Old Soldier told Altamont Boy of War
Thursday Sept. 2, 1976
Grundy County Herald
submitted by: Greg
Curtis

At this
point in time, it has been 111 years since Lee made his surrender to Grant
at Appomattox courthouse in Virginia, signaling the end of the fighting
between North and South.
As the time of man goes, 111 years is a long time. Yet there are still
in our midst a few persons who in their childhoods heard first hand
stories recounted of the war by men and women who survived it.
One of these is Chester Fults, well-known Altamont merchant. Ches
recounts that when he was a little boy, He had the privilege of knowing
an old man named John Scruggs, who had entered the Confederate Army at
age 17 and fought through the entire war, a participant in some of its
most famous engagements.
"He was the only person I ever knew," Chester recounts, "who had been
in those Civil War battles and took the time to tell me about them."
In his extreme old age Mr. Scruggs slowly went blind, but he would take
the little boy on his knee and tell him about those days of his youth
when shells burst, men engaged in mortal combat, and many fell to rise
and fight no more.
John Scruggs had been a member of Company A of the 35th Tennessee
Infantry, raised by John Armfield of Beersheba Springs and commanded by
his nephew, Capt. Albert Hanner.
It well may have been that during the war the old man's life was saved
by a case of the measles. At the battle of Shiloh, Company A was in the
thickest of the bloody fight losing among many men its commander, Capt.
Hanner. Scruggs, however, was at the time quarantined with the
measles.
Company A having been cut to pieces, its survivors were reassigned, and
John Scruggs became a member of Company D commanded by John Macon. With
this unit he took part in the Battle of Chickamauga. During which he
was knocked senseless by an exploding shell and had 14 bullet holes to
rip through his cloths; yet not one touched him.
Apparently, he led a charmed life throughout the war; more than 50
balls penetrated his uniform as he fought through battle after battle,
yet he sustained no serious wound.
After the war, he worked for H. B. Northcutt as a salesman, then taught
school before being elected county court clerk in 1870, a position in
which he served for manly years. He also was superintendent of
education for ten years.
When he grew old and blind, however, what he liked best to do was take
a little boy like Chester Fults up on his knee and tell about those
days of long ago when he went to soldiering and did his part in many a
bloody
battle.

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