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Capture of Sedalia

Capture of Sedalia
Part of the American Civil War
DateOctober 15, 1864; 159 years ago (1864-10-15)
Location38°42′11″N 93°13′52″W / 38.70306°N 93.23111°W / 38.70306; -93.23111
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
 Confederate States  United States
Commanders and leaders
M. Jeff Thompson[a] John D. Crawford
Units involved
Shelby's Brigade Home guards and Enrolled Missouri Militia
7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry
Strength
c. 1,200 men c. 830 men
Casualties and losses
Unknown 1 dead and 23 wounded
Several hundred captured and released or paroled
Sedalia
class=notpageimage|
Location within Missouri
Sedalia
Sedalia (the United States)

The capture of Sedalia occurred during the American Civil War when a Confederate force captured the Union garrison of Sedalia, Missouri, on October 15, 1864. Confederate Major General Sterling Price, who was a former Governor of Missouri and had commanded the Missouri State Guard in the early days of the war, had launched an invasion into the state of Missouri on August 29. He hoped to distract the Union from more important areas and cause a popular uprising against Union control of the state. Price had to abandon his goal of capturing St. Louis after a bloody repulse at the Battle of Fort Davidson and moved into the pro-Confederate region of Little Dixie in central Missouri.

Many recruits in the region joined the Confederates in the region, and Price soon needed supplies and weapons for these men. He sent side raids to Glasgow and Sedalia. One of these involved sending a 1,200-man brigade led by Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson of the Missouri State Guard towards Sedalia. Despite learning of Union movements in the area, Thompson attacked the town, which was primarily defended by militia. The initial Confederate attack quickly dispersed most of the defenders, although some held out until Thompson brought up the rest of his force. Many of the militiamen were captured. After paroling or releasing their prisoners and plundering the town, the Confederates left to rejoin Price's main force. On October 23, Price was defeated at the Battle of Westport near Kansas City. The Confederates then retreated, suffering defeats at the battles of Mine Creek and Second Newtonia later in October, before eventually entering Texas.

Prelude edit

At the outset of the American Civil War in 1861, the state of Missouri was a slave state. Governor Claiborne Fox Jackson supported secession, and formed the pro-secession Missouri State Guard, a militia unit. Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon of the Union Army evicted Jackson and the pro-secession portion of the state legislature from the state capital of Jefferson City.[2] The Missouri State Guard won several battles, but Union forces had the secessionists restricted to the southwestern portion of the state by the end of the year. Jackson and the secessionists formed the Confederate government of Missouri, which would function as a government-in-exile for much of its existence, moving from place to place before settling in Marshall, Texas; Missouri now had two competing governments.[3][4] The Union gained control of Missouri in March 1862 after the Battle of Pea Ridge,[5] and the state was then plagued by guerrilla warfare throughout 1862 and 1863.[6]

Price's Raid edit

 
Map of Price's Raid

By the beginning of September 1864, events east of the Mississippi River, especially the Confederate defeat in the Atlanta campaign, gave Abraham Lincoln, who supported continuing the war, an edge in the 1864 United States Presidential Election over George B. McClellan, who promoted a war-ending armistice that would preserve slavery.[7] Meanwhile, in the Trans-Mississippi Theater, the Confederates had defeated Union attackers in the Red River campaign in Louisiana in March through May. As events east of the Mississippi turned against the Confederates, General Edmund Kirby Smith, commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department, was ordered to transfer the infantry under his command to the fighting in the Eastern and Western Theaters. However, this proved to be impossible, as the Union Navy controlled the Mississippi River, preventing a large scale crossing.[8]

Despite having limited resources for an offensive, Smith decided that an attack designed to divert Union troops from the principal theaters of combat would have the same effect as the proposed transfer of troops. Major General Sterling Price and the Confederate Governor of Missouri Thomas Caute Reynolds suggested that an invasion of Missouri would be an effective offensive; Smith approved the plan and appointed Price to command the offensive.[8] Price was a former governor of Missouri, had served in the Mexican-American War, and had commanded the Missouri State Guard in 1861 before entering Confederate service.[9] Price expected that the campaign would create a popular uprising against Union control of Missouri, divert Union troops away from principal theaters of combat (many of the Union troops previously defending Missouri had been transferred out of the state, leaving the Missouri State Militia as the state's primary defensive force), and aid McClellan's chance of defeating Lincoln.[8] On September 19, Price's column of about 12,000 to 13,000 men entered the state.[10]

Price soon learned that a Union force held Fort Davidson near Pilot Knob. Not wanting to leave a large Union force in the rear of his army, Price decided to attack the Union post. The attack, known as the Battle of Fort Davidson, occurred on September 27, and the Confederates were repulsed with heavy losses. While the fort's defenders retreated that night, Price decided to abandon plans to capture St. Louis as his troops had suffered at least 800 casualties and their morale had been dented.[11] After giving up the proposed St. Louis thrust, Price's army headed for Jefferson City, although the Confederates were slowed by bringing along a large supply train.[12] On October 7, the Confederates approached Jefferson City, which was held by about 7,000 men, mostly inexperienced militia. Faulty Confederate intelligence placed Union strength at 15,000, and Price, fearing another defeat like Fort Davidson, decided not to attack the city, and began moving his army towards Boonville the next day.[13] Boonville was in the pro-Confederate region of Little Dixie in central Missouri, and according to different sources Price was able to recruit around either 1,200[14] or 2,500 men.[15] Price, needing weapons and supplies,[16] then authorized two raids away from his main body of troops: Brigadier General John B. Clark Jr. was sent to Glasgow,[17] and Missouri State Guard Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson's[1] brigade of Brigadier General Joseph O. Shelby's division to Sedalia.[17]

Battle edit

 
Map of Pettis County, Missouri from 1872. Sedalia is the large town in the center, Georgetown is above Sedalia, and Longwood is in the upper right

The particular allure of Sedalia for Price was a rumor that the Union army had thousands of mules and cattle in the town, which would be helpful in feeding and remounting the Confederate force.[18] Thompson's command consisted of Shelby's Iron Brigade made up of Slayback's Missouri Cavalry Battalion, Elliott's Missouri Cavalry Regiment, the 5th Missouri Cavalry Regiment, and Collins' Missouri Battery;[19] the force totaled around 1,200[20] or 1,500 men.[21] While Thompson's command had a nominal strength of about 2,000 men, many of the unit's soldiers were absent visiting their homes in the Boonslick area.[20][22] Slayback's battalion had been performing scouting duties and rejoined Thompson's command at Longwood. The unit reported that Union cavalry were operating in the area but had moved towards the west.[23]

Continuing their movement the next day, the Confederate soldiers captured two Union stragglers near Georgetown who claimed to be former Confederates forced into Union service. The prisoners identified the Union cavalry sighted by Slayback as Brigadier General John B. Sanborn's command, and informed Thompson that Union forces were concentrating at Jefferson City and Kansas City, in addition to a Union infantry force at California that was preparing to head to Georgetown.[23] Thompson, who had established a chain of relay couriers along his path,[22] sent a message to Price to inform him of this development.[24] Thompson initially decided to call off the attack on Sedalia, before changing his mind in the belief that the Union infantry was not heading in his direction and that Sanborn was too far away to interfere.[23]

Sedalia was located in the middle of an expansive prairie with few trees or other features to provide cover to an attacking force.[25] Two redoubts and some rifle pits existed as defensive positions.[19] The town was held by almost 800 home guard and Enrolled Missouri Militia,[25] including men of the 1st Missouri State Militia Cavalry Regiment.[26] Additionally, 33 men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry Regiment under the command of Captain Oscar B. Queen were in the town to meet a wagon train of ammunition coming from Georgetown.[25][26][27] Colonel John D. Crawford of the 40th Enrolled Missouri Militia commanded the garrison.[25]

Thompson believed that surprise gave him the greatest chance of success[25] and attacked before daylight on October 15.[19] Benjamin F. Elliott's regiment, which was largely dressed in captured Union uniforms, led the advance and reached within pistol shot of the Union pickets before being discovered. The Union pickets were scattered and driven back into town. Crawford and many of the Enrolled Missouri Militia soldiers followed them in their flight.[25][28] Queen claimed that Crawford had ordered his men to retreat as soon as Thompson's men were sighted.[27] However, the men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry held, and the Union soldiers were able to form a point of resistance. Elliott's regiment had gotten ahead of the rest of the Confederate force and fell back after meeting the unexpected resistance.[25] Within ten minutes, the rest of Thompson's brigade, including the artillery, arrived. Confederate artillery fire scattered the remaining Enrolled Missouri Militia soldiers, and the men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry surrendered the town.[29] Thompson reported that the Confederates were unaware that the defenders had fled, as they had left their flags flying above the fortifications.[26] Confederate soldiers chased the militiamen as they fled across the prairie, inflicting an unknown number of casualties.[30]

Aftermath edit

 
Brigadier General M. Jeff Thompson of the Missouri State Guard

Some degree of plundering occurred after the fighting ended. The historian Paul B. Jenkins, writing in 1906, stated that Thompson's men looted Sedalia, with government property being particular targets for destruction,[31] while the historian Paul Kirkman states that Thompson attempted to limit the plundering to military-related supplies.[21] The modern historian Kyle Sinisi stated that Thompson attempted to keep the capture of military property orderly, although things got out of Thompson's control despite the Confederate commander performing actions such as shooting a mule a soldier was riding and spanking some of his men with the flat of his sword. Sinisi states that the looting was primarily restricted to businesses, not private homes.[30] Some eyewitnesses reported seeing Confederates riding barefoot and carrying their boots filled with stolen whiskey.[31] Sedalia's post office was plundered. Thompson claimed that "no outrage or murder was committed"[32] and reported capturing a number of weapons and wagons of "goods suitable for soldiers". Most of the Confederate units that had participated in the fighting became disorganized, and Slayback's Battalion, which was in the best state of organization,[33] performed guard duty after the battle.[34] Thompson captured almost 2,000 mules and cattle.[30]

The Union suffered one man killed and 23 wounded.[35] Several hundred Union soldiers were captured, but Thompson did not have the ability to keep them as prisoners or issue them standard written paroles.[36][32] Treatment of the prisoners varied between how Thompson classified them: a few hundred were classified as home guard and released, while 75 Enrolled Missouri Militia and 47 Missouri State Militia were given nonstandard verbal paroles,[37] including threats if they reneged on the terms. Several Union officers protested that the practice was illegal, but were ignored.[36] Queen considered the paroles to be "worthless" and returned to Jefferson City for further orders.[38] Knowing that they could be trapped by Union forces if they tarried, the Confederates left Sedalia within hours.[39] Thompson moved north to rejoin Price's main body and rejoined it at the Salt Fork River,[40] near Waverly, on October 18.[41]

Clark's raid on Glasgow was also successful. By October 19, the Confederates had reached Lexington, where they fought against a Union force in the Second Battle of Lexington. Two days later, Union Major General James G. Blunt attempted to stop Price at the crossing of the Little Blue River, but was defeated in the ensuing battle. After fighting several more actions, Price encountered nearly 20,000 Union soldiers near Kansas City on October 23. The Battle of Westport followed, and Price's 9,000 soldiers were soundly defeated.[42] Price then fell back into Kansas but was defeated in the Battle of Mine Creek on October 25. About 600 Confederate soldiers were captured at Mine Creek. Later that day, Price ordered the destruction of almost all of the cumbersome wagon train.[43] The final major action of the campaign occurred on October 28 near Newtonia, Missouri. In the Second Battle of Newtonia Price was defeated by Blunt; by this point, the Confederate army was disintegrating. Union troops continued pursuing Price until the Confederates reached the Arkansas River on November 8; the Confederates did not stop retreating until they reached Texas[44] towards the end of November 1864.[45] The campaign failed to affect the election, and while part of the XVI Corps was diverted to Missouri, the transfer was only temporary and did not have a major impact on campaigns in other theaters.[46]

References edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Thompson's commission was in the Missouri State Guard, not the Confederate States Army.[1]

Citations edit

  1. ^ a b Warner 1987, p. xviii.
  2. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 19–20.
  3. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 20–21, 23–25.
  4. ^ Geise 1962, p. 193.
  5. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 34–37.
  6. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 377–379.
  7. ^ Kennedy 1998, p. 343.
  8. ^ a b c Collins 2016, pp. 27–28.
  9. ^ "Sterling Price". National Park Service. Retrieved 13 November 2021.
  10. ^ Collins 2016, pp. 37, 39.
  11. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 380–382.
  12. ^ Collins 2016, p. 53.
  13. ^ Collins 2016, p. 57.
  14. ^ Collins 2016, p. 59.
  15. ^ Sinisi 2020, p. 125.
  16. ^ Sinisi 2020, p. 127.
  17. ^ a b Collins 2016, p. 63.
  18. ^ Sinisi 2020, pp. 134–135.
  19. ^ a b c Jenkins 1906, p. 52.
  20. ^ a b Sinisi 2020, p. 135.
  21. ^ a b Kirkman 2011, p. 79.
  22. ^ a b Lause 2016, p. 35.
  23. ^ a b c Sinisi 2020, pp. 135–136.
  24. ^ Monnett 1995, p. 31.
  25. ^ a b c d e f g Sinisi 2020, p. 136.
  26. ^ a b c Lause 2016, p. 36.
  27. ^ a b Official Records 1893, p. 364.
  28. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 84, 86.
  29. ^ Sinisi 2020, pp. 136–137.
  30. ^ a b c Sinisi 2020, p. 137.
  31. ^ a b Jenkins 1906, pp. 52–53.
  32. ^ a b Lause 2016, p. 37.
  33. ^ Official Records 1893, p. 665.
  34. ^ McGhee 2008, p. 132.
  35. ^ "Missouri Civil War Battles". National Park Service. Retrieved 29 August 2020.
  36. ^ a b Collins 2016, pp. 137–138.
  37. ^ Lause 2016, p. 38.
  38. ^ Official Records 1893, p. 365.
  39. ^ Monnett 1995, pp. 31–32.
  40. ^ Sinisi 2020, pp. 137–138.
  41. ^ Monnett 1995, p. 32.
  42. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 382–384.
  43. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 384–385.
  44. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 385–386.
  45. ^ Collins 2016, p. 186.
  46. ^ Collins 2016, p. 187.

Sources edit

  • Collins, Charles D. Jr. (2016). Battlefield Atlas of Price's Missouri Expedition of 1864 (PDF). Fort Leavenworth, Kansas: Combat Studies Institute Press. ISBN 978-1-940804-27-9.
  • Geise, William R. (October 1962). "Missouri's Confederate Capital in Marshall, Texas". The Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 66 (2): 193–207. JSTOR 30236239.
  • Jenkins, Paul Burrill (1906). The Battle of Westport (PDF). Kansas City, Missouri: Franklin Hudson Publishing Company. OCLC 475778855.
  • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. (1998). The Civil War Battlefield Guide (2nd ed.). Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-74012-5.
  • Kirkman, Paul (2011). The Battle of Westport: Missouri's Great Confederate Raid. Charleston, South Carolina: The History Press. ISBN 978-1-61423-131-8.
  • Lause, Mark A. (2016). The Collapse of Price's Raid: The Beginning of the End in Civil War Missouri. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-826-22025-7.
  • McGhee, James E. (2008). Guide to Missouri Confederate Regiments, 1861–1865. Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 978-1-55728-870-7.
  • Monnett, Howard N. (1995) [1964]. Action Before Westport 1864 (Revised ed.). Boulder, Colorado: University Press of Colorado. ISBN 978-0-87081-413-6.
  • Sinisi, Kyle S. (2020) [2015]. The Last Hurrah: Sterling Price's Missouri Expedition of 1864 (paperback ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 978-1-5381-4151-9.
  • United States War Department. (1893). Davis, George B.; Perry, Leslie J.; Kirkley, Joseph W. (eds.). The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, Series I, Volume XLI, Part I: Reports. Washington: Government Printing Office. OCLC 262466842 – via Internet Archive.
  • Warner, Ezra J. (1987) [1959]. Generals in Gray (Louisiana Paperback ed.). Baton Rouge, Louisiana: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-3150-3.

capture, sedalia, part, american, civil, wardateoctober, 1864, years, 1864, locationsedalia, missouri38, 70306, 23111, 70306, 23111resultconfederate, victorybelligerents, confederate, states, united, statescommanders, leadersm, jeff, thompson, john, crawfordun. Capture of SedaliaPart of the American Civil WarDateOctober 15 1864 159 years ago 1864 10 15 LocationSedalia Missouri38 42 11 N 93 13 52 W 38 70306 N 93 23111 W 38 70306 93 23111ResultConfederate victoryBelligerents Confederate States United StatesCommanders and leadersM Jeff Thompson a John D CrawfordUnits involvedShelby s BrigadeHome guards and Enrolled Missouri Militia 7th Missouri State Militia CavalryStrengthc 1 200 menc 830 menCasualties and lossesUnknown1 dead and 23 wounded Several hundred captured and released or paroledSedaliaclass notpageimage Location within MissouriShow map of MissouriSedaliaSedalia the United States Show map of the United States The capture of Sedalia occurred during the American Civil War when a Confederate force captured the Union garrison of Sedalia Missouri on October 15 1864 Confederate Major General Sterling Price who was a former Governor of Missouri and had commanded the Missouri State Guard in the early days of the war had launched an invasion into the state of Missouri on August 29 He hoped to distract the Union from more important areas and cause a popular uprising against Union control of the state Price had to abandon his goal of capturing St Louis after a bloody repulse at the Battle of Fort Davidson and moved into the pro Confederate region of Little Dixie in central Missouri Many recruits in the region joined the Confederates in the region and Price soon needed supplies and weapons for these men He sent side raids to Glasgow and Sedalia One of these involved sending a 1 200 man brigade led by Brigadier General M Jeff Thompson of the Missouri State Guard towards Sedalia Despite learning of Union movements in the area Thompson attacked the town which was primarily defended by militia The initial Confederate attack quickly dispersed most of the defenders although some held out until Thompson brought up the rest of his force Many of the militiamen were captured After paroling or releasing their prisoners and plundering the town the Confederates left to rejoin Price s main force On October 23 Price was defeated at the Battle of Westport near Kansas City The Confederates then retreated suffering defeats at the battles of Mine Creek and Second Newtonia later in October before eventually entering Texas Contents 1 Prelude 1 1 Price s Raid 2 Battle 3 Aftermath 4 References 4 1 Footnotes 4 2 Citations 4 3 SourcesPrelude editMain article Missouri in the American Civil War At the outset of the American Civil War in 1861 the state of Missouri was a slave state Governor Claiborne Fox Jackson supported secession and formed the pro secession Missouri State Guard a militia unit Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon of the Union Army evicted Jackson and the pro secession portion of the state legislature from the state capital of Jefferson City 2 The Missouri State Guard won several battles but Union forces had the secessionists restricted to the southwestern portion of the state by the end of the year Jackson and the secessionists formed the Confederate government of Missouri which would function as a government in exile for much of its existence moving from place to place before settling in Marshall Texas Missouri now had two competing governments 3 4 The Union gained control of Missouri in March 1862 after the Battle of Pea Ridge 5 and the state was then plagued by guerrilla warfare throughout 1862 and 1863 6 Price s Raid edit Main article Price s Raid nbsp Map of Price s Raid By the beginning of September 1864 events east of the Mississippi River especially the Confederate defeat in the Atlanta campaign gave Abraham Lincoln who supported continuing the war an edge in the 1864 United States Presidential Election over George B McClellan who promoted a war ending armistice that would preserve slavery 7 Meanwhile in the Trans Mississippi Theater the Confederates had defeated Union attackers in the Red River campaign in Louisiana in March through May As events east of the Mississippi turned against the Confederates General Edmund Kirby Smith commander of the Trans Mississippi Department was ordered to transfer the infantry under his command to the fighting in the Eastern and Western Theaters However this proved to be impossible as the Union Navy controlled the Mississippi River preventing a large scale crossing 8 Despite having limited resources for an offensive Smith decided that an attack designed to divert Union troops from the principal theaters of combat would have the same effect as the proposed transfer of troops Major General Sterling Price and the Confederate Governor of Missouri Thomas Caute Reynolds suggested that an invasion of Missouri would be an effective offensive Smith approved the plan and appointed Price to command the offensive 8 Price was a former governor of Missouri had served in the Mexican American War and had commanded the Missouri State Guard in 1861 before entering Confederate service 9 Price expected that the campaign would create a popular uprising against Union control of Missouri divert Union troops away from principal theaters of combat many of the Union troops previously defending Missouri had been transferred out of the state leaving the Missouri State Militia as the state s primary defensive force and aid McClellan s chance of defeating Lincoln 8 On September 19 Price s column of about 12 000 to 13 000 men entered the state 10 Price soon learned that a Union force held Fort Davidson near Pilot Knob Not wanting to leave a large Union force in the rear of his army Price decided to attack the Union post The attack known as the Battle of Fort Davidson occurred on September 27 and the Confederates were repulsed with heavy losses While the fort s defenders retreated that night Price decided to abandon plans to capture St Louis as his troops had suffered at least 800 casualties and their morale had been dented 11 After giving up the proposed St Louis thrust Price s army headed for Jefferson City although the Confederates were slowed by bringing along a large supply train 12 On October 7 the Confederates approached Jefferson City which was held by about 7 000 men mostly inexperienced militia Faulty Confederate intelligence placed Union strength at 15 000 and Price fearing another defeat like Fort Davidson decided not to attack the city and began moving his army towards Boonville the next day 13 Boonville was in the pro Confederate region of Little Dixie in central Missouri and according to different sources Price was able to recruit around either 1 200 14 or 2 500 men 15 Price needing weapons and supplies 16 then authorized two raids away from his main body of troops Brigadier General John B Clark Jr was sent to Glasgow 17 and Missouri State Guard Brigadier General M Jeff Thompson s 1 brigade of Brigadier General Joseph O Shelby s division to Sedalia 17 Battle edit nbsp Map of Pettis County Missouri from 1872 Sedalia is the large town in the center Georgetown is above Sedalia and Longwood is in the upper right The particular allure of Sedalia for Price was a rumor that the Union army had thousands of mules and cattle in the town which would be helpful in feeding and remounting the Confederate force 18 Thompson s command consisted of Shelby s Iron Brigade made up of Slayback s Missouri Cavalry Battalion Elliott s Missouri Cavalry Regiment the 5th Missouri Cavalry Regiment and Collins Missouri Battery 19 the force totaled around 1 200 20 or 1 500 men 21 While Thompson s command had a nominal strength of about 2 000 men many of the unit s soldiers were absent visiting their homes in the Boonslick area 20 22 Slayback s battalion had been performing scouting duties and rejoined Thompson s command at Longwood The unit reported that Union cavalry were operating in the area but had moved towards the west 23 Continuing their movement the next day the Confederate soldiers captured two Union stragglers near Georgetown who claimed to be former Confederates forced into Union service The prisoners identified the Union cavalry sighted by Slayback as Brigadier General John B Sanborn s command and informed Thompson that Union forces were concentrating at Jefferson City and Kansas City in addition to a Union infantry force at California that was preparing to head to Georgetown 23 Thompson who had established a chain of relay couriers along his path 22 sent a message to Price to inform him of this development 24 Thompson initially decided to call off the attack on Sedalia before changing his mind in the belief that the Union infantry was not heading in his direction and that Sanborn was too far away to interfere 23 Sedalia was located in the middle of an expansive prairie with few trees or other features to provide cover to an attacking force 25 Two redoubts and some rifle pits existed as defensive positions 19 The town was held by almost 800 home guard and Enrolled Missouri Militia 25 including men of the 1st Missouri State Militia Cavalry Regiment 26 Additionally 33 men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry Regiment under the command of Captain Oscar B Queen were in the town to meet a wagon train of ammunition coming from Georgetown 25 26 27 Colonel John D Crawford of the 40th Enrolled Missouri Militia commanded the garrison 25 Thompson believed that surprise gave him the greatest chance of success 25 and attacked before daylight on October 15 19 Benjamin F Elliott s regiment which was largely dressed in captured Union uniforms led the advance and reached within pistol shot of the Union pickets before being discovered The Union pickets were scattered and driven back into town Crawford and many of the Enrolled Missouri Militia soldiers followed them in their flight 25 28 Queen claimed that Crawford had ordered his men to retreat as soon as Thompson s men were sighted 27 However the men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry held and the Union soldiers were able to form a point of resistance Elliott s regiment had gotten ahead of the rest of the Confederate force and fell back after meeting the unexpected resistance 25 Within ten minutes the rest of Thompson s brigade including the artillery arrived Confederate artillery fire scattered the remaining Enrolled Missouri Militia soldiers and the men of the 7th Missouri State Militia Cavalry surrendered the town 29 Thompson reported that the Confederates were unaware that the defenders had fled as they had left their flags flying above the fortifications 26 Confederate soldiers chased the militiamen as they fled across the prairie inflicting an unknown number of casualties 30 Aftermath edit nbsp Brigadier General M Jeff Thompson of the Missouri State Guard Some degree of plundering occurred after the fighting ended The historian Paul B Jenkins writing in 1906 stated that Thompson s men looted Sedalia with government property being particular targets for destruction 31 while the historian Paul Kirkman states that Thompson attempted to limit the plundering to military related supplies 21 The modern historian Kyle Sinisi stated that Thompson attempted to keep the capture of military property orderly although things got out of Thompson s control despite the Confederate commander performing actions such as shooting a mule a soldier was riding and spanking some of his men with the flat of his sword Sinisi states that the looting was primarily restricted to businesses not private homes 30 Some eyewitnesses reported seeing Confederates riding barefoot and carrying their boots filled with stolen whiskey 31 Sedalia s post office was plundered Thompson claimed that no outrage or murder was committed 32 and reported capturing a number of weapons and wagons of goods suitable for soldiers Most of the Confederate units that had participated in the fighting became disorganized and Slayback s Battalion which was in the best state of organization 33 performed guard duty after the battle 34 Thompson captured almost 2 000 mules and cattle 30 The Union suffered one man killed and 23 wounded 35 Several hundred Union soldiers were captured but Thompson did not have the ability to keep them as prisoners or issue them standard written paroles 36 32 Treatment of the prisoners varied between how Thompson classified them a few hundred were classified as home guard and released while 75 Enrolled Missouri Militia and 47 Missouri State Militia were given nonstandard verbal paroles 37 including threats if they reneged on the terms Several Union officers protested that the practice was illegal but were ignored 36 Queen considered the paroles to be worthless and returned to Jefferson City for further orders 38 Knowing that they could be trapped by Union forces if they tarried the Confederates left Sedalia within hours 39 Thompson moved north to rejoin Price s main body and rejoined it at the Salt Fork River 40 near Waverly on October 18 41 Clark s raid on Glasgow was also successful By October 19 the Confederates had reached Lexington where they fought against a Union force in the Second Battle of Lexington Two days later Union Major General James G Blunt attempted to stop Price at the crossing of the Little Blue River but was defeated in the ensuing battle After fighting several more actions Price encountered nearly 20 000 Union soldiers near Kansas City on October 23 The Battle of Westport followed and Price s 9 000 soldiers were soundly defeated 42 Price then fell back into Kansas but was defeated in the Battle of Mine Creek on October 25 About 600 Confederate soldiers were captured at Mine Creek Later that day Price ordered the destruction of almost all of the cumbersome wagon train 43 The final major action of the campaign occurred on October 28 near Newtonia Missouri In the Second Battle of Newtonia Price was defeated by Blunt by this point the Confederate army was disintegrating Union troops continued pursuing Price until the Confederates reached the Arkansas River on November 8 the Confederates did not stop retreating until they reached Texas 44 towards the end of November 1864 45 The campaign failed to affect the election and while part of the XVI Corps was diverted to Missouri the transfer was only temporary and did not have a major impact on campaigns in other theaters 46 References editFootnotes edit Thompson s commission was in the Missouri State Guard not the Confederate States Army 1 Citations edit a b Warner 1987 p xviii Kennedy 1998 pp 19 20 Kennedy 1998 pp 20 21 23 25 Geise 1962 p 193 Kennedy 1998 pp 34 37 Kennedy 1998 pp 377 379 Kennedy 1998 p 343 a b c Collins 2016 pp 27 28 Sterling Price National Park Service Retrieved 13 November 2021 Collins 2016 pp 37 39 Kennedy 1998 pp 380 382 Collins 2016 p 53 Collins 2016 p 57 Collins 2016 p 59 Sinisi 2020 p 125 Sinisi 2020 p 127 a b Collins 2016 p 63 Sinisi 2020 pp 134 135 a b c Jenkins 1906 p 52 a b Sinisi 2020 p 135 a b Kirkman 2011 p 79 a b Lause 2016 p 35 a b c Sinisi 2020 pp 135 136 Monnett 1995 p 31 a b c d e f g Sinisi 2020 p 136 a b c Lause 2016 p 36 a b Official Records 1893 p 364 McGhee 2008 pp 84 86 Sinisi 2020 pp 136 137 a b c Sinisi 2020 p 137 a b Jenkins 1906 pp 52 53 a b Lause 2016 p 37 Official Records 1893 p 665 McGhee 2008 p 132 Missouri Civil War Battles National Park Service Retrieved 29 August 2020 a b Collins 2016 pp 137 138 Lause 2016 p 38 Official Records 1893 p 365 Monnett 1995 pp 31 32 Sinisi 2020 pp 137 138 Monnett 1995 p 32 Kennedy 1998 pp 382 384 Kennedy 1998 pp 384 385 Kennedy 1998 pp 385 386 Collins 2016 p 186 Collins 2016 p 187 Sources edit Collins Charles D Jr 2016 Battlefield Atlas of Price s Missouri Expedition of 1864 PDF Fort Leavenworth Kansas Combat Studies Institute Press ISBN 978 1 940804 27 9 Geise William R October 1962 Missouri s Confederate Capital in Marshall Texas The Southwestern Historical Quarterly 66 2 193 207 JSTOR 30236239 Jenkins Paul Burrill 1906 The Battle of Westport PDF Kansas City Missouri Franklin Hudson Publishing Company OCLC 475778855 Kennedy Frances H ed 1998 The Civil War Battlefield Guide 2nd ed Boston New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 74012 5 Kirkman Paul 2011 The Battle of Westport Missouri s Great Confederate Raid Charleston South Carolina The History Press ISBN 978 1 61423 131 8 Lause Mark A 2016 The Collapse of Price s Raid The Beginning of the End in Civil War Missouri Columbia Missouri University of Missouri Press ISBN 978 0 826 22025 7 McGhee James E 2008 Guide to Missouri Confederate Regiments 1861 1865 Fayetteville Arkansas University of Arkansas Press ISBN 978 1 55728 870 7 Monnett Howard N 1995 1964 Action Before Westport 1864 Revised ed Boulder Colorado University Press of Colorado ISBN 978 0 87081 413 6 Sinisi Kyle S 2020 2015 The Last Hurrah Sterling Price s Missouri Expedition of 1864 paperback ed Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 1 5381 4151 9 United States War Department 1893 Davis George B Perry Leslie J Kirkley Joseph W eds The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Series I Volume XLI Part I Reports Washington Government Printing Office OCLC 262466842 via Internet Archive Warner Ezra J 1987 1959 Generals in Gray Louisiana Paperback ed Baton Rouge Louisiana Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 3150 3 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Capture of Sedalia amp oldid 1162554025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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