The Color Bearer Tradition

The War Between the States was the heyday of American battleflags and their

bearers. With unusualhistorical accuracy, many stirring battle paintings show

the colors and their intrepid bearers in the forefront of the fray or as a

rallying point in a retreat. The colors of a Civil War regiment embodied its

honor, and the men chosen to bear them made up an elite. Tall, muscular men

were preferred, because holding aloft a large, heavy banner, to keep it

visible through battle smoke and at a distance,

demanded physical strength. Courage was likewise required to carry a flag

into combat, as the colors “drew lead like a magnet.” South Carolina’s

Palmetto Sharpshooters, for example, lost 10 out of 11 of its bearers and

color guard at the Battle of Seven Pines, the flag passing through four hands

without touching the ground.

Birth and Early Life in Charleston

Born in Charleston in 1824, Charles Edmiston and his twin sister, Ellen Ann,

were the third son and second daughter, respectively, of newspaper editor

Joseph Whilden and his wife, Elizabeth Gilbert Whilden. The births of two

more sons, Richard Furman in 1826 and William Gilbert in 1828, would complete

the family, making seven children in all. Young Charles’ roots ran deep into

the soil of the lowcountry. His Whilden ancestors had settled in the

Charleston area in the 1690’s, and an ancestor on his mother’s side, the Rev.

William Screven, had arrived in South Carolina even earlier, establishing the

First Baptist Church of Charleston in 1683, today the oldest church in the

Southern Baptist Convention. Like many Southerners who came of age in the

late antebellum period, Charles

Whilden took pride in his ancestors’ role in the American Revolution,

especially his grandfather, Joseph Whilden, who, at 18, had run away from his

family’s plantation in Christ Church Parish to join the forces under

Brigadier General Francis “Swamp Fox” Marion fighting the British.

At the time of Charles’ birth, the family of Joseph and Elizabeth Whilden

lived comfortably in their home on Magazine Street, attended by their devoted

slave, Juno Waller Seymour, a diminutive, energetic black woman known as

“Maumer Juno” to four generations of the Whilden family. Raised

by Maumer Juno from the cradle, Charles soon developed a strong attachment to

the woman - an attachment that would endure to the end of his life. The

prosperity of Joseph Whilden and his family would prove less enduring,

however, and business reversals, beginning in the late 1820’s, combined with

Joseph’s stroke a few years later and his eventual death in 1838, would

reduce his family to genteel poverty. To help make ends meet, Maumer Juno

took in ironing. Despite a lack of money for college, young Charles managed

to obtain a good education. Details about Charles’ schooling are sketchy, but

the polished prose of his surviving letters reflects a practiced hand and a

cultivated intellect. Charles’ admission to the South Carolina bar at

Columbia in 1845 is further evidence of a triumph of intellect and effort

over financial adversity.

In the closing decades of the antebellum period, when Charles Whilden was

growing up in Charleston, the city was the commercial and cultural center of

the lowcountry as well as South Carolina’s manufacturing center and most

cosmopolitan city. By the time Charles Whilden reached adulthood, however,

the Charleston economy was in decline, and the city’s population would

actually diminish during the decade of the 1850’s. Not surprisingly, after a

brief attempt to establish a law practice in Charleston, Attorney Whilden

chose to seek his fortune outside his home town. But the practice of law in

the upcountry town of Pendleton also failed to pan out for Whilden.

Confronted with a major career decision, Whilden elected not only to leave

the law but also to leave the Palmetto State for the north.

The 1850 federal censustakers found Charles Whilden living in a boarding

house in Detroit, Michigan, where he worked as a clerk, probably in a

newspaper office. Speculation in copper stocks and land on Lake Superior soon

left Charles deeply in debt to his youngest brother, William, who had built

up a successful merchandising business back home in Charleston. Desperate to

get out of debt, and perhaps longing for adventure, in the spring of 1855

Charles Whilden signed on as a civilian employee of the U.S. Army. After an

arduous two-month trek from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, Whilden arrived in the

old Spanish city of Santa Fe, New Mexico Territory, on August 27, 1855, where

he took up his duties as civilian private secretary to the local garrison

commander, Colonel John Breckinridge Grayson of Kentucky, who would later

serve the Confederacy as a brigadier general in Florida.

Life in New Mexico Territory

When Whilden arrived in Santa Fe, the city had been under U.S. jurisdiction

for only a few years, and the population was overwhelmingly Hispanic and

Roman Catholic, causing the Baptist Whilden to complain, in an early letter

to his brother William in Charleston, that “[t]here are so many Saints days

among these Hottentots, that it is hard to recollect them.” So isolated was

Santa Fe from the U.S. that mail reached the city only once a month from

Missouri. Looking on the bright side of his cultural and geographic isolation

in New Mexico Territory, in a letter written in May 1856 Charles expressed

his intention to William to remain in New Mexico until “I have paid up all my

debts, for I can do it better out here, than in the States, as there are no

concerts, Theatres, White Kid Gloves, Subscriptions to Charities or churches,

or gallivanting the ladies on Sleigh rides and &c to make a man’s money fly.”

Whilden’s duties as Colonel Grayson’s secretary were relatively light,

leaving him ample time for other pursuits - perhaps too much time for his own

financial good. His April 30, 1857 letter home to Charleston states: “In

addition to the offices I hold in this Territory of Warden of a Masonic

Lodge, President of a Literary Society, member of a Territorial Democratic

Central Committee &c …, I have lately added that of Farmer.” Dreaming of

making enough money to satisfy his debts to William and to establish a law

practice in Texas, Charles had purchased a 16 acre truck farm near Sante Fe,

establishing his claim as a “farmer.” Alas, the farm would prove to be

unprofitable.

In his spare time, Whilden also occasionally edited the Santa Fe newspaper

when the regular editor was busy. During the Presidential election campaign

of 1856, Whilden penned an editorial supporting the renomination of President

Franklin Pierce, a pro-Southern Democrat, and he expressed the hope in a

letter to William that Pierce would be re-elected and “give me a fat office.”

Whilden’s hope for a political sinecure also proved to be a dream.

Marriage was another unrealized dream. After his own marriage in 1850,

William Whilden badgeredhis elder brother to end his bachelorhood and to

settle down. In December 1854, when he was stillin Detroit and aged 30, a

friend had tried to interest Charles in marrying his fiftyish, red-headed

aunt. Seizing the opportunity to turn the tables on William, Charles wrote to

William not to be surprised if he married the woman and took up William on

his standing offer to permit Charles to honeymoon at William’s stylish new

home in Charleston. Whatever romantic aspirations Charles may have

entertained when he arrived in New Mexico, the dearth of eligible women in

the territory soon quashed. In a letter to William written seven months after

his arrival in Santa Fe, Charles could count only six unmarried American

ladies in all of New Mexico, none of whom, however, lived in Santa Fe.

However boring it may have been, life in Santa Fe also afforded Whilden time

for puffing his meerschaum pipe, reading his subscriptions to the peppery

Charleston Mercury newspaper and thehighbrow Russells Magazine and reflecting

on the mounting sectional tensions of the prewar years. In a letter to

William dated March 26, 1856, Charles complained that the “Government is

becoming more abolition every day” and he predicted that the “Union may last

a few years longer, but unless a decided change takes place in Northern

politics, it must at last go under.”

The War Begins

Events would prove Whilden correct. On December 20, 1860, delegates to the

so-called Secession Convention, meeting in Institute Hall in downtown

Charleston, only a short distance from Charles Whilden’s boyhood home on

Magazine Street, unanimously adopted the Ordinance of Secession, taking South

Carolina out of the Union. The bombardment of Fort Sumter in Charleston

Harbor four months later heralded the beginning of the shooting war.

A lesser man than Charles Whilden might have been content to sit out the war

in New Mexico Territory. After all, Whilden had been gone from the South for

more than a decade. He was fast approaching 40. Whilden’s frequent

denunciations of abolitionism in his letters were based on principle, not

political expediency or financial self-interest. Apart from a nominal,

undivided interest in his beloved Maumer Juno that he shared with his

siblings, Charles held no slave property. Furthermore, he was more than 1,000

miles from South Carolina, with little money for travel. But Charles Whilden

was no ordinary man. Undeterred by the obstacles confronting him, Whilden

resolved to answer South Carolina’s call to arms. According to a reminiscence

written in 1969 by his grand niece, Miss Elizabeth Whilden Hard of

Greenville, South Carolina, the “only way he could get back to Charleston was

by the Bahamas, and on his way back to Charleston the ship was wrecked,

he spent some time in an open boat, suffered sunstroke, and as a result had

epileptic attacks.”

The date of Whilden’s harrowing return to Charleston is conjectural, as none

of his correspondence from the early war years has survived, but the likely

date is late 1861 or early 1862. Whilden’s Confederate service records in the

National Archives in Washington, D.C. commence with his enlistment in 1864,

but Miss Hard’s reminiscence may be correct that her Great Uncle Charles

“enlisted a number of times, but when he had an [epileptic] attack would be

discharged. Then he would go somewhere else and enlist again.” Confederate

service records are notoriously incomplete, and it stands to reason that

Charles Whilden would not have risked life and limb returning to Charleston

only to avoid military service once home.

Irrespective of whether or not he had seen prior service, Whilden

demonstrably enlisted “for the war” at Charleston on February 6, 1864, as a

private in Company I (known as the Richardson Guards) of the 1st Regiment,

South Carolina Volunteers. Lieutenant Wallace Delph enlisted Whilden, and the

lieutenant can be forgiven if he looked askance at his new recruit. By most

standards, Whilden was a marginal recruit. Though intelligent and patriotic,

Whilden was also in his 40th year, the red hair of his youth turned grey. His

urban background and string of sedentary occupations better suited him for

a Richmond clerkship than active service in the field. On top of everything

else, Whilden was epileptic.

Whilden’s new regiment was a proud outfit. The 1st Regiment, South

Carolina Volunteers, was known popularly as “Gregg’s lst South

Carolina” after its first colonel, Maxcy Gregg, in order to distinguish

the regiment from several other South Carolina infantry regiments also

identified numerically as the “lst Regiment.” The successor to a regiment

organized by Col. Gregg in December 1860 for six-months service, the 1st

Regiment, SCV, was arguably the very first Rebel infantry regiment. At the

time of Whilden’s enlistment, the regiment was part of Brigadier General

Samuel McGowan’s brigade in the Army of Northern Virginia. At one time part

of A.P. Hill’s vaunted Light Division, McGowan’s South Carolinians had won a

reputation for hard fighting on many a bloody field. That reputation was

shortly to be put to its sternest test at a strategic Virginia crossroads

village known as Spotsylvania Court House.

The Fight at the Mule Shoe

Following his repulse at the Wilderness on May 5 and 6, 1864, Union General

in Chief Ulysses S. Grant ordered the Army of the Potomac to move southeast

about 12 miles to the vicinity of Spotsylvania Court House (NPS Web Site),

hoping to get between the Army of Northern Virginia and Richmond. General

Robert E. Lee, however, was quicker, and elements of the Confederate First

Corps arrived at Spotsylvania Court House just ahead of the Federals. Over

the next few days a series of collisions in the area occurred as both sides

took up positions and brought up additional units. The Army of Northern

Virginia settled into a defensive line at Spotsylvania that bulged

northward in the center to form a salient or “mule-shoe,” with elements of

Lieutenant General Richard Ewell’s Second Corps defending the mule-shoe.

At first light on May 12, nearly 19,000 men of the Union II Corps, taking

advantage of ground fog, attacked the tip or apex of the mule-shoe, quickly

overwhelming Major General Edward Johnson’s 4,000-man division defending the

apex. Once inside the mule-shoe, the Federals threatened to advance southward

like a tidal wave. Only their own disorganization and a series of desperate

Confederate counterattacks halted the Union advance before it resulted in a

general rout.

With most of Johnson’s Division dead or prisoners, a considerable segment of

the works inside the apex of the mule-shoe was unoccupied by any Confederate

troops. To correct this, General Lee forwarded two brigades from the Third

Corps, Harris’s Mississippians and McGowan’s South Carolinians, during the

mid-morning hours of the 12th. With a cheer and at the double quick,

McGowan’s Brigade advanced towards the tip of the mule-shoe in support of

Harris’s Brigade, sloshing through rain and mud and under heavy fire.

At the head of each of the brigade’s five regiments, two soldiers carried the

regimental state flag and the national battleflag. The blue silk state flag

featured a palmetto tree encircled with a wreath of oak and laurel leaves;

the national battleflag displayed the familiar blue, starred St.Andrew’s

cross dividing a red field. When the regular color bearer was shot, Whilden

insisted upon bearing his regiment’s national colors into the fight, although

he was not a member of Company K, the regiment’s color company. Lieutenant

James Armstrong, the commander of CompanyK and Whilden’s messmate, relented,

though, according to Armstrong’s postwar account, Whilden was “feeble in

health and totally unfitted for active service…. In fact, he was stumbling

at every step.” Watching Whilden struggle to keep up with his command,

Armstrong offered to relieve Whilden of the flag and to carry it himself.

Whilden relinquished the flag to the lieutenant, but only after Armstrong had

promised to restore it to him when the regiment halted. As the command

arrived at the next line, “Whilden came rushing up, took the flag and bravely

bore it throughout the fight,” Armstrong recalled.

The lieutenant was being literal when he wrote that Whilden “bore” the flag,

because, when the top of his flag staff was shot away during the advance,

Whilden tied the battleflag around his waist and continued forward. When

Whilden and his comrades finally halted in the late forenoon, they fell into

trenches west of the mule-shoe tip. Perhaps two hundred yards of the

salient’s defenses then remained in Federal hands. In his recent book on

Grant’s Overland Campaign, Noah Trudeau writes: “Along those two hundred

yards of mutually held trenches, men now killed each other with zealous

abandon. In a war that had birthed its share of bloody angles, this day and

the morning of the next at Spotsylvania would give birth to the bloodiest of

them all.”

For the next 17 hours or so, McGowan’s Brigade would hold its position along

the apex of the salient front and would maintain a more or less continuous

fire. At times the two sides were only a few yards apart. Now and then a

hundred or so Yankees would surge forward over the Confederate trenches, only

to be immediately hurled back in desperate hand-to-hand fighting. Rain fell

intermittently during the afternoon of the 12th, adding to the misery of the

combatants. About 10 o’clock that evening, a large oak, some 22 inches in

diameter and cut almost in half by Federal rifle fire, fell down on works

manned by Whilden’s regiment, wounding several men and startling a great

many more.

While this desperate fighting took place, other Confederates were

constructing a new defensive line across the base of the mule-shoe about a

mile to the rear of the Mississippians and South Carolinians. Finally, at 4

o’clock in the morning of May13, the brigades of Harris and McGowan

withdrew to the new line. Thus ended the longest sustained hand-to-hand

combat of the war. The toll on McGowan’s Brigade had been heavy. General

McGowan was wounded early in the advance, and the commander of Gregg’s 1st

South Carolina, Col.C.W. McCreary, fell wounded almost in Whilden’s arms.

Total casualties within the brigade exceeded 40 percent. One of these

casualties was the impromptu flag bearer, Private Charles Whilden. At some

point before McGowan’s Brigade retired to the relative safety of the new

defensive line, a bullet tore open Whilden’s shirt, inflicting a wound to his

shoulder. With the flag still tied around his waist, Whilden was carried to a

field hospital. For all intents and purposes, the war was over for him.

The next day, May l4, Charles hurriedly wrote a letter to his brother,

William, who was then serving as an artillery officer near Charleston. After

describing the fighting of the preceding two days and the heavy losses of his

brigade, Charles turned to a more personal subject. “[I]f it should be the

decree of the Almighty that I should lose my life in this War,” he wrote,

then William should have his meerschaum pipe and his sisters-in-law should

draw for his watch and chain. What little remained of his property, Charles

wrote, should be “equally divided between Sisters Charlotte & Ellen Ann — I

promised dear Mother that they should never want if I could prevent it.”

Sent to the General Hospital at Camp Winder in Richmond to recover his

health, Whilden was furloughed to Charleston in late August. Listed as

“absent sick at Charleston” on the muster rolls of his regiment for September

through December 1864, Whilden never recovered sufficiently to return

to active service.

After the War

In common with other Confederate veterans, Charles Whilden struggled to put

his life back together after the war. He might have succeeded, but on

September 25, 1866 he died suddenly in Charleston at age 42. According to

Elizabeth Hard, her Great Uncle Charles “died without fame or glory, as on

an early morning walk he suffered an [epileptic] attack and fell in a pool of

water from rain collected on the pavement.” The man who had survived the

Bloody Angle at Spotsylvania drowned back home in a few inches of ground

water.

The story of the flag that Charles Whilden carried so courageously at

Spotsylvania does not end with his death. After Whilden was wounded at

Spotsylvania and hospitalized, the flag was stored with his other effects.

Given to Whilden when he was furloughed to Charleston in August 1864, the

flag was in his possession when he died about two years thereafter.

About 15 years after the war, Edward McCrady, Jr., a prominent Charleston

lawyer who had captained the color company of Gregg’s 1st South Carolina

early in the war and had later risen to the rank of lieutenant colonel of the

regiment, petitioned William Whilden to turn over the battleflag that he had

inherited from his brother Charles. McCrady had possession of the regiment’s

blue state colors, and he professed a desire to reunite the two flags. In a

letter written on New Year’s Day, 1880, McCrady pled his best case, pointing

out that his regiment had carried the battleflag “in every battle until May

1864″ and that, for years during the war, he had “lived with the flag in

[his] tent, and slept with it by [his] side in the bivouac.” After consulting

his three surviving brothers, two of whom were Baptist ministers, William

Whilden declined McCrady’s request, essentially on the grounds that

McCrady had no higher claim to the flag than any other veteran of the

regiment. In declining, however, Whilden indicated a willingness to entrust

the flag to a collection of Confederate relics.

Following William Whilden’s death in 1896, custody of the battleflag passed

to William’s daughter, Mrs. Charles Hard of Greenville. In 1906, Mrs. Hard

delivered up the flag to her Uncle Charles’ old friend and messmate, James

Armstrong, a postwar harbor master of Charleston who had commanded the color

company of Gregg’s 1st South Carolina at Spotsylvania. In his letter to Mrs.

Hard expressing his appreciation for the flag, Armstrong promised to

“communicate with the other officers of the Regiment in regard to sending the

flag to the State House to be placed alongside of the blue State flag.”

Armstrong assured Mrs. Hard that, “[u]ntil sent there it will be kept in a

fire proof vault.”

Time passed, and the battleflag remained with the aging Armstrong. Finally,

in 1920, Mrs. Hard wrote to Armstrong about the flag. Rose McKevlin,

Armstrong’s nurse, responded, informing Mrs. Hard that Armstrong’s leg had

been amputated the prior month as a result of a wound he had suffered at

Spotsylvania more than half a century previously. The letter explained that

Armstrong had tried to convene a meeting of the surviving officers to discuss

the flag but that he had failed to do so, and it concluded with the promise

that Armstrong, being the senior of the two surviving officers of the

regiment, would send the flag to the Secretary of State in Columbia to be

placed alongside the blue state colors of the regiment already there.

Although the evidence is not conclusive, the old soldier evidently made good

on his nurse’s promise on his behalf by turning over the battleflag to

the state before he died.

.

PRINCIPAL SOURCES

used in preparing this essay

1. James Armstrong and Varina D. Brown, “McGowan’s Brigade at Spotsylvania,”

Confederate

Veteran, vol. 33 (1925), pp. 376-379.

2. J.F.J. Caldwell, The History of a Brigade of South Carolinians, Known

First as “Gregg’s,” and

Subsequently as “McGowan’s Brigade” (Dayton, Ohio: Morningside Press, 1984

reprint of 1866

ed.).

3. Compiled Service Record of CharlesE. Whilden, 1st Regiment, South Carolina

Volunteers,

Compiled Service Records of Confederate Soldiers Who Served in Organizations

from the State of

South Carolina, War Department Collection of Confederate Records, Record

Group 109, National

Archives, Washington, D.C.

4. Fairfax Downey, The Color-Bearers (Mattituck, NY: J. M. Carroll & Company,

1984).

5. William D. Matter, If it Takes All Summer, the Battle of Spotsylvania

(Chapel Hill: University of

North Carolina Press, 1988). 6. John Hammond Moore, editor, “Letters From a

Santa Fe Army

Clerk, 1855-1856, CharlesE. Whilden,” New Mexico Historical Review, vol.40,

no.2 (April 1965),

pp. 141-164 (relating to letters from CharlesE. Whilden to his brother,

WilliamG. Whilden, or

Mrs.WilliamG. Whilden, the originals of which are in the South Caroliniana

Library).

7. John Belton O’Neall, Biographical Sketches of the Bench and Bar of South

Carolina

(Spartanburg, SC: The Reprint Company, Publishers, 1975), Vol.II, at p.614.

8. Noah Andre Trudeau, Bloody Roads South, the Wilderness to Cold Harbor,

May-June 1864

(Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1989).

9. U.S. Bureau of the Census, Seventh Census of the United States, 1850, City

of Detroit, Wayne

County, Michigan, Schedule1-Free Inhabitants, National Archives Microfilm

Pub. No.T-6, Reel

No.146, p.8 (reverse).

10. CharlesE. Whilden Letters, 1855-1856, MSS in the South Caroliniana

Library, University of

South Carolina, Columbia, SC.

11. CharlesE. Whilden Letters, 1854-1920, MSS in the South Carolina

Historical Society,

Charleston, SC (which collection also includes letters of Edward McCrady,

Jr., WilliamG. Whilden,

Mrs. Charles Hard and Rose McKelvin respecting the battleflag of Gregg’s 1st

South Carolina and a

typescript of Ella Hard’s October23, 1969 letter to the Director of Archives,

Columbia, SC,

respecting her great uncle).

12. [Ellen Whilden,] Life of Maumer Juno of Charleston, S.C., A Sketch of

Juno (Waller) Seymour

(Atlanta, GA: Foote & Davies, 1892).