From the November 8 Mountain Xpress:
Asheville Archives: Initial reactions to the Shelton
Laurel Massacre, 1863
Posted on November 8, 2020 by Thomas
Calder
CALLING THE SHOTS: Lt. Col. James Keith, an
impressively bearded native of Mars Hill, was in charge of the North Carolina
64th Regiment, which carried out the Shelton Laurel Massacre. Photo via Mrs.
James F. Arnold, El Paso, Texas; courtesy of Southern Appalachian Archives,
Mars Hill University
On
Jan. 15, 1863, amid the Civil War, The Asheville News reported
that enemies, “not in the shape of Northern soldiers, but … of disloyal men
from Tennessee and our own State,” ransacked the nearby town of Marshall.
Confederate soldiers, the article noted, were headed to Madison County to
“restore order and security.”
Additional
information, the paper continued, “will be fully known in due time.”
Subsequent
reports explained how the region’s Union sympathizers, including those living
in Shelton Laurel, were denied salt from Confederate commissioners. With food
in short supply and salt critical for preserving meat, individuals took matters
into their own hands.
Two
months later, on March 17, 1863, The North Carolina Standard, based
in Raleigh, shared an account from an unnamed source residing in the state’s
western region. According to the individual, Confederate soldiers “shot down in
cold blood” a number of Shelton Laurel residents accused of the January raid.
The
source asserted that the officer who ordered the executions (identified in
subsequent papers as Lt. Col. James Keith) “knew that the only
object of the raid made by these [Shelton Laurel] men was to seize the salt,
which they believed was wrongfully withheld from them.”
“I
am no apologist for these miserable ignorant thieves,” the source continued.
“But I hold that the Constitution and the laws of this country guarantee to
every man and woman in the Confederacy, no matter what their crime, a fair and
impartial trial.”
The
North Carolina Standard agreed. The men accused of the
raid “committed a great wrong against society,” the paper wrote. Along with the
stolen salt, the article noted damage to private property and at least two
wounded residents.
The
men deserved lawful punishment, The North Carolina Standard continued.
But instead, the paper observed: “The musket did the work. The red hand of
vengeance was triumphant, and the voice of mercy, which is heard everywhere
except in hell, was raised in vain.”
Because
these men were denied a trial, the paper deemed the 64th Regiment’s actions
“both cowardly and wicked.”
By
the summer of 1863 several newspapers — including the Baltimore Sun and The
New York Times — picked up on the story and ran a syndicated article
describing the January killing of the 13 men and boys, which became known as
the Shelton Laurel Massacre.
The
piece features gruesome and dramatic details about the executions, including
alleged pleas made by one of the youngest victims, 12-year-old William Shelton.
“Poor little Billy was
wounded in both arms. He ran to an officer, clasped him around his legs, and
besought him to spare his life. ‘You have killed my father and my three
brothers; you have shot me in both arms — I forgive you for all this; I can get
well. Let me go home to my mother and sisters.’ What a heart of adamant the man
must have who could disregard such an appeal! The little boy was dragged back
to the place of execution; again the terrible word ‘fire!’ was given, and he
fell dead, eight balls having entered his body.”
The
syndicated report went on to note that a number of Shelton Laurel women were
also brutally “whipped and hung by the neck till they were almost dead.” Among
the assault victims was an 85-year-old resident. “And the men who did this were
called soldiers!” the article decried.
No
members of the North Carolina 64th Regiment were ever tried for the deaths of
the 13 people killed in Madison County on Jan. 19, 1863.
Today,
the Shelton Laurel Massacre continues to inspire debate, research and
publications, including the most recent work of historical fiction And
the Crows Took Their Eyes by local author Vicki Lane.
(See “Author Vicki Lane Takes Multiple Views of the Shelton
Laurel Massacre,” Oct. 23, Xpress)
Editor’s
note: Peculiarities of spelling and punctuation are preserved from the original
document.
2 comments:
Yep, you said it in your book! And it was so unfortunate that it ever happened. I like that you gave the characters voices...both men and women who were involved. Thanks so much.
He has Rasputin eyes!
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