In August 1864, Union General Eleazar A. Paine expelled a number
Transcription
In August 1864, Union General Eleazar A. Paine expelled a number
In August 1864, Union General Eleazar A. Paine expelled a number of citizens of Columbus and Paducah, Kentucky. Men, women, and children were packed into rail cars guarded by Negro soldiers from the 8th Heavy Artillery (Colored) and sent to Canada because of their stubborn support of the Confederate government. The intent of Paine was to humiliate these defiant Kentucky defenders of the Southern cause. When the war orted , Ken tucky officially became a loyal slave stote. As such, no Kentuc~y sl?ve was freed_ by . st 1 ·dent Lincoln's Emanc1pat1on Proclamation as 1t pres plied only to slaves from parts of rebel states then oPcu pied by federal forces . Such harsh treatment ~fwest Kentuc~ia~s loyal '.o the Confeder?cy can be identified principally with Eleazar A. _Pa~ne fr?m h·s arrival in 1861 as colonel of the 9th lll1no1s regiment ~infantry under General U.S. Grant until his court ~artial in 1865 as the war en?ed. Paine, an . acquaintance of Abraham Lincoln, never hesitated nor apologized for his acts nor was he punished. The year 1864 proved to be a dramatic one tor Paducahans, black and white. President Lincoln removed the right of habeas corpus in Kentucky on September 15, 1863. By July 5, 1864, the President declared martial law in Kentucky due to the unsettled conditions in that state. Union recruiters began enlisting Kentucky African-Americans despite the opposition of state officials. Lorenzo Thomas, adjutant general of the Union forces reported "In my letter of the 1st instant, I reported instructions respecting the 1st Artillery Regiment Colored Troops to be raised at Paducah, Kentucky. Shall I proceed with its organization?" By the end of the war, two African-American artillery regiments and parts of several African-American infantry regiments had been recruited at Paducah and at Columbus. Enlistment in the federal armed forces freed a Kentucky slave and his family. The fact that General Paine used these soldiers to escort the Kentuckians suspected of disloyalty was, in effect, the realization of the slave dream "De bottom rail gwin be on de top." The date of the expulsion , August 8, continues 116 117 Picture, identified as E. A. Paine, in the holdings of the Ohio Historical Society (www.ohiohistorv.wordpress.com/2011 /08/15/do-you-knowthis-man) Kentuckians Expelled by Federal Government By John Robertson to be celebrated in Paducah as emancipation day, However, the cause for the celebration is often erroneously credited to the Emancipation Proclamation . The role of Paine as the instigator of the " Reign of Terror" is often overlooked . This paper will focus on Paine in Paducah. (City records cite the general as "Pain." They knew the proper spelling of his name.) When the War of the Rebellion (this event certainly was not civil) began , Kentucky tried , for a time, to remain aloof. In fact, the pro-southern governor, Beriah Magoffin, threatened to fight either side that violated the sovereign territory of the Commonwealth. Rather than provoke an unpleasant decision, Lincoln and Jefferson Davis both made efforts to avoid provoking Kentucky since the state possessed a well organized State Guard under Simon B. Buckner. The colonel commanding the guard in the west was Lloyd Tilghman of Paducah. One incident caused Tilghman to move a considerable force of State Guards to Columbus to protect that point on the Mississippi River. Later, Tilghman went to Guthrie, Tennessee, and formed the 3rd Kentucky, CSA. Many former state guards and their equipment from Paducah were not in this Confederate unit. R.B.J. Twyman , editor of a Paducah newspaper, an avowed Democrat, noted when the telegraph announced that South Carolina had seceded from the Union there were not half a dozen outspoken secessionists in Paducah. As state after state followed , Paducahans shifted more and more to the radical position . Shelling Fort Sumter at 4:30 a.m. caused Paducahans to put matches to 118 sa nd hang them on their gates as a token of 1ante~t . soon the town was ablaze wi'.h light ..Many :u~~d uc ah kept their allegiance to neighbors 1n the in uth eve n when the state was forced t.o t.ake a . so d with the Union. This often led to fnct1on. Union ston ps were shunned by a majority of the people in tr~~ucah. Eventually this led to retribution that P onates through the psyche of Paducah even to res· day The Sons of Confederate Veterans h ave a th IS • • • Jorge membership. Blue 1s seen infrequently. The neutrality of Kentucky came to an end early in September, 1861. A new <?onfederate rnmanded in west Tennessee , Lieutenant General ~~onidas Polk, moved into Hickman and Columbus on September 3 rd and seized high ground overlooking the Mississippi River. News of that event eached the new commander of the Federal forces ~eadquartered in Cairo, Illinois, U.S. Grant, who reacted immediately. He loaded a small force.on boats and headed up the Ohio River. By so doing , Grant was out of telegraphic contact with St. Louis, the regional headquarters of Federal forces and thus could not be called back. Early the ne~t morning, Grant seized Paducah to t~e surpn:e and consternation of its occupants. In his Memoirs G~ant noted that the citizens of Paducah were expecting Confederates to arrive about noon . Some Confederate flags were flying. " Men, women , and children came out of their doors looking pale and frightened at the presence of the invader." Among the intruders were the men from the 9 th Illinois Volunteers led by Col. E.A. Paine. Grant instructed Paine carefully. "Upon my departure, you will assume command of the troops at this post, make 119 such disposal of the forces will best enable you to obtain possession and control of the city. A portion of the troops can be quartered at the Marine Hospital. You are charged to take special care and precaution that no harm is done to inoffensive c itizens: that the soldiers shall not enter any private dwelling, not make any searches unless by your orders, and then a detail shall be made for that purpose. Exercise the strictest discipline against any soldier who shall insult citizens, or engage in plundering private property." In her doctoral dissertation at Auburn in 2009 (page 117), Patricia Ann Hoskins noted that Grant in 1861 wanted Paine 's men "to go easy on the citizens of Paducah. He commanded him to make sure that no southern sympathizing citizens were insulted or harmed and forbade any soldier to enter the home of any Rebel citizen or plunder his property. Paine, a West Pointer from Ohio, ignored Grant's orders." He wrote Grant that no one in Paducah could be trusted . He said that he "was compelled to be severe for nearly everyman is a rank secessionist." The day after Grant left, Paine ordered a gunboat to fire a round into the city as a warning. Fortunately, no one was injured. Later, he ordered a blacksmith to shoe his horse. When the man refused , Paine gave him two choices: shoe the horse or be shot. As he wrote Grant, he was not to be beaten." This attitude deepened by the time Paine returned to Paducah. Shortly thereafter, General C.F. Smith arrived to take command with Paine leading the first brigade (History of Kentucky Illustrated, Edition One, reprint with additions, 1979, by Southern Historical Press, p. 82). Note: Grant was careful to limit Paine. 120 raid toward Pai ne exceeded his orders ·on a A Ldter, · t an t iu rnbus and c.F . Smith was furious . ss1s C~. ton t General Thomas J . Newsham sent a hot A t{~r to Pain on November 11, 186, charging that le. 's men "marched back from Milburn, Kentucky po1ne f ·t· '" rnere mob' and that the property o c1 1zens d5 0 . . t wantonly destroyed, and 1n some ins onces w~sbery by violence (was) committed." Newsham ~oiled for legal action against Paine. As it tur~ed t Smith was reassigned . On February 8, Paine oud~red troops to take prisoners out and "hang one 0 ~ the rebel cavalry for each Union man murdered, 0 d ofter this two for each. Continue to scout, ~~pture, and kill." Grant becam_e aware_ of this and when Paine came back under his authority, Gran_t rote to General George Thomas, noting that Paine ;.v'was entirely unfit to command a post." (Dr: " . Marshall Myers, Gen. Eleazar A Paine and Hts Reign of Terror" in West Ky. in the Kentucky Explorer, February 2011 , pp. 24ff.) . In the spring of 1864, active warfare hit western Kentucky . Confederate General ~athan B. Forrest struck north to disrupt Union supply lines. Leading the raid was General Abe Buford 's Kentuckians. Louis Kolb Sr. recalled the Battle of Paducah in an article in the New-Democrat on March 15, 1927, 63 years after the event. The. advanced rebel contingent arrived at the Union outpost at Eden's Hill about 2:10 Saturday after~oon. By 3:00 p.m Forrest's main body reached what 1s now Fifteenth and Broadway, where they dismounted to wait for dark. Kolb and his young wife got to the river bank about 5 o'clock, on the afternoon of the battle. Kolb managed to gain a 121 place for his family in a small boat. " I clung fast to the bottom of the boat while the firing was going on. near a woman with a bad case of smallpox. having less fear of contracting the disease than the shots from in and around the fort. " The Kolbs crossed over the Ohio River to Brookport, Illinois where they remained until the fighting ended on Sunday. Word of smallpox reached the rebels, hastening their departure. The goal of Forrest 's raid was to cut the vital supply lines running through Kentucky and disrupt Federal dispositions. The advance part of Forrest was the 12th Kentucky, CSA, led by Captain H. A. Taylor. The defenders, led by Colonel S. G . Hicks of Illinois (a veteran of Shiloh) consisted of the 122nd Illinois Infantry, 16th Kentucky Cavalry, recently recruited by George F. Barnes of Paducah, and the ist Kentucky Artillery plus the 8th U.S. Heavy Artillery (Colored), containing many former Kentucky slaves. The Federals were supported by the gunboats Peosta and Paw-Paw. As soon as the Confederates came within cannon-shot, the guns in the fort opened up. A participant recalled: "The Kentuckians were dismounted and moved in line of battle in the direction of the fort . The alignment was maintained until the more densely built-up portion of the city was reached, when it was broken by the buildings and the further advance had to be made along the streets in column by regiments or companies ." Forrest's' men halted for a short time about 300 yards from the enemy and protected themselves by getting behind houses in the street and alleys that ran at right angles to those leading out in the 122 directi on of the fort . Henry George in the History of the Jrd, 7 th, Bth, and /2 th Kentucky C.S.A. wrote: "While marching through the streets the command as under a constant and withering fire from the fort ~y both small arms and artillery. When ou.t in the open space, the lines were somewhat adius'.e~ before the final charge ~as ma~e. When w1th1~ a hod distance of the fort 1t was discovered that 1t ~as surrounded by a deep ditch with s~ch perpendicular banks as to render crossing impossible." A retreat was ordered back to cover the buildings . There, "a terrific fire was kept up on the tort until near night at which time the whole command was withdrawn a short distance from the city and went into camp for the night," according to George. Colonel A.P. Thompson led the rebels in the assault to allow him the honor of taking his hometown. Instead, he was killed by artillery. Colonel Edward Crossland , next in command and also from Kentucky, took over and was severely wounded. The Union losses were 4 killed, 46 wounded, and 40 prisoners. The fort held. White and black soldiers acted with courage and honor. No other assault was attempted. The Rebels moved southward. Upon learning that the newspapers in Paducah were boasting about hiding horses from the Confederates, Forrest detached General Abe Buford's Kentuckians to return to Paducah for the prized mounts. Then, oddly enough , the Kentucky troops under Forrest were allowed to return home on leave with the understanding that they would rejoin the column at 123 a fixed date. They all did, remounted and resupplied with food and clothing. In their absence ' Forrest attacked Fort Pillow that also had black soldiers. After taking the position, many of the black soldiers were massacred. General Paine transferred from the Army of the Mississippi back to western Kentucky on July 19, 1864, beginning a campaign of nearly two months of unabated fear and chaos as punishment for recalcitrant civilians in western Kentucky. Some of Paine 's acts border on sadism. Finally, Governor Thomas Bramlette of Kentucky appointed General Speed Fry and Colonel John Mason Brown of the Kentucky State Guard to look into the situation in Paducah. This they did with diligent investigation. On September 18, 1864, Captain J. Bates Dickson, A.A.G . Military District KY wrote the report of Speed Fry-John Mason Brown. "Your committee would report that they had much difficulty in procuring information from official sources, as Brig. Genl. Paine and his Asst. Adj . Genl. left Paducah on the evening of our arrival, taking with them, or having sent away every clerk who was familiar with the office business of Hd. Qrs." The committee persisted. "Your committee proceeded to examine numerous w itnesses, both soldiers and civilians and to reduce their testimony to the form of affidavits." The remainder of the report was in this form. "It was the constant aim of your committee to elicit, as nearly as practicable, the actual truth." To this end , the committee was open to anyone who wished to testify. Those implicated also were allowed to submit rebutting evidence. "This course although irregular, was 124 ·udged under all the circumstances to be neces~ary land expedient. It enables us to make the following ort of facts about which , we think, there can be reP ,, bUt little controversy. . " . The committee got right to the point. Bng. Genl. E. A. Paine assumed command at Paducah on or about 19 July 1864. His violence of manner as of a character to very much alarm the . ~ommunity. Several of the citizen.s, whos~ uniform ood conduct is a matter of public notoriety and ~ho had fought to defend the city against an. attack by Genl. Forrest, were terrified into leaving their homes. The most sanguinary an.d brutal threats were continually uttered by Genl. Prnne and the execution of some Guerillas (or persons charged with that crime) gave such color to his threats as to alarm the entire country. Such was the state of the public 's mind in the Dist. of West Kentucky (but more especially in Paducah) naturally conseque~t upon the Public speeches and private conversation of Brig . Paine at the time of his arrival." . , The committee turned to reports of Prnne s treatment of private citizens. "Your committee has found but one single citizen of the city of Paducah (Mr. R Enders) who was ever.a.~c~ sted by Bri.gl. Paine in terms of common c1v11ity. Others did not fare so well. "His usage of gentlemen whose reputation for integrity and social worth is co- . extensive with the District was harsh and brutal 1n the extreme. Curses were heaped upon all who approached him. A favorite expression and one frequently made use of was , 'You are a Goddammed scoundrel, God dam you. I'll dig a hole and shoot and put you in it.'" Even women 1 125 rogramme or whether Capt. Hall's report of $2700, received similar treatment. " Private citizens against whom not an earthly charge could be made, were summarily arrested and thrust into the Guard House. One gentleman (Dr. Milam) was confined for fifty one days and finally thrust out as he had been thrust in, without charges or explanations. During his imprisonment he suffered from a violent attack of Erysipelas but was refused medical aid." "A man named Doughty, was seized by Genl. Paine and ordered to execution - although he had been tried and acquitted by a Military Court of the identical charge upon which his death warrant was founded - Fortunately your committee were informed of the facts and (after Paine's removal) Brig. Genl. Meredith was at once apprised of them and countermanded the order." Additional instances were noted by the committee. "Your committee could multiply instances, but respectfully refer to the accompanying affidavits for the accumulated proofs of a uniform system of violent, profane, and abusive tyranny such as they freely confess they would not have believed possible were it not for the respectable oaths which establish the fact. Still further to terrify and alarm the citizens an order was issued by Genl. Paine confiscating the rents of all property belonging to persons who were not and had not been of unconditional loyalty. Capt. R.H. Hall, Pro. Mar. 1st cong. Dist of Ky. was charged by Genl. Paine with the supervision and collection of the forfeited rents, testified that many loyal and Union men suffered heavily by this order, but that Genl. Paine's order was express and preemptory. How much money was collected under this \certaining except from Capt. Hall 's affidavit, a which is filed h erew1•th . . The committee reported the reaction of local uthoriti es to the acts of Paine. "When civil officers of the county remonstrated against Genl. Paine's ~olicy, they were notified to resign and in one instance did resign." Moreover, "the jailor of the county was forced to discharge from his custody persons committed for felony because their accusers in the civil courts were not proved to have been unconditional union men." Another charge was that "money was extorted from private citizens by officers with the knowledge and consent of Brig. Genl. Pain, as will be particularly seen from the affidavits of W.L. Mayes and Thomas A. Duke." A major area of misconduct by Paine and his men concerned the conduct of trade. Colonel H. w. Barry, (8th U.S. Heavy Artillery, Colored) "forced a Banker of the city to pay $150 in gold to a prostitute, whose society the Col. Enjoyed." Also, "private homes were seized by Genl. Paine 's order and the furniture and bedding confiscated." This was a hallmark of Paine throughout the war. He never passed an opportunity to confiscate furniture for his own use. "Your committee enquired carefully and closely for the money resulting from the confiscation, but no trace of it could be discovered." A tax of $1 O per hogshead and bale was to be paid as a fee. Paine did not stop there. "For the purpose of carrying out this order the large tobacco warehouse of Thomas Hale was seized." The report did exonerate the person to whom the fees were 126 127 ~correct, your committee had no method of 1 II paid . He acted properly. However, the report went on to list those who did profit: Hon . Lucian Anderson member of Congress, John J. Bollinger, R. H. Hall, Pro' Mar. 1st cong. Dist Ky, Major Henry Bartling, 8 th U.S. · Heavy Artillery and Thomas Redd, Surveyor of the port of Paducah." Bollinger was accused of shipping "about 142 hhds of tobacco and 84 bales of cotton." Bollinger only paid $10 in fees and had 0 government steamboat come to his landing where the cargo was loaded by soldiers. The committee was convinced that "the all powerful influence of Anderson, Bolinger [siCJ had already sprung up when your committee arrived, and in some instances heavy sums were paid for permits which if admissible should have been freely granted, and if improper should have of course been refused." Paine ordered "all bank checks should be approved by him or by an agent appointed by him, before payment could be obtained. The committee noted the effect of this on trade: "The paralyzing effect of such a measure must appear at first glance." This view was sustained by the local banking community in a document appended to the report of the committee. Further, Mr. Redd was allowed to collect 50 cents on each check. Instances of resistance were dealt with firmly. The committee noted that "the seizure of store houses and g.oods was generally preceded by the arrest of the owners or their clerks. In no case was a reason assigned for seizure which was explained away as soon as a fee was paid to Mr. Anderson and Major Bartling - in the great majority of cases your committee could not with the most 128 .. ent search discover any charge alleged or d1l1Q d against the sufferers." The committee pr~ve d that this practice was commonplace and e 1· k · 0 ff1rrn t "the seizure of such property was but one 1n 1n thO eries of oppressions and extortions so th~ smatically devised. Your committee conferred sv;e~Y with Brig. Genl. Meredith (who replaced . fr . el on this point and the complaints were being pain .bl ,, lieved as rapidly as poss1 e. . re It was the opinion of the committee that one f the most egregious acts of the Paine cortege was ~vied against federal troops: "A charge of ten ts for each letter, newspaper or parcel allowed f;~ave the city of Paducah." _It should be no'.ed that black soldiers had to pay fifty cents to mrnl ? letter at a time they received half the pay of white soldiers. . During General Paine's first tour of duty 1n western Kentucky, he had run afoul with the Woolfolk family. In 1852, Robert, a wealthy "gentleman," encouraged Lloyd Tilghman to :ome to Paducah to build the New Orle?ns a~d Ohio Railroad. In fact, Woolfolk built a fine bnck h?use to accommodate the Tilghman family. When Tilghman and family left to join the Confederates, the Woolfolk moved into the two story house (currently known as the Tilghman house). In 1861 this house was the scene of a fist fight over a Confed~rate flag flying over the Tilghman-Woolfolk house while a Union column marched by. Troops, commanded by General Lew Wallace, objected to a rebel flag on the house of Robert Owen Woolfolk who shouted "Hurrah for Jefferson Davis." Wallace's men tore the flag down. Woolfolk appealed to General Charles 129 Ferguson Smith, commanding, who sent two men to replace the flag as Confederates were there under a flag of truce. A fist fight resulted , but the Union flag remained. Smith was reassigned . Paine also left Kentucky but carried with him his dislike of Woolfolk. On return, this family became a prime target for Paine 's spleen. Andrew Lucas Hunt of Chicago, newly arrived Lieutenant in the l 34th Illinois volunteers was assigned to Paine's Head Quarters. He wrote his mother on August 5, 1864 that "I saw General Payne [sic] this morning ... .He is a very pleasant ge.n tleman." (The last word was underscored twice!). Hunt commented that were no "really fine places residences in the city. The rebels when they attacked the city last March - destroyed so much property- and it has never been fully repaired. Hunt was in a position to see and understand the acts of Paine that have come down in history as the "Reign of Terror" in Paducah. Hunt wrote on August 14th that "I am with him (Paine) a great deal. I hear him issue orders to close such a store - and bring its owner to him in irons. The accounts you see in the papers are true. I saw him send this lady off. I stood right along side of him - when an old lady whose three sons are in the rebel army - came with tears in her eyes and ask him to let her stay in the city. The General told her that living or dead she should leave for Canada on next (last) Monday. I saw her off on the following day. There were eight in that family. Their names were Woolfolk. They had a splendid residence -had to leave everything and there is a negro guard to Canada. The captain of the guard reported to Capt. Paine (the general's 130 ) yesterday noon . The trip cost $350.00 but it all sonmes out of the rebels who live in the c~igh borhood ." Hunt explained to his mother that noine put taxes on the sale of tobacco and cotton p ed by "rebs - or persons of doubtful loyalty - to own a fund for repaying union fam11es ·1· th a t 1·1ve ·1n for1,. d [. ] the neighborhood. "Pain paye sic a woman hose husband had been hanged by the rebs for ~dhering to his union sentiments - a thou:and dollars f this fund - and told her when she was 1n a place of safety and wanted more funds - he would pay ~er a thousand more. That's the right kind of doctrine - he will give audience to? poor ne~ro woman - and will listen with all possible attention to her complaints ." Punishment of suspect citizens by the order of General Paine, for giving "aid and comfort to the rebels" was extraordinary. On September l, 1864, the Holmes County Former (in Ohio) carried the report from the Detroit Free Press for August 11 of Kentucky citizens from Columbus and Pa?uca.h who were banished to Canada. The party arrived in Detroit "this morning, en route for Canada, under the conductorship of Captain H. B. Norton, 8th United Sates Colored Artillery (Heavy) and the fragrance of about two dozen artillerists. ~heir appearance at the Michigan Central Stat10.n created quite a sensation." The reporter srnd numerous citizens engaged in conversation the southerners who gave a "round unvarnished tale" of the cause of their banishment so far as would be permitted by the guard. The party " consisted of about forty persons, men, women and children, all of whom belonged to n'"\ 131 the first families of the State in which they resided. Judges, magistrates , and wealthy merchants, young and beautiful women , widows, and their offspring, were all made to feel the iron hand of despotism, disgorge blood money, dignified by the title of " assessments." The correspondent characterized their misery, "leaving the homes of their youth and the scenes of their childhood, and suffer the tortures of a worse than Siberian Exile, without home, friends ' or even a place in which to lay their heads." Those with whom our reporter conversed expressed none but the most loyal sentimenls to the Federal Government. They stated that they knew not for what they were ordered into exile. They were simply notified that they must either "go to hell, Africa, or Canada by an imperial edict from Gen. Paine. They made no complaint. " Among those expelled from Columbus and whose property was seized were Pembroke Walker, George B. Moss, James Morton, William McKew Hubbard, William Cook, Turner Horn, Josephine Horn Moss, Horn Hill, Kate Horn Moss, James Moore, Richard Cook, and Burns Walker. The family of Major John W. Malone (then a POW from the 12th Kentucky CSA) also were deported. They included William George and Sarah Van Battle Malone (his parents) and four sisters and two young brothers. This family chose not to return until the end of the war. The Paducah Evening Star for July 27, 1907, p. 2 gave names of others sent from Columbus to Canada. Mrs. Joe Overall on July 6 wrote : "About August 8, 1864, I with a number of others from the same place, were banished and sent to Canada by order of General E. A. Paine. We were sent up the 132 \;er to Coiro by boot, and there transferred to a car. n n afterwards quite o party from Paducah, Ky., soo . eluding the family of Colonel R.A. Woolfolk, came in n the Ohio River in a boat and were transferred dOW t . th to the some car with us, and we were kep 1n e or until we reached Windsor, Canada. Negro ~o1diers were kept stationed ?teach door. I . . ember distinctly Miss Bertie Woolfolk coming into re rn . t t P . the c ar holding to the arm of Lieu enan 01ne, son of the man who banished us .. I have .a clear . collection now of the clonking of his sword as 1t re ,, would strike the floor of the car. The Paducah News-Democrat, February 15, 1903, carried the names of those banished to canoda : "Mrs. Robert Woolfolk, six children Nannie, Bertie, Kate, George, Owen , Mary, Henry, nurse Nancy; Mrs. Joe Dane Hobbs, Mrs . Masurer, Mrs. Rollston, Miss Kate Sanders, Mr. Robert Sanders. I do not recall any others banished from P?ducah, but there may have been." Nancy technically was freed the moment she set foot on Canadian soil, but she returned to Paducah with the family. (J . R. Puryear gave the name of another from Paducah who went to Canada : Robert Shanklin .) In 1906, the Evening Sun carried o note from Mrs. (Kate) Whitfield , a daughter of the Woolfolks: "My father, who had made his esca~e at the instance of a cousin who had seen his name heading a list of southern citizens to be shot, reached Windsor about 6 the same day. We occupied the suite of rooms Vallandingham had used during his stay in Canada. I was not grown at the time , so I may not recall all who were sent ... " 133 Kate continued: "My uncle, Captain R. H. Woolfolk, of Louisville, went personally to Washington to see President Lincoln (I think my grandfather, Mr. Robert Enders, accompanied him). They showed the paper to Lincoln and told of Paine's injustice. The same paper must have been carried to Burbridge (Stephen Gano Burbridge took command of the District of Kentucky in February of 1864). He may have been in Washington at the time. I do not know. The paper was then mailed to my father in Canada, who from anxiety and exposure was suffering with a serious brain fever and was not able to return to Paducah until six weeks later." The court martial found Paine guilty of some of the charges, but let him off with only a reprimand as the war was over. Paine did express remorse for his profane language, but for nothing else. As a result, Paine is most often remembered as cruel, remorseless, and sadistic general in the Army of the Mississippi. One who saw to it that prisoners had access to broken down horses. When they tried to escape, Paine would organize a trophy hunt that ended in the death of the escapee. His second tour in Paducah earned the name "Reign of Terror". About the Author: John E. L. Robertson is a longtime me mber of the Jackson Purchase Historical Society and served as th e Society 's President in 1991 -1992 and 1999-2000. Robertson is a w e llknown Pad ucah historian and author of many boo ks and a rticles about th e area. He is also a profess or emeritus of West Kentucky Community and Technical College. 134 poetry Book Review: THE HOMEPLACE Poems by Marilyn Nelson Waniek The Homeplace, we all have one . That won derful family home where past, present an~ futu re meet on warm summer days accompanied bY good food, g.o~d con.versation , and laugh.terl This slim volume 1s filled with wonderful word pictures, set in free and metered rhythms, of an AfricanAmerican homeplace in the Jackson Purchase town of Hickman, Kentucky. Each section begins with an ancestral picture and short genealogical reference point which brings one down through the years from the 1845 birth of the poetess' great-great-grandmother, in slavery, to the 191 6 birth of the poetess's mother. Diverne was the Hickman slave who bore the bi-racial children destined to become important citizens in Hickman, the state of Kentucky and the world: Pomp Atwood , businessman and partner in Hickman Joint Stock Company; Rufus Atwood , President of Kentucky State University for 38 years; Melvin M. Nelson, Captain , USAF (Ret.), a Tuskegee Airman. Entwined with the family stories is the story of the African-American struggle before, during , and after the Civil War, the failures they experienced and the successes they achieved in Hickman and beyond to the places to which they migrated: businesses, schools, the ability to go to college, the ability to earn a living! From the poem , Intermezzo, page 15: 135