From The Civil War Quadrennium
by William O'Donnell
The winter of 1863 came, and it was a cold, harsh winter. The Arkansas River was frozen solid at Little Rock for many
months. Just before the New Year, great excitement swept the city because 17-year-old David Owen Dodd had been arrested
by Union troops as a Confederate spy. Word of young Dodd's arrest sent shockwaves among the remaining permanent
residents of Little Rock. The regenerating grapevine picked up the information shortly after the boy was lodged in the
guard house at the arsenal after being brought in from the old Hot Springs Road where, by an unfortunate mischance, he
crossed the path of a Union foraging party.
All the permanent residents of Little Rock knew young and handsome David Dodd, his father, mother and sister, Senhora.
The Dodds had friends and relatives from Little Rock to Texas. David had worked briefly in one of the Main Street
business establishments at the time when Confederate recruiting had decimated available manpower. Circumstantial
evidence indicates David may have worked in Little Rock Alderman James A. Henry's mercantile store, although there
is another report he had brief employment in Little Rock's new telegraph office. Alderman Henry demonstrated his
strong character at this juncture by doing what he could to help young Dodd, even though he ran the risk of tighter
Union surveillance of his activities. He hired William Walker, a Fort Smith attorney, to defend the boy and he went
to General Steele's headquarters, seeking permission to visit David, who meantime had been transferred from the
arsenal to the State Prison on the western outskirts of the city (where the Arkansas State Capitol now stands).
The alderman's personal interest in David Dodd derived, at least in part, from the fact that the youngster had
long been a personal friend of Henry's youngest son, who at this time apparently was still among the Little Rock
children remaining in south Arkansas. Apart from the curiosity about the Dodd boy, Little Rock's chief concern as
1864 began was making a living and finding employment for a horde of freed slaves who followed the Union army into
the city. Interest also began reviving in political concerns. There was no indication in the National Union in the
first days of January that a military tribunal convened on January 2 to try David Dodd for espionage. So the chief
interest of the city's residents was the arrival of delegates representing 24 counties in northern Arkansas who
convened in a constitutional convention on January 4. They debated several days whether to amend the 1836
constitution to eliminate slavery, but on January 8 there was a dramatic interruption.
David Owen Dodd was born in Victoria, Lavaca County, Texas, November 10, 1846. At age 17 in 1863, he was a
dark-haired boy of slight build and a winning personality. His father, Andrew Dodd, and his mother, Lydia,
were married in a village somewhere south of Little Rock and immediately moved to Texas where David and his
sisters, Leonora and Senhora, were born. Records provide little insight into Andrew Dodd's means of livelihood,
but his movements indicate he earned his living in some sort of itinerant enterprise. David's sister Leonora
died sometime before the war.
When David was 10 years old, the family returned to Arkansas and settled in the environs of Benton. It was there
that David attended school for the first time. His sister Senhora was sent to Little Rock to live with her aunt,
Mrs. Susan A. Dodd, and to attend school in the capital city. In the fall of 1861, the Dodds moved to Little Rock
to be closer to Senhora, and David transferred to St. John's College, out beyond the arsenal, where, ironically,
he was to die two years later. The Dodd family remained in the capital city until August 1862 when Mr. Dodd and
David traveled to Monroe, Louisiana, leaving the boy's mother and sister with Mrs. Susan Dodd. David was now 16
and he took a job in the telegraph office in Monroe, staying with relatives there during the fall and early
winter of 1862 while his father traveled to Mississippi to enlist, as he told David, in the Confederate army.
In January 1863, David quit his telegraph job in Monroe after about four months employment and went to Grenada,
Mississippi. There, curiously, he found his father not in the Confederate army but operating some kind of store.
For the next nine months, David worked for his father and then, in September 1863, he began his fateful journey
back to Little Rock. The Union, meantime, had taken Vicksburg and word had just reached Grenada that Little Rock
had fallen. So Mr. Dodd went to Union military headquarters and obtained a pass for David to go to Little Rock
to bring his mother and sister to Mississippi. Once back in Little Rock, David took a job clerking in a Main
Street store (perhaps the mercantile establishment of Alderman Henry). There being no mail service at this point
in the war, three months passed without Andrew Dodd receiving any news from his wife, his son or his daughter.
So the husband-father crossed the Mississippi, traveled north through Confederate Arkansas and sneaked through
Union lines at night. Reunited with his family, Dodd immediately arranged through friends and relatives to have
a wagon waiting for the family beyond Union lines south of Little Rock, and on December 1, 1863, under the cover
of darkness, the father, mother, son and daughter traveled cross-country toward Benton.
A week later, the Dodds arrived in Camden, and a curious thing happened. Mr. Dodd went to the headquarters of
Confederate General James F. Fagan and obtained a pass for David to return to Little Rock, ostensibly to wind
up some family business. David subsequently admitted that he delivered letters to several of his acquaintances
on his re-arrival in the city. David moved in with his aunt, Mrs. Susan Dodd, and for the next couple of weeks
he was a popular figure with the city's younger set, especially the girls. There were, after all, very few
teenaged boys left in Little Rock, except for some of the Union soldiers. David even became popular with some
of the younger servicemen stationed at the arsenal, especially because he usually was accompanied by a local girl or two.
On December 28, 1863, David visited the Provost Marshal's office at St. John's College (several hundred yards
southwest of the arsenal) and had no trouble obtaining a pass through Union lines to rejoin his family in Camden.
He headed out the Benton Road, riding a mule, showing his pass to Union sentries at the city line and again at a
point eight miles from Little Rock, where the outpost sentry tore up the pass, explaining to David that he would
have no further need for it because he was entering Confederate territory. A short way farther on, David detoured
to spend the night with his uncle, Washington Dodd, who had lived in the area for years. He obtained some pocket
money and a handgun from his uncle, and the next morning, December 30, he resumed his trip south. He took a
crosslots route back to the Benton Road, instead of returning the way he had come to his uncle's house, and this
proved to be a fatal mistake. Had he followed his earlier route, David would have stayed in Confederate territory.
But his cross-country course took him back through an area controlled by the Union, and it was there he encountered
a foraging party of Union cavalrymen.
Challenged by these horsemen, who demanded to see a pass or other identification, David tried to explain how his
pass had been destroyed the previous evening by the last Union sentry he met. But the foragers were not convinced.
They forced the boy to ride his mule alongside them as they led him back to the sentry post. As it happened, the
sentry who tore up David's pass was no longer on duty. So the cavalrymen took their captive to the nearby
guardhouse to be questioned by the lieutenant in charge of the guard south of the city. This officer, too, became
suspicious when David was unable to produce personal identification. So he ordered him to empty his pockets. The
money, both Confederate and Union, did not surprise the officer. Neither did the handgun. Anybody traveling in
remote areas without at least a pistol would be thought foolhardy. Some letters David was carrying to relatives
and friends in south Arkansas caused no concern, but a memorandum book aroused curiosity. The officer found most
entries in the book innocuous, but one page, written entirely in Morse Code, prompted him to arrest the boy on
suspicion of espionage and send him back to Union headquarters at the arsenal in Little Rock.
General Steele called in a telegrapher from the Little Rock telegraph office to decode the suspicious page of
David's memorandum book. The result was formal charges of espionage and formation of a Court Martial to try the
case. The Morse Code in the memorandum book proved to be a highly accurate synopsis of Union strength in Little
Rock, even listing the number of artillery pieces in certain units. For two days, David Dodd was questioned by
Federal military officers who were extremely anxious to identify the Union "traitor" who gave him detailed
information about Little Rock defenses. They also demanded to know for whom David was working. Some histories
claim the youngster steadfastly refused to answer either question, but Walter Scott McNutt's Elementary History
of Arkansas maintains, without attribution, that David blamed General Fagan in Camden for his plight. He
reportedly told Union investigators that Fagan refused to issue him a pass to Little Rock through Confederate
lines unless he agreed to spy. David was now committed to the State Prison to await trial.
The military tribunal convened January 2, 1864, at the arsenal with General John Milton Thayer as the presiding
officer of the Court Martial. The trial record indicates the boy was asked repeatedly to name the Union traitor
and the person to whom he was directly responsible. But in the four days the Court Martial lasted, David kept
silent. His attorneys, William Walker, who was hired by Alderman Henry, and William Fishback, who later became
Governor of Arkansas, had little but David's ignorance on which to base a defense, and the defendant made only
a feeble effort to explain his Morse Code information as something he did to exercise his telegraphic skills.
The boy did not take the witness stand, but his attorneys submitted a written deposition of his testimony. The
Court Martial lasted four days. David Dodd was convicted of spying for the Confederacy and was sentenced to be
hanged at the discretion of General Steele. The boy was immediately transferred back to the State Prison to
await his execution, and General Steele designated Friday, January 8, 1864, as the fateful day.
Much happened in the two days between David's conviction and his hanging. But through it all, there was no
indication that the boy was ever other than stoical. Troops immediately set to work constructing a gallows on
the front campus of St. John's College, but as the execution would demonstrate, the Yankees were much more
adept at killing people in hot blood than in cold blood. Alderman Henry had been forbidden to attend the
espionage trial. The occupying army still feared his ability to cause trouble. But the alderman courageously
approached the Provost Marshal following David's conviction and asked permission to visit the lad in his prison
cell. Alderman Henry, it will be remembered, was a close friend of David Dodd and that apparently was the reason
he was allowed a brief visit with the boy. It was during this visit that David asked Alderman Henry to take
charge of his burial, and the alderman agreed, though he was certain the Yankees would object.
To avoid arousing further Union animosity, the alderman went directly from the prison to the home of friends,
Dick Johnson and Barney Nighton, at Fifth and Rock Streets and arranged for them to apply for General Steele's
permission to take responsibility for the boy's funeral." With the understanding that Alderman Henry would not
attend, Steele chose a small delegation of David's friends to serve as bearers and mourners and granted Nighton
permission to receive the body. As these plans were being made, there were repeated appeals to General Steele
to grant the young spy clemency, but the commander explained that death was mandatory under military law when
a spy is convicted by Court Martial. Nevertheless, the city still held out hope that there would be a last
minute reprieve because of David's age.
Before he was moved to the guard house at the arsenal in the early morning hours of his execution day, David
penned a heartwrenching farewell to his parents and sister. In his cell at the State Prison, he wrote:
Military Prison
Little Rock Jan. 8
1 o'clock a.m. 1864
My Dear Parents and Sister:
I was arrested as a Spy and tried, and Sentenced to be hung today at 3 o'clock. The time is fast approaching but
thank God I am prepared to die. I expect to meet you all in heaven. Do not weep for me for I will be better off
in heaven. I will soon be out of this world of sorrow and trouble. I would like to see you all before I die, but
let God's will be done, not ours. I pray to God to give you strength to bear your troubles while in this world.
I hope God will receive you in heaven - there I will meet you. Mother, I know it will be hard for you to give
up your only son, but you must remember it is God's will. Goodbye. God will give you strength to bear your
troubles. I pray that we may meet in Heaven.
Goodbye, God will bless you all.
Your son and brother,
David O. Dodd
Drama more poignant than anything Little Rock had ever seen now touched the soul of the city. There were
grumblings about David's conviction, and there even were reports - idle gossip, perhaps - that Confederate
troops would storm back into the capital city on a rescue mission. Such talk may have convinced some people,
though it is doubtful the majority of Little Rockians believed it. Stricter surveillance of all now approaching
the arsenal was an indication that General Steele had heard this talk and was taking it seriously.
Despite bitter cold weather with snow covering the earth and the coercive attitude of the Union military, the
vast majority of Little Rock's residents trekked cautiously past the arsenal toward the campus of St. John's
College where all had heard the execution would be carried out. Many hundreds of men, women and children
trudged to the site from the north side of the Arkansas River, crossing on ice that had solidly covered the
stream for several weeks. Many of those entering the arsenal area wondered why they were not challenged by
military sentries, but they found the answer when they reached their destination.
Entering the college campus clearing from the woodland that surrounded it, the civilian spectators were awed by a
military formation of hundreds of blue-clad soldiers who stood in a square human barricade around a simple gallows.
The gibbet consisted of two tall timbers joined at the top by a rough crossbeam from which hung a hangman's noose.
Silence was the order of the afternoon. One estimate said there were 6,000 spectators. Anyone who spoke kept his
voice down, and complete silence spread across the throng just before 3 o'clock when the prison wagon bringing
David Dodd from the guard house was seen approaching. The boy was sitting on his rough wood coffin. The northwest
corner of the phalanx of troops parted to admit the two-horse team, and from that point on, all was very methodical,
except for one obvious embarrassment a Union oversight caused. The prison wagon backed up to the hanging noose,
and David was told to stand on the tailboard. His arms were tied behind his back and his ankles were bound. Then,
to the dismay of the officers in charge, it was discovered that those who planned the execution had overlooked
the military requirement that a blindfold be in place before any convict is executed. There were few, if any, at
the scene who were more composed than David Dodd, and it was he who rescued his executioners from their
embarrassment. "You will find a handkerchief in my coat pocket," he told the soldiers. Thus the doomed lad was
blindfolded with his own kerchief.
There was a brief pause for the reading of the official sentence: Death by hanging. The Provost Marshal next
fitted the noose around David's neck and stepped aside while a local minister, Rev. Dr. Peck, voiced an invocation.
All the while, spectators standing outside the square of soldiers and crowding every window on the north side of
the college building kept silent and virtually motionless, as if disbelieving what they were witnessing. Nobody
seemed to notice the bitter cold that embraced the city. Spectators wondered what was being said when the Provost
Marshal stepped onto the wagon tailgate and conversed briefly with the condemned boy. No one could hear and there
is no written record of the conversation, but there has been speculation ever since that David might have been
given one last chance to save his life by naming his co-conspirators.
The Provost Marshal stepped down from the tailgate of the prison wagon, and, in another instant, he tripped the
tailgate latch. Thus began a horror that sickened even some of the battle-hardened soldiers ringing the area.
Man of the civilians and not a few of the military men averted their eyes. The scene before them was a shocking
demonstration of Union ineptitude as executioners. Hangings traditionally are conducted so that the victim's
fall when the trap is sprung will break his neck and render him immediately unconscious. But that's not what
happened to David Dodd. In the first place, the wagon tailgate was not high enough to provide the necessary
fall, and the Provost Marshal had failed to realize that new rope would stretch. Thus, when the tailgate fell,
David's tightly-trussed body simply slid to the end of the rope, stretching it and allowing the boy's feet to
touch the ground. Slowly, David began to strangle and ever more frantically he began flinging his weight from
side to side in agony and terror. A stalwart soldier quickly shinned up one of the timbers of the gibbet and,
sitting on the crossbeam, pulled hard on the rope to hasten the boy's death. But it was more than five full
minutes before young David's body hung motionless, and many onlookers were nauseous. A medical doctor finally
was able to find no pulse, and the body was cut down.
The corpse was placed in the prison wagon and carried to the Provost Marshal's office at St. John's College.
There, military doctors examined the pitiful remains and reported death due to "a disrupted spine." An hour
or so later, after most civilians had left the area, David's body was loaded in a wagon provided by Dick
Johnson and Barney Nighton and was taken to Johnson's home on Rock Street where it was prepared for burial.
General Steele insisted that the funeral be kept simple and quiet. But, by Alderman Henry's pre-arrangement,
the body, ready for interment, was displayed on a couch on Johnson's front porch and many mourning residents
passed that evening to view the remains.
Early Saturday morning, January 9, a small cortege of selected mourners accompanied David Dodd's body across
town to West Main Street (now Broadway) and buried it in a grave in Mount Holly Cemetery reportedly donated
by Nighton. In 1913, an eight-foot marble spire was erected over the boy's grave and a simple low marble
curb was installed to outline the plot. On the spire is engraved:
" Here lie the remains of David O. Dodd.
Born in Lavaca County, Texas, Nov.10, 1846, died Jan. 8, 1864"
A marble scroll overlaying the curb that surrounds the grave bears the inscription:
"Boy Martyr of the Confederacy"
The grave is in the southeast quadrant of Mount Holly Cemetery.
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