Addendum 1: Battery Flag
Battery Flag
Atlanta, GA. October 11, 1891
Colonel John M. Martin, Ocala, FLA.
Dear Sir: By todayâs express I forward you the flag and staff of the Marion Florida Light Artillery, placed in my care at Zebulon, GA., July 1864, by my son, Lieutenant A. J. Neal, of that gallant little band, for safekeeping; stating that, by order of the general commanding, none but flags of large bodies of troops would be retained. This request was faithfully fulfilled by myself, my wife and two daughters, the only members of my family then at home.
I deeply regret the shameful manner in which the beautiful spear that ornamented the staff was lost. The value of the spear is beyond price in dollars and cents, when we remember that it was gotten up by the contributions of Floridaâs noble sons and daughters, especially the latter, who so generously contributed âmantle and jewelsâ, as well appear by an appropriate and beautifully written article, after the Battle of Richmond, KY., 1863, a copy of which I enclose.
That little band then and ever since, have appreciated those contributions, and held them as sacred as the cause they volunteered to sustain. The loss of the spear occurred in April 1865. A large body of the Federal Army pass through Zebulon. There being only three old men besides myself in town, we were entirely unprotected.
Mrs. Neal had prepared two large pockets, in which she concealed our daughterâs jewelry and the spear.
After the main body passed, there came suddenly through our garden, four men armed and wearing Federal uniforms. Mrs. Neal fled with the jewels but was pursued by the rufflianly villains, overtaken and robbed of everything, including the spear.
They then searched my person and took a small sum of money.
The flag was saved by Miss Ella Neal now Mrs. John Keely, who concealed it beneath her overskirt while the Army was passing. The staff was concealed in the garden.
Yours Truly,
John Neal
âExcerpt from a letter from John Neal
Father of Lieutenant A. J. Neal to Colonel John M. Martin,
Dated October 11, 1891
Source: A. J. Neal Letters, File, Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield
Addendum 2: Artillery Battery Organization
Artillery Battery Organization
The initial organization for the Marion Light Artillery follows the established organization of the US Army Artillery Battery at the beginning of the Civil War. That being six guns formed a battery, usually with four six-pounder and two twelve-pounder howitzers. Usually, after the first year of the war, most Confederate units were reduced over time to four guns due to casualties of men; loss of horses, which was very high; and the Confederacyâs severe supply and logistical problems.
The Florida Battery would become a four-gun battery at Tallahassee, Florida, while en route to Chattanooga, Tennessee. Its two-pounder howitzers were detached and assigned to another unit.
The staffing and organization of most batteries consisted of a captain (not unusual to have a first lieutenant in command due to casualties or other demands of the service). A second lieutenant commanded a two-gun section (two sections per battery), each gun (field piece) was commanded by a sergeant with two corporals with a gun crew of nine privates. A six-horse team includes a field piece, limber, and caisson. A second ammunition caisson would carry three ammunition chests. A second lieutenant (some batteries have a third lieutenant) commanded all the batteryâs ammunition caissons. The battery had a first sergeant (or orderly sergeant), a quartermaster sergeant, and four to five artificers (farrier, blacksmith, saddler, etc., basically, a technical or mechanic position, usually a skilled NCO, who would maintain, repair the guns, all related battery equipment in serviceable condition).
The battery would have assigned to it a traveling forage, a battery wagon for equipment, but again, field conditions and supply needs would dictate the amount of equipment and transportation assigned to each battery.
The Florida Battery may have had at any one time several men assigned as clerks, commissary staff as the batteryâs situation required. Last staff position would be one of honor and danger, the guidon or flag bearer.
In the Army of Tennessee by early 1863, all batteries were assigned to a battalion (usually four batteries). The battalions were assigned to a division, usually two battalions per division.
Bibliography for Addendum 2
Coggins, Jack. Arms and Equipment of the Civil War. Mineola, New York: Dover Publications, Inc., 1990.
Daniels, Larry J. Cannoneers in Gray. Revised Edition. Tuscaloosa, Alabama: The University of Alabama Press, 2005.
Dickison, Mary E. Dickison and His Men. Facsimile Reproduction of the 1890 Edition. Gainesville: University of Florida Press, 1962.
About the Author
Florida native Michael W. Evans served twenty-six years in the US Air Force, both active and reserve. With tours in Southeast Asia and Afghanistan, where he served as the NCOIC of Intelligence for the Provincial Reconstruction Team. He graduated with a BS in parks and resource management from the University of Southern Mississippi and a BA in history from the University of North Florida. He spent twenty-six years with the Florida Park Service as a ranger, law-enforcement officer, and park manager, five and a half years with the National Park Service as a park ranger. He enjoys living history, studying southern culture and Florida history; he currently volunteers for both agencies. Michael and his wife, Ann, live in Flagler Beach, Florida.