My thanks to the many of you who sent messages of
congratulations for my just joining the “grandfather club.” I gotta say the
first three days of membership have been wonderful. Not to be too sappy, but
last night Jackson and his parents joined us for supper at our round kitchen
table. It was Jackson’s first day home from the hospital, at the ripe old age
of about 48 hours. Of course his adoring mother held him during the meal, but
Jackson was awake watching with bright eyes when I reached out and held his wee
hand, a fragile new hand in our family circle, while I gave a blessing for the
food and the new little guy, the next generation of our branch of the McBride
family tree. Pretty special. I think I’m going to like the grandfather club.
Moving on, the Texas Legislature has just convened
for its “odd year” session in the state capitol building. It’s always a show,
especially if you’re the type who enjoys watching sausage being made. Most
people may enjoy the final spicy product, even if it’s greasy and bad for us,
but we really don’t want to know what goes into the sausage mix or witness its
making. Ditto for watching any legislature, since lawmaking often has some dead
cats ground into the mix
Appropriately, in my historical “rabbit chasing” on
the internet this week, I came upon the recently published memoir of a Texas
legislator and Confederate soldier who I had never heard of before: Dewitt
Clinton “Clubfoot” Fort.
Fort wrote a lengthy and very entertaining memoir of his war experiences, while awaiting trial in prison in Tennessee, accused of plotting to murder the newly appointed governor of Tennessee. He eventually beat the charge and returned to Bellville, Texas. His memoir lay undisturbed with his descendants until 2007 when it was dusted off, transcribed, footnoted, and published.
Fort wrote a lengthy and very entertaining memoir of his war experiences, while awaiting trial in prison in Tennessee, accused of plotting to murder the newly appointed governor of Tennessee. He eventually beat the charge and returned to Bellville, Texas. His memoir lay undisturbed with his descendants until 2007 when it was dusted off, transcribed, footnoted, and published.
Just before the Civil War, in 1859, Mr. Fort won a
seat in the 8th Texas Legislature in the House of Representatives.
Fort described himself as a one-issue member of the House – secession. He wrote
that every vote he cast was based on whether passage of any bill would further
the likelihood of secession. He also wrote some entertaining side stories of
his time in Austin, including his visits, shortly after he arrived in Austin, to
the state-run facilities for the insane, blind, and deaf.
Wrote Representative Fort: “I had always thought a
lunatic asylum was a place where a person’s mind was strengthened and then
restored to normalcy. Imagine then my surprise to learn that about only one
person in ten had any sense at all, that at least 9/10’s of the residents of
the lunatic asylum having lost their wits. I was at first apprehensive that
should I linger too long, the same malady might become my fate. I have always
been fearful of epidemics.
“But then I felt sure if I were to fully lose 9/10’s
of my wits, there would still be very few members of the Texas Legislature that
had has much sense as myself.”
His words are old proof that some things are
constant in politics, whether in 1859 or 2015.
As a Confederate officer, even with a crippling foot
deformity, Fort earned a reputation as the fearless leader of a small company
of cavalry scouts who first fought with JEB Stuart in Virginia, and later with
Nathan B Forest in Tennessee. He was once captured and escaped by diving into
the muddy Mississippi off the river boat that was taking him upriver to prison
camp.
Fort wrote that he hit the water about dark and swam
in the cold water and current for hours before reaching the shore shortly
before daylight. After making his way back to Confederate-held land, he resumed
his “scouting” duties in the Union-occupied area near Memphis. He led his
scouts so successfully that when the war ended, there was a $5,000 in gold
reward on his head. Be aware that the term “scouts” during the Civil War often
meant a lethal band of guerilla fighters, operating with stealth and great
violence within the Union army’s zone of occupation.
Captain Fort wrote very clearly of his band of 43
men fighting repeated engagements with Union cavalry, using ambushes and
deception to great effect. His only defeat appears to have been an attempt to
board and capture a steamship that had pulled in to the shore to load wood for
its boilers. The plan was for Fort’s company to rush up the gangplanks in the
dark, but they became intermingled with the ship’s fleeing crewmen who had been
onshore loading wood. The noisy confusion allowed the ship’s captain enough time
to slip the boat from the shore, leaving Fort’s lieutenant and first sergeant
stranded onboard. They resisted capture and were killed by the ship’s guard
detachment of Union infantry.
Although Fort wrote of leading multiple mounted
charges straight at Union cavalry, remember that Fort nicknamed himself “Clubfoot”
for his deformed extremity. That handicap must have kept him from leading from
the front when his company charged up the gangplanks. In the tradition of
military leadership, it’s not surprising that the men who were second and third
in command of Fort’s company were the first onto the ship, stranded, and died
fighting. (Think of the Israeli commando attack to free the civilian hostages of
an airplane high-jacking at Entebbe, Uganda in the 1976. The Israeli commanding
officer was the first one through the door of the building where the hostages
were being kept, and the only Israeli soldier to die in the violence.)
After beating his murder conspiracy charge and returning
to Bellville, Texas, Fort practiced law. In 1868, at the age of 38 and recently
a new husband and father, Fort was gunned down by Lancaster Springfield, who
himself had been a Confederate captain, and who was an angry courtroom opponent.
The cowardly assassin first knocked Fort to the ground with a shotgun blast to
his back on a dusty street in Hempstead, Texas, then walked up to his prostrate
victim and finished him off with a derringer bullet to his head. As an aside, this was during the era of reconstruction
in Texas, and a jury acquitted Springfield of the murder.
I’m trying to think how to insert Captain Fort into
the McBee saga as a tough-as-nails “scout” with a quick wit, but I’ve already
closed the door on 1862 in Tangled Honor, the last year Foot
was in Virginia. McBee is not destined to fight in western Tennessee where Fort
spent the last half of the war, so if Fort makes the story it would have to be
after the war, back in Texas, and right now the grand plan ends in Virginia,
not Texas. But, dang, if Fort is not an intriguing character.
It’s this sort of discovery of real people with
engaging stories, people like Lucy Pickens and Clubfoot Fort, people who tempt
writers to stretch the facts of real history to fit into our fictional stories.
Sometimes I sigh in regret and move on, sometimes a facsimile in a new
character joins the cast, and sometimes I close my eyes and cheat the dates or
the geography, putting a real name in a place and day where he/she wasn’t.
That’s when I excuse my departure from historical exactitude by reminding
myself that I’m writing historical “fiction,” and, besides, the devil made me
do it.