Stonewall Assaults Dam No. 5
This
article appeared in the September, 2000 issue of "America's Civil War."
It is reproduced here in its entirety with permission.
For further
reading visit: http://historynet.com or
for anyone who wants to
subscribe. (You will be leaving this site).
Never one to rest
on his
laurels, Thomas ‘Stonewall’ Jackson
planned a foray against an inviting target on the Potomac River—Dam
No. 5. Any blow, he believed, was better than nothing.
By Jason
Barrett
In the
early fall of 1861, the
picturesque Shenandoah Valley in western Virginia was a land besieged.
Half a year
after the state had
seceded, the valley was menaced by Union troops raiding from the
mountains to
the west and massing on the banks of the Potomac River
to the north. Alexander Boteler, a Confederate congressman who hailed
from the
region, complained: “The condition of our border is becoming more
alarming
every day. No night passes without some infamous outrage upon our loyal
citizens.”
Valley
denizens clamored
anxiously for relief from the Confederate government. One
influential resident asked for “some
competent regular or experienced officer of the army to take charge of
and
direct the whole military operations in this quarter.” In
October 1861, this assignment went to Maj.
Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson, who had won renown at the First
Battle of
Manassas that July. Jackson was a natural choice for the
assignment, having lived and
taught for 10 years in Lexington, in the southern portion of the
valley.
The
South needed to control the
Shenandoah for several reasons. Most important, it was a populous
agricultural
region that supplied the Confederacy with both food and army recruits.
It was
also militarily important. A Union force moving eastward from the
valley could
fall on the flank of a Southern army defending Richmond. The topography
of the Shenandoah Valley also benefited
Confederate offensive
strategy. Running in a southwest-northeast direction, it
formed an ideal
corridor for a potential invasion of
the North. Finally,
many Virginians revered the green,
fertile land, and its loss would be a psychological blow to the
South.
On November 5, Jackson arrived in Winchester, where he
had
been ordered to establish his
head-quarters.
Although not unduly large, Winchester was still the
most prominent town in the
northern end of the valley, and the network of roads passing through
the
community made it a valuable war prize to the contending armies.
Winchester was about 25 miles southwest of Harpers Ferry,
to which it was connected by an offshoot of the Baltimore &
Ohio Railroad.
Despite
importance of Jackson
’s assignment, however,
E. Johnston balked at
orders from Richmond
to
transfer
veteran troops from his army at
Centreville to augment the small force
of militia and
cavalry in the
valley. “[Jackson] will be opposed by
raw
troops. We [face] the enemy’s
best,” Johnston wrote to Confederate
Adjutant General Samuel Cooper. It
took repeated requests to
pry Jackson’s old volunteer brigade from Johnston and the intervention
of
President
Jefferson Davis to quiet the
commander’s complaints about the transfer.
The arrival of
the
Stonewall Brigade brought Jackson’s strength up to 4,000
effectives. The
brigade had been recruited in
the Shenandoah
Valley
and consisted of the 2nd,
4th, 5th and
27th Virginia regiments, along
with the Rockbridge Artillery. The battery may have been the most
religious in the Confederate service, boasting
25 theology students on its original
muster roll and led by an Episcopal
rector, Captain William Nelson
Pendleton, who had christened the battery’s
four
guns Matthew, Mark, Luke and
John.
There
were more than 8,000
additional
Confederate troops scattered throughout western Virginia, mostly under
Brig. Gen. William W. Loring, at
Huntersville,
and Colonel Edward Johnson, guarding the Allegheny Mountain passes to
the south-west. With Loring and
Johnson available
in a pinch, Jackson might have had enough manpower to keep the valley
safe from Federal
depredations during the winter.
But North and South alike were soon to
learn that Thomas Jackson, despite the
nickname “Stonewall,” was incapable of
remaining still for long. Indeed, he had been plotting to attack and
push back
the Northern soldiers from the moment he had received his new
assignment.
Jackson’s first
priority was recovering the
town of Romney, 43 miles west of Winchester. The 5,000-man Union force
occupying
the town was a sword
of Damocles suspended over Winchester and the northern valley. To add
insult to injury, a
Virginian from the Unionist far-western part of the state, Brig. Gen.
Benjamin
Kelley, commanded the troops garrisoning Romney. (Brig.-General Benjamin Franklin
Kelley, pictured).
Kelley's force had an
unobstructed path to Winchester, and Jackson understood that the small
Union army,
continually being
reinforced, would only become more
potent if allowed to hibernate
over the winter. “Let not the idea of Federal
forces wintering in Romney be
tolerated for one
moment,” he warned Virginia Governor John
Letcher.
In order to
drive
them out, however, Jackson would
need more
strength. He cast a covetous eye on Loring’s three brigades, which were
preparing to go into winter quarters along the Staunton-Parkersburg
Turnpike. In a
November 20 letter to Secretary of War Judah Benjamin. Jackson proposed
the capture of Romney and
asked for Loring to be ordered
to Winchester and added to his
command. He admitted that a winter campaign would involve certain
hardship, but he was optimistic
of success “through the
blessing
of God.”
Annoyed and frustrated by the holdup, Jackson
looked for
an opportunity to strike some kind of blow at a target closer
to Winchester. During the first week of December,
he began to focus on
Dam No. 5 on the Potomac River, seven
miles up river
from Williamsport, Md. Dam No. 5, as Jackson’s future adjutant general,
Major
Robert Dabney, later
noted, was “built within a sharp curve of the river, concave toward the
south,
north of the town of Martinsburg [Virginia].” Constructed
of a heavy wooden frame filled with
quarried rock, it was the most
pivotal of a progression of dams in the Potomac that
forced water into the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal.
Destroying Dam No. 5 would effectively
dry up the C&O Canal, cutting off the supply
of Pennsylvania coal to factories and steamships in
the Washington area. The
canal was
also used to transport Union troops and military supplies. If Jackson
could successfully breach the dam, he
could throw a wrench
into the Northern military machine and cause an energy crisis in the
enemy
capital for at least the
winter.
“No force would be adequate,”
Dabney believed, “to rebuild [the dam] amidst the ice and freezing
floods of
winter,” The time was ripe for the adventure, Jackson wrote Benjamin,
because many empty
cargo boats had been spotted
traveling westward along the canal. Jackson proposed to strand these
vessels and
their valuable return
cargoes of bituminous coal many miles from Washington.
Paxton
arrived at the dam around
sunset on the 7th and opened fire with artillery
upon the small group
of Federal pickets across the Potomac. The surprise shelling drove the
Northerners from the
riverbank and gave the Confederate dam-wreckers about five hours to
slip into
the water and hack away at the lumber frame undercover of darkness.

Correspondent
Corporal Henry Bacon, 13th Mass., Co. D, sketched the first
skirmish at Dam No. 5 for
Frank Leslies Illustrated paper. (The caption gives him the
incorrect rank of Captain). Bacon was wounded at 2nd Bull
Run.
He studied art in Paris and became a well-know artist after
the
war.
Around 11 p.m., Union reinforcements arrived in
unexpected strength and
forced the Confederates to the safety of the south bank, Colonel Samuel
H. Leonard
of the 13th Massachusetts, whose regiment was posted in the vicinity,
led the Northern
defense. Leonard reported to Maj. Gen. Nathaniel
P Banks in Frederick,
Md. Banks was a political appointee and military novice, and although
his courage
and patriotism were unimpeachable, he was fated to spend the first year
of his
army career as Stonewall
Jackson’s hapless foil. Jackson once summed up Banks with the words,
“He is generally willing to fight—and
he generally
gets whipped.”
But that
sentiment would not
hold true on December 8. Paxton
later reported
what happened next: “At daybreak Sunday morning our cannon opened fire
upon
them again, but they were so sheltered in the canal—from which in the
meantime they
had drawn off the water- -that it was found impossible to dislodge
them. As my workmen
could not be protected against
the enemy s fire, I found it necessary to abandon the
enterprise.” Paxton reluctantly led his
men back to Confederate-held
Martinsburg, 25 miles northeast of Winchester on the Valley Turnpike.
There he
dejectedly wrote his wife,
“Entrusted with an
important work, I have made a failure.” (Major Elisha Franklin Paxton,
27th Virginia, pictured).
Jackson admitted that “the injury done to Dam
No. 5 is not sufficient
to admit any passage of water on the Virginia side,” but he
did not find fault with Paxton’s effort.
The
pious Jackson was convinced that an engagement on
the Sabbath had not
received the Lord’s blessing and thus had been doomed to
fail. In his official report, the miscarriage was attributed
more
securely to “the enemy’s
resistance and want of adequate [Confederate means.” Now, with a better
idea of
what to expect, Jackson resolved to try again—and this time there would
be no half-measures.
On
December 10, Jackson
temporarily transferred his headquarters to
Martinsburg, less than a day’s
march from Dam
No.
5. He spent the next week
planning
his strategy and gathering men and materiel,
even having some small boats built “for the purpose of
crossing a
party to the Maryland side [of
the Potomac] if
necessary.”
Jackson wrote optimistically to General
Johnston, “If this plan succeeds—as
through the blessing of Providence it will—Washington will hardly get
any further supply of
coal during the war
from Cumberland.” Jackson was worried, however, about an
advance by Kelley on Winchester, which he expected daily. That would
force him to abandon
his plans for the dam and prepare to defend the northern valley.
But the potential rewards of
the adventure—the
shutting down of the C&O Canal—made it
worth the Gamble.
Jackson himself would lead the
second dam expedition, which
consisted of the Stonewall Brigade, part or Brig. Gen. James H.
Carson’s brigade
of Virginia militia, and a cavalry detachment
under the mercurial Lt.
Col. Turner Ashby. At 6 a.m. on Monday, December 16, the
troops moved out from camp near Winchester. They
were reunited
with Jackson near Martinsburg that night. After
lightening their loads
by leaving tents and knapsacks in town, they marched 14 more miles on
the 17th
and arrived, dog-tired, at the bluffs overlooking the Potomac around 9
p.m.
characteristically wasting no time and taking full
advantage of the darkness, Jackson set them to work that very night.

Contemporary
View of Dam No. 5
and Lock Keeper's House, February, 2005. ©
Brad Forbush, 2009.
Paxton’s previous foray had
demonstrated that anyone attempting to wreck the dam was extremely
vulnerable
to fire from the Maryland shore. Jackson’s
challenge was to reduce his soldiers’ danger as much as possible for as
long as
possible in order to give them a chance to do irreparable damage.
Accordingly, he
dispatched sentries along the Potomac near the dam to prevent any Union
force from crossing in
his rear and pinning his own men against the river. To
further confuse Banks and Leonard and draw
off some of their firepower Jackson sent Carson with some
of
his militia to make a demonstration at
Falling Waters, near Williamsport.
Jackson concealed most of his remaining force
behind a hill that
afforded some protection from Federal cannons. Throughout
the engagement, companies took
turns on picket duty along the river. A cadre of Southern sharpshooters
took
over a nearby mill from which they could snipe at the Federals across
the river. Captain
Raleigh T. Colston of the 2nd Virginia was a native of the area and,
in Jackson’s words, “well acquainted with the locality of the dam and
its
structure.” That
first night Colston led a party of about 30 valley Irishmen equipped
with
crowbars, axes, picks and shovels
down to the water.
Colston’s party crept
halfway out along the dam and
descended into the
chilly
waters on the Potomac. For
a while they
worked undetected in the darkness on the dam’s wooden
supports. The Federals,
however, soon detected their
presence and drove the
demolition crew back to the
shore by midnight. Colonel Leonard had recognized Carson’s
demonstration
at
Falling Waters as a diversion and had kept a sizable force on hand at
the dam.
Sporadic firing across the river went on throughout
the night.
Leonard sent a dispatch to Banks
early on the 18th, informing him of the
situation. While Jackson was
concerned about Kelley advancing from Romney, Banks, unsure of the
Confederate
strength, was worried about Jackson’s moving there to overwhelm
Kelley—exactly
what Jackson was looking forward to eventually doing. Banks was afraid
that the
operation at the dam might merely be a feint to throw Leonard
off-balance and open the way
for an assault on Romney. He
warned his subordinate to keep this
in mind, but his main concern, properly, was for the canal, though he
was not
sure whether Jackson’s real target was Dam No, 5 or Dam
No. 4, a short distance
downriver. (Col. S. H.
Leonard, 13th Mass., pictured).
Banks
ordered Colonel John R.
Kenly of the 1st Maryland,
then stationed in Frederick, to march “with all expedition to one or
the other of
these localities, as
necessity may require or as movements of the enemy may dictate.”
Kenly’s instructions
were to cooperate with Leonard “to resist at all hazards the
destruction of the
dam or any efforts to cross the river.” Along with his own regiment,
Kenly
started forward with the 5th Connecticut, the 29th Pennsylvania, one
detached company or artillery
and two of cavalry. A
nervous Banks urged both Kenly and Leonard to send frequent reports and
anxiously offered reinforcements to both
commands.
At
daybreak on the 18th,
while Carson was keeping the Federals busy at
Falling Waters,
Confederate artillery began thundering to cover another wrecking
party. Jackson had posted two
guns on top of the bluff
commanding the river, one
belonging to the Rockbridge
Artillery and the other to the Ashby Horse Artillery,
commanded by Captain R. Preston Chew, who just months earlier
had been a cadet of Jackson’s
at
Virginia Military Institute.
The
artillerymen zeroed in on a brick house swarming with Union
sharpshooters and had the
satisfaction
of watching them run”from the
house like rats.”
Jackson’s workmen, meanwhile, helped their
own cause by erecting a
rough stone barrier across the top of the dam as partial protection
against Federal
musketry. Some also took to sheltering themselves in the cavities they
were
making in the dam. Leonard duly re-ported to Banks the commencement of
hostilities in a 6:30 a.m. dispatch but said he was
confident that he had the
strength to hold off the attackers.
During
the day, the tide
turned
against the Confederates. Leonard’s own
artillery, a detachment of the 4th U.S., deployed in a grove of woods
and
commenced dueling with Jackson’s two guns.
The
Rebel gunners on the
exposed bluffs were caught with no cover
in a hurricane of
projectiles. ”They had our
range from the first and threw
their shells
right among us,” recalled Lieutenant William T. Poague of the
Rockbridge
Artillery.
As
Poague scurried back to bring up the rest or his battery’s guns,
his unfortunate comrades took what protection they could find among the
few small
saplings on the bluff.
Artillery
private George Neese recalled, “I laid so close to
the ground that it seemed
to me I flattened out a little,
yearning for a leave of
absence.” Guns and horses were left
in the open, much to the chagrin of
Jackson, who unsuccessfully exhorted his soldiers to abandon their
cover. The
Federal shelling finally ended just as Jackson’s additional guns
finally came up, and
the general
decided to conserve his ammunition and
cut short the artillery duel.
Jackson gloomily realized
that he would get little accomplished during daylight. Not
only was his
artillery at a disadvantage, but laborers going to
and from the crude
fortifications in the middle of the
dam were exposed to harrowing Federal gunfire, although, miraculously,
none of
his soldiers had been killed. Two
infantry captains, Henry Robinson of the 27th Virginia and Frederick
Holliday of the 33rd Virginia, volunteered to lead
their companies into the water to resume
the work after dark.
Jackson went down to the riverbank that night
to hand out tools and
encouragement to the
volunteers. Again the intrepid
Southerners crept out to the middle of the dam and slithered
into the water. Dabney marveled
at their fortitude: “The amount
of fatigue which the men endured, laboring,
as they constantly did, waist-deep in
water, and in the intense cold
of winter, can never
be
sufficiently appreciated.” The men
lacked even the luxury of a
campfire on the shore to warm themselves by, as no blazes were
permitted
so close to the enemy. The
abstentious Jackson, however,
was more
generous than usual with the whiskey stores that night.
The Southerners soon learned
that Leonard had his wits about him, as he demonstrated that smoking
out
sharpshooters was a game
that
two could play. Union artillery targeted the mill Jackson had taken
over upon arriving and soon
had it ablaze. This
had the double benefit of uncovering Jackson’s nest of marksmen and
giving
Leonard’s own riflemen some light by which to fire upon Robinson’s and
Holliday’s still toiling men. The Virginians did manage to inflict some
damage
to the structure, though the dam was still holding together.
In
order to continue smashing
away at the dam during the daylight hours, Jackson resorted to a ruse
on the 19th. After
daybreak, he began moving conspicuously
down the Potomac with troops, wagons and pontoons, to
give the impression
that he was headed to try his luck at Dam No. 4, or possibly to cross
the
river. Leonard swallowed the deception long enough to dispatch his only
battery
and some infantry downriver, giving the Confederates in the river a few
peaceful hours to batter at the dam’s supports. The Federals soon
returned in
force, however, and were joined later that day by Kenly’s regiments
arriving
from Frederick. The defenders once again cleared the river of Rebels.
That evening, Banks reported: “Heavy firing most of the
day.... Enemy
driven from the dam.” (camp
photo of members of the 13th Mass at Williamsport.
Chandler Robbins standing left, Lt John G. Hovey, seated, Lt. Charles
B.
Fox seated far right. Barely visible inside the tent on the
left,
is Lt. Isaac Hall Stimpson).
Jackson spent part of the 20th’trying
to finish the
work on the dam. By 3 p.m., however,
having only weakened the structure and caused some leakage, he decided
to
withdraw from the riverbank. Jackson no longer had any advantage of
surprise, and the Federals
had had four days in
which to bring reinforcements to bear. Furthermore, Kelley’s troops
were still
in Romney, a fact that must have intruded often upon Stonewall’s
thoughts
during the campaign. Surely Loring would be at Winchester any day, if
he was not already there,
allowing Jackson to get on with the winter’s real work.
Spotting the Rebel withdrawal,
Leonard quickly sent troops across the Potomac,
which put an end to the project. At 6
a.m.
on the
21st, Jackson’s force began the march back to
Martinsburg, joined by Carson’s militia pulling back from
FallingWaters. Two Confederate
deserters, possibly bogus, materialized in the Union camp and reported
Jackson’s host at a vastly inflated 15,000
men, discouraging any
Federal pursuit.
Jackson
proclaimed his expedition a success.
His casualties had
been remarkably light, one killed and four wounded. In a report to
Johnston’s
headquarters on December 24th, Jackson crowed he
had ”reason to
believe that the recent break in Dam No. 5 will destroy any vestiges of
hope
that might have been entertained of supplying Washington with
Cumberland coal
by the Chesapeake & Ohio Canal.” According to Dabney, writing
several years
later, “a great chasm was made, through which the whole current of the
river
flowed down toward its original level, leaving the canal far above it
drained
of its waters.” (Photo
of canal boats lined up near Washington, D.C. C&O
Canal NHP).
It
turned out that these were
substantial exaggerations, whether or not Jackson or Dabney realized
it. In
Dabney’s case, he was writing shortly after the war for an audience to
whom Jackson, in death, had become a demigod, and
some literary license
was almost obligatory when describing his exploits. In Jackson’s case,
he was appealing for
reinforcements for his Romney
campaign or, as he thought
more
likely, for defense against a thrust by Kelley toward Winchester.
Although scrupulously honest, Jackson could play politics when
necessary,
and he may have been
doing a bit of spin-doctoring to give extra urgency to his request for
more
troops. He followed the pronouncement of victory at Dam No. 5 with a
pointed
warning that the Federals would be able to resume the coal supply by
repairing
the B&O Railroad if he were not given adequate manpower to
prevent them
from doing so.
In fact, Washington’s
coal supply had not been
interrupted at all, for the
Federals had already repaired the dam by the time Jackson wrote his
report. As soon as Jackson left the riverbank on the 20th,
the Federals
could see that the structure was “but little injured,” and Banks sent a
telegram to Leonard congratulating him on his defense of the
dam. The following day, Leonard
happily reported
that canal boats were running without interference from Jackson’s
Confederate soldiers.
Photo of canal
boats awaiting passage through the locks. (C&O Canal
NHP).
William Poague of the Rockbridge
Artillery admitted later that “the Yankees got the better of us.” After
the
war, the 5th Connecticut’s regimental historian, Edwin E.
Marvin, also took issue
with Dabney’s boastful account of the incident and cited a discussion
with
Captain Robinson of the 27th Virginia, who had
been captured in
March 1862. According to Marvin, Robinson “had freely admitted to the
officers of
our regiment, in frequent conversations, that the whole thing was a
gigantic
failure on their part.”
Although the Dam No. 5
expedition added little to the Stonewall Jackson mystique, some of the
qualities that would make him a legend in his own time were already
evident at
this early stage of his career. His talent for audacious planning, his
penchant
for trickery, and his refusal to make allowances for human frailty all
revealed
themselves in the small operation. .Seemingly, only a lunatic
would have sent men
into an ice-cold river
for hours at a time exposed to enemy fire, but when Jackson could
envision grand results, he
believed that with God’s
favor he could always find a way to bring them about. Unlike many
generals on
both sides, Jackson believed in quick and decisive
action, and the Confederacy
would come to rely on his success in battle.
In
early 1862—after Jackson had finally occupied Romney without a
battle and been
piqued by interfering orders from the Confederate War Department—he
briefly tendered
his resignation from the army. General Johnston’s rueful comment was,
“I don’t
know how the loss of this officer can be supplied.” After Jackson’s
mortal wounding in May 1863 at the
Battle of Chancellorsville,
the answer would become plain: It
could
not.
Marlboro,
Mass., author Jason
Barrett wrote about General Albert Sidney
Johnston’s journey to Texas in the September
1998 issue of America’s
Civil War. For further reading, see: Stonewall Jackson,
by James I. Robertson, Jr.; or Stonewall, by Byron Farwell.
Visit
"Americas
Civil War" for further reading or magazine subscriptions: http://historynet.com
Return to Top of Page
|