The Shoes Come First

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Because Life Should Make You Laugh

Civil War: Devil’s Den & the Texan

By Original uploader was Hlj (Hal Jespersen) at en.wikipedia - Library of Congress Prints and Photographs Division, Panoramic photographs: LC-USZ62-40269, Public Domain, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=5582904

Naturally, when I read the stories of the men and women who fought at Gettysburg, there were many heroic deeds and brave acts that took place. The one that made me smile was a retelling of the courier of General Hood, who took up arms in the battle at Devil’s Den.  I’ve seen his name spelled many ways, Wilson J. Barbee, William Barbie, Willie Barbie. I’m going with what the author wrote in the quote below. Please forgive if I got it wrong.

The battle of Devil’s Den took place on the second day of the 1863 Battle of Gettysburg.  A young courier for General Hood, Willie Barbie, of the 1st Texas came upon his fellow Texans fighting an uphill battle against the Union army. The soldiers considered the battle a loss until Barbie did what any crazy Texan would do…

“The Texan’s advanced through thunderous shelling by Union artillery.  There was no wind that day, and the Devil’s Den looked like a volcano, the smoke belching from the guns of the Federal battery on top of the hill.  As the 1st Texas moved up the hill, fighting was intense.

William J. Barbie, one of Hood’s scouts, came riding to the front of the line.  Suddenly, his horse was shot.  Barbie leaped down, and without missing a step, scrambled up one of the boulders.  He looked at the Yanks on the top of the hill and commenced shouting.  His words were – well, unpleasant, such that I cannot repeat here.

Perhaps this did not create sufficient effect, so Barbie had the wounded Texans below start tossing up their rifles.  Calmly standing on top of the boulder, Barbie fired up the hill.  One Texan related that the scout fired 25 times.  The fellows below were reloading the guns, so this was going efficiently.

Nonetheless, Barbie was totally exposed to the fire of the Federals.  Finally, he took one in the leg, and toppled off the boulder.  He was a Texan, so he climbed back up, where he resumed firing.  (I imagine he shouted a few more choice comments, but history does not tell us whether he did or what he might have said.)

The hail of Union bullets continued, and another one clipped Barbie in the leg.  Down he went.  But Texans are hard to kill, so he clambered back up the rock.

Barbie renewed firing until another mini ball stuck him, this time in the chest.  He tumbled off the rock, but could not get back up on his own.  Out of the fight with the Yanks, Barbie cursed his fellow Texans for not helping him back onto the boulder.

This was definitely a man who would have shot craps with the devil himself. “

From Stories of Confederate Soldiers https://confederate.ultimateflags.com/2016/11/29/devils-den-texas-scout/

I loved this story, and if I could go back in time, this is one guy I’d like to meet.  
Forever Crazy,
Janet Leigh
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