Arkansas Militia in the Civil War: Difference between revisions
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In response to the Governor’s message, Militia companies began assembling in Little Rock by February 5, 1861 and they made their intention to seize the Arsenal known to its commander, CPT Totten. The Yell Rifles commanded by Captain [[Patrick Cleburne]] and the Phillips County Guards both of Phillips County, were the first companies to reach Little Rock and report to Governor Rector. Governor Rector denied having called the militia forces, and sent the newly arriving companies in to camp near the present state capitol building. In addition to the two Phillips County Companies, the Jefferson Guards of Pine Bluff, the Southwestern Guards, and the LaGrange Cavalry, all responded to the call to seize the Arsenal.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> Eventually more than a thousand men would assemble, representing Phillips, Jefferson, Prairie, White, Saline, Hot Spring, Montgomery, Monroe, and St. Francis counties. The Little Rock city council reacted with alarm at this sudden invasion of the capitol by the newly formed volunteer companies and called out its own militia unit, the Capitol Guards and ordered them to patrol the streets and stand guard over the newly arrived volunteer companies.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> |
In response to the Governor’s message, Militia companies began assembling in Little Rock by February 5, 1861 and they made their intention to seize the Arsenal known to its commander, CPT Totten. The Yell Rifles commanded by Captain [[Patrick Cleburne]] and the Phillips County Guards both of Phillips County, were the first companies to reach Little Rock and report to Governor Rector. Governor Rector denied having called the militia forces, and sent the newly arriving companies in to camp near the present state capitol building. In addition to the two Phillips County Companies, the Jefferson Guards of Pine Bluff, the Southwestern Guards, and the LaGrange Cavalry, all responded to the call to seize the Arsenal.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> Eventually more than a thousand men would assemble, representing Phillips, Jefferson, Prairie, White, Saline, Hot Spring, Montgomery, Monroe, and St. Francis counties. The Little Rock city council reacted with alarm at this sudden invasion of the capitol by the newly formed volunteer companies and called out its own militia unit, the Capitol Guards and ordered them to patrol the streets and stand guard over the newly arrived volunteer companies.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> |
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Governor Rector used the quickly massing militia forces to open negotiations that would lead to the surrender of the Arsenal to state forces.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> Many citizens of Little Rock opposed the occupation of the Arsenal, fearing a loss of life and property.<ref>The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 642, accessed 14 December 2010. http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=658;page=root;size=s</ref> With militia forces now surrounding the arsenal grounds, Governor Rector dispatched General Thomas. D. Merrick, Commander of the First Division, Arkansas Militia with a formal demand for the Arsenal’s surrender. Captain James Totten, Arsenal commander, agreed to evacuate the Arsenal in return for safe passage out of the state. Governor Rector agreed and the Militia took control of the Arsenal on February 8, 1861.<ref>The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 644, Accessed 14 December 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=660;page=root;size=s</ref> CPT Totten and his men were escorted from the city by the Capitol Guards. Grateful citizens of Little Rock presented him a sword, which some later came to regret as Totten would eventually meet Arkansas troops on the field of battle.<ref>Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 42; Margaret Ross, “Chronicles of Arkansas, the Years of the Civil War, Arkansas Gazette, Feb. 5 and Apr. 23, 1961; Bearss and Gibson, Little Gibraltar, pp. 242–243.</ref> Later, artillery batteries were set up at Helena on the Mississippi River and Pine Bluff on the Arkansas to prevent reinforcement of Federal military posts. |
Governor Rector used the quickly massing militia forces to open negotiations that would lead to the surrender of the Arsenal to state forces.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> Many citizens of Little Rock opposed the occupation of the Arsenal, fearing a loss of life and property.<ref>The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 642, accessed 14 December 2010. http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=658;page=root;size=s</ref> With militia forces now surrounding the arsenal grounds, Governor Rector dispatched General Thomas. D. Merrick, Commander of the First Division, Arkansas Militia with a formal demand for the Arsenal’s surrender. Captain James Totten, Arsenal commander, agreed to evacuate the Arsenal in return for safe passage out of the state. Governor Rector agreed and the Militia took control of the Arsenal on February 8, 1861.<ref>The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 644, Accessed 14 December 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=660;page=root;size=s</ref> CPT Totten and his men were escorted from the city by the Capitol Guards. Grateful citizens of Little Rock presented him a sword, which some later came to regret as Totten would eventually meet Arkansas troops on the field of battle.<ref>Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 42; Margaret Ross, “Chronicles of Arkansas, the Years of the Civil War, Arkansas Gazette, Feb. 5 and Apr. 23, 1961; Bearss and Gibson, Little Gibraltar, pp. 242–243.</ref> Later, artillery batteries were set up at Helena on the Mississippi River and Pine Bluff on the Arkansas to prevent reinforcement of Federal military posts.<ref>The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, page 686, accessed 19 Janaury 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;q1=Rector;rgn=full%20text;idno=waro0001;didno=waro0001;view=image;seq=702;page=root;size=s;frm=frameset;</ref> |
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The Yell Rifles returned to Helena and then moved to Mound City, where they mustered in to State Service as Company A, [[15th (Josey's) Arkansas Volunteer Infantry|1st Arkansas Infantry, State Troops]]. Patrick Cleburne was elected to command the new regiment. The Phillips County Guards remained in Little Rock to provide a garrison for the newly seized Arsenal.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> |
The Yell Rifles returned to Helena and then moved to Mound City, where they mustered in to State Service as Company A, [[15th (Josey's) Arkansas Volunteer Infantry|1st Arkansas Infantry, State Troops]]. Patrick Cleburne was elected to command the new regiment. The Phillips County Guards remained in Little Rock to provide a garrison for the newly seized Arsenal.<ref name="web.archive.org"/> |
Revision as of 14:20, 19 January 2011
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The focus of the Arkansas Militia in the Civil War is on those organizations with a connection to the Arkansas Army National Guard. Much has been written regarding the battles which occurred in Arkansas and the histories of the Confederate units which hail from the state, the focus of this article is on the roll of the Arkansas Militia and the organizations that were connected to it. During the period of the war, multiple military organizations existed under different and sometimes competing authorities. The Militia had almost died out following the 1840s war with Mexico, but had been revised in the closing years of the 1850s by Governor Conway. As the United States moved toward war, military minded young men began to organize Volunteer Companies, which trained more often than the traditional militia, but continued to operate under the umbrella of the militia system, at least until the secession crisis of 1861. The Arkansas Secession Convention directed that each county organize Home Guard organization originally intended to include old men and boys who were otherwise disqualified for active service. The Home Guard were later commissioned to begin guerrilla operations against occupying Union forces. The Secession Convention created a State Military Board to oversee state military operations and to raise regiments of State Troops, initially for the Provisional Army of Arkansas, but with the express intent of transferring them to the new Confederate States Army. The Confederate government also authorized certain individuals to recruit units directly into Confederate service, with no connection to the state government. The focus of this article is on those organizations to which the current Arkansas National Guard may claim a connection, namely the Militia, Home Guard and State Troop regiments and their operations during the war.
Status of the Arkansas State Militia at the beginning of the war
With the ending of the Mexican-American War, the Arkansas militia once again fell into a state of disorganization. The Mexican threat, like that of the Indians, was a thing of the past. Now, it seemed Arkansans needed protection from no one. Throughout much of the 1840s and 1850s the Arkansas militia was practically dead. Company and regimental musters were held infrequently, and officers stopped performing their duties. Governor Elias Conway, in an address to the state legislature dated 7 November 1854 stated that the state militia had not filed a single annual status report with the War Department since 1843.[1] Without these reports, of course, the militia did not receive its quota of Federal arms and equipment. One Little Rock newspaper editor wrote in 1852:
- "There is not a volunteer military company in Little Rock; in fact, the editor cannot recall having seen a single muster in this town since the beginning of the war with Mexico [in 1846]. What has become of the military spirit of our young men? If it is not entirely extinct, we would like to see a little of it exhibited in the organization of a uniformed company here."[2]
When Elias N. Conway was elected governor in 1854, he set about rebuilding the state militia. Conway came from a prominent family of Arkansas politicians, some of whom had served in the militia during its earlier and more active years. Governor Conway pushed the legislature to revise the militia laws and successfully sparked a renewed interest in the militia. In 1860, Conway commissioned a printing of a digest of the militia laws of Arkansas.[3] A review of the election returns for militia officers in each county in 1860 and the spring of 1861 provide some indication of the organization of the state militia on the eve of the civil war.[4] The militia was organized into two divisions, of four Brigades each. Each county supplied a least one regiment, and counties were normally organized in each township. Several counties had more than one regiment and one, Lawarence County, had three militia regiments.[5] Regimental and company officers were elected at the annual muster. The election results were forwarded to the Governor either by the regimental commander or by the County Clerk. The exact strength of these units is unclear, but it may have been better than is often represented. In May 1860, well before the election crisis of that fall, COL George M. Holt, Commander of the 18th Regiment from Saline County claimed to have 1000 to 1200 men available and requested that the County be granted a second Regiment.[6]
Regiment | Brigade | Commander | Date of Muster | County |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st Militia Division | Major General T.D. Merrick[7] | |||
1st Militia Brigade | 1st Division | Brigadier General Benjamin P. Jett, Sr. [8] | Sevier, Hempstead, Lafayette, Pike, Clark, Ouachita, Hot Springs, Montgomery, Polk, Columbia[7] | |
2nd Militia Brigade | 1st Division | Brigadier General George M. Holt [9] | Pope, Yell, Conway, Perry, White, Prairie, Pulaski, Saline[7] | |
3rd Militia Brigade | 1st Division | Brigadier General Napoleon B. Borrow[9] | Crawford, Franklin, Scott, Johnson, Sebastain[10] | |
4th Militia Brigade | 1st Division | Brigadier General William T. Neal[11] | Washington, Madison, Benton, Carroll[12] | |
2nd Militia Division | Major General James Yell[12][13] | |||
5th Militia Brigade | 2nd Division | Brigadier General Unknown[13] | Mississippi, Crittenden, Poinsett, St. Francis, Phillips, Moore, Craighead[12] | |
6th Militia Brigade | 2nd Division | Brigadier General Thomas S. James [13] | Arkansas, Union, Chicot, Desha, Jefferson, Ashley, Calhoun, Dallas, Drew, Bradely[12] | |
7th Militia Brigade | 2nd Division | Brigadier General Unknown[13] | Van Buren, Izard, Fulton, Marion, Searcy, Newton[5] | |
8th Militia Brigade | 2nd Division | Brigadier General Thedore H. Phillips[14] | Randolph, Green, Lawrence, Independence, Jackson[5] | |
1st Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL Alexander H. Reynolds | 9 February 1861[15] | Arkansas [12] |
2nd Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL John T. Humphreys | 21 February 1861[16] | Benton [10] |
3rd Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL Henry Helton | Carroll [10] | |
4th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL William Turner | 12 January 1861 | Conway[12] |
5th Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | COL John T. Humphreys | 12 January 1861[17] | Crawford [10] |
6th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL W. Warren Johnson | 8 March 1861[18] | Desha County [12] |
7th Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | COL Albert L. Berry | February–March 1862 | Franklin[10][19] |
8th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL Daniel Griffin | 24 January 1861[20] | Hempstead [7] |
9th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL W. A. Bivens | 24 August 1861[21] | Independence [22] |
10th Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | Colonel John W. May | 20 February 1862 | Johnson [10][23] |
11th Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL Benjamin Vaughan | 7 June 1861[24] | Madison [10] |
12th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL William H. Robards | 29 January 1861[25] | Phillips [10] |
13th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL C. Peyton | 22 March 1861[26] | Pulaski [7] |
14th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL Robert H. Baird | Poinsett[10] | |
15th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL John L. Williamson | 25 December 1861 [8][27] | Pope [7] |
16th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL James T. Martin | 31 March, 4 May and 21 November 1860[28] | Randolph[5] |
17th Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | COL James F. Lee | 11 February 1860[29] | Scott[10] |
18th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL George M. Holt | 11 February 1860[30] | Saline [7] |
19th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL Marsh Walker | 18 February 1860[31] | St Francis[10] |
20th Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL Henry Rieff | 7 January 1860[32] | Washington[10] |
21st Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL John Critz | 14 April 1860[33] | White[7] |
22rd Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL J. B. Simms | 24 June 1861[34] | Van Buren[5] |
23rd Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL Batt Jones | 4 January 1861[35] | Chicot[12] |
24th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL Donelson McGegor | 4 March 1861[36] | Jefferson[12] |
25th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL James H. McCalob | Lawrence [5] | |
26th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL W. H. Dawson | 16 December 1861 [37] | Yell[7] |
27th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL ??? | Bradley [12] | |
28th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL William M. Bruce | 19 January 1861[38] | Clark[7] |
29th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL William R. Cowser | 10 May 1860[39] | Union[12] |
30th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL Reuben T. Redman | Crittenden[10] | |
31st Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL J. R. Dowd | 9 February 1861[40] | Marion[5] |
32nd Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL George W. Hughes | 16 July 1860[11] | Washington[10] |
33rd Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL R. C. Mock | Green [5] | |
34th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL Chritopher W. Board | Jackson [5] | |
35th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL C. W. Richardson | 18 January 1861[41] | Monroe County[10] |
36th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL John Baskins | Perry[7] | |
38th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | James W. M. Murphy | Pike[7] | |
39th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL Joab B. Brooks | Ouachita[7] | |
40th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL John H. Hamiter | Layfette[7] | |
41st Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL Pleasant Fowler | Newton[5] | |
42nd Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL John J. Kemp | Izard[5] | |
43rd Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL Thomas Srable | Fulton[5] | |
44th Militia Regiment | 4th Brigade | COL Benjamin Vaughan | Madison [10] | |
45th Militia Regiment | 7th Brigade | COL Michell Eldridge | 13 March 1860[42] | Searcy[12] |
46th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL H.H. Elliot | 7 March 1861[43] | Dallas[12] |
47th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL R. S. Clayton | 31 January 1861[44] | Hot Springs (Garland)[7] |
48th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL J. B. Barum | 10 March 1861[45] | Mississippi[12] |
49th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL A. S. Alexander | 7 January 1861[46] | Polk[7] |
50th Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL E.E. Dismukes | 12 February 1861[47] | Prairie[7] |
51st Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | COL Samuel L. Griffing | 6 February 1860[48] | Sebastian[10] |
52nd Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL Lawrence H. Belser | Drew [12] | |
53rd Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL William MacKlin | Ashley [12] | |
54th Militia Regiment | 6th Brigade | COL P.H. Echols | Calhoun [12] | |
55th Militia Regiment | 5th Brigade | COL Adam D. Grayson, | 10 May 1860[49] | Craighead[10] |
56th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | Colonel James P. Austin | Columbia[7] | |
57th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | Colonel Nathaniel Grant | Montgomery [7] | |
58th Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | Colonel John M. Council | 22 February 1862 | Franklin (southern half)[10][50] |
59th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL Sterling Allen | 1 February 1861[51] | Independence[5] |
60th Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL R. G. Shaver | 29 December 1861[52] | Lawrence[5] |
61st Militia Regiment | 8th Brigade | COL J.C. Holmes | Lawrence [5] | |
62nd Militia Regiment | 3rd Brigade | Col Carrell | 20 April 1862 | Johnson[10][53] |
63rd Militia Regiment | 2nd Brigade | COL David F. Shall | 14 January 1861 | Pulaski[54] |
64th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL E.J. Bacon | 25 February 1861 | Columbia[55] |
65th Militia Regiment | 1st Brigade | COL C. W. Presley | 25 February 1861 | Clark[56] |
Militia vs. Volunteer Companies
The Militia Law of the State of Arkansas as published in 1860 provied that in addition to the sixty two existing regminets of militia, each county was to organized four volunteer companies from withing the ranks of the existing militia regiments in each county.[57]
- "SEC. 57. There may be organized in each county in this State four volunteer companies; one of infantry, one of light infantry or riflemen, one of cavalry, and one of artillery, who shall elect their officers at the first election, at a time and place to be ordered by the colonel of the regiment, upon whose certificate of election commissions shall issue; "
In a letter to the "TO THE MILITIAMEN OF THE STATE OF ARKANSAS" dated August 27, 1860. Governor Conway exhorted the raising of these volunteer companies[58]:
- "All the volunteer companies authorized by law in every county in the state ought to be speedily and thoroughly organized and disciplined, and armed and equipped in the best manner as soon as possible..... It devolves upon each colonel commandant, not only to organize his regiment, but also to have formed within the bounds of his regiment, as many volunteer companies, independent of his regiment, as the law requires, and the number of militiamen will justify. "
He commented that if all the volunteer companies authorized by the act were to be raised, the state would have a force of twenty-two thousand volunteers. He explained that the general assembly had yet to pass a law allowing the state to provided arms for all the volunteer companies, and he encouraged the counties to consider taxing themselves in order to raise funds for the arming of volunteer companies[59].
In response to the Governor's call, "Volunteer" companies began to spring up around the state. These volunteer companies drilled much more often (three times a week in the case of the Pulaski Artillery, a Volunteer Artillery Company organized in Little Rock in December 1860).[60] The leaders of these volunteer companies began to search for uniforms and equipment, often requesting them through the militia channels, to the Governor, but then turning to private sources when the State Government was unable to supply weapons, uniforms, and other equipments. The state legislature responded in January 1861, by appropriating $100,000 for the arming and equipping of the militia being formed into volunteer companies. Act Number 192 was approved on January 21, 1861 and it appropriated money for the purpose of arming the militia of this state, when formed into volunteer military companies, and for other purposes.[61]
- "Section 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of the 'State of Arkansas, That the sum of one hundred thousand dollars, be, and the same is hereby appropriated out of any money in the treasury, not otherwise appropriated, for the purchase of arms for the use of the volunteer militia of this state, in the manner following: Thomas J. Churchill, and Christopher C. Danley, be, and they are hereby appointed commissioners for the state, to act in conjunction with the governor, whose duty it shall be to ascertain and determine the kind of arms, accoutrements, and munitions of war that may be necessary for arming the militia of the state, and to proceed, by themselves or by an agent, to be by them appointed, to purchase the required arms, accoutrements, and munitions of war, keeping in view the interests of the state by purchasing the best articles for the least amount of money, and payment for said arms shall be made upon the joint certificate of said commissioners, and the cettificate of the governor that said arms and other matters, have been received by him or by a proper agent of the state.
- Section 2. Whenever the several colonels or captains, or any of them, shall notify the governor that a volunteer company of not less than fifty men, including the commissioned and noncommissioned officers, has been formed and organized, he shall be, and he is hereby required to cause to be delivered to every such colonel, or captain, arms and accoutrements suitable to such company so formed and organized."
In the beginning, these companies continued to operate under the authority of the local militia commander, with the local Regimental Commander overseeing the election of officers and forwarding the election results to the Governor.[62] After the state actually succeeded in May 1861, Volunteer Companies and Regiments would be raised under the authority of the State Military Board, or directly by Confederate Government authorities.
A good comparison of the readiness of the Militia organizations as compared to the Volunteer Companies springing up around these state occurred when the Crawford County Militia, the 5th Regiment Arkansas Militia, conducted its annual muster and drill on Saturday, February 23, 1861 at Van Buren. They were joined on this occasion by two companies of volunteers, the "Frontier Guards" (Captain Hugh Thomas Brown) and the "Independent Light Horse Guards" (Captain Powhatan Perkins).[63] The two independent companies received rave reviews for their drill, but the performance of the 5th Militia Regiment provoked the following report from the Van Buren Press:
- The special parade of this Regiment, by order of the Officers in command, took place in this City on Saturday last. In connection therewith, the Rifle Company, Capt. Brown, and Horse Company, Capt. Perkins, paraded, making a fine display—and in fact all the "military" on the ground was composed of these two independent companies. A more decided burlesque on military parade could not be had, than the muster on Saturday. If any good was derived by bringing such a body of men together, for "inspection" and "drill," we were not able to discover it—and we trust it will be at least a year, before another "occasion" occurs for preparation to defend our rights and liberties against northern aggression.[64]
However a more favorable account comes from a report on the September 1860 muster of Pulaski County's 13th Militia Regiment:
- ...the regimental drill and review of the 13th regiment of Arkansas militia..... We arrived on the ground about noon, with Brigadier Gen. Holt, of the 2d Brigade and Staff, composed as follows, of Adjutant General McConaughey, Aids de Camp Fagan and Harrell, Brigade Major Newbern, Inspector General Trigg; Quarter Master Fletcher, Surgeon Hooper and Commissary Faust:–Col. McGregor, of Jefferson county, acting as Pay Master, and Col. Critz, of White, acting Judge Advocate—splendid with plumes and buttons, all good horsemen and well mounted; the commanding form of the General, in the becoming uniform of his rank, towering above all the others.
- The regiment, composed of ten companies, numbering about a thousand men, was drawn up in line of battle facing to the west... The regiment having been reviewed in form, changed direction to the right, and now in its turn, while the reviewing officers took position on the former front, marched before them by companies, in the following order: Pulaski Lancers, Lieut. Morrison, commanding cavalry, with lances, pennants and handsome uniforms of blue and red, well drilled, and presenting a very gallant appearance; 1st comp. the Capital Guards, Capt. Peay, drilled like veterans of the "Old Guard", and dressed in a uniform of blue and gold, never yet surpassed in taste and neatness; 2d company, exceeding well drilled and fine looking, Capt. Stillwell; 3d company, composed of gallant looking and intelligent men, Lieut. Griffith, commanding; 4th company, the elite of the regiment, Sergeant Lee of the "Guards", commanding; 5th company presenting a most soldierly appearance, Capt. Johnson; 6th company, with the step and front of courage and intelligence, Capt. Bushnell; 7th company brave looking, erect and well-drilled, Capt. Vance; 8th company looking as if they might have seen service, and would like to see it again, Capt. Marshall; 9th company who we will venture to say, are all good riflemen, and familiar with the smell of gun powder, Capt. Wellman.[65]
Following the Drill of the 13th Regiment, the Brigadier General Holt and the regimental officers gathered in front of Governor Conway's home and heard a speech in which the governor complemented them "upon the revival, at a critical time, of the military spirit which once animated the people, but seemed long to have been dead."[65]
In October an article appeared in the same paper announcing a Dill Contest to be conducted as a part of a Fair to be conducted 8–9 November on the grounds of St John's College in Little Rock. The best drilled militia company was to receive a "Premium".[66]
Volunteer Companies Organized from State Militia
This list currently only includes those volunteer militia companies who were organized in accordance with Section 57 of the 1860 Militia Law, by having the election of their company officer's certified by the Colonel commanding the local militia regiment, or whose association with the local militia regiment can be documented through contemporary accounts. Several other well documented companies are likely have been organized in this manner, such has the Jackson Guards, from Jackson County, the Yell Rifles and the Phillips County Guards of Phillips County, but so far contemporary records linking them to the militia have not been found.
Regiment | Company | Regimental Commander certifying Election of Officers | Date of Muster | County |
---|---|---|---|---|
1st Militia Regiment | "Home Defenders", Cavalry Company | COL Alexander H. Reynolds | 8 February 1861 | Arkansas[67] |
1st Militia Regiment | "Dewitt Guards", Company Number 1 | COL Alexander H. Reynolds | 8 February 1861 | Arkansas[68] |
2nd Militia Regiment | "Spavian Volunteer Rifle Company" | COL John T. Humphreys | 21 February 1861 | Benton County[16] |
5th Militia Regiment | "Van Buren Frontier Guards" | COL John T. Humphreys | 12 January 1861 | Crawford[69] |
6th Militia Regiment | "Napoleon Grays" | COL W. Warren Johnson | 28 February 1861 | Desha County[70] |
6th Militia Regiment | "Home Guards" | COL W. Warren Johnson | 8 March 1861 | Desha County[71] |
8th Militia Regiment | "Nashville Blues" | COL Daniel Griffin | 20 March 1861 | Hempstead[72] |
8th Militia Regiment | "Hempstead Riflemen" | COL Daniel Griffin | 12 January 1861 | Hempstead[73] |
13th Militia Regiment | "Totten Artillery Company" later "Pulaski Light Artillery" and "Woodruff's Battery" | COL C. Peyton | 22 March 1861 | Pulaski[74] |
13th Militia Regiment | "Capitol Guards" | COL C. Peyton | 10 October 1860 | Pulaski[75] |
13th Militia Regiment | "Pulaski Lancers" | COL C. Peyton | 10 October 1860 | Pulaski[75] |
18th Militia Regiment | Captain Addy Company" | COL George M. Holt | 16 June 1860 | Saline[76] |
20th Militia Regiment | "Washington Rifle Guards" | COL Henry Rieff | 7 January 1860 | Washington[77] |
20th Militia Regiment | "Washington Mounted Rifles" | COL Henry Rieff | 18 February 1860 | Washington[78] |
22rd Militia Regiment | "Quitman Rifles" | COL J. B. Simms | 24 June 1861 | Van Buren[79] |
28th Militia Regiment | "Arkadelphia Guards" | COL William M. Bruce | 15 January 1861 | Clark[80] |
34th Militia Regiment[81] | "McCown's Artillery", Also know as "Jackson Light Artillery" [82] | Brigadier General Theodore H. Phillips | 15 June 1861 | Jackson [83] |
35th Militia Regiment | "Volunteer Rifle Company" | COL C. W. Richardson | 23 February 1861 | Monroe County[84] |
47th Militia Regiment | "Mountain Minute Men" | COL R. S. Clayton | 25 December 1861 (1860?) | Hot Springs (Garland)[85] |
48th Regiment | "Osceola Stars" | COL J. B. Barum | 10 March 1861 | Mississippi[86] |
50th Militia Regiment | "Rector Guards", Des Arc | COL E.E. Dismukes | 12 February 1861 | Prairie[87] |
51st Militia Regiment | "Fort Smith Rifles" | CPT J.H. Sparks | 12 January 1860 | Sebastian[88] |
51st Militia Regiment | Horse Company "Mountain Rangers" | COL Samuel L. Griffith | 30 August 1860 | Sebastian[89] |
51st Militia Regiment | "Independent Artillery" | COL Samuel L. Griffith | 27 September 1860 | Sebastian[90] |
51st Militia Regiment | "Sebastian County Volunteers" | COL Samuel L. Griffith | 7 August 1860 | Sebastian[91] |
51st Regiment | "Bell Pont Guards" | COL Samuel L. Griffith | 10 July 1860 | Sebastian[92] |
60th Militia Regiment | "Lawrence Cavalry" | COL R. G. Shaver | 29 December 1861 (1860?) | Lawrence County[93] |
60th Militia Regiment | "Dick Johnson Guards" | COL R. G. Shaver | 17 June 1861 | Lawrence County[94] |
The Secession Crisis
Lincoln's victory in the presidential election of 1860 triggered South Carolina's declaration of secession from the Union. By February 1861, six more Southern states made similar declarations. On February 7, the seven states adopted a provisional constitution for the Confederate States of America and established their temporary capital at Montgomery, Alabama. A pre-war February Peace Conference of 1861 met in Washington in a failed attempt at resolving the crisis.[95]
As the secession movement grew, people in Arkansas became greatly concerned. In January 1861 Governor Henry M. Rector, at the direction of the General Assembly, called an election for the people to vote on whether Arkansas should hold a convention to consider secession. At the same time the voters were to elect delegates to the convention in case the vote should be favorable. On February 18, 1861 Arkansans voted to call a secession convention, but at the same time elected mostly unionist delegates.[96]
Seizure of the Federal Arsenal at Little Rock
Even before the Convention on Secession could convene companies of troops were already being organized in different parts of Arkansas. Some of these companies were based on existing militia units, and some were new volunteer units with no official connection to the state militia. Anti-union forces, probably including Governor Henry Massey Rector, began calling for the seizure of the Federal Arsenal in Little Rock. When rumor were circulated that the Federal Government intended to reinforce the troops at the Little Rock Arsenal, the leading citizens of Helena Arkansas, in Phillips County, sent Governor Rector a telegram volunteering 500 men to assist in the seizure of the Arsenal. Edmund Burgevin, adjutant general of the Arkansas State Militia, carried the message to the Governor. Burgevin complained of the impropriety of a direct offer of volunteers to the governor of a State which had not seceded, and might not secede. Governor Rector's response was:
- The governor has no authority to summon you to take possession of a Federal post, whether threatened to be reinforced or not. Should the people assemble in their defense, the governor will interpose his official position in their behalf.[97]
In response to the Governor’s message, Militia companies began assembling in Little Rock by February 5, 1861 and they made their intention to seize the Arsenal known to its commander, CPT Totten. The Yell Rifles commanded by Captain Patrick Cleburne and the Phillips County Guards both of Phillips County, were the first companies to reach Little Rock and report to Governor Rector. Governor Rector denied having called the militia forces, and sent the newly arriving companies in to camp near the present state capitol building. In addition to the two Phillips County Companies, the Jefferson Guards of Pine Bluff, the Southwestern Guards, and the LaGrange Cavalry, all responded to the call to seize the Arsenal.[97] Eventually more than a thousand men would assemble, representing Phillips, Jefferson, Prairie, White, Saline, Hot Spring, Montgomery, Monroe, and St. Francis counties. The Little Rock city council reacted with alarm at this sudden invasion of the capitol by the newly formed volunteer companies and called out its own militia unit, the Capitol Guards and ordered them to patrol the streets and stand guard over the newly arrived volunteer companies.[97]
Governor Rector used the quickly massing militia forces to open negotiations that would lead to the surrender of the Arsenal to state forces.[97] Many citizens of Little Rock opposed the occupation of the Arsenal, fearing a loss of life and property.[98] With militia forces now surrounding the arsenal grounds, Governor Rector dispatched General Thomas. D. Merrick, Commander of the First Division, Arkansas Militia with a formal demand for the Arsenal’s surrender. Captain James Totten, Arsenal commander, agreed to evacuate the Arsenal in return for safe passage out of the state. Governor Rector agreed and the Militia took control of the Arsenal on February 8, 1861.[99] CPT Totten and his men were escorted from the city by the Capitol Guards. Grateful citizens of Little Rock presented him a sword, which some later came to regret as Totten would eventually meet Arkansas troops on the field of battle.[100] Later, artillery batteries were set up at Helena on the Mississippi River and Pine Bluff on the Arkansas to prevent reinforcement of Federal military posts.[101]
The Yell Rifles returned to Helena and then moved to Mound City, where they mustered in to State Service as Company A, 1st Arkansas Infantry, State Troops. Patrick Cleburne was elected to command the new regiment. The Phillips County Guards remained in Little Rock to provide a garrison for the newly seized Arsenal.[97]
The first Convention on Secession
On March 4, 1861, Abraham Lincoln was sworn in as President. In his inaugural address, he argued that the Constitution was a more perfect union than the earlier Articles of Confederation and Perpetual Union, that it was a binding contract, and called any secession "legally void".[102] He stated he had no intent to invade Southern states, nor did he intend to end slavery where it existed, but that he would use force to maintain possession of federal property. His speech closed with a plea for restoration of the bonds of union.[103]
On the day after Lincoln's inauguration in Washington, March 5, 1861, The Arkansas Secession Convention convened in the State House in Little Rock. David Walker, who opposed secession, was elected president. The convention continued in session for two and a half weeks. Feeling ran high and many fiery speeches were made, but it soon became evident that a majority of the members did not think that the situation at that time called for secession. The convention voted down a resolution condemning Lincoln's inaugural address, and defeated a conditional ordinance of secession. The opinion seemed to prevail that Arkansas should secede if the Federal government made war on the Confederate States. Still hoping for a compromise settlement that would avoid war, the delegates agreed to go home until after the people had voted on the secession question at a special election to be held in August.[104]
Arkansas leaves the Union
Fort Monroe in Virginia, Fort Sumter in Charleston, South Carolina, and Fort Pickens, Fort Jefferson, and Fort Taylor, in Florida, were the remaining Union-held forts in the Confederacy, and Lincoln was determined to hold them all. Under orders from Confederate President Jefferson Davis, troops controlled by the Confederate government under P. G. T. Beauregard bombarded Fort Sumter on April 12, forcing its capitulation. Northerners rallied behind Lincoln's call for all the states to send troops to recapture the forts and to preserve the Union,[105] citing presidential powers given by the Militia Acts of 1792. Following the Confederate shelling of Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor on April 12, 1861, President Lincoln called upon the "militia of the several states" to provide 75,000 troop to put down the rebellion.[106] For months before that, several Northern governors had discreetly readied their state militias; they began to move forces the next day.[107]
The first Arkansas Secession Convention had pledged the state to "Resist to the last extremity any attempt on the part of such power (President Lincoln) to coerce any state that had succeeded from the old Union".[108]
In spite of the fact that Arkansas had yet to officially secede, a militia battalion was quickly organized under the command of Solon F. Borland, which included the Pulaski Lancers, the Capitol Guards,[109] the Pulaski Light Artillery, (all associated with the 13th Militia Regiment, Pulaski County) and Captain Daniel Ringo's Peyton Rifles was dispatched to also seize the Federal Arsenal at Fort Smith, Arkansas on 23 Apr 1861.[110]
The Adjutant General, Edmond Burgevin, provided the states' response to the War Department's demand for troops:
- Sir: I am directed by his Excellency the governor to acknowledge the receipt for Special Orders, No. 106, from the War Department at Washington. That order is based on the presumption of the State of Arkansas being willing to furnish the quota of troops required of her for the Federal Army, a presumption entirely improbable, and I can assure you, utterly impossible.
- Further, I have to inform you that I had the honor on Tuesday night, April 23, 1861, at Fort Smith, to order the seizure of the person of Maj. R.C. Gatlin, Fifth Infantry, as a prisoner of war, and who is now at large on parole of honor not to serve against the State of Arkansas or the Southern Confederacy.
- I am, sir, very respectfully, your obedient servant.
- Edmund Burgevin
- Adjutant General of Arkansas
Faced with President Lincoln's demand for troops, the Succession Convention reconvened in Little Rock and, On May 6, 1861 and passed the ordinance of succession by a vote of 69 to 1. Future Governor Isaac Murphy was the only "No" vote.[108]
The Pulaski Light Artillery was initially assigned to garrison the captured arsenal at Fort Smith. Brigadier General Borrow was elevated to the command of the 1st Militia Division and sent Fort Smith, where he began negotiations with the Chickasaw Nation to occupy Federal forts in the Indian Territory.[111]
Organizing State Military Forces
The Secession Convention continued to meet and began the process of drafting a new state constitution and ordering the state's military affairs. The new constitution sought to limit the power of the Governor by vesting authority for military matters in a three person board, chaired by the Governor. The Military Board was to oversee the organization of a State army, to arm, feed, and clothe the troops, and to call out the forces for such military expeditions as might be necessary to defend the state. The military board was composed of Governor Rector, Christopher C. Danley of Little Rock, and Benjamin C. Totten of Prairie County. Mr. Danley of Little Rock was soon replaced by Samuel W. Williams, who was replaced in turn by L.D. Hill of Perry County.[112] The Secession Convention also adopted an ordinance providing for the organization of an "Army of Arkansas".[113] The Army was to consist of two divisions, the 1st Division in the western portion of the state and the 2nd Division in the Eastern portion of the state. Each Division was to be commanded by a brigadier general. The ordinance required each regiment to consist of not less than 6 companies and not more than 10. Each Company was to consist of not less than 64 men and not more than 96 men and four officers. The officers were to be elected by the men of the regiment. Two million dollars was appropriated to fund the Board.[114]
The Convention elected three of its members as commanders of the new army, Major General James Yell of Jefferson County (overall commander) Nicholas Bartlett Pearce, a graduate of West Point and resident of Benton County (commander of the First Division), and Thomas H. Bradley of Crittenden County (commander of the Second Division). Historian Leo Huff has referred to these commanders as "three political generals". Pearce, due to his military training, was obviously the best of the lot. But all three of these men did harm to the war effort by opposing the transfer of Arkansas troops to a unified Confederate command. Eventually, all three men were either relieved of their command or transferred to other activities.[115]
The Secession Convention also enacted an ordinance on May 30, 1861, that called upon all the counties in the State to appoint a “home guard of minute men” for local defense, until regular military regiments could be raised and deployed. These Home Guard units were made up of old men and boys who were not eligible for normal military service. Like the Militia, the Home Guard units were organized at the County Level, with companies being supplied by each township. Originally these units were intended to be separate from the state militia. Most counties presumably complied with the law, but records of only a few of these 1861 home guard organizations can now be found. The Independence County Home Guard was established in accordance with this new ordinance. The Independence County Court, in special session, established and made appointments to the local home guard organization on June 29, 1861. Subsequent appointments were made in July, October and November 1861. About 220 men were appointed in all the townships of the county. Virtually all of them were property owners, many quite prominent and wealthy, and, as far as can be determined, all were over the conscript age. Some were quite elderly. Despite their age, wealth and social position, many of these home guards later served in regular Confederate units in the latter part of the war, especially in Dobbin’s and Morgan’s cavalry regiments. John Farrell Allen was appointed General Commander of the Independence County Home Guard.[116]
Mobilizing Forces
The speed with which the State Army was organized worked to the detriment of the regular militia. The Secession Convention had intended for the militia to remain separate from the Confederate forces. The existing militia organizations were to be retained as a source of manpower and a last ditch defense network. However, the local militia commanders frequently volunteered their existing forces rather than organize separate Confederate companies.[117]
Efforts to mobilize the state's forces were subject to the Military Boards own competing interest. The board recognized the need to quickly mobilize troops to defend the state, but wished to avoid as much of the cost for the mobilization as possible. Additionally the Military Board feared that troops raised to defend the state would be diverted into the eastern theater of operations. This concern quickly proved valid. The board made a decision not to mobilize the existing Arkansas State Militia. Instead, the board began organizing new regiments of "State Troops". The regiments are also referred to a Volunteer Regiments in State Records from the period. The board, fearing the loss of units to the Confederate army initially attempted to keep the militia units separate from the new State Troop Regiments which were forming for the Army of Arkansas. The militia units would maintain a separate identity from the State Troops and Confederate troops until the spring of 1862 when most former militia units conducted final musters and then enlisted in new Confederate units.[118]
The board immediately dispatched Christopher C. Danley of Little Rock to Richmond to open nnegotiations with the new Confederate government for the transfer of State Troops to the Confederate government. The Board immediately issued a call for 10,000 troops (10 Regiments). [119]
Much confusion exists in tracking the formation of military units during the initial months of the war due to the fact that several different governments, with competing interest were raising troops within the state. The State Military Board was raising units which it hoped to transfer in to Confederate Service. Various individuals, some with direct permission from the Confederate War Department or other Confederate authorities organized regiments strictly for Confederate Service, with no actual connection to the state. Various Home Guard and Militia unit continued to operate under the authority of local and county governments.[120]
The Military Board developed its own plan for numbering the regiments of State Troops which were raised, but this plan was apparently ignored by the new Brigade Commanders, who tended to number regiments sequentially based upon the date they were sworn into state service. The plan was also ignored by Confederate authorities who renumbered the Regiments of State Troops when they were transferred into Confederate service, based on the date they were sworn into the Confederate Army. The result is a great deal of confusion regarding the designation of any particular Arkansas unit.[121]
The Volunteer companies which had converged on the state capitol for the seizure of the Federal Arsenal were organized into new Regiments of State Troops.
The 1st Arkansas, State Troops, was commanded by Colonel Patrick R. Cleburne was one of the first regiments created from the initial wave of volunteering units and was mustered into state service at Mound City on May 14, 1861. The new regiment was designated at the 1st Arkansas Infantry, State Troops, and was initially mustered into the Confederate Army as the 1st Arkansas Infantry, Confederate States Army. Later it was determined that another regiment had already received the designation. The unit recognized by the Confederate Army as the 1st Arkansas Infantry was commanded by COL James F. Fagan.[122] COL Fagan had served as a Lieutenant with the Arkansas Regiment of Mounted Volunteers, Company C, during the War with Mexico. This regiment was not composed of former state militia troops but was recruited directly for Confederate service, and left the state for the Easter Theater and was mustered in to confederate service in Lexington, Virginia.[122] 1st Arkansas, CSA and COL Cleburne's 1st Arkansas State Troops, was redesignated as the 15th Arkansas Infantry.[122] But the confusion did not end there, because a total of three Arkansas Infantry regiments were eventually named the "15th", the first being the aforementioned 1st Arkansas State Troops commanded by COL Cleburne. The new 15th Arkansas moved into camp with the 2nd Division of the Army of Arkansas, under the field command of Major General Yell, in Pocahontas.[123]
Volunteer Milita Companies Enlisted in Confederate Service
The following volunteer companies who were formed under the authority of the antebellum militia laws were inducted into the new regiments of State Troops or directly in to Confederate Service:
"Rector Guards" ||50th Militia Regiment || 1st Regiment State Troops|| 15th (JOSEY'S) Arkansas Volunteer Infantry Regiment, CSA.Company | Militia Regiment | Regiment of State Troops | Confederate Army Regiment |
---|---|---|---|
"Dewitt Guards", Company Number 1 | 1st Militia Regiment | None | 1st Arkansas Volunteer Infantry Regiment, CSA. |
"Van Buren Frontier Guards" | 5th Militia Regiment | 3rd Regiment State Troops[124][125] | Disbanded after Wilson's Creek |
"Napoleon Grays" | 6th Militia Regiment | 1st Regiment State Troops[125] | Company E, 15TH (JOSEY'S) Arkansas Volunteer Infantry Regiment, CSA. |
"Napoleon Rifles" | 6th Militia Regiment | 1st Regiment State Troops[125] | Company G, 1st Arkansas Mounted Rifles, CSA. |
"Hempstead Riflemen" | 8th Militia Regiment | Company B, 3rd Regiment, Arkansas State Troops, Disbanded after Wilson's Creek, | Reformed and enlisted as Company H, 17th Arkansas Infantry, CSA |
"Totten Artillery Company" later "Pulaski Light Artillery" | 13th Militia Regiment | Colonel Solon Borland’s Battalion State Troops, Disbanded after Wilson's Creek | reformed later as Weaver Light Artillery[126] |
"Capitol Guards" | 13th Militia Regiment | 6th Regiment State Troops | Company A, 6th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry Regiment, CSA.[127] |
"Pulaski Lancers" | 13th Militia Regiment[128] | Colonel Solon Borland’s Battalion State Troops | 1st Arkansas Mounted Rifles, CSA. |
"Peyton Rifles" | 13th Militia Regiment[128] | Colonel Solon Borland’s Battalion State Troops | Company F, 25th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, CSA. |
"Quitman Rifles" | 22rd Militia Regiment | 10th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry
Regiment, CSA. | |
"McCowan's Battery" | 34th Militia Regiment[129] | Jackson Light Artillery (Thrall’s Battery)[130] | |
"Fort Smith Rifles" | 51st Militia Regiment | Co. A, 3rd Regiment, Arkansas State Troops[125] | disbanded following Battle of Wilson's Creek |
"Bell Pont Guards" | 51st Regiment | Co. G, 5th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops[125] | Disbanded following the Battle of Wilson's Creek. |
Order of Battle, Provisional Army of Arkansas
This new Army of Arkansas was to consist of two divisions, the First covering western Arkansas and the Second in the eastern half of the state. A major general was to command the Army, while each division was to be under the command of a brigadier general. Each regiment was to consist of six to ten companies. As was tradition, company officers were elected by the men and regimental officers were elected by the company officers.[131]
Brigadier General Thomas Bradely who initially commanded the eastern or 2nd Division was quickly relieved of command after a dispute with COL Cleburne. Major General Yell assumed command of the 2nd (Eastern) Division and had the following units under his direct command.[132]:
- 2nd Regiment, Arkansas State Troops, (2nd Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Confederate States Army)
- 5th Regiment (Cross's Regiment), Arkansas State Troops, (5th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Confederate States Army)
- 6th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops, (6th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Confederate States Army)
- 7th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops, (7th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Confederate States Army)
- 8th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops, (8th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Confederate States Army)
Brigadier General Pearce assumed command of the 1st (Western) Division and had the following units under his direct command:[133]
- 3rd Regiment, Arkansas State Troops. (Garrott's Regiment)
- 4th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops. (Walker's Regiment)
- 5th Regiment, Arkansas State Troops. (Dockery's Regiment)
- 1st Cavalry Regiment, Arkansas State Troops (Carrols Regiment)
- Pulaski Light Artillery, (formerlly of the 13th Arkansas Militia Regiment).
On July 14, 1861 Confederate Brigadier General William J. Hardee arrived in Little Rock to assume unified Confederate command in the state. The following day the state Military Board signed an "Article of Transfer", which provided that all state forces (excepting the militia), some 10,000 men, would be transferred on a voluntary basis to the command of the Confederate States of America.[134] All weapons, ammunition, and supplies were also to be transferred.[135] Before the transfer could take place, Arkansas State Troops got their first taste of real battle.
1st Division, Provisional Army of Arkansas and the Battle of Wilson's Creek
Brigadier General Pearce, who lived in Benton County, established his divisional headquarters, Camp Walker, at nearby Maysville. Thus when a Union army began operating around Springfield in Southwest Missouri, Pearce's state troops were nearby. Brigadier General Benjamin McCulloch assembled Pearce's 2,234 troops, along with about 8,000 other soldiers from several commands, to form a sizable force and immediately marched toward Springfield. On August 10, 1861 Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon, the forceful commander of Union troops in Missouri, attacked the Confederates. The ensuing day-long battle witnessed heavy fighting on a number of fronts. During the battle CPT William E. Woodruff, Jr., commander of the "Pulaski Light Artillery", engaged in a fierce artillery duel with Captain James Totten, who had only a few months earlier surrendered the Federal Arsenal at Little Rock. Captain Totten found himself with an opportunity to gain revenge, and his cannons roared throughout the day.[136]
The Battle of Wilson's Creek came to an abrupt and inglorious halt when the Union commander was killed. Leaderless and outnumbered five-to-one, the bluecoats fled the battlefield. The Arkansas troops played a major role in winning the battle, but paid a heavy price for victory.[137] Two Arkansas units suffered particularly heavy casualties. Colonel Thomas J. Churchill's 1st Arkansas Mounted Riflemen counted forty-two killed and 155 wounded out of 600 men. Colonel John Gratiot's 3rd Arkansas Infantry, State Troops, suffered 109 casualties, including twenty-five killed, out of a force of 500 men.[138]
Shortly after the Battle of Wilson's Creek, Pearce's troops were polled as to whether they wanted to be transferred to Confederate command as had been arranged prior to the battle. Brigadier General Pearce actively campaigned against joining the Confederate States Army. Sources differ as to how many of these Arkansas state troops agreed to the transfer, however, it appears that few were willing to continue in either service. Colonel Gratiot's command voted in masse against the transfer, and they were marched back to southwest Arkansas where they were mustered out.[139] By the end of August 1861, all organized state troops had either been transferred to Confederate command or mustered out.[140]
45th Regiment Arkansas Militia, only mobilized Militia Regiment
The 45th Regiment Arkansas Militia was the militia regiment of Searcy and present-day Stone counties. It is also the only militia regiment known to have been called up during the war for a specific mission. Confederate and State authorities became increasingly concerned about a shadowy organization in north-central Arkansas known as the Peace Society. The Peace Societies were largely Union Sympathizers who felt that the large slave holding planters of southern Arkansas and the Deep South had cause the war and advocated that they should be required to bear the burden of the conflict. Governor Rector ordered the 45th Arkansas Militia Regiment (Searcy County) to round up suspected Peace Society members in Searcy and Van Buren counties.[141]
The regiment mustered on November 26, 1861, at Burrowville (now Marshall), and spent the next few weeks identifying and apprehending suspected Peace Society members throughout the mountains of north-central Arkansas. Finally, in mid-December, the regiment "escorted" their prisoners to Little Rock, where most of them were forced into Confederate service. Companies I and K of Marmaduke's 18th Arkansas (later 3rd Confederate) regiment were composed primarily of men rounded up by the 45th Militia. Their mission completed, the regiment returned to Searcy County and mustered out on December 20, 1861. The next spring, most of them enlisted in the 27th and 32nd Arkansas regiments.[141]
Status of Militia Units fall 1861
The Military Board's efforts to mobilize necessary forces to defend the state, while maintaining the Militia as a separate organization appear to have still been successful in the fall and winter of 1861. In early December, 1861, the Commanding Generals of the Arkansas Militia Brigades made inspection tours of their districts. The Adjutant General, General Edmund Burevin reviewed the Militia Division of Major General Thomas D. Merrick, who had mobilized as the Colonel of the 10th Arkansas. Major General James Yell reviewed the 2nd Militia Division. Brigadier General Holt, 2nd Brigade, 1st Division, reported that he found that the militia units, in the 8 counties that comprised the 2nd Brigade were well organized, and that domestic arms were more plentiful than he had expected.[142] Regimental Drill was conducted on 5 December 1861 at St. Johns College in Little Rock, and on 7 December in Saline County.[142]
Arkansas Confederates transferred East of the River
Between July 2 and August 1, 1861 eight regiments were organized by the Military Board. By November 1861 Governor Rector could report that twenty-one regiments had been raised, a total of 16,000 men, and an additional 6,000 men were soon to be in the ranks.[143]
The Secession Convention and the Military Board fears of Arkansas troops being transferred east of the Mississippi quickly came to reality. Brigadier General William J. Hardee led his new brigade of Arkansas Troops on a short in uneventful raid into Missouri, and then transferred the command east of the Mississippi to join what would become the Confederate Army of Tennessee.[143] Arkansas soon found itself virtually defenseless. By insisting that all state troops have the right to approve their transfer to Confederate service, state authorities had effectively killed the chance of raising a large unified force in the state. Governor Rector's newspaper charged: "The Confederate government has abandoned Arkansas to her fate."[144]
General Van Dorn Raises a new Army
The Confederate Government in Richmond reacted to Arkansas's complaints in January 1862 by dispatching Major General Earl Van Dorn to the State.[145] MG Van Dorn immediate demanded that the State Military Board raise and additional 10,000 troops.[146] These new Volunteer Regiments raised by the State Military Board in the fall of 1861 and winter of 1862 were formed into MG Van Dorn's new Confederate Army of the West.
State Militia Unit hold final muster
It appears from surviving records that the Arkansas State Militia Regiments conducted one final muster in the early spring of 1862. Most of these musters occurred in the last week of February or the first week of March 1863, which may be just coincidental, or may indicate that this muster was connected to General Van Dorn's campaign plan for the coming Battle of Pea Ridge. It appears that during the spring and summer following this final muster, most able bodied men joined one of the newly formed Volunteer Regiments. It may be that the militiamen decided it was better to enlist in mass and remain together than to wait for forced conscription, under new Confederate Conscription laws, which were being strictly enforced during the summer of 1862 by the next Confederate commander dispatched to Arkansas, General Hindman. Whatever the reason, final muster rolls for several militia units exist. In many cases, names on these rolls match subsequent enlistments in new Volunteer Regiments being raised in the Spring and Summer of 1862:[147]
Regiment | County | Final Muster Date | Confederate Unit of Enlistment |
---|---|---|---|
21st Regiment Arkansas Militia | White County | March 7–9, 1862 | 36th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, CSA[148] |
5th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Crawford County | February 21 to March 17, 1862 | unknown[149] |
7th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Franklin County | February and March 1862 | Co. I, 34th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, CSA also several enlisted in Union units[150] |
10th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Johnson County | February 20 to March 19, 1842 | 26th Arkansas Infantry Regiment and the 4th Arkansas Cavalry Regiment[147] |
15th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Pope County | March 10–11, 1862 | 35th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, CSA[151] |
45th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Searcy County | December 20, 1861 | 27th and 32nd Arkansas Infantry Regiments, CSA[152] |
51st Regiment Arkansas Militia | Sebastian County | 4–14 March 1862 | Unknown[153] |
58th Regiment Arkansas Militia | Franklin County | February 22 to March 21, 1862 | 35th Arkansas Infantry Regiment, CSA (Many also enlisted in Union Regiments)[154] |
62nd Regiment Arkansas Militia | Johnson County | 22 Feb 1862 to 1 Mar1862 | unknown[155] |
Arkansas once again abandoned
MG Van Dorn utilized these new Volunteer Regiments during his ill fated March 7–8, 1862 attack on the Federal Army of the Southwest near Elk Horn Tavern in what would become known as the Battle of Pea Ridge. Following his defeat at this battle, MG Van Dorn moved his army east of the Mississippi to assist with operations near Corinth, Mississippi. This resulted in Arkansas once again being left virtually defenseless in the face of a continued threat of invasion.[156]
General Hindman Organizes a New Army
Furious with the authorities in Richmond, Governor Rector threatened to withdraw Arkansas from the Confederacy. When Arkansas' Confederate congressional delegation joined Rector in demanding defense for Arkansas, President Jefferson Davis in the summer of 1862 created the Trans-Mississippi District, made up of Arkansas, Louisiana, and Texas. Major General E. Kirby Smith was placed in command, with headquarters at Shreveport, Louisiana. Major General Thomas C. Hindman, a resident of Helena and a forceful commander, was named to command the forces in Arkansas. Facing the immediate threat of Federal occupation, General Hindman insisted that the State Military Board transfer all remaining state troops to Confederate service. Rector, having won the battle with Richmond and facing staggering costs in maintaining a state army, was in no position to refuse. On June 2, 1862 Rector issued a proclamation noting that it was "essential that but one military organization shall exist within the Trans-Mississippi Department" and transferred all state forces to Confederate command[157] It is possible that this lead to the aforementioned large number or enlistments from former militiamen into Volunteer Regiments in the summer of 1862.[citation needed]
Hindman wasted absolutely no time in trying to correct the complicated situation in Arkansas. The general at once began to raise a new army. Relying upon a recently adopted Confederate conscription law, he drafted large numbers of men. With Federal troops only thirty-five miles from Little Rock, Hindman was forced to take drastic measures. While on his way to Little Rock he had "impressed" one million dollars from Memphis banks. At Helena he raided the stores, confiscating supplies ranging from medicine to ammunition, all of which he loaded on impressed steamboats. These actions, although of doubtful legality, continued once Hindman reached Arkansas. Professor Michael Dougan has written that Hindman took "stores of all kinds" from citizens, even going so far as to raid the State Library to obtain paper for making cartridges. Finally, he burned thousands of bales of cotton to prevent their falling into enemy hands.[158]
Home Guard used for "the more effectual annoyance of the enemy"
Besides attempting to organize a strong force of regular Confederate troops, General Hindman used the conscription laws to create "home guard" units. The Confederate conscription statues required that boys of seventeen years and men between forty-five and fifty serve in home guard units, similar to the traditional militia.[159] On June 17, 1862 Hindman issued General Orders Number Seventeen, providing that "for the more effectual annoyance of the enemy...all citizens of this district, who are not subject to conscription, are called upon to organize themselves into independent companies." In the thoroughness that typified Hindman, he even suggested the types of operations which the home guards should carry-out:
"Their duty will be to cut off Federal pickets, scouts, foraging parties, and trains, and to kill pilots and others on gun-boats and transports, attacking them day and night, and using the greatest vigor in their movements."[160] Although the home guard units were similar to the militia, the Federals accused Hindman of legalizing bushwhacking. It is true that many of the men who joined the home guards merely used the organization as an excuse to pillage isolated farms and villages. Northwest Arkansas, in particular, suffered at the hands of these guerilla bands.[161]
The home guards proved to be popular with Confederate sympathizers in Arkansas. The primary reason for this popularity was the fact that these units could not be sent out of the state without the consent of state authorities. While some of these groups did engage in informal guerrilla activities, others were well organized and competently commanded.[162]
General Hindman proved a more effective organizer, than a battlefield leader. His new army met defeat first at the Battle of Prairie Grove, 7 December 1962 and later at the Battle of Helena in July, 1863. The state capitol, Little Rock, fell to advancing Union Forces, in September 1863. Arkansas Confederate forces continued to resist until the end of the war, and even managed to inflict a few embarrassing Union defeats, notably at Battle of Jenkins' Ferry and Battle of Marks' Mills during the Red River Campaign of 1864. The Home Guard units continued to operate until the closing days of the war, but otherwise, the roll of the prewar militia was at and end.[citation needed]
A new Unionist Militia
In September 1863 Little Rock was captured by Union forces and the Confederate state government fled to Washington, located in Southwest Arkansas. From that point, effective Confederate control was limited to the southwest corner of the state. However, home guard units and guerrilla bands did continue to mount frequent raids. For all practical purposes, though, Arkansas had been captured and was ready for a new unionist government.[citation needed]
That new loyal government was led by Isaac Murphy. Murphy had gained fame, and no small degree of hatred, by his firm refusal to vote for secession during the state secession convention. In early 1864 a convention was held in Little Rock to draft a unionist state constitution. On March 14 the document was approved by the available voters; Isaac Murphy was shortly thereafter elected governor.[163]
Among Murphy’s first acts was to call for the formation of a loyal state militia. With bushwhacking running rampant in the state, it is no wonder that Governor Murphy would create a militia force. On May 31, 1864 the legislature adopted Act Number Nineteen, which provided for the creation of "a loyal State militia." This legislation stipulated that “none but loyal and trustworthy men shall be permitted to bear arms in said organization." So that the legal militia could be easily separated from the guerrilla forces, the act required each militiaman to "wear, as a mark of distinction, and for the purpose of being recognized at a distance, a band of red cloth [three] inches in width, to be worn on their hats, or in the most conspicuous [sic] manner...." Governor Murphy was authorized by the legislature to solicit ten thousand stands of arms from the Federal authorities to supply the militia force. Albert W. Bishop, a lieutenant colonel in the 1st Arkansas (Union) Cavalry, became Murphy's adjutant general.[164]
Using United States Army officers to oversee recruitment, the new militia slowly took shape. Recruitment was most effective in strong unionist areas, especially northwest Arkansas, and in areas where a large Federal garrison could provide assistance. By the end of September 1864 militia drills were being held at Little Rock and Fort Smith as well as other points. In Little Rock authorities ordered businesses to close during the three-hour weekly drills in order to encourage full attendance.[165]
The rural areas of Northwest Arkansas, which experienced continual depredations by guerrilla forces, witnessed the formation of paramilitary organizations akin to, but different from, the Militia. Portions of the area had been stripped of productive farms, given the roaming bands of bushwhackers and Federal troops who frequently impressed food and supplies. Thus, a large percentage of the population faced starvation. As early as 1863, well before the formation of the Murphy government in Little Rock, Colonel M. LaRue Harrison, a Unionist commander and the man after whom the city of Harrison would be named, formed what came to be known as "Farm Colonies". These colonies would serve both a military and agricultural purpose. The colonies organized Militia companies composed entirely of farmers, which would be expected to cultivate the land and protect it also.[166][167]
Connection to the Arkansas National Guard
Current Arkansas Army National Guard units do not trace their Lineage and Honors to any of the units that participated in the Civil War. This is due in part to the lack of organization and record keeping at the state level both before and after the war, and in part due to confusion over which unit is which. Several Arkansas Confederate units went on to win acclaim, particularly the 1st Arkansas Infantry which served in the Confederate Army of the Tennessee and the 3rd Arkansas Infantry which served in the Confederate Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee. However the 3rd Arkansas Infantry, CSA, had no connection to the peace time militia organizations in the state of Arkansas before or after the Civil War, so when the veterans of the 3rd Arkansas laid down their rifles at Appomattox Court House in April 1865, their history and traditions pasted out of existence with them. In contrast to other southern states whose current National Guard units are awarded the campaign participate credits for their units participation in the various campaigns and engagements while in Confederate service, no current Arkansas National Guard Unit has Campaign Participation Credit for the period of the Civil War.[168]
See also
- Arkansas in the American Civil War
- List of Arkansas Civil War Confederate units
- List of Arkansas Union Civil War units
References
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- ^ Arkansas Civil War Chronicles - 1861, Accessed 11 January 2011, http://www.arkansasties.com/Military/CivilWar1861.htm
- ^ a b c d e The War Almost Started in Little Rock, Seizing the U.S. Arsenal at Little Rock, The Capitol Guard, Company A, 6th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, Accessed, 31 October 2010, http://web.archive.org/web/20091029033543/http://geocities.com/capitalguards/arsenal.html
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- ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 644, Accessed 14 December 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=660;page=root;size=s
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 42; Margaret Ross, “Chronicles of Arkansas, the Years of the Civil War, Arkansas Gazette, Feb. 5 and Apr. 23, 1961; Bearss and Gibson, Little Gibraltar, pp. 242–243.
- ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, page 686, accessed 19 Janaury 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;q1=Rector;rgn=full%20text;idno=waro0001;didno=waro0001;view=image;seq=702;page=root;size=s;frm=frameset;
- ^ Abraham Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, Monday, March 4, 1861.
- ^ Lincoln, First Inaugural Address, March 4, 1861.
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, pp. 35–36.
- ^ "Lincoln's Call for Troops".
- ^ James McPherson, Battle Cry of Freedom, p. 274.
- ^ Massachusetts in the Civil War, William Schouler, 1868 book republished by Digital Scanning Inc, 2003 – See the account at [1].
- ^ a b "The Confederate War Department, The Ordnance of Succession of Arkansas". Retrieved February 15, 2010.
- ^ Collier, MAJ Calvin L, "First in, Last Out, The Capitol Guards, Arkansas Brigade, Civil War", Pioneer Press, Little Rock, 1961, Page 8
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page , BORLANDS REGIMENT, accessed 1 October 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/borlands.html.
- ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 1, Page 691, Acccessed 16 December 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;idno=waro0001;node=waro0001%3A3;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=707;page=root;size=s
- ^ Harry, Smith. "Arkansas Army and Air National Guard, a History and Record of Events, 1820–1962": 4.
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: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Huff, COL Leo E., The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, Page 76
- ^ A thorough analysis of the Military Board may be found in Leo E. Huff, “The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas”, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXVI (Spring 1967), pp. 75–95.
- ^ Huff, Leo E., “The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas”, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXVI (Spring 1967), p. 79
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, Independence County Home Guard—1861, Accessed, 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/indhomgd.html
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 70.
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, 15th Regiment Arkansas Militia, accessed 1 October 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/15milhis.html
- ^ Huff, Leo E., “The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas”, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXVI (Spring 1967)
- ^ Huff, Leo E., “The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas”, Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXVI (Spring 1967), p. 84
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, “The Hempstead Rifles”, Arkansas State Troops, Accessed 10 January 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/hemprifl.html
- ^ a b c Harry, Smith (December 21, 1962). "Arkansas Army and Air National Guard, a History and Record of Events, 1820–1962". Little Rock, Arkansas: Arkansas Military Department: 4.
{{cite journal}}
: Cite journal requires|journal=
(help) - ^ Huff, "Military Board", p. 84
- ^ Watson, Lady Elizabeth, Fight and Survive!, a history of Jackson County, Arkansas, in the Civil War, Jackson County Historical Society, 1996, Page 9
- ^ a b c d e The Arkansas in the Civil War Message Board – Archive Company Names Posted By: Bryan Howerton, accessed 1 Nov 2010, http://history-sites.com/mb/cw/arcwmb/archive_index.cgi?noframes;read=8440
- ^ Woodruff, W. E., With The Light Guns: 1861-1865
- ^ The Captiol Guards, Company A, 6th Arkansas Volunteer Infantry, accessed 10 December 2010, http://reocities.com/Pentagon/base/6595/history.html
- ^ a b Pass and Review of the 13th Milita Regiment, Old -Line Democrat, Little Rock, October 18, 1860, p. 3, c. 2-3, reprinted in, The Arkansas Toothpick, The Civil War Hub of Arkansas, Accessed 10 December 2010, http://arkansastoothpick.com/?p=863
- ^ Watson, Lady Elizabeth, Fight and Survive!: a history of Jackson County, Arkansas, in the Civil War, Jackson County Historical Society, 1996, Page 9
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, Jackson Light Artillery (Thrall’s Battery), Accessed 2 January 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/jackson.html
- ^ A thorough analysis of the Military Board may be found in Leo E. Huff, "The Military Board in Confederate Arkansas", Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXVI (Spring 1967), p. 76.
- ^ Huff, "Military Board", p. 84
- ^ Battles and leaders of the Civil War, 1884-1887, The Century Company, Page 306, accessed 6 Jan 2010, http://books.google.com/books?id=8C4OAAAAIAAJ&lpg=PA306&ots=YkTLQMSmfA&dq=Sam%20J.%20Churchill%20Arkansas%20general&pg=PA306#v=onepage&q&f=false
- ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 3, Page 609, Accessed 11 January 2011, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;g=moagrp;xc=1;q1=hardee;q2=Wilson%20s%20Creek;q3=Gratiot;rgn=full%20text;idno=waro0003;didno=waro0003;view=image;seq=0623
- ^ Huff, "Military Board", p. 79.
- ^ Edwin C. Bearss, Battle of Wilson’s Creek (Diamond, MO, 1975), pp. 59, 77–78. See also Huff, "Military Board", p. 90.
- ^ Report of Brig. Gen N. B. Pearce, commanding First Division, Army of Arkansas, The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 3, Page 123, Accessed 11 January 2011, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;xc=1;idno=waro0003;g=moagrp;q1=arkansas;q2=Wilson%20s%20Creek;q3=Gratiot;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=137;page=root;size=s
- ^ Edwin C. Bearss, Battle of Wilson’s Creek (Diamond, MO, 1975), pp. 59, 77–78. See also Huff, “Military Board”, p. 90.
- ^ The war of the rebellion: a compilation of the official records of the Union and Confederate armies. ; Series 1 - Volume 3, Page 716, Accessed 10 Jaunary 2010, http://dlxs2.library.cornell.edu/cgi/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=moawar;cc=moawar;xc=1;idno=waro0003;g=moagrp;q1=Arkansas;q2=Wilson%20s%20Creek;q3=Gratiot;node=waro0003%3A4;frm=frameset;view=image;seq=729;page=root;size=s
- ^ Bearss and Gibson, Little Gibraltar, pp. 250–251; Montgomery, “DWJ”, p. 3.; Huff, “Military Board”, p. 80; Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, pp. 77–79.
- ^ a b Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, 45th Regiment Arkansas Militia., Accessed 3 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/45milf&s.html
- ^ a b Arkansas Militia, 1860–1865, The Civil War, Volume II, Arkansas Military Journal, Arkansas Militia Foundation, Vol. 4, Fall 1995, No.1, Page, 2
- ^ a b Huff, "Military Board", pp. 82–84.
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 80.
- ^ The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture, Civil War Time Line, Accessed, 1 November 2010, http://www.encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=5336
- ^ Huff, "Military Board", p. 87
- ^ a b Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "10th Regiment Arkansas Militia (Johnson County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/10milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "21st Regiment Arkansas Militia (White County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/21milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "5th Regiment Arkansas Militia(Crawford County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/5milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "7th Regiment Arkansas Militia (Johnson County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/7milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "15th Regiment Arkansas Militia (Pope County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/15milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "45th Regiment Arkansas Militia (Searcy County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/45milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "51st Regiment Arkansas Militia (Sebastian County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/51milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "58th Regiment Arkansas Militia (Franklin County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/58milhis.html
- ^ Edward G. Gerdes Civil War Page, "62nd Regiment Arkansas Militia (Johnson County)", Accessed 1 November 2010, http://www.couchgenweb.com/civilwar/62milhis.html
- ^ The Encyclopedia of Arkansas History and Culture, Battle of Pea Ridge, Accessed 1 November 2010. http://encyclopediaofarkansas.net/encyclopedia/entry-detail.aspx?entryID=508
- ^ Huff, "Military Board", p. 88; Herndon, Annals of Arkansas, II, p. 614; Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, p. 101.
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, pp. 90–91; Ferguson and Atkinson, Historic Arkansas, p. 122.
- ^ Hill, Minutemen, p. 68.
- ^ General Order 17 is reprinted in full in Bishop, Loyalty on the Frontier, p. 97
- ^ Margaret Ross, "Chronicles of Arkansas; The Years of the Civil War", Arkansas Gazette, June 15, 1962; Leo E. Huff, "Guerrillas, Jayhawkers and Bushwackers in Northern Arkansas during the Civil War", Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XXIV (Summer 1965), pp. 127–148; Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, pp. 91–92.
- ^ Margaret Ross, “Chronicles of Arkansas; The Years of the Civil War”, Arkansas Gazette, May 14, 1962, Apr. 8, 1963, Oct. 16, 1963; Eno, Crawford County, pp. 240, 254.
- ^ Dougan, Confederate Arkansas, pp. 119–120.
- ^ Bishop, Loyalty on the Frontier, p. 1; 1864 Acts of Arkansas, pp. 51–52; Ruth Caroline Cowen, "Reorganization of Federal Arkansas, 1862–1865", Arkansas Historical Quarterly, XVIII (Summer 1959), pp 50–51. Informal unionist militia companies were occasionally formed prior to the formation of Murphy’s government. For information on a unit established at Batesville in 1862 see Morgan A. Powell, "Yankee Recruiting in Batesville", Independence County Chronicle, III (July 1962), pp. 26–30.
- ^ Margaret Ross, "Chronicles of Arkansas: The Years of the Civil War", Arkansas Gazette, Sept. 10, 1964.
- ^ Margaret Ross, "Chronicles of Arkansas: The Years of the Civil War", Arkansas Gazette, Feb. 14, 1964.
- ^ Arkansas Journal, May 31, 1865; "Company 'A', Arkansas Home Guard Militia Organized by Joseph R. Rutherford", Benton County Pioneer, IV (May 1959), pp. 12–13.
- ^ For a listing of Arkansas units in the Confederate service, see V. Y. Cook, “List of General and Field Officers, Arkansas Troops, C.S.A. and State Troops”, Publications of the Arkansas Historical Association, I (Fayetteville, AR, 1906 -), pp. 411–422. Similar information can be found in Herndon, Annals of Arkansas, II, pp. 607–614.