Tuesday, June 23, 2015

Prairie Grove Civil War Battlefield – Prairie Grove, Arkansas



DATE VISITED:  05/02/2015

HISTORICAL SITE:  Prairie Grove Civil War Battlefield
 Dedicated to the Soldiers of 1861-1865…1917-1918
Erected by the Daughters of Confederacy 1924

LOCATION:  506 E. Douglas St., Prairie Grove, Washington Co., Arkansas

MARKER #: 
70000133 (original) - 92001523 & 05001167 (boundary increases)
 



DEDICATED:  September 4, 1970 with boundary increases on November 9, 1992 and October 27, 2005

“This property has been placed on the National Register Of Historic Places by the United States Department of Interior”
Hindman Hall Museum   A bequest by Biscoe, son of General Thomas C. Hindman who commanded Confederate forcces during the Battle of Prairie Grove, provided $100,000 to establish on the battlefield a “suitable memorial” to his Father and the brave men and officers who fought in that battle. 1965

MARKER PLACED BY:  United States Department of the Interior

PERSONAL REFLECTIONS:  

I have always wanted to go to a Civil War battlefield but living in California makes it difficult without a long trip. Lucky for us…this trip took us right into the vicinity of a battlefield that is known for being most the intact in the U.S.

I have always found the Civil War to be a fascinating period in U.S. history. My boys have the unique position of their ancestors being on both sides. All of their maternal ancestors fought for the Confederacy while their paternal side of the family fought only for the Union.

In fact, I have been working on the family genealogy since David had to do a family history assignment in the 4th grade. Helping David gave me the bug and I’ve done research off and on for the past 20 years. I found one area in southern Indiana/northern Kentucky where a Conner (paternal) fought and lost an arm in the same general area where a Beaver (maternal) was also fighting. At this point, I can’t say whether they were even in the same battle…just an interesting thought to ponder.

Museum
So, it was with much excitement that Dana and I visited the Prairie Grove Battlefield. It is a sprawling 270 acres with a museum, a walking tour and a driving tour. We spent some time in the museum before heading out.
"The Bayonet Or Retreat"
"They Came Like Demons"
Field Surgeon's Kit
Confederate Money
Cannonballs
The Blue & The Grey

 The day was humid so it didn’t take long for these poor girls from California to wilt and we quickly decided upon the driving tour.

Although what follows will be several markers, what I found in retrospect is that there is a lot of redundancy. 

Bottom line…Confederate General Hindman knew that two Union Divisions had been separated by too much distance. Hindman knew if he could defeat these two Divisions, he would retake northwest Arkansas for the Confederacy and open up the possibility of an invasion of Missouri. In the end, the battle was a stalemate but because of lack of supplies, and once the two Union Divisions were combined, the Confederate army retreated to Van Buren Arkansas and any thoughts of a Missouri invasion, was lost.

Battlefield Park   The original 10 acres of Battlefield Park were purchased in 1908 by the Prairie Grove chapter of the United Daughters of the Confederacy and maintained by the U.D.C. for nearly 50 years as a memorial park. From 1886 to 1926 an annual reunion of Confederate veterans was held on this site. The State of Arkansas in 1957 created a Prairie Grove Battlefield Commission which added 55 acres to the Park area and developed the Park as a battle memorial. Members of the first Commission, appointed by Governor Orval E. Faubus, were Fred McCuistion, Mrs. J.C. Parks, Mrs. Lee Seamster, Glenn Will and W.J. Lemke.

March of the Armies  December 3-7, 1862  General Hindman on the Arkansas River planned to drive General Blunt’s Federal army out of nothwest Arkansas. The Confederate army left Van Buren on December 3. Enroute north, Hindman learned that Blunt had called for help from General Herron at Wilson’s Creek, MO and that the latter was already on the march. Hindeman decided to bypass Blunt at Cane Hill and march to intercept Herron. Herron’s army made a forced march of 100 miles in 3 days ran into the Confederate advance early on the morning of Sunday, December 7. The Confederates established themselves on this ridge, facing northeast. Herron crossed the Ilinois River and attacked. Meanwhile Blunt at Cane Hill learned that the Confederate army had bypassed him, so he marched his army to Rhea’s Mill, the approached the battle from the northwest, arriving on the field at 2:00pm. Darkness finally halted the bitteryly-fought battle. During the night, Hindman’s army, low on supplies and ammunition, withdrew south to Van Buren.

Battle of Prairie Grove   December 7, 1862  The battle on this field was between the Confedate army of General T.C. Hindman (Arkansas) and Federal forces commanded by Generals James C. Blunt (Kansas) and F.J. Herron (Iowa). Battlefield Park occupies the approximate center of the Confederate position. From 10am to 2pm the contest was between Herron, attacking from the north and the Confederate defenders of this ridge. From 2 o’clock until dark, the battle was chiefly against Blunt’s army, attacking from the northwest. Hindman reported that he had 11,000 troops engaged. Blunt’s report gives his force as 8,000 and Herron’s as 5,000. The Confederate loss in killed, wounded and missing was 1,317. The Federal loss was 1,148. During the night of December 7-8 the Confederate army withdrew to Van Buren.

Commerating valor, sacrifice and fortitude of the youth of Arkansas 1861-in the Confederacy-1865   Dedicated by the Children of the Confederacy Arkansas Division September 2, 1937

Blunt’s attack   From this spot the observer is viewing the terrain over which General James C. Blunt’s 1st Division advanced on the afternoon of December 7, 1862, to attack the Confederate left and relive the pressure on General F.J. Herron’s 2nd and 3rd Divsions which had been engaged since early morning. Blunt had been camp at Cane Hill and was bypassed by General T.C. Hindman’s army on the night of December 6. Blunt marched his men to Rhea’s Mill on Sunday morning, December 7, and entered the battle here at 2 o’clock in the afternoon.


Battle Monument  Rhea’s Mill  This tower was the chimney of Rhea’s Mill, which stood 6 miles northwest of this spot. The mill was operated by the Federal army before and after the Battle of Prairie Grove. General Blunt’s supply train was at Rhea’s during the battle, under guard of General Frederick Salomon’s troops.
The tower is 55 feet high and weighs 200,000 pounds. It is 8 feet square at the base and tapers to 4 by 4 feet at the top. It contains 700 stones. The chimney was taken down at Rhea’s and re-erected here as a memorial to the men who fought on this field December 7, 1862.
This tower was given to Battlefield Park in 1957 by Mr. and Mrs. G.C. Mennecke.

Major General Thomas C. Hindman   Thomas C. Hindman commanded the Confederate army in the battle of Prairie Grove. He was born in 1828 in Tennessee. Served in the war with Mexico, later moving from Mississippi to Helena, Ark. Was elected to Congress in 1859. In 1861, he entered the Confederate army as Colonel and won promotion to Major General at the Battle of Shiloh. Transferred to the Trans-Mississippi Department, he raised the army that fought at Prairie Grove. He later fought in many battles in Tennessee, Georgia and North Carolina.

General James G. Blunt  Genearal Blunt of Kansas commanded the First Division of the Federal army in the Battle of Prairie Grove. He was made Brigadier General in April 1862 and given command of the all Kansas troops. His army was at Cane Hill December 6, 1862 but reached this field at 2pm on December 7, to relieve General Herron’s army.

General Francis J. Herron   General Herron of Iowa, in command of the 2nd and 3rd Divisions of the Federal army, was encamped at Wilson’s Creek, MO., when Blunt summonded him to Cane Hill. A forced march of 100 miles in 3 days brought Herron’s army to Prairie Grove early on the morning of December 7, 1862. His army bore the brunt of the battle until relieved by Blunt.


This house, built about 1855, was the home of the John Morrow family, and originally stood on Cove Creek 9 miles south of here. On the night before the battle of Prairie Grove, Confederate General T.C. Hindman met with his division and brigade commanders in this house and made final plans for battle. The army left the Morrow farm for Prairie Grove at 4 o'clock on the morning of December 7, 1862. This house also sheltered General Sterling Price in February 1862 when Price's army was enroute to the battle of Pea Ridge.


The Lord’s Vineyard  This 2-story log house and out-buildings were erected by John Latta about 1834 on Evansville Creek, 12 miles southwest of this spot. The Latta settlement was called Vineyard from “The Lord’s Vineyard”. The Vineyard was the first postoffice in Washington County (1829). John Latta was postmaster from 1835 to 1838 and conducted the office in this house. It was also a stop on the early stage route from Fayetteville and Cane Hill to Van Buren. This house figured in many of the stirring events of pioneer days on the Indian border. The buildings were given to the Washington County Historical Society by F.F. Latta, grandson of the pioneer builder, and were removed to this site in 1958.

The Borden House   The Borden House was the epicenter of what one historian has called “one of the most intense firefights west of the Mississippi” during Dec. 7, 1862, Battle of Prairie Grove. Union and Confederate troops fought around the house and orchard, suffering hundreds of casualties. The Borden family sought refuge from the fighting with other families in the cellar one mile west of here. The day after the battle the Borden family returned to find that their home had been burned to the ground. The house here now was built on the same site around 1870.
Friends of the Prairie Grove Battlefield, Inc.
No. 19  2011

Herron’s Attack   From this spot the observer is viewing the fields over which General F.J. Herron’s army advanced on the morning of December 7, 1862 to attack the Confederate position on this ridge. Because the ford of the Illinois River was under artillery fire Herron crossed northwest of the ford, or almost directly north of this spot. His army consisted of troops from Missouri, Iowa, Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana and Arkansas. Herron’s Divisions bore the brunt of the battle until 2pm when Blunt’s army came to his aid. Blunt’s army entered the battle one mile west of this spot.

The Dead of Prairie Grove   The men who died on this field on December 7, 1862 are buried in soldier cemeteries in Fayetteville. 700 unknown Confederate soldiers are in the cemetery maintained by the Southern Memorial Association on East Mountain. The Union dead are in the Fayetteville National Cemetery. The commanding Generals reported 339 dead and 1,630 wounded in action. The records show that many of the wounded died—430 in army hospitals of Fayetteville, 150 in churches and homes of Cane Hill, and others in homes along the Cove Creek and Telegraph roads. The losses were about 10 per cent of the troops engaged.

 Site of the First Cumberland Presbyterian Church, used as a hospital during the Battle of Prairie Grove 1862. Marked by Prairie Grove Chapter U.D.C. 1930 Restored 2013 by Prairie Grove UDC

Additional Info...
Official Reports of Prairie Grove Battle

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