Tag Archives: Civil War

Today in Texas History – February 23

From the Annals of Bad Decisions –  In 1861, Texas citizens (meaning white, property-owning men) voted on the Texas Ordinance of Secession. The vote was overwhelmingly for secession from the Union with 46,153 voting for secession and only 14,747 against. Of the 122 counties casting votes, only eighteen cast majorities against secession. Only eleven other counties had votes of as much as 40 percent against.  For those who claim the Civil War was not about slavery, please take a look at the vile racist screed that is the Texas Ordinance of Secession.

Today in Texas History – October 14

From the Annals of Culling the Herd – In 1867, Lt. James Pike of the First United States Cavalry died when he smashed his malfunction rifle against a rock in frustration.  Pike’s last act occurred during an Indian attack.  Pike arrived in Texas in 1859 and joined John Henry Brown’s company of Texas Rangers. With the outbreak of the Civil War, Pike left Texas and went to Ohio, where he passed himself off as the nephew of Albert Pike. He joined the Fourth Ohio Cavalry in 1861 and saw considerable action as a scout, spy, and courier under Gen. William T. Sherman, who praised his “skill, courage and zeal” but warned him to “cool down.”  After the war, he joined the First U.S. Cavalry,  His memoir The Scout and Ranger: Being the Personal Adventures of Corporal Pike, of the Fourth Ohio Cavalry (1865) is a lively account of his career and has been praised by historians even though some of Pike’s claims are demonstrably false.

Today in Texas History – September 13

From the Annals of the Religious Right –   In 1860, abolitionist Methodist minister Anthony Bewley was lynched.  In 1858, Bewley – an outspoken opponent of slavery – established a mission south of Fort Worth.   He ran afoul of the so-called vigilance committees who were claiming that abolitionists were plotting to burn Texas towns and murder white citizens.

Bewley was targeted primarily on the basis of a letter he allegedly received from another abolitionist earlier in July.  The letter implored Bewley to continue with his work in helping to free Texas from slavery.  Many were convinced it was a forgery set up to incriminate Bewley.  But the letter was widely published and used as supposed evidence that Bewley was fomenting trouble along with other John Brownites in Texas.

Bewley knew trouble was coming and took his family to Kansas.  A Texas posse caught up with him in Missouri.  He was returned to Fort Worth on September 13.   Later that evening,  vigilantes seized and lynched Bewley. His body was allowed to hang until the next day.  He was buried in a shallow grave, but quickly disinterred.  His bones were stripped of their flesh and placed on top of Ephraim Daggett’s storehouse and children were allowed to play with them.

One cannot know how many in the lynch mob went on to serve in the Confederate military.  But stories such as this illustrate clearly why the Confederate “heroes” should continue to be removed from the place of honor that hold in many Texas areas and relegated to the dustbin of history.

Today in Texas History – July 25

From the Annals of the Civil War –  In 1861, the Crittenden-Johnson Resolution was passed by the U.S. Congress.  The resolution sought to reassure the border states of Missouri, Kentucky and Maryland and pro-slavery Unionists that the Civil War was being fought to restore the Union and not to eradicate slavery.  The implication was that once the war had been won, the Confederate states would be returned to the Union fold with slavery intact.  The resolution was named for its sponsors Rep. John Crittenden of Kentucky and Sen. Andrew Johnson of Tennessee.  The resolution passed with an overwhelming vote in both houses.  The plan to reassure the border states worked as none of them left the Union.  However, by December of 1861, sentiment had changed so drastically that the resolution was repealed largely through the actions of Pennsylvania Senator Thaddeus Stevens.

Today in Texas History – May 13

From the Annals of Senseless Combat –  In 1865, the last battle of the Civil War was fought near Brownsville at Palmito Ranch.  Union and Confederate commanders had previously reached a local truce thinking that a confrontation in the what appeared to be the waning days of the war over non-strategic ground in south Texas would be a waste of time, ammunition and most importantly lives.  Despite this on May 11, Col. Theo. H Barrett sent 300 mostly Black troops to take possession of Brownsville.  The Union force surprised about 150 Confederate cavalrymen and quickly routed them.  However, later in the afternoon the Confederates engaged the Union in a skirmish.  The Union commanders assumed that the Confederates had received reinforcements and quickly withdrew.  On May 13, Col. John “Rip” Ford arrived with artillery and assumed command.  The Confederates opened up with the cannons and an ensuing cavalry charge.  The Union troops were quickly routed and fell back to Brazos Island.  Approximately 30 unfortunate Union soldiers were killed in the meaningless and unnecessary battle.  After capturing some Union troops, the Confederates learned of the surrender of Lee and Johnston.  This small battle is only remembered because it was the last actual battle of the Civil War.

Today in Texas History – March28

From the Annals of the Irregulars –  In 1864, William C. Quantrill was captured by Confederate forces after reporting to Bonham.  Quantrill was already notorious at the time for his raid on Lawrence, Kansas in which men and boys were indiscriminately killed and other atrocities, but Lt. Gen. Edmund Kirby-Smith found Quantrill to be useful to the Confederacy’s goal of instilling fear and terror in the western theatre of the war.  Kirby-Smith order Gen. Henry McCulloch to use Quantrill to help round up the increasingly larger numbers of deserters and draft-dodgers in North Texas. Quantrill’s raiders mostly killed those they found and were pulled from this duty.  Quantrill’s next mission – to track down a band of Comanche raiders – was equally unsuccessful.   Quantrill moved south of the Red River during the winter of 1864, at which time Quantrill’s lieutenant, William (Bloody Bill) Anderson, formed perhaps an even more vicious band.  The two competing renegade groups began raiding Grayson and Fannin Counties and the level of violence became such that regular Confederate forces had to be assigned to protect residents from the activities of the irregular Confederate forces.

General McCulloch finally decided to run Quantrill out of North Texas.  On March 28, 1864, when Quantrill appeared at Bonham as requested, McCulloch had him arrested on the charge of ordering the murder of a Confederate major. Quantrill escaped later that day and returned to his camp near Sherman, pursued by over 300 state and Confederate troops.

Quantrill’s raids in Texas were essentially over and he was supplanted when his gang of bandits elected George Todd, a former lieutenant to Quantrill, as their new leader.  Quantrill and an increasing small band continued raiding.  In Kentucky they were surprised by Union irregulars. Quantrill was shot through the spine, captured and died in a Union prison in Louisville, Kentucky shortly after the end of the war.

Today in Texas History – March 10

From the Annals of the Civil War – In 1864, President Abraham Lincoln appointed Ulysses S. Grant as Lieutenant General in command over all Union forces.  Grant was promoted from Major General in command of the western front of the War with the Armies of the Tennessee and Cumberland.  From this point on, the fate of the Nation rested largely in the hands of one rather ordinary man who had both a hatred and genius for war.  At the beginning of the war, if anyone had suggested that Sam Grant, the failed shopkeeper and farmer from Ohio, would rise to command the entire Union Army, the laughing and knee slapping would have gone on for hours. In fact, Grant himself would probably have thought that he might aspire to be a competent Brigade commander based on his West Point training and experience in the Mexican-American War.  Grant’s primary experience had been as a quartermaster in charge of supplies and provisions.  From that work, Grant knew exactly what was required for fighting units to succeed.  His first units were superbly equipped and it showed on the battlefield. Grant’s victories at Forts Henry and Donelson  were two of the very few early Union successes and were widely publicized in the North.  These victories secured him a quick promotion to Major General and command of the Army of the Tennessee.  And his victory at Shiloh, at almost unspeakable cost for both sides, secured him a top leadership position for the remainder of the war.  Grant understood that just being in the Army was the greatest danger most soldiers faced.  More troops were dying from illness and disease than from combat wounds.  It was a brutal numbers game, but he was determined to bring the war to a swift conclusion by fighting.  The 30 Days campaign was intended to do just that and it broke the back of the Army of Northern Virginia.  Even though the war on the Eastern front settled into trench combat for many months, the 30 Days Campaign assured ultimate Union victory. It is not hyperbole to say that but for U.S. Grant, there is no United States of America as we know it.

Grant has been much maligned over the years as an incompetent general and corrupt politician. His skill as a military man should be unquestioned.  His greatest blunder was at Cold Harbor where troops were forced to wait to assault Confederate lines giving the rebels a chance to dig in.  Grant was forthright in acknowledging his mistake. But as a general, he knew he had the power of men and might on his side and used them effectively.  As President (for Grant was not a politician), his administration had several notable achievements.  He secured the Treaty of Washington which ended all disputes between the U.S. and Great Britain and set in place the greatest alliance of the past 175 years, he almost single-handedly stopped the extirpation of the plains Indians, he balanced the budget,  he supported the rights of the freedmen in the South (who were later abandoned by the Republican Party), and negotiated the annexation of the Dominican Republic (which was stopped by a short-sided Congress).

There is some new thinking on Grant, exemplified by Jean Edward Simith’s tremendous biography Grant.  And if you are in the mood for an excellent read on Texas in the late 1840’s, read Grant’s Memoirs.

Today in Texas History – January 29

From the Annals of Stupidity – In 1861, the Secession Convention of the state of Texas voted overwhelmingly to secede from the United States.  Support for a convention to consider the issue began to swell in October 1860, when it became apparent that Abraham Lincoln would be elected to the presidency. Only the governor could call the legislature into special session and only the legislature could call a convention. Sam Houston who was strongly opposed to secession refused to act hoping that the secessionist furor would die down.  In a blatantly illegal and unconstitutional act, Oran M. Roberts, chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court and several other prominent Texans took the law into their own hands and called a convention.

Once it was clear that some sort of secession convention would meet, Houston called the legislature into session hoping that it would declare the convention illegal.  Houston was rebuffed and the legislature validated the calling of a convention, turned over the House chambers to the convention, and adjourned.

The result was almost a foregone conclusion because of the election process for the delegates.  Delegates were often elected by voice votes at public meetings at which Unionists were not welcomed.  Other Unionists ignored what they viewed to be as an illegal process.  As a result the delegates disproportionally favored secession and the vote of 166 to 8 clearly did not represent the substantial opposition to secession.

The Texas Ordinance of Secession passed by the Convention is certainly one of the most vile racist screeds ever enacted by a representative body in the history of the United States.  It is a direct rebuff to revisionists who claim that the Civil War was not about slavery.

In all the non-slave-holding States, in violation of that good faith and comity which should exist between entirely distinct nations, the people have formed themselves into a great sectional party, now strong enough in numbers to control the affairs of each of those States, based upon the unnatural feeling of hostility to these Southern States and their beneficent and patriarchal system of African slavery, proclaiming the debasing doctrine of the equality of all men, irrespective of race or color–a doctrine at war with nature, in opposition to the experience of mankind, and in violation of the plainest revelations of the Divine Law. They demand the abolition of negro slavery throughout the confederacy, the recognition of political equality between the white and the negro races, and avow their determination to press on their crusade against us, so long as a negro slave remains in these States.

We hold as undeniable truths that the governments of the various States, and of the confederacy itself, were established exclusively by the white race, for themselves and their posterity; that the African race had no agency in their establishment; that they were rightfully held and regarded as an inferior and dependent race, and in that condition only could their existence in this country be rendered beneficial or tolerable.

That in this free government all white men are and of right ought to be entitled to equal civil and political rights; that the servitude of the African race, as existing in these States, is mutually beneficial to both bond and free, and is abundantly authorized and justified by the experience of mankind, and the revealed will of the Almighty Creator, as recognized by all Christian nations; while the destruction of the existing relations between the two races, as advocated by our sectional enemies, would bring inevitable calamities upon both and desolation upon the fifteen slave-holding States. By the secession of six of the slave-holding States, and the certainty that others will speedily do likewise, Texas has no alternative but to remain in an isolated connection with the North, or unite her destinies with the South.

While Texas was largely spared the ravages of the Civil War by virtue of geography, the defense of slavery cost the lives of thousands of Texans in a cause doomed to failure.

Today in Texas History – January 14

From the Annals of the Constitution –  In 1860, the U.S. House of Representatives’ Committee of Thirty-Three submitted a proposed constitutional amendment protecting slavery in all areas where it already existed. The proposed amendment was intended to stop states from seceding.   Following the election of Abraham Lincoln, the secession fury picked up in the South.  The Republican Party was committed to restricting slavery in the Western territories, and Southerners were dead set on protecting their right to own other human beings.  The House of Representatives appointed the Committee of Thirty-Three, consisting of one member from each state, to investigate avenues of compromise that would keep the South from seceding.

Most of the floated plans involved an expansion of slavery into the Western territories, but that fight was what had killed off the Whigs and given rise to the Republican party, and Northern states were opposed to any further slave states entering the Union.  The only plan to make it out of the committee was submitted by Thomas Corwin of Ohio and called for an amendment to protect slavery, enforce the fugitive slave laws, and repeal state personal liberty laws.  The South was increasingly concerned faced with numbers of slaves escaping to the North and the personal liberty laws made it difficult to return persons to the condition of chattel slavery.  South Carolina, Florida, Mississippi, and Alabama had already seceded by the time Corwin made his proposal. The plan went no where and the issue of slavery was only resolved with a long and bloody civil war.

And this is why floating absurd plans to amend the Constitution to fundamentally alter our federal system are a stupid idea Governor Abbott.

Today in Texas History – January 11

From the Annals of the Civil War – In 1863, the last remaining soldiers of the Fourth Brigade of Walker’s Texas Division were captured at Arkansas Post. The Texas Division was reputed to be the only division in the Confederate Army made up entirely of troops from a single state.  Organized in October 1862, the Division was named after Maj. Gen. John George Walker, who took command on January 1, 1863.   It was nicknamed the “Greyhound Division,” or “Walker’s Greyhounds” as a testament to the troops ability to endure long marches during the conflict to reinforce troops at critical junctures.  Initially, the division was made up of four brigades. The Fourth Brigade, under the command of Col. James Deshler, was stationed at the Arkansas post until it was captured intact and ceased to be an active force for the remainder of the war.

Image of John G. Walker from maritimetexas.net.