This
transcription provided courtesy of Martye Jeffords ( martyejeffords@gmail.com
)
Diary or Reminiscence
by
David H. Mobley
Member
of Evans Camp,
DeKalb
County
The
following 3 documents were copied [exactly as recorded] from microfilm # 283/34
in the
Georgia
Department
of Archives & History, Morrow,
Georgia
in July 2005. It is part of a
collection of Civil War histories & memories collected from
Georgia
Veterans. Evans Camp was the Civil
War Veteran’s Unit in Decatur, GA where David Mobley lived his later years
& was the Veterans group he affiliated with there. Much
of what David Mobley writes in these documents is contained in the other private
papers passed down in his family. The
interviews with CSA veterans seem to have been gathered over a period of years,
which probably accounts for the repetitiveness in the reports.
In the Jan. 1925 report David Mobley is definitely 85 ½ years old, but
in another report he says he is 82 years old [he always knew exactly how old he
was – mj]. Since David Mobley was in his 80s when these reminiscences were
gathered, he would have dictated or handwritten them and the
typed versions stored in the GA Archives were possibly typed by his daughter
Winnie Davis Mobley, with whom he lived].
Decatur
,
Georgia
.
January 22, 1925.
I,
David H. Mobley, member of Evans Camp, DeKalb County, originally of Walton
County, now a citizen of Decatur, Georgia, volunteered for the War Between the
States [he refused to refer to the war as
anything other than the War Between the States or, simply, the War - mj], at
Monroe, Georgia, Walton County, being then twenty-one years old, the 16th
day of the following June.
Dr.
W. S. Barrett and myself made up a company and organized at
Walnut Grove
,
Georgia
. Dr. W. S. Barrett was elected
captain: Pulliam Wilkinson, First Lieutenant; J. Y. Carter, Second lieutenant;
William Scott, Third Lieutenant. I refused to be elected a commissioned officer
of the Company and was elected Corporal. Some
time afterward I was appointed a Sergeant and later appointed Commissary
Sergeant of the Regiment.
The
Company was known as The Walton Guards, Company G. Thomas’ Brigade, 35th
Georgia Regiment. We went into service from
Atlanta
,
Georgia
, in October, ’61, and went into camp at
Richmond
,
Virginia
. We spent the winter at Evansport
on the Potomac River, and in the spring following were ordered to
Yorktown
.
I
was in the battle of
Fredericksburg
,
Petersburg
, and was wounded on the sixth day of May, in the
Battle
of the Wilderness, on the plank road,
Virginia
.
I
was at the surrender of General Lee at Appomattox Courthouse, Virginia, on the 9th
day of April, 1865, and with many of
the survivors crowded around Generall [sic] Lee, took him by the hand, and while
he was shedding many tears, bade him goodbye.
David H. Mobley, Company G.
35th
Georgia Regiment,
Thomas’ Brigade.
War Record OF D. H. Mobley
I
enlisted in the Confederate service in 1861,
Walton
County
,
Georgia
., in Captain W. S. Barrett, Company G., 35th Ga. Regiment, Gen. E.
L. Thomas’ Brigade.
Was
mustered into service in
Atlanta
,
Ga.
. After remaining in camps one month we were ordered to
Richmond
,
Va.
I refused to be elected 3rd Lieut. of the Company and accepted the
place of 3rd Corporal. I
was elected 5th Sergeant in our Company at the Dunn House in
Virginia
in 1864. Soon after I was appointed
Commissary Sergeant of our Regiment, which office I filled for the balance of
the war.
I
remained in the regiment all the time during the war of four years, was in the
campaign during the Winter of 1861 on the Potomac River, also was in the
Yorktown
campaign, in 1862. I was home on
furlough and missed the Seven Pines fight on account of sickness.
On my return to
Virginia
, I was in time to be at the surrender of Harper’s Ferry to general D. H.
Hill. I was in the battle of the
Wilderness on the plank road in
Virginia
and was wounded on the plank road on the 6th. day of May, 1863 [1864
– mj]
From
there I was sent to
Lynchburg
,
VA.
, to the hospital. After about 30
days I returned to my command, found it at the Dunn House in Camp. After the
seven days fighting around
Richmond
, at which place I was appointed Regimental Commissary Sergeant, I was at
Petersburg
, saw the army of Lee falling back, making good mt [sic] escape from the front
line of battle, saw Gen, A. P. Hill just a few minutes before he was killed.
I was with the command until the surrender of Gen. Lee at
Appomattox Court
House
,
Va.
Saw Gen. Lee and Gen. Grant when
they met under the apple tree in formal meeting or formal surrender.
I was standing by them as they approached each other Gen. Lee halted as
he met Gen. Grant. Gen. Lee drew his
sword from his scabbard and saluted Gen. Grant and held it until Gen. Grant in
like manner drew his sword and saluted Gen. Lee.
After a few minutes of conversation with each other, they turned and rode
away. It was then learned for the
first time that Gen. Lee had surrendered. His
soldiers seeing what happened, gathered together about Gen. Lee to tell him
good-bye, and all who could get to him crowded about him with tears blinding
their eyes, and shook hands with him, while the large clear tears ran down his
cheek and dropped to the ground from his venerable face and long grey beard.
We shall never forget his words as he let
go the hands of his weeping soldiers who had followed him in so many battles.
He said, “Boys go home and be men as you have been with me..” It was
on the 9th day of April 1865. So
ended that part of the Confederate War in
Virginia
.
(Signed)
D.H. Mobley
WAR HISTORY OF DAVID H. MOBLEY,
BETWEEN THE STATES [sic]
I enlisted in
Walton County
,
Georgia
in August, 1861, in Dr. W. S. Barretts Co. G 35th Georgia Reg.,
which was organized in
Atlanta
under Col. Ed. L. Thomas, John Bull,
Lieutenant
Col.
We camped and drilled in
Atlanta
about two months and was then ordered to
Richmond
,
Va.
We camped in the fair grounds there
until about the first of December and we were ordered to
Ivens
Port
on the Potomac, where we spent the Winter, in March following our command was
ordered to
Fredericksburg
and from there to
Yorktown
. I was in the battle of
Fredericksburg
the Wilderness where on the 6th day of May I was wounded.
I
was in the battle of Gettysburg and I was at the surrender at Apamattox [sic] C.
H. Va. surrendered and paroled Commissary Sargent [sic] of the 35th
Georgia Regiment, on the 9th day of April 1865.
I
had the pleasure of grasping the hand of General Lee in bidding him farewell.
D. H. Mobley
Co.
G. 35th Regiment
P. S. I was a member of R. E. Lee Camp at Monroe, Walton Co., Georgia.
An honorary member of the U. D. C. Chapter at
Social
Circle,
Georgia
. Now a member of the Gen. Evans
Camp of Dekalb Co., Georgia in which I reside at
Decatur
,
Georgia
. I was born in Walton, Co.,
Ga.
on the 16th day of June 1840, now in my 82nd year and
have been elected an honorary member of Chapter Decatur, Ga.
D. H. Mobley