Ohio History Journal

  • 1
  •  
  • 2
  •  
  • 3
  •  
  • 4
  •  
  • 5
  •  
  • 6
  •  
  • 7
  •  
  • 8
  •  
  • 9
  •  
  • 10
  •  
  • 11
  •  
  • 12
  •  
  • 13
  •  
  • 14
  •  
  • 15
  •  
  • 16
  •  
  • 17
  •  
  • 18
  •  
  • 19
  •  
  • 20
  •  
  • 21
  •  
  • 22
  •  
  • 23
  •  
  • 24
  •  
  • 25
  •  
  • 26
  •  
  • 27
  •  
  • 28
  •  
  • 29
  •  
  • 30
  •  
  • 31
  •  
  • 32
  •  
  • 33
  •  
  • 34
  •  
  • 35
  •  
  • 36
  •  

THE HOSKINSVILLE REBELLION

THE HOSKINSVILLE REBELLION

By WAYNE JORDAN1

 

 

A corporal, four privates from the Union Army and a deputy

United States marshal sloshed through mud all day and neared

Hoskinsville, Ohio, on the evening of March 11, 1863.                 They did

not enter the village immediately, but stopped at a house about

a mile away.

The posse had come to get two Noble County boys who were

in bad with the Government. The deputy marshal, Samuel Colby,

had a warrant for the arrest of Tertullus W. Brown, who was

charged with "aiding and abetting and enticing a soldier to de-

sert."2   The corporal, James F. Davidson of the 115th   Ohio,3

had an order for the arrest of John Wesley McFerren as a de-

serter from the 78th Ohio, "now and then stationed at the city

of Memphis in the State of Tennessee."4 Brown, soon to be

described by the editor of the Noble County Republican as "a

copperhead of the most venomous kind,"5 had sent a letter in

January to McFerren, who was his cousin.6 The letter did not

reach McFerren, for he had left the regiment,7 but somebody

opened it and read:

 

1 This article has been made possible by the researches of K. W. McKinley of

the Ohio State Archaeological and Historical Society Library staff, to whom I am

indebted for most of the contemporary newspaper accounts that are cited. Thanks

are also due to Josephine E. Phillips, who surveyed source material at Marietta, and

to F. A. Hight, deputy clerk of the United States District Court, Cincinnati, who

helped me in finding essential records.--W. J.

2 Report of "The Examination of the Noble County Resistants before Com-

missioner Halliday," Cincinnati Enquirer, April 2, 1863; reprinted in McConnelsville

Weekly Enquirer, April 8, 1863. Also, see Cincinnati Daily Gazette, April 2, 1863, and

the Crisis (Columbus), April 8, 1863.

3 Company A.

4 Cincinnati Enquirer, April 2, 1863, and McConnelsville Weekly Enquirer, April

8, 1863; L. H. Watkins & Co., pub., History of Noble County, Ohio (Chicago,

1887), 247.

5 Noble County Republican (Caldwell), quoted in Zanesville Daily Courier,

April 1, 1863.

6 Ibid. Also Watkins, Noble County, 277. McFerren was a boy in the colloquial

sense only. He gave his age as 21 when he enlisted on December 5, 1861 (Ohio

Roster Commission, Official Roster of the Soldiers of the State of Ohio in the War

of the Rebellion, 1861-1806 (Akron, Ohio, 1893-1895). VI, 382), and his tombstone gives

his birth date as July 10, 1840. The Census of 1860 gives Tertullus's age as 16.

7 Cincinnati Gazette, March 20, 1863; Crisis, April 1, 1863; Marietta Republican,

April 9, 1863; Watkins, Noble County, 277.

319