Quantrill's Raiders
Quantrill's Raiders | |
---|---|
Active | 1861–May, 1865 |
Country | Confederate States of America (claimed) |
Allegiance | CSA |
Branch | Partisan Rangers, American Civil War |
Type | Guerrilla |
Engagements | American Civil War |
Commanders | |
Notable commanders | Captain William Quantrill |
Quantrill's Raiders was a loosely organized force of pro-Confederate Partisan rangers, "bushwhackers", who fought in the American Civil War under the leadership of William Clarke Quantrill. The name "Quantrill's Raiders" seems to have been attached to them long after the war, when the veterans would hold reunions.
Origins
The Missouri-Kansas border area was fertile ground for the outbreak of guerrilla warfare when the Civil War erupted in 1861. Historian Albert Castel wrote:
For over six years, ever since Kansas was opened up as a territory by Stephen A. Douglas' Kansas-Nebraska Bill of 1854, its prairies had been the stage for an almost incessant series of political conventions, raids, massacres, pitched battles, and atrocities, all part of a fierce conflict between the Free State and proslavery forces that had come to Kansas to settle and to battle.[1]
In February 1861 Missouri voters elected delegates to a statewide convention, which rejected secession by a vote of 89-1. Unionists, led by regular US army commander Nathaniel Lyon and Frank Blair of the politically powerful Blair family, and increasingly pro-secessionist forces, led by governor Claiborne Jackson and future Confederate general Sterling Price, contested for the political and military control of the state. By June, there was open warfare between Union forces and troops supporting the Confederacy. Guerrilla warfare immediately erupted throughout the state and intensified in August after the Union defeat at the Battle of Wilson's Creek.[2]
By August 1862, with the Union victory at the Battle of Pea Ridge, the state was free of significant regular Confederate troops but the violence in Missouri continued. One historical work describes the situation in the state after Wilson's Creek:
Unlike other border areas in Maryland and Kentucky, local conflicts, bushwacking, sniping, and guerilla fighting marked this period of Missouri history. "When regular troops were absent, the improvised war often assumed a deadly guerrilla nature as local citizens took up arms spontaneously against their neighbors. This was a war of stealth and raid without a front, without formal organization, and with almost no division between the civilian and the warrior."[3]
The most notorious of these guerrilla forces was led by William Clarke Quantrill.
Methods and legal status
Quantrill was not the only Confederate guerrilla operating in Missouri, but he rapidly gained the greatest notoriety. He and his men ambushed Union patrols and supply convoys, seized the mail, and occasionally struck towns on either side of the Kansas-Missouri border. Reflecting the internecine nature of the guerrilla conflict in Missouri, Quantrill's soldiers fought jayhawkers, Kansas Border ruffians, local German (pro-Union) militias, federal occupation forces and pro-Union civilians, attempting to drive them from the territory where he operated.
Under his direction, Confederate guerrillas perfected military tactics such as disguises, coordinated and synchronized attacks, planned dispersal after an attack using pre-planned routes and relays of horses, and technical methods, including the use of multiple .36 caliber Colt revolvers, for increased firepower and their improved accuracy over the .44 caliber.
Confederate induction
On 15 August 1862, Quantrill and his men were officially mustered into the Confederate army under the Confederate Partisan Ranger Act. Quantrill was designated as a captain and other officers were elected by the men. Quantrill often referred to himself as a Colonel. Despite the legal responsibility assumed by the Confederate government, Quantrill often acted on his own with little concern for his government's policy or orders.[4] His most notable operation was the Lawrence Massacre, a revenge raid on Lawrence, Kansas in August 1863.
Lawrence, Kansas massacre
Lawrence, Kansas had historically been the base of operations for abolitionist and jayhawker organizations. During the Border War (1855-1861) and the War Between the States (Civil War), irregular raids into Missouri by Border ruffians, abolitionists, redlegs, jayhawkers and US federal soldiers, resulted in robberies, theft, arson, rape & murder of Missouri citizens by these criminals.
In August 1863, Kansas jayhawkers and federal soldiers assigned to the Border of Kansas & Missouri were frustrated by the hit & run tactics of Quantrill's guerrillas. The pro-Union federals resorted to capturing & imprisoning the women family members of the known guerrillas. These females, some teenagers, were jailed in Kansas City, MO, in George Caleb Bingham's house, on Grand Street. When imprisoning the women did not result in the response they wanted, the federal soldiers (some Kansas jayhawkers) reported dismantled the foundations of the house, causing it to collapse. Many women were maimed and killed in this cowardly act. To this day, the cause of that building collapse remains in controversy, as the Kansans & federals claim the building was "decrepit", though the house was only 3 years old. The intentional harming & killing of women non-combatants caused a reactionary fury in the citizens & guerrillas of Western Missouri.
Calling for revenge, Quantrill organized a unified partisan raid on Lawrence, Kansas, the center for these forces. Coordinating across vast distances, small bands of partisans rode across 50 miles of open prairie to rendezvous on Mount Oread in the early morning hours before the raid. Quantrill's men burned a quarter of the town's buildings and killed at least 150 men and boys.[5]
One of the main targets of the raid, abolitionist U.S. Senator Jim Lane, escaped by fleeing into corn fields.[6] The Lawrence raid was the most successful and infamous operation of Missouri's Southern guerrillas.
Confederate reaction
The Confederate leadership was appalled by the raid and withdrew even tacit support from the "bushwhackers". Following the raid, in the winter of 1863-64, Quantrill led his men behind Confederate lines into Texas. There, their often lawless presence proved an embarrassment to the Confederate command.
Some Confederate officers appreciated the effectiveness of these Missouri irregulars against Union forces, which never gained the upper hand over them, especially Quantrill. Among these was General Joseph O. Shelby, who rode south into Mexico with his troops rather than surrender at the end of the war, and whose command was remembered as "The Undefeated". Their exploits are also immortalized in a later addition to the post-war ballad, "The Unreconstructed Rebel":
- "I won't be reconstructed– I'm better now than then.
- And for that Carpetbagger I do not care a damn.
- So it's forward to the Frontier soon as I can go.
- I'll fix me up a weapon and start for Mexico."[7]
John Noland
Among Quantrill's men was a freed former slave man named John Noland. He was one of Quantrill's scouts, reputed to be his best one. Noland helped scouting Lawrence, Kansas, before the raid by Quantrill's men in 1863. He joined Quantrill's raiders because of the abuse his family suffered at the hands of Kansas Union Jayhawkers. Post-war pictures show him sitting with comrades at reunions of the Raiders. In the 1999 movie Ride with the Devil, depicting a group of fictionalized Missouri bushwhackers similar to those of Quantrill's Raiders as well as the Lawrence raid, the character of Daniel Holt was representative of Quantrill's John Noland.
Dissolution and aftermath
Deaths
Quantrill's guerrillas, as a group, did not maintain operations in the winters, along he Kansas\Missouri Border. Quantrill would lead his men to Tyler, Texas over-winter and offer his services to the Confederacy. Their assignments included attacking teamsters who supplied the Union, repelling Union & jayhawker raids into Northern Texas, repelling native Indians and policing & rounding-up deserters, roaming in Texas & Oklahoma. The guerrillas were rowdy, undisciplined and dangerous. Quantrill lost his control of the men in the winter of 1863\64.
The men split into bands and were commanded by lieutenants, "Bloody" Bill Anderson and George Todd. These guerrillas returned to Missouri, while Quantrill took several of his loyal troops East towards Kentucky.
Quantrill's group of guerrillas that went to Kentucky were hunted & tracked by pro-Union soldiers and hired killers. His men were cornered in a barn in Kentucky. A shootout resulted in William Quantrill being injured in the spine, unable to move. He was arrested, but reportedly died a week later from his wounds.
William Anderson's splinter group of Quantrill's guerrillas was assigned to duty North of the Missouri river, during the General Sterling Price raid, in 1864. His duties included disrupting operations North of the Missouri river, drawing Union troops toward his cavalry command. Anderson was reportedly shot dead North of Orrick, Missouri. His body was drug through the streets of Richmond, Missouri. His grave marker is located in the old Mormon Pioneer cemetery, in the extreme SW corner, behind some Pine trees, near the road.
George Todd's splinter group of Quantrill's guerrillas was attached to Major General Sterling Price's raid across Missouri, South of the Missouri river. He functioned as a cavalry scout and was shot out of his saddle by a Union sniper, North of Independence, MO, a day before the Battle of Westport.
Some of the guerrillas continued under the leadership of Archie Clement, who kept the Raiders together after the war and harassed the state government of Missouri during the tumultuous year of 1866. In December 1866, state militiamen killed Clement in Lexington, Missouri, but his men continued on as outlaws, emerging in time as the James-Younger Gang.
Popular culture
In the films True Grit, protagonist Rooster Cogburn (John Wayne in the original 1969 version and Jeff Bridges in the 2010 version) prides himself on being a part of Quantrill's Raiders during the Civil War while arguing with Texas Ranger LaBoeuf. He also has a cat named General Sterling Price after a famous Confederate General from Missouri. The movie The Outlaw Josey Wales is loosely based on Quantrill's Raiders.
Notes
- ↑ Castel (1997) pp. 1-2
- ↑ Nevins (1959) pp. 120-129, 310-316
- ↑ Donald, Baker, and Holt (2001) p. 177. The quote within the larger quote was from Michael Fellman, Inside War: The Guerilla Conflict in Missouri during the American Civil War, (1989) p. 23.
- ↑ Schultz (1996) p. 117
- ↑ Casualties are based on the more recent scholarship of Dr. Michael Fellman, Professor of History at Simon Fraser University in Vancouver, Canada. See Fellman (1989) cited above and referenced below, p. 25 and 254.
- ↑ Wellman, 1961.
- ↑ with variations by Ry Cooder for the 1980 film, "The Long Riders": http://www.rycooder.nl/pages/ry_cooder_the_long_riders_chords_lyrics.htm
References
Wikisource has original text related to this article: |
- Castel, Albert.Civil War Kansas: Reaping the Whirlwind. (1997) ISBN 0-7006-0872-9. This is a republication of the 1958 edition with a new introduction and some text corrections.
- Donald, David Herbert; Baker, Jean Harvey; and Holt, Michael F. The Civil War and Reconstruction. (2001) ISBN 0-393-97427-8
- Fellman, Michael. "Inside War: The Guerilla Conflict in Missouri in the American Civil War." (1989) ISBN 0-19-506471-2
- Nevins, Allan. The War for the Union: The Improvised War, 1861-1862. (1959) SBN 684-10426-1
- Schultz, Duane. Quantrill's War: The Life and Times of William Clarke Quantrill. (1996) ISBN 0-312-14710-4
- Petersen, Paul. "QUANTRILL OF MISSOURI" (2003) ISBN 1-58182-359-2
- Petersen, Paul. "QUANTRILL IN TEXAS" (2007) ISBN 978-1-58182-582-4
- Petersen, Paul. "QUANTRILL AT LAWRENCE" (2011) ISBN 978-1-58980-909-3
- Gilmore, Donald. "Civil War on the Missouri-Kansas Border" (2006) ISBN 978-158980-329-9