William A. Fletcher
Home ] Up ] Isaac Ryan ] Rev. John August Tubbe ] David Choate, Jr. ] James B. Likens ] Lewis S. Owings ] Thomas Deye Owings ] Samuel P. Henry ] Dr. Arrel Pye ] Pradelles ] Brothers ] Sailboats ] Jaguar ] Skull Island ] Black Cat ] Bear Hunters ] Boundary ] Immigrants ] Shooting ] Big Cat ] Confederate flag ] Slave Trade ] Whale ] Texas Germanic Heritage ] Creative Writing ] [ William A. Fletcher ] Wild Family ] Early Newspapers ] Bolivar Peninsula ] A Killer's Trail of Thread ] Slave Lucy ] Opelousas Trail ] Southwest Louisiana ] Stuart ] Black Panthers ] German Pilgrims ]

 

For East Texas Historical Journal
Review by W. T. Block

Rebel Private Front and Rear: The Memoirs of a Confederate Soldier, by William Fletcher

Andrew Fletcher (reprint: Dutton, 375 Hudson, New York, N. Y. 10014), 1995 P. 224, $22.95, Paperback.

horizontal rule

About 1907, William A. Fletcher of Beaumont, Tx., already wealthy, retired, and in his late 60's, wrote and published his memoirs as a Confederate soldier, and soon after publication, nearly all copies were destroyed during a fire at his home. One copy made its way into the National Archives, and in a letter to Fletcher's daughter a half-century ago, Margaret Mitchell acknowledged using Fletcher's book while researching Gen. W. T. Sherman's march upon Atlanta.

Fletcher first enlisted in Co. F, 5th Texas Infantry, of Hood's Brigade, in 1861. During ensuing years, he fought in the Seven Days' Battle Before Richmond, and at the Battles of Second Manassas, Gettysburg, Fredericksburg, and Chickamauga. He was twice wounded, at both Manassas and Chickamauga, but he soon recovered and rejoined his unit.

After the Battle of Chickamauga, Fletcher was reassigned to the cavalry of Terry's Texas Rangers as Gen. Joseph Johnston began his slow retreat from Chattanooga to Atlanta. On one occasion near Rome, Georgia, Fletcher was captured, but he succeeded in escaping after a few days. He remained a part of that command until Gen. Johnston surrendered to Gen. Sherman near Bentonville, N. C. in April, 1865.

Fletcher returned to Beaumont, Texas, and in the course of the next 35 years, he became president and major stockholder of Long Manufacturing Company, which made 36,000,000 cypress shingles annually at Beaumont,; of Texas Tram and Lumber Company, with sawmills at Beaumont and in Jasper County; and of the Village Mills Company sawmills in Hardin County. By 1893, he owned 110,000 acres of Hardin and Jasper County timberlands. He was also a master machinist and millwright, and when he could find no steam loader and log skidder that he liked, he built and patented his own Fletcher log skidder and loader, that he tested and perfected at Village Mills in 1895.

Fletcher also developed the "Fletcher log scale" for measuring the board feet of stumpage of logs floated down the Neches River. That William A. Fletcher attained national stature for his successes as a lumber manufacturer was apparent in his biography in St. Louis Lumberman of 1892, when during a national lumbermen's convention, he was accorded the appellation of "the old man eloquent" for his oratory before the convention. In 1902, W. A. Fletcher sold out his Texas Tram and Lumber Company and Village Mills Company properties, including all timberlands, to Kirby Lumber Corporation. The old soldier died in 1915.

horizontal rule

Copyright � 1998-2024 by W. T. Block. All rights reserved.
Unless otherwise indicated, the material published on this site is copyrighted by William T. Block.
Like us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/WTBlock