- I keep all my school
papers on file. This is part of a report on the
"University Greys" from history class last
year.
- --Rachel
When Mississippi seceded
from the Union in 1861, the fever to join the
Confederate cause was catching. Among those
interested in serving the Southern army were
students from Ole Miss who dubbed themselves the
University Greys and became Company A of the
Eleventh Mississippi Regiment of Volunteer
Infantry. Their allegiance was founded soon
thereafter, and on April 27, 1861, the sum of $125
from the school treasury was devoted to the young
up-and-coming soldiers.
The group was led by
William B. Lowry, a 19-year-old who had arrived on
campus with guns, horses, hunting dogs and a slave.
Noted for his unbecoming behavior and disinterest
in school work, Lowry led his fellow students and
soldiers in military training. Local legend has it
that Lowry, upon being expelled from the
university, rode his horse into the Lyceum while
lashing a bullwhip and calling for the
Chancellor.
The Greys rode out of
Oxford 47 soldiers strong on May 1 following
Confederate orders. Their first battle was also
the first major skirmish of the war, the Battle at
First Manassas or Bull Run. The Greys went on to
serve the Confederacy at Second Manassas, Gaines'
Mill, Sharpsburg, Gettysburg, the Wilderness,
Talley's Mill, Spotsylvania Courthouse, Bethesda
Church, Petersburg and Hatcher's Run. It is said
that at Gettysburg they reached the "high watermark
of the Confederacy," beyond even the reach of
Pickett's men.
Very few Greys survived,
and among those who did, none ever reconvened at
Ole Miss. There are few items left to remember
their legacy. A stained glass window in Ventress
Hall commemorates the Greys, and there is a
collection of letters at the J.W. Williams Library
on the Ole Miss campus. Also, Mrs. Maud Morrow
Brown of Oxford documented their struggle in her
book The University Greys.
|