GREENSBOROUGH Patriot
October 16, 1862
Page 2
Incidents of the Great Battle
“Personne,” the army correspondent of the Charleston
Courier, mentions the fact that our soldiers were in the habit of supplying
their own urgent want of shoes, etc., by stripping them from the feet of the
dead yankees, who certainly had no further use for
them. Personne
says, “If you could see our bare-footed and ragged men, you might think there
was even a virtue in stealing from a defunct army.” And he adds, “Among the amusing occurrences
of this kind, it is related of a soldier
belonging to the Eighth Alabama Regiment, that he found a yankee
in the woods, but being separated from his regiment, did not know what to do
with him. While soliloquizing, the
officer who gave me the incident rode by, and his advice being asked, he told
the soldier he had better let the prisoner go.
“Well,” said the Alabamian, “I reckon I will, but look here, yankee, you can’t leave till you’ve given me some of those
good clothes. Strip! I want your boots and breeches.” The yankee
protested against such indignity, and appealed to the officer to protect
him. The Alabamian also pleaded his
cause. “Here’s this fellow,” said he,
“come down here a robbing of our people, and he’s stayed so long it’s no more’n right he should pay for his board. I don’t want him to go around in his bare
legs any more’n he wants to; and I mean to give him
my old clothes.” “A fair exchange is no
robbery,” replied the officer, “and as you have no shoes and a mighty poor pair
of pants, I reckon you had better help yourself.” “Now, yankee, you
hear what the “boss” says, do yer; off with your
traps and let’s trade.” The last thing
my friend saw, as he rode away, was the two worthies, in their “bare legs,
stripping for an eschange.”
[Transcribed by Sharon Strout]