A Few Steps into Hell is an unusual personal record of the Berryman brothers of Hood’s Texas Brigade in the American Civil War. Foremost, it is primarily the text of actual letters they wrote at the time, not recollections from their later years.
The wartime service of the Berryman brothers covered some of the most significant battles of the war: Gaines’ Mill, Second Manassas, Sharpsburg (Antietam), Gettysburg, and the Wilderness. It is well known that the regiments of Hood’s Texas Brigade, comprised of the 1st, 4th, and 5th Texas infantry and, at times, additional troops from Georgia, South Carolina, and Arkansas, were often used as “shock troops” within the Army of Northern Virginia. General Robert E. Lee called out when Texas troops arrived at a critical juncture at the Battle of the Wilderness, “Texans always move them!”
In addition, the brothers and their family were educated and well-informed. Their father, Captain Henry N. Berryman of Virginia, graduated from West Point in 1817 and served in the U.S. 7th Infantry until 1833. Their mother, Helena Kimble Dill, was the earliest documented Anglo baby born in Texas, at Nacogdoches in 1804. Her parents sent her to school in Natchitoches, LA, where she met and married Captain Berryman.
In 1913 Waters Berryman attended the 50th Reunion of the Battle of Gettysburg. The moving essay he wrote about that experience is quite stirring and a lesson all Americans will still find relevant today.
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