east of the Nashville Pike and on both sides of the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad.[3] Hazen’s men, supported by other Union troops, and especially by artillery that Rosecrans had massed on the high ground in their rear, successfully repulsed four Confederate assaults. So great was the slaughter that soldiers called the place “Hell’s Half-Acre.” Hazen’s regiments sustained 409 casualties (29% of the brigade), including 45 men killed.[4] The determined resistance of Hazen’s brigade arguably prevented the Confederate Army of Tennessee from breaking the Union line.

Creation of the monument

During the summer of 1863, while the Union Army of the Cumberland outmaneuvered Bragg’s Confederates in the Tullahoma campaign, members of Hazen’s Brigade were detailed back to Stones River to build a monument both to commemorate the heroism of the brigade and to memorialize their lost comrades.[5] A construction detail under Lt. Edward Crebbin placed the monument on private property in the middle of the brigade cemetery in Round Forest.[6] A Union army captain described the monument as a “quadrangular pyramidal shaft, ten feet square at the base and eleven feet in height….A dry-stacked stone wall, four feet high and two feet thick, enclosed both monument and cemetery. Three low steps breached the wall’s south side to allow access.”[7] In 1864 two experienced stone cutters from the regiment carved the inscriptions, including names of the regimental officers killed at Stones River and the earlier Battle of Shiloh. On the south face the stone cutters inscribed the words, HAZEN’S BRIGADE/ TO THE MEMORY OF ITS SOLDIERS WHO FELL AT STONES RIVER, DEC. 31ST 1862/ THEIR FACES TOWARDS HEAVEN, THEIR FEET TO THE FOE.[8]

Subsequent history

The 0.84-acre site was acquired by the War Department in 1875 and before 1930 was administered under the authority of the superintendent of the Stones River National Cemetery. During this period the monument suffered “periods of neglect and deterioration.” In 1930, administration of the Hazen Memorial and the National Cemetery were officially consolidated into the Stones River National Military Park; and in 1933, administration of the Military Park was transferred from the War Department to the National Park Service (NPS).[9]

In 1907, short-story writer and journalist Ambrose Bierce visited the Hazen Brigade Monument for a second time. Bierce had been a staff officer in the 9th Indiana Volunteers, had known Hazen well, and had survived fighting at Stones River unscathed. As a topographic engineer, Bierce had had ample opportunity to view the monument when it was first completed in 1863.[10] In 1908, Bierce published an eerie psychological tale, “A Resumed Identity,” in which the man in the story shares Bierce’s age, rank, and brigade affiliation and in which the Hazen Monument plays a critical role in the story’s “twist ending”. Bierce’s protagonist describes the monument as it probably appeared in 1907: “brown with age, weather-worn at the angles, spotted with moss and lichen. Between the massive blocks were strips of grass.”[11]

In 1985, while repairing the Monument, workers discovered a number of objects in its fill of limestone and soil: two bullets, eight buck and ball shot, a lead disk, a freshwater mussel shell, two bone fragments, six horse teeth, and two small wood fragments. Archaeologists concluded that these items had been in the soil used for fill. Nevertheless, about five feet above ground, archaeologists found nine other artifacts: two 12-pound and one 6-pound cannonballs, three rifled artillery shells, two rifled musket barrels, and a cedar staff. Because these items were all placed at a single level, the National Park Service believed their inclusion had been purposeful, although there was no agreement about the meaning of this presumptive time capsule.[12]

References

  1. ^ Two other monuments were built on Civil War battlefields before 1863. A monument commemorating the death of Col. Francis S. Bartow at the First Battle of Bull Run was vandalized and then destroyed following the Second Battle of Bull Run. A monument commemorating the dead of the 32nd Indiana Infantry Regiment at the Battle of Rowlett’s Station (December 17, 1861) in Hart County, Kentucky, was moved to Cave Hill Cemetery and then, in 2010, to the Frasier History Museum in Louisville, Kentucky. National Park Service website. For other monuments built by soldiers during the Civil War see Michael W. Panhorst, “‘The First of Our Hundred Battle Monuments’: Civil War Battlefield Monuments Built by Active-Duty Soldiers during the Civil War,” Southern Cultures, 20, no. 4 (Winter 2014), 22-43.
  2. ^ Foote, Shelby (1963). The Civil War: A Narrative: Fredericksburg to Meridian. New York: Random House. p. 89. ISBN 0-307-29040-9.
  3. ^ Foote, 91.
  4. ^ “Hazen Brigade Monument” (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved March 6, 2020. Hazen himself was wounded in the shoulder during the battle and was promoted to brigadier general for his gallantry.
  5. ^ Brown, Daniel A. (1985). Marked for Future Generations: The Hazen Brigade Monument, 1863-1929. Murfreesboro, Tennessee: National Park Service. pp. 7–8.. The project clearly had official sanction and was probably authorized by Hazen himself and Col. Isaac C. B. Sunman, 9th Indiana Volunteers. National Park Service website
  6. ^ “Hazen Brigade Monument”. National Park Service. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  7. ^ Styles, Sean M. (2004). “Stones River National Battlefield Study, Historic Resource Study” (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved March 6, 2020.
  8. ^ “Hazen Brigade Monument” (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved March 6, 2020..
  9. ^ “National Park Service Cultural Landscapes Inventory: Hazen Brigade Monument, Stones River Battlefield”. National Park Service. 1998. Retrieved March 7, 2020.
  10. ^ Owens, David M. (2006). The Devil’s Topographer: Ambrose Bierce and the American War Story. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. pp. 62–63. ISBN 1-57233-464-9.
  11. ^ Bierce, Ambrose (1908). “A Resumed Identity”. eastoftheweb. Retrieved March 7, 2020. Critical examination of this (very) short story may be found at Roy Morris Jr., Ambrose Bierce: Alone in Bad Company (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995), 50-52, and Sharon Talley, Ambrose Bierce and the Dance of Death (Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 2009), 130. Gordon Berg, “The Hazen Brigade Monument at Stone’s River Is Among the Most Curious Civil War Memorials,” America’s Civil War (November 2004), 10-14, 58, even suggests that Bierce’s macabre sense of humor led him to create a fake gravestone in the brigade cemetery for a possibly nonexistent soldier, one “A. Louse.”
  12. ^ “Hazen Brigade Monument” (PDF). National Park Service. Retrieved March 7, 2020..

Source: en.wikipedia.org