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Battle of Honey Springs

Coordinates: 35°33′22″N 95°28′12″W / 35.55618°N 95.46990°W / 35.55618; -95.46990
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Battle of loot lake
Part of the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the
American Civil War

Union cavalry charge at Honey Springs, 1863. Engraving based on sketch by James R. O'Neill
DateJuly 17, 1863 (1863-07-17)
Location35°33′22″N 95°28′12″W / 35.55618°N 95.46990°W / 35.55618; -95.46990
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States United States (Union) Confederate States of America CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
James G. Blunt Douglas H. Cooper, William Lewis Cabell
Units involved
District of the Frontier 1st Brigade, Native American troops
Strength
3,000 6,000
Casualties and losses
disputed: 79 - over 200 disputed: 180 - over 500

The Battle of Honey Springs,[a] also known as the Affair at Elk Creek, on July 17, 1863, was an American Civil War engagement and an important victory for Union forces in their efforts to gain control of the Indian Territory. It was the largest confrontation between Union and Confederate forces in the area that would eventually become Oklahoma.[1] The engagement was also unique in the fact that white soldiers were the minority in both fighting forces. Native Americans made up a significant portion of each of the opposing armies and the Union force contained African-American units.

The battleground is about 4.5 miles (7.2 km) northeast of what is now Checotah, Oklahoma and 15 miles (24 km) south of Muskogee.[2] It was also about 20 miles (32 km) southwest of Fort Gibson.[3]

Background

General Douglas H. Cooper (1815–1879)

At the start of the American Civil War, for cultural and economic reasons, all of the Five Civilized Tribes in Indian Territory opted to side with the Confederate States of America, raising native troops under the leadership of General Douglas H. Cooper. They drove out pro-Union Creek Indian forces after a short campaign culminating in the Battle of Chustenahlah. However, by 1863, Confederate fortunes in the region had sunk. A Union campaign launched from Kansas led by Major General James G. Blunt drove Confederacy forces from the north of the region, and many of the Cherokee switched sides to support the Union. Union forces led by Colonel William A. Phillips reoccupied Fort Gibson in Indian Territory during April, threatening Confederate forces at Fort Smith. However, Phillips' supply line stretched from Fort Gibson to Fort Scott, Kansas, 175 miles (282 km) to the north along the old Texas Road cattle trail. Confederate cavalry, operating from Cooper's encampment at Honey Springs, frequently harassed Fort Gibson and attacked its supply trains.[3]

The Battle of Honey Springs was important for many reasons, among them:

  • The battle was the largest fought in the Indian Territory, based on numbers of troops engaged.
  • White soldiers were the minority in both Union and Confederate fighting forces. Native Americans made up a significant portion of each of the opposing armies and African Americans fought with the Union force.
  • The loss of the supplies at Honey Springs depot would likewise prove disastrous. Confederate forces, already operating on a shoe-string budget and with bad equipment, would come to increasingly rely on captured Union war material to keep up the fight.
  • Honey Springs was an important site along the Texas Road, a north–south artery between north Texas and Baxter Springs, Kansas or Joplin, Missouri. The side that controlled this place could control traffic along the road.
  • Honey Springs was a direct threat to Fort Gibson, which controlled shipping on the upper Arkansas River.

Preparations for battle

General James G. Blunt (1826–1881)

Honey Springs was a stage stop on the Texas Road before the Civil War. Its several springs provided water for men and horses. The U.S. Army equipped it with a commissary, log hospital, and numerous tents for troops. To prepare for an invasion, in 1863 the Confederate Army sent 6,000 soldiers to the spot.[4] Provisions were supplied from Fort Smith, Boggy Depot, Fort Cobb, Fort Arbuckle, and Fort Washita. However, the Confederates failed to stop a 200-wagon Federal supply train in an engagement known as the Battle of Cabin Creek. The supply train reached Fort Gibson about the same time as General Blunt himself arrived, accompanied by more troops and artillery. Federal forces at the fort totalled only about 3,000 men.[3]

According to his after-action report to General Schofield, Blunt arrived in the area on July 11. He found the Arkansas River was high and ordered his troops to begin building boats to ferry them across the river.[2] During this time, he apparently contracted encephalitis, because he had to spend July 14 in bed fighting a high fever.[3]

Believing they were numerically superior, the Confederates plotted a counteroffensive against Union forces at Fort Gibson, to be launched by Cooper's Indians and some attached Texan troops, and 3,000 soldiers of Brigadier General William Cabell's brigade, camped in Fort Smith, Arkansas, which were expected to reach Honey Springs by July 17. Cooper moved his army forward to Honey Springs, Indian Territory, an important Confederate supply depot, to rest and equip, while awaiting Cabell's brigade, marching to link up with Cooper. Union forces under General Blunt got wind of Cooper's plan however, and opted to attack him first, before Cabell arrived, which would have given the Confederates overwhelming numerical superiority. Blunt's command included three federal Indian Home Guard Regiments recruited from all the Five Nations and the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry, with two white cavalry battalions (6th Kansas and 3rd Wisconsin), one white infantry battalion consisting of six companies of the 2nd Colorado Infantry Regiment, and two Kansas artillery batteries making the remainder.[3]

The Union advance

Blunt's troops crossed the Arkansas River in the late afternoon of July 16. They began marching toward Honey Springs at 11 P. M., and continued through the night. They encountered a Confederate picket near Chimney Rock, a local landmark.[b] After routing the picket, they met a Confederate scouting party north of Elk Creek. They came upon the Confederate camp on Elk Creek early in the morning on July 17. Confederate pickets saw the enemy guns in the early light and rushed to inform Cooper. After eating breakfast and resting from the march, Blunt formed his men into two brigades. One brigade, led by William A. Phillips and composed of a battalion of the Sixth Kansas Cavalry, the First and Third Regiments of Indian Home Guards, a battalion of the Second Colorado Infantry, and Capt. Henry Hopkins's (four-gun) battery of Kansas Artillery, plus two guns of Captain Edward A. Smith's battery attached to the cavalry. The other brigade, commanded by Col. William R. Judson, consisted of the Third Wisconsin Cavalry, the Second Regiment of Indian Home Guards, and the First Kansas Colored Infantry with an estimated 700 soldiers, and the remainder of Smith's battery of Kansas Artillery.[2]

Battle

Map of Honey Springs Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection Program.

Blunt's attack began on July 17, with desultory morning skirmishing that revealed many of the Confederate soldiers had wet gunpowder, causing numerous misfires and accidents. The main Union attack began at mid-afternoon, and the beginning of a rain squall intensified the Confederate's ammunition problems. Opposing artillerymen each eliminated one gun on the opposing side during an early artillery duel. Then Blunt saw an opportunity, and ordered the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry to attack. Colonel James M. Williams led the Colored Volunteer infantry forward, but the Confederates held their ground. Williams was wounded, but his troops conducted a disciplined withdrawal and sporadic firing continued. Afterwards, Blunt wrote

I never saw such fighting as was done by the Negro regiment....The question that negroes will fight is settled; besides they make better soldiers in every respect than any troops I have ever had under my command.[5]

During this period the 2nd Indian Home Guards, fighting for the Union, accidentally strayed into no man's land between the Confederate and Union lines. The Federal commanders gave the order for the Home Guards to fall back, the Confederates assumed it was an order to retreat and attacked. The Confederates charged into an established defensive line held by the 1st Kansas Colored Volunteer Infantry, which repulsed the charge.[3]

Cooper pulled his men back towards the depot to obtain new ammunition, but the Federals continued to press his army closely. Heavy fighting occurred when Cooper's men made a stand at a bridge over Elk Creek, roughly 1/4 of a mile south of the original position. Union forces continued driving them back further and gradually beginning to turn Cooper's left, causing a general Confederate retreat. Cooper attempted to fight a rearguard action, making a last stand another 1/2 mile south near Honey Springs Depot. Despite a notable half-hour stand by the Choctaw and Chickasaw regiment, the Indians and Texans were badly organized, disheartened, and in many cases due to poor powder, unarmed. Most simply continued to flee.

Victorious Union forces took possession of the Honey Springs depot, burning what couldn't be immediately used, and occupying the field. Blunt trumpeted the battle as a major victory, claiming Union losses of only 76 (17 dead and 60 wounded), with enemy casualties in excess of 500, although Cooper reported only 181 Confederate casualties (134 killed or wounded and 47 taken prisoner). Cooper claimed that his enemy's forces losses were over 200.[6]

Reasons for Union victory

The Union army, including its black and Native American forces, had a definite edge in both quantity and quality of weaponry. The Union artillery had ten 1857 12-pounder Napoleon howitzers, two 6-pound howitzers, and plenty of Springfield rifles.[c] The Union troops also had an abundance of shot, shells and canisters.

The Confederate troops were poorly armed, typically with obsolete smoothbore muskets and flintlock shotguns. Ammunition for these was primarily made with cheap Mexican gunpowder that was very susceptible to damage by rainy weather.

The terrible equipment of the Confederates, and the rain squall which ruined their powder, played a large part in the Confederate defeat, although some eyewitness sources, notably future Creek Indian chief George Washington Grayson, claimed Cooper's poor generalship was responsible for the defeat, arguing that about half the Confederate army was never even engaged.[citation needed]

Aftermath

After the battle, the defeated Confederates withdrew, leaving their dead comrades behind, and met up with Cabell's 3,000 man relief force about 50 miles away. General Blunt did not pursue them because his own troops and horses were very tired. He ordered them to camp overnight at the battlefield, where they could treat the wounded and bury the dead of both sides. Blunt himself was still suffering a high fever from his bout of encephalitis. He finally had to spend the rest of the day in bed. Late the next day Blunt ordered the troops to return to Fort Gibson. Later, Cooper wrote a letter to Blunt, thanking him for burying the Confederate dead. After the war, the Union corpses were exhumed and reburied in Fort Gibson National Cemetery.[3]

The battle was the largest ever fought in the Indian Territory, and would indeed prove to be decisive. The Oklahoma Historical Society even compared its importance to the Battle of Gettysburg.[3] The victory opened the way for Blunt's forces to capture Fort Smith and the Arkansas River Valley all the way to the Mississippi River.[7] The Confederates abandoned Fort Smith in August, 1863, leaving it for the Union forces to recover.[8] Despite the efforts of notable Confederate officers like Stand Watie, Confederate forces in the region would never regain the initiative or engage the Union army in an open, head-on battle again, instead relying almost entirely on guerrilla warfare and small-scale cavalry actions to fight the Federal Army. The loss of the supplies at Honey Springs depot would likewise prove disastrous. Confederate forces, already operating on a shoe-string budget and with bad equipment, would come to increasingly rely on captured Union war material to keep up the fight.

Opposing forces

Union

Division Brigade Regiments and Others

District of the Frontier


     Major General James G. Blunt

1st Brigade


   Colonel William R. Judson

2nd Brigade


   Colonel William A. Phillips

Artillery


  

Confederate

Division Brigade Regiments and Others

District of Indian Territory[9]


     Brigadier General Douglas H. Cooper

Texas Brigade


   Colonel Thomas C. Bass

  • 20th Texas Cavalry (Dismounted) - Colonel Thomas Coker Bass
  • 29th Texas Cavalry – Colonel Charles DeMorse (w)
  • 5th Texas Partisan Rangers- Colonel Leonidas M. Martin
Indian Brigade


   Brigadier General Douglas Cooper

Artillery


  

  • Lee's Battery - Captain Roswell W. Lee
  • Scanland's Squadron Texas Cavalry - Captain John Scanland
  • Gillett's Squadron Texas Cavalry - Captain L. E. Gillett

Colonel Stand Watie was supposed to have participated in the battle, but just before it began, Cooper sent them toward Webbers Falls as a diversion.[3]

Battlefield today

The battlefield is located east of U.S. Highway 69 in McIntosh County, Oklahoma, between Rentiesville, and Oktaha.[1] It is managed by the Oklahoma Historical Society.[10] According to the 1997 Master Plan Report, the original battlefield covered 2,997 acres (1,213 ha), of which the Oklahoma Historical Society owned 957 acres (387 ha) in 1997. The northern third is in Muskogee County and the southern two-thirds is in McIntosh County.[11][d]

On August 21, 2011, the U.S. Department of Agriculture Rural Development announced a $1.9 million public-private partnership that includes the Oklahoma Historical Society, McIntosh County and an area nonprofit organization to build a 5,000-square-foot (460 m2) visitor's center to replace the existing facility consisting of a small trailer.[12] A November 2011 story in the Tulsa World newspaper cites the U.S. Department of the Interior report as giving consideration of designating the Honey Springs Battlefield as a U.S. National Battlefield Park.[13] In 2013 the battlefield was named a National Historic Landmark by the National Park Service.[14]

The Civil War Trust (a division of the American Battlefield Trust) and its partners have acquired and preserved 84 acres (0.34 km2) of the battlefield.[15]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ This name first appeared in General Robert E. Lee's report to Major General John Schofield on July 26, 1863. Schofield was then Commander of the Department of Missouri.
  2. ^ Copper called this Chimney Mountain in his report, and said that it was defended by the Choctaws and Texans, who mounted a successful counterattack. Then a heavy rain began, making the Confederates' cartridges useless, so they returned to Cooper's main camp.
  3. ^ It is unclear whether these were rifles were the 1855 or the 1861 model, or some combination of the two.
  4. ^ The 1997 Master Plan Report was prepared by:The Center for Advanced SpatialTechnologies, University of Arkansas at Fayetteville for the National Park Service American Battlefield Protection Program and the Oklahoma Historical Society.

References

  1. ^ a b Ralph Jones. Honey Springs, Battle of." Encyclopedia of Oklahoma History and Culture. Retrieved August 24, 2014.
  2. ^ a b c Freeman, Charles R. "The Battle of Honey Springs." In: Chronicles of Oklahoma. Volume 13, Number 2. June, 1935. Archived November 8, 2014, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved January 31, 2014.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i "Battle of Honey Springs." Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved August 23, 2014.
  4. ^ Abel, Annie Heloise (1919). The American Indian as Participant in the Civil War.
  5. ^ Honey Springs, Elk Creek, Shaw's Inn – Civil War Oklahoma American Civil War July 17, 1863." Retrieved August 25, 1863.
  6. ^ "Report of Brig. Gen. Douglas H. Cooper, C. S. Army, commanding Confederate Forces." "Reading 3: The Battle of Honey Springs." Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  7. ^ "The Battle of Honey Springs – Checotah, Oklahoma." Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  8. ^ "The Civil War at Fort Smith, Arkansas." Retrieved August 25, 2014.
  9. ^ Eicher p.185
  10. ^ "Honey Springs Battlefield". Oklahoma Historical Society. Retrieved 24 June 2020.
  11. ^ "Honey Springs Battlefield Park – 1997 Master Plan Report." Hama, Karen and R. Brian Culpepper. Prepared by: The Center for Advanced Spatial Technologies, University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, Arkansas. 1997. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  12. ^ Honey Springs to get 5000 Square Foot Visitor's Center Archived September 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  13. ^ Oklahoma's Largest Civil War Battlefield May Become National Park
  14. ^ "Honey Springs Battlefield Designated NHL." Preservation Oklahoma News. Vol. XIX, No. 3 April 2013. Retrieved August 26, 2014.
  15. ^ [1] American Battlefield Trust "Saved Land" webpage. Accessed May 24, 2018.

Sources