The Honored 600
The citizens of Craighead County can be proud to know that during the "War Between the States" they had a hero. His name was Peru H. Benson. He was a Lieutenant in the 23rd Arkansas Infantry. Not many citizens have ever heard of the Honored 600 of Morris Island.
The men of the 23rd Arkansas Infantry were captured at Port Hudson, Louisiana. The enlisted men were released to return home. Most of these men reentered the Confederacy to serve until the end of the war. The officers were sent to prisons all over the North. Most of the 23rd's officers were sent to Fort Delaw aare then on to Hilton Head, South Carolina.
These Prisoners were used as a shield by the Yankees. The Yankees thought that the Confederates would not shoot at them if they put their cohorts on an island between the two forts.
Benson, P.H., prisoner, Hilton Head, S.C.
Of the party removed from the island [Johnson's]
with me, numbering about six hundred, we were taken to Point Lookout, Md.,
for the ostensible purpose of exchange, as there was a great clamor at
that time in the North to exchange the prisoners, and a small batch were
sent through on exchange. The other two-thirds,
on our arrival at the [City] Point, were placed
in the hospital building, and had very comfortable quarters. We were
fed at mess Hall on convalesc ents' rations, through but few of us
were or had been sick" However, we did very well on the food. We were kept
in the building until hostilities between Lee and Grant began, when we
were moved out and placed in tents to make room for the wounded.
We remained in tents until warm weather,
and were sent to Fort Delaware, and there I remained until about August
20,1864, when about sixC hundred of us were taken on a steamer to Morris
Island, S.C., off the bar of Charleston Harbor. After being on the vessel
Twenty-seven days, we were landed on the island and put in a
stockade of about an acre in extent, on a
direct line between our Fort Moultrie and Fort Anderson, occupied by the
Federals, so the shells fired from one s at the other passed directly over
our heads unless they fell short, and seventeen of them fell short, but
none, of us were hurt by them. We were kept in this place for forty
days. Our rations were prepared by the
Yankees, and given in tin cups,. We received twice a day one-half
pint of mush well seasoned with wnrms, and about two ounces of bacon,
One of our party, being of an inquiring turn of mind, counted the
worms in his half pint of mush.. He said he got seventy-two, and seeing
that he was losing too much of his grub, quit and ate the balance. I never
doubted his figures.
After forty days, we were loaded on two schooners, and towed to, Fort Pulaski, Ga., and placed in the casements of the fort, and were kept there until a few days after the presidential election in 1864. then were sent to Hilton Head, S.C. I was of this party.
Upon arrival there we were put in two
buildings arranged after the manner of a livery stable, with stalls on
either side of the building, dignified as "Cells." In dating four
occupants. There was a table running the entire length of the building
in the center, with benches on either side. We were told by our captors
that the
Confederates were starving the prisoners at
Andersonville, and that we were to receive the same treatment in retaliations.
Our rations were then issued, each man drawing ten days' rations at one
time. when divided into ten parts it consisted of about ten ounces of cornmeal,
fully one-half of which could crawl, four ounces of
flour, three cucumber pickles, and a tablespoonful
of salt. Those who were able to live on this diet were kept on it forty
days. About twenty-five percernt were crippled from black scurvy,
and after the forty days were out they added to our rations four
ounces of pork and four ounces of Irish potatoes, and we lived on this
twenty-seven days.
It was then decided to exchange us, and we were sent to Charleston. On boarding the vessel we found our Fort Pulaski comrades, who we learned had gone through just what we had. Before leaving Hilton head news came that Charleston had been captured. We were then ordered to City Point for exchange, and when we arrived to Fortress Monroe it was learned that Richmond was also captured, so we were sent to Fort Delaware, where we remained until the end. I left prison June 15, 1865, got transportation home and in six days was with my family, from whom I had heard nothing for twelve months.
Lt. Benson returned to Jonesboro, then moved to Randolph courity, Arkansas. He was living around Pocahontas in 1880. He later moved to Texas and was living there at the turn of the century.
Benson has been removed from Jonesboro for more than a century, but his name and legend will grow as the years pass. The brave men of the 23rd left to serve to defend against the invasion from the north.
Many of these men died for what they believed to be the preservation of our southern way of life. We all need to hold our heads high and never forget the price that the 23rd paid in time, sweat, tears, blood and lives.
Fort Delaware
At the mouth of the Delaware river where
it empties into Delaware Bay, some 48 miles south of Philadelphia, lies
Pea Island. Just east of the island is New Jersey and to the west is Delaware
City. During settlement of the area in Colonial days a Dutch ship loaded
with peas was abandoned in the river after running aground.
The peas grew, the island grew, and eventually
the resulting land became large enough for a fort to be built on it during
the Revolutionary War. A subsequent fort, named Fort Delaware, was
still standing during the Civil War. It was converted into
a prison for Confederate soldiers, and it was used throughout the war.