Blindfolded, bound, and shackled, Captain William F.
Corbin and his comrade Thomas Jefferson McGraw sat on a pair of
rough coffins at the shoreline not far from the prison stockade on Johnson’s Island located on Lake Erie. Seconds later the signal came and the firing squad
took aim. Shots rang out and the two Confederate officers fell back into their coffins.
Death came instantaneously.
Captain William F. Corbin
from: A Short History of the Soldier-Life, Capture and Death of William Francis Corbin: Captain Fourth Kentucky Cavalry: CSA
by J. C. DeMoss, 1897
from: A Short History of the Soldier-Life, Capture and Death of William Francis Corbin: Captain Fourth Kentucky Cavalry: CSA
by J. C. DeMoss, 1897
The fate of Corbin and McGraw was dictated by unique
circumstances. Of the thousands of Confederate prisoners incarcerated on
Johnson’s Island during the course of the Civil War, they alone were executed
under Order #38.
Johnson's Island on Lake Erie |
A month earlier, Corbin, an officer in the 4th
Kentucky Cavalry, was recruiting for the Confederacy in his home state when he
and his comrade were captured by Union soldiers in Pendleton County. Acquaintances assured the men they would be
treated as prisoners of war. But two weeks later, Corbin and McGraw found
themselves before a hastily convened military tribunal in Cincinnati. They had
been charged with recruiting for the Confederacy behind Union lines and
carrying mail and information to persons in arms against the United States
government.
Drawing of the Military Prison at Johnson's Island
Hayes Presidential Library, Roger Long Collection
Hayes Presidential Library, Roger Long Collection
The charges originated with Order #38 issued four days
after their capture by General Ambrose Burnside, Commander of the Ohio. In short, the order stated, “persons found
within our lines committing acts for the benefit of enemies of our country will
be tried as spies or traitors and, if convicted, will suffer death.”
After taking testimony from the Union soldiers who
captured the pair, a nine-member commission delivered a verdict of guilty.
Corbin and McGraw were ordered to Johnson’s Island, where they were to be
executed between the hours of noon and 3 o’clock P.M. on May 15, 1863.
When Melissa Corbin learned of her brother’s fate, she
hurried to Cincinnati and met with old family friends. Despite their strong
support for the Union, they sympathized with the well-respected Corbin family.
They accompanied the desperate sister to Burnside’s headquarters. After
listening to her pleas, Burnside replied that he was determined to make an
example of her brother and McGraw. Only President Lincoln could commute the
sentence.
Armed with letters from Union friends testifying to
her brother’s Christian character, Melissa Corbin set out for Washington, D. C.
Using every connection possible, Melissa finally reached the commander-in-chief
by way of a letter delivered to him by one of Washington’s leading ministers.
But President Lincoln already had reviewed the case and refused to open the
letter. Referring to the testimony given during the trial, President Lincoln
remarked, “Those men were bridge burners and bad men and should be punished.”
He could not interfere with General Burnside’s order.
It was Melissa Corbin’s last hope. She returned to
Kentucky, knowing that within a matter of days she and her family members would
lay Captain Corbin to rest in the family cemetery at Carthage. Lt. McGraw was buried in the Flagg Spring Chapel Cemetery.
Note: Posted on the Hayes Presidential Library and Museums' website is the listing of the deaths and names of those buried in the Johnson's Island prison cemetery provided by the late Roger Long. Mentioned among them are Corbin and McGraw.
The Friends and Descendants of the Johnson's Island Civil War Prison are dedicated to the preservation of this National Historic Landmark
Captain William F. Corbin
Courtesy of RootsWeb
Courtesy of RootsWeb
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The Friends and Descendants of the Johnson's Island Civil War Prison are dedicated to the preservation of this National Historic Landmark
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