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Calvin E. Johnson, Jr. is a member of the Sons of Confederate Veterans and author of the book, "When America Stood for God, Family and Country."

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The Jefferson Davis Memorial Day Funeral Train By Calvin E. Johnson Jr.

A Southern President was laid to rest on Memorial Day.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans have proclaimed 2008, as
the “Year of Jefferson Davis” and Davis’ 200th birthday, June 3,
2008, will be celebrated with many great events including the
reopening of his last home “Beauvoir” on the Mississippi Gulf
Coast.

Please share the following Memorial Day story with your family
and remember Monday, Mary 26th, is Memorial Day in the USA.

Listen closely, when the wind blows, and you may hear a train
whistle from the distance.

Many songs have been written about the passenger trains.
On Sunday, May 28, 1893, a few days before Memorial Day, a story
began in New Orleans, Louisiana that overshadowed all other events
reported in the newspapers of the north and south.

Jefferson Davis died in 1889 and over 200,000 people witnessed
his temporary burial at Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans. Four
years later on a rainy Saturday, on May 27, 1893, the remains of
Jefferson Davis was removed and taken to Confederate Memorial
Hall where many people paid their last respects.

At 4:30 PM, May 28th, a funeral service was held for Mr. Davis
and a moving memorial address was delivered by Louisiana’s
Governor Murphy J. Foster as thousands listened. A reverent
silence fell among the people as the casket was given to the
commitment of Veterans from Virginia.

The procession then formed for a slow march to the Louisville
and Nashville Railroad Station on Canal Street.

Train No. 69, with Engineer Frank Coffin, waited patiently as
the casket was taken to the platform and passed through an
open observation car to a catafalque. The cars wall could not
be seen due to the many flowers.

This was the vision of Mrs. (Varina) Jefferson Davis when she
began three years previous to secure a funeral train and military
escort for a 1,200 mile train trip from New Orleans, Louisiana
to Richmond, Virginia.

Train engine No. 69, of the Louisville and Nashville Railroad,
slowly pulled out of New Orleans Station at 7:50 PM. L and N
railroad later became CSX Railroad.

Newspaper reporters from New Orleans, Richmond, Boston,
New York and the Southern Associated Press were guests on
the train.

After a brief Stop at Bay Saint Louis, and a slow-down at
Pass Christian, where hundreds of people lined the tracks, the
Jefferson Davis Funeral Train stopped at Gulfport, Mississippi
and “Beauvoir, www.beauvoir.org, that was the last home to
Jefferson Davis and his family. It was here that Davis wrote his
book, “The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government.”

Uncle Bob Brown, a former servant of the Davis family and a
passenger on the train, saw the many flowers that the children
had laid on the railroad tracks. Brown was so moved by this
beautiful gesture that he wept uncontrollably.

In Mobile, Alabama, the train was met at midnight by parents
who let their children stay up late to witness the historic ocassion
that included a artillery salute. Locomotive No. 69 was retired and
Locomotive No. 25 was coupled to the train with Engineer C.C.
Devinney and Fireman Warren Robinson taking over.

The Atlanta Journal reported, quote, “The Cradle of the Confederacy
is ablaze with life and light tonight. Everything is ready for honoring
the memory of Jefferson Davis. Tomorrow morning with the rising
of the sun the funeral train from New Orleans will reach Montgomery.
unquote.

The train pulled into Montgomery at 6:00 AM, on the 29th. A
severe rainstorm delayed the funeral procession until 8:30 AM
when a caisson carried the body of Davis to Alabama’s capitol
building. A procession carried the casket through the portico
where Jefferson Davis, in 1861, had taken the oath of office as
President of the Confederate States of America.

The casket was placed in front of the bench of the Alabama
Supreme Court. Above the right exit was a banner with the word
“Monterrey” and above the left exit was a banner with the words
“Buena Vista.” During the Mexican War Jefferson Davis was a
hero at Monterrey and wounded at Buena Vista.

All Businesses and schools were closed, and church bells toiled
during the procession to and from the capitol. In a final tribute,
thousands of people in Montgomery, including ex-Confederate
soldiers and children, filed by the casket.

At 12:20 in the afternoon the funeral train departed over the
Western Railway of Alabama and Atlanta and West Point
Railroad for Atlanta. At West Point, Georgia the train stopped
under a magnificently-beautiful arch of flowers to pick up
Georgia’s Governor William J. Northen and his staff.

The funeral train pulled into Atlanta’s Union Station at 4:30 PM.
It is written that over 20,000 people lined the streets as the
funeral procession made their way to the state capitol. Atlanta’s
Old Gate City Guard stood guard over the president’s remains.
Among those in attendance was former Confederate General
John B. Gordon who had also been Governor of Georgia.

The Boston Globe reported, quote, ” Davis Funeral Train on
way north. Visions of the past called up. Living links of the past
cause. Sumter’s flag appears once more. Both banners on the
walls of Georgia’s capitol. Thousands look upon the dead leader.
Women of the South show their affection by flowers.” unquote.

At 7:00 PM the train pulled out of the station going north on
the Richmond and Danville Railroad, which later became Southern
Railroad and, today, Norfolk Southern Railroad. The train
traveled through Lula, Georgia, Greenville, South Carolina and
stopped in North Carolina at Raleigh. Davis’ remains were taken
to the North Carolina capitol building to lie in state.

A brief stop was made in Danville, Virginia where a crowd
gathered around the train and sang, “Nearer My God To Thee”
as the church bells toiled.

Finally, the train reached Richmond, Virginia on Wednesday,
morning, May 31, 1893. It was Memorial Day. Mrs. Davis met
the train and her husband’s casket was taken to the Virginia State
House to lay in state. There was no school this day and many
children brought flowers that they scattered about the casket.

At 3 PM on May 31, 1893, the funeral procession started for
Hollywood Cemetery with former Gen. John B. Gordon as Chief
Marshall. The caisson was driven by six white horses and earlier
rains kept the dust of the dirt roads from stirring.

With Mrs. Jefferson Davis were two of her daughters, Winnie
and Margaret. Six Southern governors acted as pall bearers.
Two hundred thousand people lined the streets and nearly
100,000 took part in the ceremony at the cemetery. The ceremony
concluded with a 21-gun salute followed by “Taps.”

It had been 28 years since the War Between the States ended, but
they came by the thousands to pay tribute to their former president.
In truth, they came to remember a hope and a dream. And all across
the South hundreds of thousands heard that train.

The Sons of Confederate Veterans of Virginia are planning to
erect a statue to Jefferson Davis and his African-American adopted
son, Jim Limber.

Lest We Forget!!
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