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Tour Route On
December 31, 1862, three columns of cavalry under the command of Brigadier General
John S. Marmaduke left Lewisburg, Arkansas and trotted north on separate roads
toward Missouri and the Union supply line. The main column proceeded north through
Forsyth, Missouri to Ozark. A Federal Garrison stationed there fled and the Confederates
burned its abandoned fort. A second column, commanded by Colonel Emmett McDonald,
destroyed the federal fort at Lawrence Mill on Beaver Creek, north of Forsyth.
The third column, under Colonel Joseph Porter passed north through Hartville.
All three commands were to converge on Springfield in an attempt to capture the
city's lightly defended warehouses of military supplies.
On the night of January 7, 1863, Federals from the Ozark garrison reached Springfield,
informing the local commander, Brigadier General Egbert Brown, that thousands
of Confederate cavalry were only a couple of hours away, headed for Springfield.
Panic ensued as Brown alternately considered a full scale retreat and destruction
of all supplies at Springfield or defending the town. Eventually Brown's subordinates
convinced him to make an effort at defense. He therefore sent word to the surrounding
communities, calling forth the Missouri State Militia and the Enrolled Missouri
Militia, with orders to march immediately to Springfield. Throughout the night
of the seventh, the Federals issued arms and ammunition to soldiers and civilians
alike. They rigged makeshift cannon and prepared warehouses of supplies so they
could be set afire easily in the event of defeat. Although
Springfield was lightly garrisoned, it had one distinct advantage. It was surrounded
by a network of four completed earthen forts which commanded the high ground.
To provide a clear field of fire south of Fort No. 4, located on the east side
of South Avenue at the edge of the town, Brown ordered a number of homes burned.
As
the morning of January 8, 1863 dawned, the Confederate columns under Marmaduke
and MacDonald approached Springfield from the south. The weather was cold. The
sky was partly overcast, and the sun shown balefully down upon the field of battle.
Since Porter's column had yet to arrive, Marmaduke occupied the morning with skirmishes
to feel out the Union lines and develop their strength. Finally at 10:30 a.m.,
the Confederates dismounted and launched an assault upon Fort No. 4. They advanced
across open fields seeking such shelter as they could get from tree stumps, piles
of rock and the charred remains of the homes burned by Union forces. Despite repeated
valiant efforts, the assault on the fort failed. Marmaduke
then resolved to take Springfield by an oblique attack from the west. The Confederates
were drawn by the cover offered by a ravine that led uphill toward town from what
is now the intersection of Grand Avenue and Grant Street. At the head of this
draw stood a two-story brick academy surrounded by a stockade. Used by the Federals
as a prison, it stood just west of what is now the intersection of Campbell Avenue
and State Street. Severe fighting erupted around the stockade. The Confederates
were able to seize the building and use it as their own fortress to return the
fire from Fort No. 4. In this attack, Union troops supporting the fort were pushed
back to College Street, over a mile from their original position. This phase of
the assault saw the most severe casualties, hand-to-hand fighting, and the capture
of a cannon by the Confederates. With
the sun sinking toward the horizon, Marmaduke launched a final assault against
Fort No. 4 from the west. The Union forces again repelled the attack. As night
fell, the Confederates withdrew to the Phelps Farm (now Phelps Grove Park). The
Battle of Springfield ended, and the Union supply depot was safe. Of the approximately
2,000 Federal troops and 2,000 Confederate troops present, almost 100 were killed
or later died from their wounds, and 300 to 400 were wounded. The absence of Porter's
column, delayed by a skirmish at Hartville, had greatly impeded Marmaduke's efforts,
and the Confederate raiders soon returned to Arkansas.
Provided
by the Museum of Ozarks' History |