Roberts Coles
Green Mountain Grays
46th Virginia Infantry
Roberts Coles
November 14, 1838
February 8, 1862
When I was a boy, Dad would tell me stories about our 'family.' Being young, I figured that he was talking about the 'Browns'... I never thought about all of the different people that had to cross paths for the past hundreds and hundreds of years for me to appear on this planet.
One of the stories that Dad would tell was about a family member who owned slaves... that he freed them... and they all wanted to remain with him. The telling of the story is that he was so nice to them that they didn't want to leave.
I've been working for a few years in my genealogy... and I have learned so much. It appears that the prominent lineage in this family was the 'Coles.' They are a storied family and are listed among 'The First Families of Virginia.'
In tracing my family, I came across a fellow by the name of Edward Coles who was a well-known abolitionist from Virginia. Edward was a cousin of Thomas Jefferson and in 1814, he encouraged Jefferson to work for an end to slavery in Virginia. When the aging Jefferson chose to leave the emancipation fight to the younger generation, Edward took his slaves to Pennsylvania (March, 1819) where they boarded two flatboats for a river ride towards Illinois.
There is much more to this story, but I am writing about Roberts Coles.
The Battle of Roanoke Island
Despite his northern birth, Roberts always considered himself to be a true Virginian. He would spend the summers visiting the Coles family in Albermarle County... and inherited a piece of property near Enniscorthy. Roberts returned to Virginia in 1860 to run his land operation and become engaged to Jennie Fairfax, of Richmond. In 1861, the war began.
Some family records say that Edward pleaded with Roberts to not support the Southern Cause... other records say that Edward didn't know that Roberts was fighting on behalf of the Confederacy until later. Roberts, however, believed it was his duty to remain loyal to his adopted state. He and some friends pooled resources, and formed a group of Confederate volunteers. This company was called the Green Mountain Grays... which later became Company I of the 46th Virginia Infantry.
On January 4, 1862, the 46th left Richmond for Norfolk and, on January 17, began the voyage to Nags Head, a narrow strip of beach lying one-half mile east of Roanoke Island... across the Roanoke Channel. When the Federal fleet finally appeared on February 6th, Companies A and I of the 46th... under Captains Wise and Roberts Coles, were loaded onto schooners to be taken to Roanoke Island.
At the start of the ensuing battle, Roberts wrote this letter to his fiancee...
On board transport, February 7, 1862
The battle has commenced. In five minutes we will be on Roanoke Island. The sight is beautiful - our gun boats and batteries are engaging the enemy in full view and the shot and shells are whistling around us. If I fall, God grant you a happy life, as happy a one as I would have tried to have a role in. Be assured that my last thoughts on earth will be of you, my dearest Jennie. Your picture will be the last sight I shall see if time is given me to look once more upon it. I have volunteered for this service. What honor I crave is only craved that you may share it. May God Almighty bless you and may we meet in the world to come if denied that blessing here again. And now I strike for Virginia. Again good bye.
Yours forever,
Roberts Coles
Captain Roberts Coles was killed in action the next day in the battle that followed in which the Union forces were victorious. According to his military records, Captain Coles "fell bravely in the Battle of Roanoke Island." He is buried in the Coles family cemetery in Philadelphia, but a marker in his honor was placed at Enniscorthy in Albermarle County, Virginia.
I had mentioned earlier about his father, Edward,
not knowing about his son's having joined
the Confederacy until he was notified of his death...
Roberts Coles
I will write about his father soon...
Rest In Peace, Roberts...
~shoes~
http://scottsvillemuseum.com/war/coles/home.html
http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=gr&GRid=10523709
Interesting history in your family. I wonder if he was able to see her face before he departed a week before Valentine's Day..it is almost like he knew he wouldn't see her as he says "again goodbye" and "yours forever"..so sad..How are you shoes? Any plans for Monument Valley?
ReplyDeleteHi there, Truedessa... how are you?
DeleteI agree... I think he knew he wasn't long in this Lifetime...
I just need to feel a bit better... I would love to get out to Monument Valley, but I fear it won't happen this year... and I hate that...
How are you doing??
~shoes~
That is such a powerful story and what a sweet and touching letter. Wish things could've ended differently but you can tell by his words he was ready to face what hit him. A brave soul...a hero.
ReplyDeleteHey you... how is your day today?
DeleteYes, I have an idea that he must have felt he wasn't going to survive. I was in this area last
March... I want and need to return... so much history...
~shoes~
Fascinating history in your family. That letter! My heart wept for he and his fiancée as I read it.
ReplyDeleteHey you... I am of the opinion that we ALL have great history in our families... we just have to find it.
DeleteRoberts and his fiancé must have had a great love... I do have her name and for some reason, just didn't add it.
I will find it and enter it later...
Thank you for your comment...
~shoes~
Whoah! That letter! Very touching and intense. Thanks for the history lesson.
ReplyDeleteHi there, Yvonne... how are you, dear?
DeleteIs it still so hot and dry in Houston??
I love history... the other side of this story is equally amazing...
I hope all is well with you...
~shoes~
Great post. It is easy to forget with the recent controversy that back in the day REAL people wore grey and were buried under the Confederate flag with the same reverence veterans are buried today.
ReplyDeleteHi there, Bluezy... very interesting... I responded to your comment earlier... and it's gone now.
DeleteReal people did wear grey... and they were honored... there was great honor between Grant and Lee that day at Appomattox...
People are just ugly today... I am very disappointed... I guess I am about to piss a group of people off...
I am respectful of others... and honorable of others... but I am not going to be talked down.
Wait until you see the next post...
~shoes~
Shoes,
Deletewhen I read this I realized how quickly I jumped on the hate the hate wagon. I apologize for my offensive manipulation and not really thinking. I should of deleted it right away.
I read a post from a girl that simply put it "the confederate flag represents the right of Southern Americans to fight for what they believed in".
My stance is that no government building should fly anything but the Old Glory and their state flag.
I remember saying once "to ban a thing is to ban all things and is not the American way"
This has become a hurting topic and has gone too far. I appreciate how you are expressing your feelings.
I am actually moving to the South at the end of this month, Yet Texas is a place in it;s own...not sure it is like the true romantic South.
Good morning, Bluezy...
ReplyDeleteI didn't take your post as being mean-spirited or ugly... so there would have been no need to delete it.
Re: South Carolina and the flag, some time ago (and it hasn't been THAT long ago) the Confederate Battle Flag flew atop of the South Carolina Capital building. There was a move to remove it from the Capitol Building and place it at a Confederate Memorial which is on the Capitol Grounds. That seemed to be ok for a while... until the shootings.
I think the outrage in South Carolina is that the state government is backing out of an agreement made. The movement of the Flag at that time also allowed for a Civil Rights Memorial to be constructed on the same grounds.
My post was about an ancestor... not Flag politics... so I don't want to get off topic. I know why Roberts went to War on the side of the Confederacy... it wasn't over slave ownership...
I have two relatives that I will write about who were at Vicksburg as members of the 87th Illinois Infantry... (I wonder if they knew each other? One was from a Grandmother's Mother's side of the family... the other from the same Grandmother's Father's side...) Anyway, I know why they were fighting... and it wasn't to free/end slavery...
... but that's another post.
I like Texas... I've tried to get out that way several times this summer... just hasnt happened... and doesn't seem that it will.
~shoes~