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Page 25 text:
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vancing to Lexington, Price compelled Curtis, with the forces from Kansas, to fall back to Independence and from thence to retreat to the Big Blue and after- wards to Westport, within a mile or two of Kansas City. On the 231-d Curtis and Pleasanton gained the advantage at the Big Blue. The retreat began, across the Osage river, where Marmaduke and Cabell surrendered, and on, through the familiar ground about Carthage, to Arkansas. Curtis was in pursuit as tar as the Arkansas river, CNovember 75, below Fayetteville. He says in his interest- ing though perhaps exaggerated report: Some of our troops crossed over and exchanged a few shots, as they supposed with the last ot' l?rice's army. Our work was accomplished and the shout that went up from the Army of the Border, and the roar of our cannon resounded through the gloomy forests ofthe Arkansas, carrying to the camp ot' the enemy beyond our parting farewell .,.. . . A prisoner taken by the enemy, who had escaped or been discharged, a reverend and perfectly reliable gentleman, gave the particulars of the enemyis condition. The elm trees for miles had been stripped to furnish food for the starving multitudefi This was the last effort made to carry the war into Missouri. Considered with reference to the number of men, the distance marched, the battles fought, and the amount of property destroyed, Pricels was one of the most remarkable expeditions ofthe war. General Price had marched 1,434 miles, fought forty- three battles and skirmishes, and, according to his own calculation, destroyed upward of ten million dollars worth of property. And yet it is diiiicult to see what the Contederate authorities expected to gain by the movement. Price was not strong enough to maintain himself in the State against the overwhelming odds that could be concentrated against him, and without some such prospect his expedition was a predestined failure. 'Kirby Smit-h's orders of August 4, 1864, mentioned St. Louis as an objective. The celebrated iirst and second Missouri brigades now consolidated and, re- duced to a mere skeleton scarcely four hundred strong,fired their last gun at Fort Blakeley 011 the shores ofthe Gulf of Mexico, April 9, 1865. General Price was not in command. His active service had terminated in March. He did not long survive the war. Joining that distinguished company ot' Confederate emigres, he went to Mexico and there held oiiice for a time in the Board of Illlllllg'l'2ti7lOll. General Price died in St. Louis, September 29, 1867. ALLFRED J. MORRISON. For the facts see: 1 Missouri LAmerican Comrnonwealthsl. By Lucien Carr, Boston, 1888. 2 The Fight for Missouri. By Thomas L. Stead, New York, 1886. 3 The Mississippi Valley in the Civil War. By John Fiske, Boston, 1900. 4 Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I., Vol. XLI, Part: I. The Rev. J. W. Perkins, of Huntsville, Mo., is about to publish a life of General Price. 23
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Page 24 text:
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By that blow Grant carried the Illll0l1 forces into the interior of the Confederacy. 4' From the seizure of Camp Jackson, in lS61, down t.o the appearance of Sher- Illl2l,ll,S army in the rear of Virginia, in 1865, there may be traced an unbroken chain of causation. General Price hoped to the last, if not to regain Missouri, at least to render it feasible for the State to contribute recruits and supplies to the Confederacy. And we must not forget that General Price's home was in Chariton county. ' On being transferred to the regular service, Gene1'al Price was ordered east. of the Mississippi. During the summer of 1862 he was in northern Mississippi and Alabama. In September he fought, against odds, the battle of Iuka, which could hardly be called a victory tor the Federals. The battle ot' Corinth, dis- astrous for the Confederacy since Grant was thus left free to move upon Vicks- burg, took place Oct. 3-4, 1862. General Pricels command was engaged. Van Dorn was unreasonably held responsible for the reverse, simply ill fortune, and was at once superseded. In February, 1863, his men being dissatisfied east' ofthe river, General Price was granted a transfer to the Trans-llfississippi de- partment, under Kirby Smith. Thereafter, until his Missouri Expedition, his operations were confined to Arkansas. For two months he was in com- mand of the district, vice Lieut. General Holmes, QJuly 23-September 25, 18631. Pricels Missourians served without pay. Many ot' them had been driven into the Contedcrate ranks through out-rages perpetrated by the military authori- ties in their State. These 111011 were ready at any time ter an incursion into Mis- souri. As early as March, 1865, General Price wrote to Kirby Smith at Shreve- port proposing an advance into Missouri. 4' VVe would be able, he said, not only to sustain ourselves there, but to attract to our army thousands of recruits. I need not point out to you the immense relief the presence of an army in Mis- souri would give our overtzasked armies beyond the Mississippi. It appears that the expedition was carefully planned. Reynolds, Jacksonls lieutenant- governor, wrote from Texas in June that one purpose was to influence the elections in November. There is evidence that the O. A. K. lodges were moving in July in sympathetic preparation for Price. In his report after the event, General Curtis says, 4' But for the presence of our troops the people of South- west Missouri were overpowered, and Price had everything, including the approaching elections, his own way. Adjutant General Eno l:Department of the Missourij thought that the plan was to revolutionize the State, destroy Kansas, and operate 011 the Presidential elections. General Price, HO111llS famed white horse, entered Missouri through Ri pley county, almost due south of St. Louis, 011 September 19, 1864. His three numbered about 12,000 men. By October 7, he was within sight of Jefferson City, having passed within forty miles of St. Louis. The governor of Kansas issued a proclamation: 4' The State is in peril, Price and his rebel forces threaten it with invasion, Kansas must be ready to hurl them back at any cost. Ad- 22
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Page 26 text:
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lgatriniinm nf the Glnllrgr Tun HAMPDEN-SIDNIQY Bovs IN 'rms REVOLUTIONARY WAR BY Goonnrncn A. WILSON, JR. p ut played by Hampden Sldnev hoys in the Wu for Independence is by no means an etsy one In th rt day of gl eat men and gl eater deeds Htmpden S1dney's 'diop 111 the bucket was probably too small to attract the attention of the historians of the time, and we must suppose that her patriotic students and professors were too modest to hand down in writing the story of their own deeds of valor. At all events, were it not for that most valuable work, Dr. Foote's Sketches of Virginia, we of the present curriculum would know nothing about the gallant and patriotic efforts of our predecessors in the infant years ofthe college. The quotations given below are taken from the first volume of tl1c Sketches, which contains, so far as we can discover, the only records bearing on this in- teresting portion 'of Hampden-Sidney's history. 4' As the declaration of national independence spread through the cou11try, the youths were roused and offered themselves as soldiers to redeem that pledge of 'our lives, our fortunes, and our sacred honor! Busy as the students were in their studies, their hearts were full of patriotism, and with the arts and sciences of academic life they would learn the rudiments of the art of War .... Mr. John Blair Smith was chosen captain of a company of the students, about sixty- iive in number, over sixteen years of age, Mr. David Witherspoon lieutenant, and Mr. Samuel Venable .... was chosen ensign. The students wore uniform, viz., a hunting shirt dyed purple, and every student.. although under sixteen years of age, was mustered every month. Captain Smith was at this time a tutor in the institution. He later became the distinguished divine, the beloved President of Hampden-Sidney, and the founder of Union College, N. Y. There is more to be said of him. Lieutenant Witherspoon, whose father signed the Declaration of Independence, was also a tutor. Ensign Venable was a stu- dent, living in a hut which his father had erected on the college grounds for his accommodation. This purple-shirted company of beardless lads, led by their gal- lant captain, were in dead earnest and stood ever ready to answer at a moment's 24 HE task of portraying, after the lapse of a century and a quarter, the z ' 1 . - , 2 f 1 . I 4 1 2 A . I i ' ' 2 - ' ' ' ' .
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