Lewis Thompson Woodruff

Lewis Thompson Woodruff (March 5, 1816-) was born in Hartford, Connecticut on March 5, 1816. When the declaration of War was made by the Lincoln administration he was a longstanding, well respected member of the Mobile, Alabama business community. He was also Captain of the “Mobile Rifles”, a local militia company. Notwithstanding his age and substantial business interests, the 45 year old rushed to the defense of his adopted home with as much alacrity as any native son. He entered Alabama state service on April 24, 1861 as Captain of the “Mobile Rifles”, which was designated Company K, 3rd Alabama Infantry. Though only a Captain, Woodruff was so well thought of that an offshoot of his company took his name, and the “Woodruff Rifles” fought nobly in the 21st Alabama Infantry. The 3rd Alabama was organized at Montgomery, Alabama and was the first Alabama regiment to make the trek to the seat of war in Virginia, where it mustered into Confederate service at Lynchburg on May 4th.

Woodruff served faithfully and well in his role as Captain in the 3rd Alabama for a year. The 3rd was brigaded with the 1st and 12th Virginia at Norfolk, on the Peninsula, first under Colonel Jones M. Withers and then under Colonel William Mahone.

Woodruff’s qualities as a soldier and a gentleman were much respected from the beginning as attested by the April 30 edition of the Mobile Register: “There is a report in camp that we are to lose one of our finest officers. It is said that Captain Woodruff of the Mobile Rifles, will be called to take position in Col. Smith’s Regiment. If so, I congratulate Col Smith and his regiment on having an officer they may well be proud of. All will regret to part with him here, and more especially his company, whose wants and interests he has watched over with care which men never fail to appreciate. Captain W., besides possessing those practical qualities so essential, is a splendid drill officer and has the confidence of all around him.”

Dame Rumor was partially correct; on May 12, 1862, Woodruff was elected Lieutenant Colonel of the newly formed 36th Alabama Infantry without even running for the post. The Thirty-sixth was organized at Mount Vernon Arsenal, in Mount Vernon, Alabama on May 12, 1862. It remained there a month, then aided in the construction of the defenses at Oven Bluff shipyard on the Tombigbee River and at Choctaw Point and was then stationed in Mobile. On March 14, 1863 Woodruff was promoted to full Colonel of the 36th.

The following month, April 1863, Colonel Woodruff and his regiment were sent to the winter camps at Tullahoma, Tennessee. There it was placed in a brigade with the 18th, 32nd, 38th, and 58th Alabama regiments under Brigadier General Henry Clayton, in Alexander Stewart's division.

When General Braxton Bragg was maneuvered out of middle Tennessee during the Tullahoma Campaign, the Thirty-sixth fell back with the army. Their first major engagement in which Woodruff commanded the regiment was at Chickamauga. In an after action report Colonel Woodruff reported that his regiment went in at 1:30 and fought till out of ammunition, then they were withdrawn to resupply. After resupplying they went back into action as Colonel Woodruff reports: “At 5 p. m. we were again ordered to the front and passed Gen. Bate's brigade, which was halted in line of battle. Charging at double-quick time over a hill and across a road, we entered a cornfield, to the left of which, in the woods, a battery of the enemy was posted. Lieut. Gladden, of Company H, and Lieut. Meek, of Company A, both passed within a few yards of this battery with their companies, and went through the corn-field and into a wheat or sedge field fully one-half mile in front of this battery. Lieut. Meek saw the enemy's flag not 200 yards distant and ordered Private Baily to fire upon it. Both officers (Lieut. G [ladden] and M[eek]) desired rather to obtain the flag than capture the battery. Lieut. Britton, of Company C, who passed by the battery, corroborates the statements of Lieut. Meek and Gladden. Lieut. Smith, of Company I, was in front and saw only two companies, except those from Clayton's brigade, in the field beyond the road. Lieut. Walker, of Company D, not regarding the battery, continued to fire upon the retreating enemy and pursue his flag. All concur in saying that the greater portion of my regiment was in the corn-field and that it first reached the battery. Thence it pursued the enemy and his flag for more than one half mile to the front. During the absence of my regiment other troops coming up removed the battery. The 36th was awarded credit for capturing the battery and the crossed cannon honors were born upon their flag.

Loses for the regiment were light at Lookout Mountain, November 24, 1863 but they suffered severely at Missionary Ridge the following day. Thus began a series of reverses that did not stop until the army went into winter quarters in and around Dalton, Georgia.

After a cold, hungry winter the Colonel led his men into battle at Rocky Face Ridge, Resaca and the sanguinary conflict at New Hope Church, Georgia. At New Hope Church "Colonel L. T. Woodruff was seriously wounded on the 25th of May, at 4 o'clock, the ball entering his thigh near the leading artery. He was carried from the field, believed to be mortally wounded.

As he was carried from the field to die, someone had the presence of mind to carry his sword with him, as subsequent events will show. He survived. Upon surviving, Colonel Woodruff was recommended for promotion to Brigadier General but his leg was so badly damaged that he could not walk fifty yards even with crutches, so the medical board recommended his retirement. On December 13, 1864 he retired from the Confederate Army and made his way back to Mobile in early 1865.

After the War, with his broken body he began to pick up the pieces of his life. On May 25, 1869 “forgetting his own safety he rushed into a burning building to save the property of a fellow citizen” his skull was crushed by the falling of a wall.

On May 27th under the heading “Imposing Ceremonies” the Mobile Register paid tribute the man: “It is seldom, if ever, that Mobile has paid such a tribute to her deceased citizens as was evidenced yesterday by the universal respect which was shown to the memory of the late Col. Woodruff, the funeral cortege following his remains to the grave being the largest which has been witnessed in this city for many years… In the morning the remains were brought to the rooms of the Board of Trade and exposed in state, and several thousand people, including many ladies, visited the room during the day to take a last look upon the honoured dead. The body was shrouded in the Confederate uniform in which Col. Woodruff had rendered such gallant service, it being his wish, expressed many months previous to his death, that he should be buried in it. The rooms were draped in mourning-the chandeliers in black, desks & etc. in white- and upon the coffin were placed the sabre of the deceased.”