Lehigh Drive closed from 25th Street

Lehigh Drive is closed from 25th street so everyone must approach from Glendon Hill Road (via Front Street to Iron Street) or Lehigh Drive from downtown.

National Mule Day: Mules Victorious!

National Canal Museum - National Mule Day: Mules Victorious!
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National Mule Day: Mules Victorious!

Closeup picture of mule nose peeking over a wooden fence. Blue sky in background.

“You got snacks?”

Today, October 26, is National Mule Day.  Like our beloved “boys” George and Hank, most mules are smart, strong, hardworking, and generally placid and peaceful.

But Wednesday October 28, is the anniversary of the day Army mules went into battle—and won.

The night of October 28, 1863, a Union Army relief and supply column that included wagons pulled by 200 mules was attacked by a Confederate unit near Wauhatchie, Tennessee.  The mules, panicked by the noise of the battle, broke their traces and stampeded—straight into the Southern infantry. Believing they were being charged by Union cavalry, the soldiers broke ranks and scattered, ending the attack.

An anonymous Union soldier from Ohio was inspired by the mules’ exploit to rewrite Tennyson’s poem The Charge of the Light Brigade to extol their victory.  The original poem was spread widely through popular media, and included in the 1888 soldier’s memoir Hard Tack and Coffee by John D. Billings. Here’s an excerpt, which we found in the Fall 1987 issue of the Canal Museum’s newsletter, The Locktender.

The Charge of the Mule Brigade:

Black and white ink drawing of the "Charge of the Mule Brigade" showing numerous mules running towards frightened men in army uniforms.

Ink drawing of the “Charge of the Mule Brigade,” reproduced from “Hard Tack and Coffee,” written by John D. Billings and illustrated by Charles W. Reed, 1888.

Half a mile, half a mile,

Half a mile onward,

Right toward the Georgia troops

Broke the two hundred.

“Forward the Mule Brigade!”

“Charge for the Rebs!” they neighed;

Straight for the Georgia troops

Broke the two hundred.

 

“Forward, the Mule Brigade!”

Was there a mule dismayed?

Not when the long ears

Felt their ropes sundered.

Theirs not to make reply:

Theirs not to reason why;

Theirs but to make them fly

On! To the Georgia troops,

Broke the two hundred.

 

Mules to the right of them,

Mules to the left of them,

Mules behind them

Pawed, brayed, and thundered.

Breaking their own confines,

Breaking through Longstreet’s lines,

Into the Georgia troops

Stormed the two hundred.

 

When can their glory fade?

O! the wild charge they made!

All the world wondered.

Honor the charge they made,

Honor the Mule Brigade,

Long-eared two hundred!

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