and the Seventeenth Corps (General Blair) occupied
the place during that night. I remember to have
visited a large hospital, on the hill near the railroad
depot, which was occupied by the orphan children who
had been removed from the asylum in Charleston.
We gave them protection, and, I think, some provisions.
The railroad and depot were destroyed by order, and
no doubt a good deal of cotton was burned, for we
all regarded cotton as hostile property, a thing to
be destroyed. General Blair was ordered to break
up this railroad, forward to the point where it crossed
the Santee, and then to turn for Columbia. On
the morning of the 13th I again joined the Fifteenth
Corps, which crossed the North Edisto by Snilling’s
Bridge, and moved straight for Columbia, around the
head of Caw-Caw Swamp. Orders were sent to all
the columns to turn for Columbia, where it was supposed
the enemy had concentrated all the men they could
from Charleston, Augusta, and even from Virginia.
That night I was with the Fifteenth Corps, twenty-one
miles from Columbia, where my aide, Colonel Audenried,
picked up a rebel officer on the road, who, supposing
him to be of the same service with himself, answered
all his questions frankly, and revealed the truth that
there was nothing in Columbia except Hampton’s
cavalry. The fact was, that General Hardee,
in Charleston, took it for granted that we were after
Charleston; the rebel troops in Augusta supposed they
were “our objective;” so they abandoned
poor Columbia to the care of Hampton’s cavalry,
which was confused by the rumors that poured in on
it, so that both Beauregard and Wade Hampton, who were
in Columbia, seem to have lost their heads.
On the 14th the head of the Fifteenth Corps, Charles
R. Woods’s division, approached the Little Congaree,
a broad, deep stream, tributary to the Main Congaree;
six or eight miles below Columbia. On the opposite
side of this stream was a newly-constructed fort,
and on our side—a wide extent of old cotton-fields,
which, had been overflowed, and was covered with a
deep slime. General Woods had deployed his leading
brigade, which was skirmishing forward, but he reported
that the bridge was gone, and that a considerable force
of the enemy was on the other side. I directed
General Howard or Logan to send a brigade by a circuit
to the left, to see if this stream could not be crossed
higher up, but at the same time knew that General
Slocum’s route world bring him to Colombia behind
this stream, and that his approach would uncover it.
Therefore, there was no need of exposing much life.
The brigade, however, found means to cross the Little
Congaree, and thus uncovered the passage by the main
road, so that General Woods’s skirmishers at
once passed over, and a party was set to work to repair
the bridge, which occupied less than an hour, when
I passed over with my whole staff. I found the
new fort unfinished and unoccupied, but from its parapet
could see over some old fields bounded to the north