James Edwin Powell

James Edwin Powell
Born December 19, 1819
Worcester, UK
Died April 6, 1862
Hardin County, Tennessee, USA
Service/branch United States Army
Rank Major
Unit 1st Infantry
Battles/wars Battle of Shiloh

Major James Edwin Powell (December 19, 1819 - April 6, 1862) was an American army officer during the 19th century. He served as an officer in the 1st Infantry, Regular Army of the United States, detached to the 25th Missouri on March 24, 1862, and is depicted on a marker at stop #8 along the Shiloh Battlefield tour route as head of the morning patrol down Reconnoitering Road to Fraley Field where the Battle of Shiloh began.

He enlisted as a private assigned to Company A, 9th Infantry by a man named "Tracey" in 1847,[1] but was released from duty in 1848. He later rejoined the military in 1855 as a Second Lieutenant. He died on April 6, 1862 in the Battle of Shiloh.

Beside being Regular Army, Powell’s eyesight could be trusted; he was by occupation stated when he joined into the Mexican-American War at Castle Perote, Mexico on August 1, 1847, a hunter. Records at the National Archives also say Powell had gray eyes, brown hair, ruddy complexion, and was just 5’4”.[2] Powell was first a private assigned to Company A, 9th Infantry—enlisted by "Tracey." The 9th was under Franklin Pierce and Winfield Scott; that’s how Powell’s second and third sons came to be named Winfield Scott and Albert Tracy.

Contents

Early life

James Edwin Powell was born on December 19, 1819 as the thirteenth child of James and Ann Hopkins Powell in 20 The Cross, Worcester, England. The elder James was a silversmith/jeweler who died in March 1838; he had intended for son James to become a watch finisher. After his death, the remaining family members emigrated to Ohio. The eldest brother Samuel (b. 1801) served as the father figure.

Per Guy Vernor Henry's Civilian Appointments of the United States Army compiled in 1873, before officially enlisting, James was a Citizen Sergeant in the 9th US Infantry who engaged at Contreras and Churubusco, Mexico. He was Color Sergeant of the regiment 1847-48 as it advanced farther through Vera Cruz to Mexico City.

Powell was released from duty as a sergeant on August 28, 1848 at Fort Adams, Rhode Island. Perks were being offered to get settlers into Maine at that time, plus many Army buddies were from there. Per copies of land records in possession of family, Powell eventually owned hundreds of acres along the Kennebec and Dead rivers north of Pleasant Pond Stream, which he sold before leaving in 1855.

James married Mary Ann Hunter at the home of neighbors John and Lucy Ham in 1849 at The Forks, Maine. The Powells had three sons—James Powell III, Winfield Scott Powell, and Albert Tracy Powell. James belonged to the Masons’ Key (Keystone) Lodge of Solon, Maine.[3]

Career as an officer

He was appointed Second Lieutenant, Company F, First Regiment of Infantry in Regular Army of the United States on June 7, 1855; although the Army expanded by four regiments that year, it was rare for an officer to be commissioned pre-Civil War without attending a military academy, and leads one to wonder who else in his family was military. This may have occurred through his friendship with Albert Tracy—who was Adjutant General of the State of Maine (1852–55)—or their former commander, Franklin Pierce, who had become President in 1852.

Powell was stationed at Fort Duncan adjacent Eagle Pass, Texas during Inspector General Colonel Mansfield’s visit in July 1856 [4] and promoted to First Lieutenant, Company F, First Regiment of Infantry in Regular Army of the United States on December 8. He was involved in much activity during his time in this rank, including assignments at Forts Smith (Arkansas), Belknap (Texas), Arbuckle (IT/OK); he led both Indian fights and negotiations of a Peace Treaty with Comanche and Wichita at Rush Springs, IT in August 1858.[5]

After the breaking of this treaty, General Winfield Scott was supposed to declare the Comanches to be at odds with all troops of the Army; he never did, but sent William H. Emory, First Cavalry, to command Fort Arbuckle. Shortly thereafter, in February 1859, Powell had to send Emory the following message written in the margin of a newspaper: "Major: Please send an ambulance and the doctor; three men wounded, two Comanches killed. Please send me some ammunition; gone in pursuit. Lieutenant Powell."[6]

This happened a few months after Lieutenant Robert Offley (First Infantry, Company E) wrote his mother from Fort Arbuckle of a wonderful July 4 (1858) celebration "in grand style and fired a salute of 34 guns, one for (each state and) Kansas. After that our men pitched two large Hospital tents and fixed them off with flags, &c. and had a very fine dinner. We had an extra beef killed for them, and let them buy chickens, &c.; together with the vegetables from our garden, they fared well. Our mule train is still here, and the teamsters were all invited. There were over 100 (who) sat down to the table. Lt. J.E. Powell (who was in command of Fort Arbuckle at the time) and myself gave them some liquor, five gallons from the Commissary, as there is a law in the (Indian) Nation prohibiting the use of liquor, which is one of the best things I know of and I am happy to say the majority of our men are glad of it. Our men are perfectly delighted."[7]

The next year on July 5, 1859, Powell took forty-two members of First Infantry Companies D & E and First Cavalry Company E to repair parts already there and finish building a road from Fort Smith, Arkansas to Fort Arbuckle. This route was called Powell Road for some time.[8]

Civil War

Powell transferred to Fort Washita, Indian Territory with Company E per telegraphic instructions dated March 19, 1861. As southern states began seceding from the U.S., all Federal troops in Texas/IT gathered on May 3 near what is today Minco, Oklahoma to go north. Some 250 Texan troops (former neighbors) tried to war with them at this time, but Major Sam Sturgis, who commanded the Cavalry regiment and had left Fort Smith less than an hour before its being taken by Southerners according to General David Twiggs’ apparent plot, saw to separating them from their horses as they were having dinner. Federal troops could not feed 250 prisoners and their mounts on the march to Kansas, so had to immediately parole all after shaving the tails of the fine animals for the only possible revenge.

Powell took his pack of thirty-eight hunting hounds north at "great trouble and expense," so was understandably quite upset that they twice took off chasing buffalo, and all but three were forever lost. General David Sloan Stanley stated that on this exodus was the last time he saw "herds of buffalo which might be numbered by the tens of thousands."

The Leavenworth Times of June 1, 1861, reported that troops of First Cavalry and First Infantry arrived in Leavenworth, Kansas on May 31, 1861. They totaled about 820 soldiers, 200 teamsters, and other army attachés plus some officers’ families, eighty wagons, and 600 horses and mules forming a train about a mile long. Powell was promoted to Captain, Company F, First Infantry Regiment, Regular Army of the United States on June 11, 1861, upon the resignation of Captain Seth Barton who joined the Confederates.

The route they followed later became the Chisholm Trail. Black Beaver, a well-known and respected Delaware Indian guide/rancher/interpreter of IT and Kansas who called himself a Yankee Indian, left his own property to lead this caravan north; he was never fully compensated. The Creeks called the Chisholm Trail "Beaver’s Trail" for him. At the end of the Civil War, Jesse Chisholm was able to find the ruts left from this massive train of heavy military wagons and started following it between IT/OK and Abilene, Kansas.

Death

Powell was promoted to Major on March 24, 1862. Thirteen days later, he was mortally wounded and buried at Shiloh. His oldest son, Jimmy, had been with him for seven years—two as his father's waiter—and was not yet twelve when James died after asking Captain Dimmick to help the young man find his way home to Maine. Powell was hit by blind fire from Confederates who could not see through the smoke during their third attempt to penetrate the Hornets' Nest about 1:00 PM on Sunday, April 6, 1862, and died later that night.

Major Powell is officially buried “unknown” at Shiloh National Cemetery.

References

  1. ^ This was most likely Albert Tracy who was born in Buffalo, New York in 1818 [with surname Haddock, which he dropped early in life] and enlisted in Maine in 1847; he was promoted to Captain for "gallant and meritorious conduct in the battle of Chapultepec" where Powell also participated with 9th Infantry. Tracy resigned his commission in 1848, but later resumed it and became Adjutant General for the State of Maine with help from then-President Franklin Pierce, a close acquaintance. This is strong evidence that he was the Albert Tracy for whom Powell’s third son was named, and most likely helped Powell get his own commission in 1855 on top of being his friend. It’s nice to know they seemed to have reunited near the end of Powell’s life as Tracy wrote Missouri in Crisis: The Journal of Captain Albert Tracy, 1861.
  2. ^ Substantiated by Lieutenant James M. Newhard’s post-Shiloh report, calling Powell “our noble little Major.”
  3. ^ Typed version of memorial statement is in family records.
  4. ^ Powell was officially assigned to Company F, but was often found with Company E and was the only officer with Company G during that report of 1856.
  5. ^ In Grant Foreman’s book Advancing the Frontier, there is an awesome explanation in Powell’s own words of this treaty and the details of how it soon became broken by officers who later joined the Confederacy.
  6. ^ Emory sent Company E to reinforce and make a clean sweep of the area (From Army annual report quoted in Justiss’ thesis).
  7. ^ From letter still in possession of Offley family, republished several times; Offley did also include that Fort Arbuckle was much nicer than Fort McKavett (Texas), where they’d been stationed the previous year, and that they had a fine Episcopal Chaplain named Daniel McManus.
  8. ^ From Patricia Adkins Rochette’s Bourland in North Texas & Indian Territory During the Civil War; she also helped us find some of the Native American connections to Powell. We note from his letter-writing that Powell differentiated between Indians he considered his neighbors and those he deemed “savages.”

External links

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