Tuesday, July 23, 2024

Williams Cleaners, Enfields and three-ringers: Each of these bullets found by Battle of Nashville Trust on acquired battlefield property has a story

Recovered Federal and Confederate spent and dropped bullets (Courtesy of BONT)
When I came across a bit of news this week from the Battle of Nashville Trust about efforts to prepare a portion of Shy’s Hill for public access, I marveled at a photo of fired and dropped bullets found during recent clearing of brush.

I confess to knowing little about Civil War ammunition, so my curiosity led me to ask the nonprofit to describe each bullet and artifact by row.

Lo and behold, I had the answer within minutes (see below).

Bobby Whitson, president of BONT, is a history enthusiast and expert in metal detecting. He provided the details and said Confederate pickets, probably from Georgia or Florida, were deployed on the newly acquired 1.2-acre site. The 5th Minnesota and 9th Minnesota on Dec. 16, 1864, rushed up the hill, signaling the beginning of the end of the Battle of Nashville, a major Union victory.

Howard Pyle's depiction of the Minnesota brigade charging Shy's Hill
BONT found evidence of fighting that occurred as the Confederate line, above and to the east, fired on the Union soldiers.

“Even though Civil War relic hunters have scanned Shy’s Hill for decades in their search for artifacts, the clearing of the property led to BONT recovering a number of bullets left undetected over the years, along with other relics including a Union uniform button and unidentified shrapnel,” the group said.

The organization emphasized relic hunting/metal detecting is prohibited on this and other battlefield ground it owns or maintains. That includes Shy’s Hill and Redoubt 1, a few miles north.

“Digging without permission on someone else's property violates many rules,” Whitson wrote in an email to the Picket.

His identification of bullets and other artifacts (photo courtesy Battle of Nashville Trust):

Top row: Silver-washed pewter button, .58-caliber three-ringer, the next eight are .570ish Confederate three-ringers.

Middle row: U.S. general service eagle button, fired three-ringer, six dropped Enfields (one is stepped on), dropped Williams Cleaner, fired three-ringer.

Bottom row: Fired three-ringer, fired Williams Cleaner with separated disk, fired Confederate three-ringer (note the difference in width of the base ring), fired Enfield, two fired Williams Cleaners, two fired three-ringers.

Also recovered were a sabot fragment from an artillery round and an unidentified brass piece (below, Battle of Nashville Trust).

Whitson said the Williams Cleaners are probably Federal “but the dropped three-ringers do not have even thickness in the bases of them, which almost always points to being a Confederate bullet; plus they mic' at .57 with a couple being spot on .577.”

“While not all Enfields can just be assumed to be Confederate, the location of these Enfields on the hillside and the arc across the land on which they were found, combined with the other Confederate drops, give them an extremely high probability of being Confederate drops. The fired bullets are a combination of Federal and Confederate,” he wrote.

The trust, with the assistance of American Battlefield Trust, bought the small “core battlefield” vacant lot in April and is hoping to open it to visitors this fall in time for the 160th anniversary of the battle. There are plans for parking at some point.

“BONT is working with Civil War Trails to install interpretive signage, both at the 4601 Benton Smith Road site and the plateau further up the hill where BONT has placed field artillery pieces in the area most likely used for Beauregard’s battery on Dec. 16, 1864.”

The site was the location of the Federal assault against Rebel troops holding the summit of Shy’s Hill on the second day of the battle. The boys in blue broke the line and routed Hood’s troops, and permanently disabling the Confederacy’s military capability in the Western Theater of the Civil War.

Looking up from the vacant lot toward the summit of Shy's Hill (BONT photo)
“We are devoting the highest level of expertise, time, energy, and resources to preserve fully this hallowed ground on which so many Minnesotans and others were wounded and killed assaulting the Confederate position on the hill,” Whitson said in the news release.

The tract is a short walk from BONT’s Shy’s Hill historic site and trailhead.

Whitson sometimes gives presentations on Tennessee metal detecting, including one in April at Lipscomb University in Nashville.

What interests each detectorist is different; some do it to get outside and get exercise, some do it for the thrill of the hunt, some do it to save the history, some do it to learn from what is in the ground, and some do it for all of the above reasons. We are simply stewards of the past and of the history; the more we find, the more we validate the history that we are trying to interpret for the community,” he said.

A monument to the 114th Illinois was dedicated at Shy's Hill last fall (BONT)
Items found on trust property are being kept separate from other collections and may eventually become part of a hoped-for museum.

“Unlike treasure hunters, we are historians with detectors that document everything in order to validate what we think we know from the written history,” Whitson said. “What's in the ground does not lie, and each artifact tells a unique story.”

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