Johnny Neil Smith

Hillcountry Warriors


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HLLLCOUNTRY

      HILLCOUNTRY

      WARRIORS

      THE CIVIL WAR SOUTH

      SELDOM SEEN BY AMERICANS

      Johnny Neil Smith

       The events, people, and incidents in this story are the sole product of the author’s imagination. The story is fictional and any resemblance to individuals living or dead is purely coincidental.

      © 2006 by Johnny Neil Smith. All rights reserved.

      No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

      Sunstone books may be purchased for educational, business, or sales promotional use. For information please write: Special Markets Department, Sunstone Press, P.O. Box 2321, Santa Fe, New Mexico 87504-2321.

      Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data:

      Smith, Johnny Neil, 1939-

      Hillcountry warriors: the Civil War South seldom seen / Johnny Neil Smith.

      p.cm.

      ISBN: 0-86534-247-4 (hardcover)

      ISBN: 0-86534-546-5 (softcover : alk. paper)

      1. Southern States—History—Civil War, 1861 -1865—Fiction.

      2. Mississippi—History—Civil War, 1861 -1865—Fiction.

      3. State rights—History—19th century—Fiction. I. Title.

      813’ .54—dc20 96-6893

      CIP

       WWW.SUNSTONEPRESS.COM

      SUNSTONE PRESS / POST OFFICE BOX 2321 / SANTA FE, NM 87504-2321 /USA (505) 988-4418/ORDERS ONLY (800) 243-5644/ FAX (505) 988-1025

      Dedicated to Susan

      without whose encouragement and assistance

      this book could not have been written

      CONTENTS

       Preface

       Prologue

       Spring Planting 1862

       Land Of Hope

       Home In The Wilderness

       Back To The Wilderness

       Settlement Begins

       Coontail

       Homecoming

       Ruckus At Walker’s Store

       Dogfight In Union

       Young Gathering

       Slave Auction

       The Thinning Ranks

       Boys Become Men

       Departure From Newton Station

       North To Virginia

       Into The Jaws Of Hell

       Pains Of War

       Angel Of Mercy

       Long Road Home

       Miracle At Christmas

       Dashed Dreams

       Out Of Despair

       Easter Meeting

       A Woman’s Dreams

       Balancing The Scales

       A Lost Crop

       The Hearing

       Justice Comes In Many Ways

      PREFACE

      Many people, when thinking about the Ante-Bellum American South, view it as a land of plantations, columned mansions, slave holders, harsh overseers and a society that supported slavery as an institution that was both moral and necessary to maintain the economy. But this is not a totally correct summation. True, slavery helped promote and strengthen the financial system of the South, but many Southerners did not own slaves nor did they have any desire to support this so-called “peculiar institution.” So it was with many of the pioneers who settled the hillcountry of east central Mississippi.

      These early settlers were living on land that did not lend itself to plantation farming. Most only raised enough food for themselves plus a little extra during the better farming years. In addition, many pioneers were first and second generations of Scotch-Irish folk possessing the ideas and values of their parents and grandparents who had struggled to get to America in order to seek a better life and, in some cases, just to survive.

      These immigrants were from economic conditions not much better than those who were in slavery in the United States. In Scotland and Ireland, they had been poor tenants who were paying rent for land that barely provided a living. If the land did not produce, they still would owe the landlord his required sum. Many were then pushed off their land and in some cases were imprisoned for debts to their landlords. They knew about poverty and oppression and upon coming to America, many were sympathetic toward the plight of the Southern slave.

      Even though these immigrants had been free to go as they pleased in the old country, in America they were not much better off than the Southern Negroes. Hillcountry people, who held little regard for the plantation system and what it represented, nevertheless found themselves entangled in the conflict that divided this nation, destroyed thousands of promising young lives, and turned family against