Showing posts with label Wilson's Creek. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wilson's Creek. Show all posts

Thursday, December 10, 2015

Springfield National Cemetery....Springfield, Missouri



DATE:  November 14, 2015

HISTORICAL SITE:  Springfield National Cemetery
 

LOCATION:  1702 E. Seminole St., Springfield, Greene Co., Missouri

MARKER #:  99001045

DEDICATED:  August 27, 1999

"This national cemetery has been listed in The National Register of Historic Places"

MARKER PLACED BY:  United States Department of the Interior

PERSONAL REFLECTIONS: 

“It is foolish and wrong to mourn the men who died. Rather we should thank God that such men lived” – General George S. Patton

I think I’ve mentioned before that there is this fascination when one place I’ve blogged about becomes connected to another. That’s the case with the Springfield National Cemetery.

This area was home to the Kickapoo Indians and the area around the cemetery was known as Kickapoo Prairie. Missouri was truly the edge of civilization before people started making their way west. We’ve seen, as with the Patee hotel, that people knew they were going into or coming out of the wilderness.


Slavery, among other issues, had always been a dividing point in the United States and it came to a head on April 12, 1861, when the Confederates opened fire on the Union garrison at Fort Sumter, South Carolina.

Not long after, the Missouri legislators met and voted against secession but said if the north declared war on the south, then they would fight for the Confederacy.

In August 1861, the first major engagement west of the Mississippi River took place at Wilson’s Creek, about 15 miles north of the cemetery. The win really went to the Confederates but they failed to push forward and gave the federal military time to regroup. The south would never really hold Missouri although the state was full of southern sympathizers.

The city bought 80 acres on the outskirts of Springfield. The cemetery was named Springfield National Cemetery, not because it was part of the federal government, but because that was the name of the street that used to run on the south border of the land. The street disappeared when the cemetery was expanded.
 The civic leaders gave the U.S. government the choice of areas within the cemetery for the sole purpose of burying Union soldiers and most had fought at Wilson’s Creek. The cemetery opened in 1867, and soldiers buried around the area were disinterred and reburied here.

In the end, there would be 1,514 Union soldiers buried with 719 unknowns. There were 566 Confederates and the majority of those were unknown. There’s something about standing there and you can see a sea of “Unknown Confederate Soldier” tombstones.

There are several monuments within the cemetery. The first one you see was placed in 1888 to the memory of Union General Nathaniel Lyon, the commanding officer at Wilson’s Creek and the 1st Union General to die in the Civil War.

A few years later, in 1901, a monument to Confederate General Sterling Price was raised. Price was once the Governor of Missouri and the Confederate Commander at Wilson’s Creek.

A local doctor, T.J. Bailey, had wanted a monument put up upon his death so in 1907 it was placed with the inscription “erected under the provisions of the last will of Dr. Thomas Bailey to show his love for the Union and its gallant defenders”

But this wasn’t the only cemetery around. Right next to the National Cemetery, there was a smaller one for Confederate soldiers. In 1911, the Confederate Cemetery Association donated 6 acres with the stipulation that only men who fought on the side of the Confederacy could be buried there. An Act of Congress in 1911 ordered the Secretary of War to accept the confederate cemetery as part of the Springfield National Cemetery.

After WWII, with a lot of space on the Confederate side, the Dept. of Veterans Affairs asked permission of the Confederate Association to bury soldiers from other wars in the area. The permission was given except for a smaller walled off section.

In 1958, the Daughters of the Confederacy put up a monument to all the unknown Confederate soldiers who died at Wilson’s Creek.

It wasn’t until the 1980’s, with amendments to the agreement with the Confederate Cemetery Association, that all veterans were eligible to be buried in the smaller Confederate section.

Yeah, they waited until no one was alive who could argue the point, but then again, who would be buried there as all Confederate soldiers were gone at this point.

There are soldiers buried here from most of America's wars including one revolutionary war veteran. Private William Freeman, born in North Carolina, was a scout for General George Washington. In 1912, his remains were removed from the family farm and re-interred here.

A monument was erected by the Pearl Harbor Survivors Association in 1992 as a tribute to those who died in the attack on Pearl Harbor in 1941 and in 1999, the Sons & Daughters of the American Revolution honored those who died in the revolution with another monument.

In addition, five Buffalo Soldiers are buried here. These were members of African American army regiments created after the Civil War. They were the protectors of settlers moving west, they built and renovated Army posts and camps, and maintained law and order in the western expanses of the country. 

There are also 5 recipients of the Medal Of Honor buried in the cemetery. This is our nation's highest military decoration, given for "conspicuous gallantry and intrepidity at the risk of his life above and beyond the call of duty.”

1999 was also when the cemetery was given the designation and put on the register of historic places.

“I don't have to tell you how fragile this precious gift of freedom is. Every time we hear, watch, or read the news, we are reminded that liberty is a rare commodity in this world.” – President Ronald Reagan

Thursday, July 23, 2015

Wilson's Creek Civil War Battlefield - Springfield, Missouri



DATE:  July 1, 2015

HISTORICAL SITE:  Wilson’s Creek Battlefield


LOCATION:  6424 W. Farm Rd 182, Republic, Greene Co., Missouri

MARKER #:  66000113

DEDICATED:  April 22, 1960 (Redesignated as a “national battlefield” on December 16, 1970)

PERSONAL REFLECTIONS: When going into Springfield for an appointment, Dirk suggested we go the WilsonCreek Civil War Battlefield and I was all for it. Dana and I had visited the Prairie Grove Battlefield in Arkansas and I loved it. That is, I loved it except for the weather. It was hot and humid, something this California girl is not used to.


You are first introduced to the National Park at the Visitors Center where there is a 30 minute film with battle re-enactments. The park itself is a 4.9 mile self-guided tour that has 8 stops in places that are considered significant to the battle.

We’re driving to the first stop when I suddenly stop the car. On the right side of the road is a turtle..about the size of a man’s hand. It’s hot and that pavement has to be uncomfortable…besides, a few more feet, he was moving from right to left…I think…and he’d be in the road and in danger of being run over. I "oh look" told Dirk about it and look at him. He’s like “do you want me to pick it up?”…I’m like “yeah, it’s going to get run over”. So Dirk gets out, picks it up and sets it in the grass. He then gets back into the car and tells me about a Missouri law that makes it unlawful to touch, pick up or generally mess with any wildlife. But I was happy and said, “but you saved his life”.

Missouri was a state with internal conflict during the Civil War. They elected to stay in the Union but declared themselves neutral and stated they would not send supplies or men to either Army. There were plenty of slave owners in Missouri and the government was often found to be harassing the Union Army. At one point, the Union demanded free rein through Missouri while the Governor said they must stay in the St. Louis area.

Soon the Armies of both the north and south were positioned to clash at this very point.

On August 10th, 1861, the Union attacked the Confederates and succeeded in claiming the high ground later called "Bloody Hill". Then the confederates rallied and attacked the Union line three times; killing both Union Generals. At the end of the 3rd attack, the Union soldiers, exhausted and lacking ammunition, withdrew to Springfield.

There were several houses in the area of this battle but one in particular; the “Ray” house, was spared because it was being used as a field hospital. That house sits on the grounds today; renovated back to its 1850’s look.
 
This was the first major civil war battle west of the Mississippi River and is also known as the Battle of Oak Hills. This battle went on for 5 grueling hours in what was described as a very hot and humid day.

I thought of that as I struggled to breath in the “wet” air…wanting to see everything yet yearning for the air conditioning of my car. It had already rained once. That’s what I have found about Missouri…it’s hot, it’s humid, and the sun is beating down on saturated air until you can’t stand it. It rains, everything and everyone breathes a sigh of relief as a kind of coolness comes over you…and then it starts anew.


Unfortunately, or fortunately, depending upon your choice of sides, the Confederate army was too disorganized and ill equipped to go after the Union army and it was this failure of the Confederates to exploit their victory here that probably kept Missouri in the Union.

On October 30, 1861, the Confederate Missourian government formally joined the Confederacy. The majority of the population never voted for succession and so the state remained in the Union.

After more skirmishes, and being unable to secure Missouri, the Missouri Guard moved to battles in Arkansas and Mississippi. That didn’t mean Missouri was quiet...just the opposite. With the organized Armies gone, guerrilla warfare between the sides kept the conflict going.

In the end, around 1,317 Union and 1,230 Confederates were either killed, wounded or captured at Wilson’s Creek.

The last stop on the tour is “Bloody Hill”, where the final routing took place. The view is spectacular and you can only imagine the carnage of an army racing up that hill. There are cannon’s placed at the top and Dirk places a hand on one of the cannons and says “cannons have a way of making a man feel virile”. I love that he makes me laugh…a lot.

P.S. It’s interesting after you visit one battlefield, how you start to see the connection of the sites and how the armies moved.