to form his brigade, stack arms, hang the belts on
the muskets, and stand waiting for orders. Stuart’s
division had been halted outside the parapet.
I then sent Major Hammond down the rebel line to
the right, with orders to stop Steele’s division
outside, and to have the other rebel brigade stack
its arms in like manner, and to await further orders.
I inquired of Colonel Garland who commanded in chief,
and he said that General Churchill did, and that he
was inside the fort. I then rode into the fort,
which was well built, with good parapets, drawbridge,
and ditch, and was an inclosed work of four bastions.
I found it full of soldiers and sailors, its parapets
toward the river well battered in, and Porter’s
gunboats in the river, close against the fort, with
their bows on shore. I soon found General Churchill,
in conversation with Admiral Porter and General A.
J. Smith, and about this time my adjutant-general,
Major J. H. Hammond, came and reported that General
Deshler, who commanded the rebel brigade facing and
opposed to Steele, had refused to stack arms and surrender,
on the ground that he had received no orders from
his commanding general; that nothing separated this
brigade from Steele’s men except the light parapet,
and that there might be trouble there at any moment.
I advised General Churchill to send orders at once,
because a single shot might bring the whole of Steele’s
division on Deshler’s brigade, and I would not
be responsible for the consequences; soon afterward,
we both concluded to go in person. General Churchill
had the horses of himself and staff in the ditch;
they were brought in, and we rode together to where
Garland was standing, and Churchill spoke to him in
an angry tone, “Why did you display the white
flag!” Garland replied, “I received orders
to do so from one of your staff.” Churchill
denied giving such an order, and angry words passed
between them. I stopped them, saying that it
made little difference then, as they were in our power.
We continued to ride down the line to its extreme
point, where we found Deshler in person, and his troops
were still standing to the parapet with their muskets
in hand. Steele’e men were on the outside.
I asked Deshler: “What does this mean?
You are a regular officer, and ought to know better.”
He answered, snappishly, that “he had received
no orders to surrender;” when General Churchill
said: “You see, sir, that we are in their
power, and you may surrender.” Deshler
turned to his staff-officers and ordered them to repeat
the command to “stack arms,” etc.,
to the colonels of his brigade. I was on my horse,
and he was on foot. Wishing to soften the blow
of defeat, I spoke to him kindly, saying that I knew
a family of Deshlers in Columbus, Ohio, and inquired
if they were relations of his. He disclaimed
any relation with people living north of the Ohio,
in an offensive tone, and I think I gave him a piece
of my mind that he did not relish. He was a
West Point graduate, small but very handsome, and
was afterward killed in battle. I never met him
again.