A CIVIL WAR ANTIQUES
STORY by Wayne Mattox
An important antique discovery has taken
place. Although records indicate thousands of unique
"green" uniform coats were issued and worn by two distinguished
Union regiments know as Berdan's Sharpshooters, only a single
known specimen housed in the Smithsonian Institution has
survived to modern times. Now, there are two. This story
involves a forgotten wayfaring Union soldier named William
Tilson and a wealthy inventor turned colonel, Hiram
Berdan.
Bill's Story:
5' 11" tall William F. Tilson was 16 years old, November 9,
1861, when he tried out for Company E, of the 2nd Regiment,
United States Sharpshooters. A Vermont farmer, he must have
spent long hours practicing his shooting. To become a
"U.S." Sharpshooter, the only volunteer unit to bear such a
designation, Bill was required to fire his own non-scope rifle
ten consecutive rounds, reloading fast as possible, at one of
two targets. The first being 200 yards distant while using a
rest, the other paced at 100 yards that was fired at
offhand. Any contestant missing the targets or averaging
more than five inches from center was disqualified. Bill
made the company.
He was issued a bayonet-fitted, Model 1859;
double set trigger, Sharps.52 caliber breech loading
rifle. Some in Company E were armed with heavy
telescopic target rifles. The government also
supplied Bill with black leather shoes, brown leather
knee length gaiters, an itchy white shirt, Austrian gray
pants, a kepi hat, a waist belt, a cartridge box, a
canteen, a square mess kit, and two unique ensembles: a
fur-covered knapsack, and a distinctive green-dyed
nine-button frock coat with rubber buttons-instead of the
customary brass-to prevent reflection of light. The
uniform, a new one was issued every year, being different
from any other in the whole army, provided more than
camouflage. It instilled comradeship and fierce pride.
Soldiers became warriors.
Bill traveled to Weehawken, NJ, where his unit
was trained in innovative close-range skirmishing
techniques and long distance marksmanship. Deadly
adversaries in hand-to-hand combat or at ranges extending
as far as 600 yards, the Berdan Sharpshooters have been
credited with a higher percentage of kills than any other
unit in the war. They also suffered the highest rate of
casualties. When training was completed, Bill traveled to
Washington D.C. where he was placed into service.
Tilson, at times a discipline problem, was
reported absent from leave in August 1862. He
returned for the Antietam Campaign a month later, where,
on Sept.17, 1862 over 25,000 men became casualties. It
was the Civil War's single bloodiest day.
Bill and his comrades were employed as light
infantry. Often patrolling from the front line, it was
their responsibility to engage the enemy for the purpose
of discovering deployment. With the enemy located,
the Sharpshooters shifted back to reinforce the infantry.
Usually positioned at a flank, they delivered long range
fire, targeting officers, artillery batteries, and enemy
snipers. During retreat, the "boys in green" were put in
the unfortunate position of rear support; forfeiting many
of their rank to prevent main body forces from being
overrun.
Bill Tilson was promoted from in rank from
private to 5th sergeant on January 3, 1863. He was
present, May 1-4, at the battle of Chancellorsville. July
2, 1863, during the second day of battle at Gettysburg,
Tilson was with the 169-man regiment positioned at
critical posts in Plum Run Valley near Little Round
Top. There, commander, Major Henry Stoughton,
wrote: "The enemy then advanced in line of battle
covering our entire front and flank. While they
were advancing, the Second Regiment did splendid
execution, killing and wounding a great many. One (enemy)
regiment broke three times, and rallied, before it would
advance. I held my position until their line of
battle was within 100 yards of me and their skirmishers
were pushing my right flank, when I ordered my men to
fall back."
The retreat was difficult. Besides being shot
at, Bill and the other Sharpshooters had huge boulders
and gnarled exposed tree roots from the heavy-forested
area to content with. The regiment scattered, but
continued to perform its deadly work. As the southerners
advanced to Little Round Top and attempted to outflank
the Union, they were hit with volley after volley.
After the battle the Confederates referred to this rocky
wooded area as "The Slaughter Pen." To the west,
scattered Sharpshooter packs were helping other Union
soldiers defend "the wheat field," an area now referred
to as the "whirlpool of the battle." Engaging armies
charged and counter-charged five times, blanketing the
terrain with corpses.
Tilson was listed as "absent sick" from July
31st through late September. Following a hospital
stay, he rejoined his regiment. Surprisingly, the soldier
once charged with desertion reenlisted when his term of
service ended in December 1863. Shortly thereafter,
he was promoted to 3rd sergeant. May 6, 1864, Sgt. Tilson
suffered a severe wound to his left side in the Battle of
the Wilderness. While recovering at a U.S. hospital in
Burlington, Vermont, he met a girl from his hometown,
Susan E. Lamson, and married. September 12, Tilson
rejoined Company E. Soon thereafter, he was reported as a
deserter for the second time. No doubt, his new bride
played a part in this transgression.
Tilson was discharged from the Sharpshooters,
January 4, 1865. He joined Company G of the 4th Vermont
Volunteers as 2nd lieutenant. During the April 2nd
assault on Petersburg, Tilson was severely wounded by
canister-shot. The lower third of his right leg was
amputated. After hospitalization, he returned to
Vermont and tried to make a living as a shoemaker. His
wounded leg never healed. After years of suffering,
"the stump developed ulcers and then a large abscess."
Tilson died, June 21, 1910, leaving his wife and four
children. Undoubtedly, Susan tucked Bill's old green coat
away as a proud momento to his life and
service.
Hiram's Story: In a day when a $300 could
exonerate one from service, millionaire businessman Hiram
S. Berdan looked for a way to involve himself in the
Northern war effort. Berdan had the reputation of
the country's finest marksman. He was also a trained
mechanical engineer, a brilliant inventor, and a
progressive thinker. Hiram realized that while the
technology for waging war had changed, due primarily to
the invention of fast loading "rifled" firearms and
"conical" bullets, war tactics remained outmoded.
Continuing the "maximum firepower" tradition born out of
the days of smoothbore short-range muskets, commanders
from both North and South continued massing their troops
in linear should-to-shoulder formations. At
distances exceeding three hundred yards, they would prove
a target gallery to an infantry of elite rifleman, Hiram
theorized.
Resolved to create such a militia, Berdan began
correspondence. In a June 13, 1861 letter to
Commander-in-Chief Winfield Scott, Hiram wrote, "I
propose to form a regiment of 750 men ... No man is to be
mustered in who cannot, when firing at a distance of 200
yards, put ten consecutive shots in a target."
Berdan used his political influence to gain an
audience with the President. Lincoln, a marksman
himself, embraced his ideas. Soon, recruiting
officers began scouring northern states. Shooting
contests were held in cities and hamlets. Within three
months, the first of two "Berdan Sharpshooters" regiments
had formed.
Berdan's second monumental impact on future U.S.
military operations would involve soldier's
uniforms. He had the unique idea of camouflaging
his Sharpshooters. In a letter to the governor of
Pennsylvania, a supplier to the regiment, he
corresponded, "I have concluded to include a uniform of
green cloth instead of blue, the latter being to
conspicuous." In another letter he expressed, "Green
cloth would better correspond in the leafy season with
the colors of the foliage."
Berdan introduced revolutionary tactics for
skirmishing. He invented several lines of weaponry. He
also helped promote the standardization of military
firearms, and more importantly, ammunition.
Sadly, Berdan's talents in the management of
warfare did not lend themselves to the management of men.
Especially other officers often chided him as a combat
leader. He was labeled irresponsible, inept, and a
coward: descriptions that seem contrary to the man's
proven attributes. Appraising the situation, Hiram
wrote to Washington. They promptly dispatched
capable leaders to help him shepherd the
Sharpshooter's.
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"I
propose to
form a
regiment of
750 men ...
No man is to
be mustered
in who
cannot, when
firing at a
distance of
200 yards,
put ten
consecutive
shots in a
target." |
|
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Berdan fought in numerous conflicts including
Seven Days War and 2nd Bull Run. In 1865, he was awarded
the brevets of brigadier and major general for
Chancellorsville and Gettysburg, at each of which he led
a brigade. The often unappreciated soldier resigned on
January 2,1864, twelve months before the Sharpshooter's
were honorably retired. In 1893, with the names of Grant,
Custer, Lee, Meade, Jackson, Stuart, Caldwell, Picket,
Buford and other charismatic Civil War heroes forever
blazed into American history texts, the man who
revolutionized military tactics passed away at age 70.
Unheralded, with the exception a brief mention in a few
obscure references, the name Hiram Berdan will never be
totally erased from history. He curtailed a horrible
war-abetted by an elite regiment of straight shooters
know as "the greencoats."
The images that you see here, are just a couple
in a collection that Williams wife also carefully tucked
away. In an important account of Tilson's military
record, in his own hand on his GAR papers, the two time
deserter turned hero; a man who reenlisted after his four
year obligation was met only to lose his leg soon-after,
wrote the following:
"Being wounded nine times, and with the
loss of my right foot being the most serious. The last
one causing Uncle Sam to conclude my services of little
importance."
by AntiqueTalk.com
Reprinted with
permission
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