with the enemy about two miles out. Cheraw was
found to be full of stores which had been sent up from
Charleston prior to its evacuation, and which could
not be removed. I was satisfied, from inquiries,
that General Hardee had with him only the Charleston
garrison, that the enemy had not divined our movements,
and that consequently they were still scattered from
Charlotte around to Florence, then behind us.
Having thus secured the passage of the Pedee, I felt
no uneasiness about the future, because there remained
no further great impediment between us and Cape Fear
River, which I felt assured was by that time in possession
of our friends. The day was so wet that we all
kept in-doors; and about noon General Blair invited
us to take lunch with him. We passed down into
the basement dining-room, where the regular family
table was spread with an excellent meal; and during
its progress I was asked to take some wine, which stood
upon the table in venerable bottles. It was
so very good that I inquired where it came from.
General Blair simply asked, “Do you like it?”
but I insisted upon knowing where he had got it; he
only replied by asking if I liked it, and wanted some.
He afterward sent to my bivouac a case containing
a dozen bottles of the finest madeira I ever tasted;
and I learned that he had captured, in Cheraw, the
wine of some of the old aristocratic families of Charleston,
who had sent it up to Cheraw for safety, and heard
afterward that Blair had found about eight wagon-loads
of this wine, which he distributed to the army generally,
in very fair proportions.
After finishing our lunch, as we passed out of the
dining room, General Blair asked me, if I did not
want some saddle-blankets, or a rug for my tent, and,
leading me into the hall to a space under the stairway,
he pointed out a pile of carpets which had also been
sent up from Charleston for safety. After our
headquarter-wagons got up, and our bivouac was established
in a field near by, I sent my orderly (Walter) over
to General Blair, and he came back staggering under
a load of carpets, out of which the officers and escort
made excellent tent-rugs, saddle-cloths, and blankets.
There was an immense amount of stores in Cheraw, which
were used or destroyed; among them twenty-four guns,
two thousand muskets, and thirty-six hundred barrels
of gunpowder. By the carelessness of a soldier,
an immense pile of this powder was exploded, which
shook the town badly; and killed and maimed several
of our men.
We remained in or near Cheraw till the 6th of March,
by which time the army was mostly across the Pedee
River, and was prepared to resume the march on Fayetteville.
In a house where General Hardee had been, I found
a late New York Tribune, of fully a month later date
than any I had seen. It contained a mass of news
of great interest to us, and one short paragraph which
I thought extremely mischievous. I think it
was an editorial, to the effect that at last the editor