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9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion

The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion, also known as Pindall's Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion, was a unit that served in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War. The battalion was formed in late 1862, in compliance with an earlier authorization by the Confederate States Congress for each brigade to have an associated battalion of sharpshooters. When first formed, the men had no unique qualifications to serve as sharpshooters and were drawn from a defunct artillery battery, a partisan rangers unit, and infantrymen. The unit's first major battle was the Battle of Prairie Grove in December 1862.

9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion
Pindall's Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion
Flag of the type carried by the battalion[1]
ActiveNovember 29, 1862, to June 7, 1865
Country Confederate States of America
Branch Confederate States Army
TypeSharpshooter
Sizebattalion
EngagementsAmerican Civil War

The first half of 1863 saw the battalion serving at various points in Arkansas. When a Confederate force attacked the Federal-held city of Helena, Arkansas, on July 4, in the Battle of Helena, the 9th Missouri Sharpshooters saw action. The unit was present in the Little Rock area during the Little Rock campaign later in the year, but saw no action. In March 1864, it moved into Louisiana to oppose the Red River campaign, during which it fought at the Battle of Pleasant Hill in early April. After Pleasant Hill, the battalion returned to Arkansas and was engaged at the Battle of Jenkins' Ferry on April 30. The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion spent the rest of the war at various points in Louisiana and Arkansas before the Confederate forces in the Trans-Mississippi Theater surrendered on May 26, 1865. The steamboat carrying the unit back to Missouri sank in the Red River of the South, killing at least 12 men of the battalion.

Background and formation edit

At the beginning of the American Civil War in 1861, the state of Missouri was politically divided. The Governor of Missouri, Claiborne Fox Jackson supported secession and the Confederate States of America, and created the pro-secession Missouri State Guard. Opposing the secessionists were troops from the Federal army.[2] In July, the anti-secession elements of the Missouri legislature voted to remain in the United States, while in November, Jackson and the pro-secession legislators voted to join the Confederacy. The resulting Confederate government of Missouri functioned as a government-in-exile. Pro-secession and Confederate forces won several battles, but by the end of 1861, were restricted to the southwestern portion of the state.[3] In March of the following year, a Federal victory over Confederate and Missouri State Guard forces at the Battle of Pea Ridge in Arkansas resulted in the Federals gaining control of Missouri.[4]

On April 21, 1862, the Confederate States Congress authorized each brigade of infantry to be assigned a battalion of sharpshooters. Per law, these battalions were to be armed with long-range rifles and were to consist of three to six companies. On November 25, Major General Thomas C. Hindman ordered his subordinate division commanders to form the sharpshooter battalions if practical. One of Hindman's division commanders, Brigadier General Mosby Monroe Parsons, had two weeks earlier formed a sharpshooter company to serve with a brigade of Missouri troops. Two more sharpshooter companies were formed on November 29, and the three were consolidated together into a battalion commanded by Major Lebbeus A. Pindall, at a camp near Fort Smith, Arkansas. According to historian James McGhee, the men assigned to the sharpshooter unit do not appear to have been exceptional marksmen or to have been otherwise uniquely qualified to serve as sharpshooters.[5] The first of the three companies was drawn from a defunct artillery battery (Foster's Battery) and a partisan ranger unit (Lawther's Partisan Ranger Regiment), while the others were pulled from infantry units.[6]

Service history edit

Prairie Grove edit

 
 
Prairie Grove
 
Van Buren
 
Jacksonport
 
Little Rock
 
Helena
class=notpageimage|
Sites associated with the battalion in 1862 and 1863

After forming, the battalion moved north as part of a brigade commanded by Parsons, as Brigadier General Daniel M. Frost was now in divisional command. On December 6, Parsons' brigade (including Pindall's battalion), along with some Arkansas cavalry, advanced to Reed's Mountain. This position controlled the Cane Hill road.[5] The Arkansans were initially unable to drive a small force of Federal cavalry off the mountain, so Parsons was asked to support them. He sent Pindall's battalion into the fray. Not long before sundown, the Federal forces withdrew off of the mountain.[7]

On December 7, in the Battle of Prairie Grove, Parsons' brigade was held in reserve to guard against a Federal flank attack for the first part of the battle. In the afternoon, Parsons' brigade moved to the front,[8] but Hindman ordered Pindall's battalion to remain in the rear near a church with Tilden's Missouri Battery. At this time, the battalion was about 130 men strong. It remained in the rear for about an hour,[9] but was ordered forward when Parsons requested support for his right flank.[10] Parsons ordered an attack,[11] which had some success.[12] Shortly before sunset, Parsons ordered another attack,[13] but it was repulsed.[14] No surviving official report by Pindall about the unit's actions during the battle is known to exist.[15][a] The unit suffered three casualties during the fighting,[16] all wounded.[17]

Pindall's battalion then served in front of the brigade line as a screen until the Confederates withdrew at around midnight. Hindman's army initially fell back to Van Buren, where it remained for about three weeks before retreating to Little Rock. Pindall's battalion was stationed at Little Rock until May 1863, when it moved to a camp along the White River, upriver from Jacksonport. On June 7, the battalion was strengthened when a company from the 2nd Northeast Missouri Cavalry Regiment was integrated into the unit.[17][b]

Helena and Little Rock edit

Confederate Lieutenant General Theophilus Holmes led an offensive against the Federal-held city of Helena, Arkansas, with hopes of relieving some of the pressure on Vicksburg, Mississippi.[19] In late June, Pindall's battalion began moving towards Helena, and arrived in the area on July 3, 1863.[17] When the Confederates attacked in the Battle of Helena the next day, the battalion was aligned in front of Parsons' brigade.[20] Along with a unit of Arkansas troops from the local area, Pindall's battalion drove in the Federal skirmish line,[21] and the Missouri sharpshooters then opened fire on the Federal soldiers manning artillery pieces in a defensive work known as Battery C atop Graveyard Hill.[22]

Two Confederate attacks against Graveyard Hill failed, but the third captured Battery C.[23] The first Confederate soldier to enter Battery C may have been an officer from Pindall's battalion.[24] However, the Confederates who had taken Graveyard Hill were unsupported. A continued attack towards Helena was repulsed, and the Confederates on Graveyard Hill came under concentrated Federal fire and were forced to retreat.[17] According to historian Ed Bearss, Pindall's battalion suffered 43 casualties;[25] historian James E. McGhee states that the battalion's losses at Helena were instead 39 men. It was only 190 men strong on July 5. After Helena, the unit withdrew with the Confederate army to Des Arc and then back to Little Rock.[17] In August, Parsons, without authority, sought to transfer men from a cavalry unit to an artillery battery. When the cavalrymen and their officers were not willing to switch branches of service, Parsons' brigade inspector used Pindall's battalion and part of the 10th Missouri Infantry Regiment to force the transfer.[26] In August, Federal forces from Helena advanced towards Little Rock in the Little Rock campaign.[27] Pindall's battalion joined other Confederate infantry in building fortifications across the Arkansas River from the city,[17] but Federal cavalry crossed the river further downstream, avoiding the defenses. While Confederate cavalry fought Federal forces in the Battle of Bayou Fourche on September 10, the rest of the Confederate troops abandoned Little Rock.[27] Pindall's battalion saw no fighting in the campaign.[17]

Pleasant Hill and Jenkins' Ferry edit

 
Map showing movements leading up to the battles of Mansfield and Pleasant Hill

Pindall's battalion withdrew with the rest of the Confederate army into southwestern Arkansas, and spent the winter of 1863–1864 at Camden and Spring Hill.[17] In March 1864, Federal forces led by Major General Nathaniel P. Banks began the Red River Campaign, a push up the Red River of the South towards Shreveport, Louisiana. The campaign was politically and economically motivated, hoping to establish Abraham Lincoln's 1863 plan for political reconstruction in Louisiana, prevent collaboration between Confederate forces and the Second French intervention in Mexico, and acquire cotton to send back to Federal textile mills.[28] Parsons' brigade, including Pindall's battalion, was transferred to northwestern Louisiana in March to reinforce Confederate forces opposing Banks' campaign. While encamped south of Shreveport in late March,[29] Parsons was elevated to division command, and Pindall's battalion became part of a brigade commanded by Colonel Simon P. Burns.[30] McGhee believes that this time frame was when Pindall's battalion was formally designated the 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion.[31]

Parsons' division began moving towards the front lines on April 5, but did not arrive until four days later, too late to participate in the Confederate victory at the Battle of Mansfield. After their arrival in the afternoon of April 9, Parsons' division formed on the right of the Confederate line as part of the deployments for the Battle of Pleasant Hill.[32] Parsons' men attacked with initial success, defeating a Federal brigade, but were then counterattacked in the flank by additional Federal troops.[31] The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion was caught in the resulting melee that ended with Parsons' men being driven to the rear. The collapse of Parsons' division prevented a Confederate success like the one the day before at Mansfield.[33] Pindall's unit lost 2 killed and 8 wounded in the fighting at Pleasant Hill.[31]

On March 23, Federal forces commanded by Major General Frederick Steele had left Little Rock with the intention of moving south towards Shreveport to join Banks' campaign. Steele's offensive has become known as the Camden Expedition. With insufficient quantities of food and forage, Steele decided to instead move towards Camden on April 12, which the Federal forces occupied three days later.[34] As Banks' campaign had been defeated, Confederate General E. Kirby Smith decided to take Parsons' and two other divisions into Arkansas to attack Steele, with the march beginning on April 14.[35] Confederate troops defeated elements of Steele's army at the Battle of Poison Spring (April 18) and the Battle of Marks' Mills (April 25), and having learned of Banks' defeat, Steele ordered a retreat from Camden on April 26. Smith's Confederates pursued.[36]

During the pursuit, heavy rains began, and the ground turned muddy and swampy. The Confederates caught up to Steele on April 30, and attacked in the Battle of Jenkins' Ferry. The terrain was waterlogged and allowed for only a portion of the Confederate force to be engaged at one time.[37] Burns' brigade went to the Confederate right. Charging, Burns' brigade forced Federal troops back about 0.25 miles (0.4 km) before being repulsed by reinforcements. Parsons' men were eventually ordered to withdraw so that Walker's Greyhounds could enter the fighting.[38] All of the Confederate attacks at Jenkins' Ferry were repulsed, and Steele's army was able to reach Little Rock safely in early May.[39] The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion had 1 man killed and 4 wounded; the unit was cited by Burns for "sturdy and unwavering courage".[31]

War's end edit

 
 
Tulip
 
Haynesville
 
El Dorado
 
Monticello
 
Jenkins' Ferry
 
Camden
class=notpageimage|
Post-Jenkins' Ferry encampments of the battalion

Along with the rest of Parsons' division, the battalion spent the rest of the war camped at various points in Arkansas and Louisiana.[31] On May 1, Smith's force moved to Tulip, Arkansas, where Parsons' division remained until May 12, although the rest of the Confederate force continued south earlier. The men then continued to the Haynesville, Louisiana, area, before returning to Arkansas. Parsons' division made a long-term encampment near El Dorado.[40] When Parsons' men left the camp near El Dorado in August, the division was separated, with Burns' brigade sent to Monticello. While at Monticello, Burns' brigade skirmished with Federal troops on September 10, which was the unit's last combat experience.[41]

Burns' brigade spent the winter of 1864–1865 at Camden.[42] Pindall's battalion was strengthened on January 20, 1865, with the addition of two companies that had been recruited during Price's Missouri Expedition in 1864.[31] That same day, Pindall was promoted to lieutenant colonel; Gabriel S. Kendrick became the unit's major in place of Pindall. The battalion now consisted of six companies, all of whom consisted of Missouri troops; they were designated with the letters A through F.[43] Morale among the Confederate troops in the Trans-Mississippi sank in May when news arrived of the surrender of the Confederate forces of Robert E. Lee and Joseph E. Johnston to the east. On May 26, the Confederates in the Trans-Mississippi surrendered as well.[44] The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion journeyed to Shreveport, where the men were paroled on June 7. The battalion was sent back to Missouri on the steamboat Kentucky; the vessel sank in the Red River during the trip.[45] At least 12 men of the battalion died in the wreck. Besides those who died when Kentucky sank, 17 were killed in action and a further 24 died of various diseases during the time the battalion existed. During the time the battalion existed, about 550 men served in it.[45]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Very few of the Missouri units below the brigade level filed official reports for Prairie Grove, Frost's report did not address the repulsed attack at the end of the battle, and Parsons' report glossed over it.[15]
  2. ^ The 2nd Northeast Cavalry Regiment had briefly existed in mid-1862 during a recruiting expedition led by Joseph C. Porter but had been disbanded.[18]

References edit

  1. ^ "Flag, Pindall's 9th Battalion Missouri Sharpshooters C.S.A." Missouri Digital Heritage. Retrieved October 5, 2022.
  2. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 19–20.
  3. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 20–25.
  4. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 34–37.
  5. ^ a b McGhee 2008, p. 253.
  6. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 30, 171–172, 253.
  7. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 121–123.
  8. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 253–254.
  9. ^ Shea 2009, p. 216.
  10. ^ Shea 2009, p. 228.
  11. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 230–231.
  12. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 233–235.
  13. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 235.
  14. ^ Shea 2009, pp. 237–238.
  15. ^ a b Shea 2009, p. 239.
  16. ^ Shea 2009, p. 240.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h McGhee 2008, p. 254.
  18. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 63–64.
  19. ^ Kennedy 1998, p. 175.
  20. ^ Gurley 2013, p. 119.
  21. ^ Christ 2010, pp. 126–127.
  22. ^ Bearss 1991, p. 1225.
  23. ^ Christ 2010, p. 129.
  24. ^ Gurley 2013, pp. 119–120.
  25. ^ Bearss 1991, p. 1243.
  26. ^ McGhee 2008, p. 124.
  27. ^ a b Kennedy 1998, p. 233.
  28. ^ Johnson 1998, p. 265.
  29. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 254–255.
  30. ^ Gurley 2015, pp. 191–192.
  31. ^ a b c d e f McGhee 2008, p. 255.
  32. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 192.
  33. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 194.
  34. ^ Kennedy 1998, p. 273.
  35. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 196.
  36. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 273–274.
  37. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 197.
  38. ^ Gurley 2015, pp. 199–200.
  39. ^ Kennedy 1998, pp. 274–275.
  40. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 201.
  41. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 202.
  42. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 203.
  43. ^ McGhee 2008, pp. 252–253.
  44. ^ Gurley 2015, p. 204.
  45. ^ a b McGhee 2008, pp. 255–256.

Sources edit

  • Bearss, Edwin C. (1991) [1986]. The Campaign for Vicksburg. Vol. III: Unvexed to the Sea. Dayton, Ohio: Morningside Bookshop. ISBN 0-89029-516-6. Note: ISBN printed in book is 0-89029-516-3.
  • Christ, Mark K. (2010). Civil War Arkansas 1863: The Battle for a State. Norman, Oklahoma: University of Oklahoma Press. ISBN 978-0-8061-4433-7.
  • Gurley, Bill (2013). "Mosby Monroe Parsons: Missouri's Forgotten Brigadier". In Schott, Thomas E.; Bergeron, Arthur W.; Hewitt, Lawrence L. (eds.). Confederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi. Vol. 1. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1-57233-985-9.
  • Gurley, Bill (2015). "Mosby Monroe Parsons: Major General, Murder Victim". In Schott, Thomas E.; Hewitt, Lawrence L. (eds.). Confederate Generals in the Trans-Mississippi. Vol. 2. Knoxville, Tennessee: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1-62190-124-2.
  • Johnson, Ludwell H. (1998). "Military Strategy, Politics, and Economics: The Red River Campaign". In Kennedy, Frances H. (ed.). The Civil War Battlefield Guide (2nd ed.). Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin. pp. 265–266. ISBN 978-0-395-74012-5.
  • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. (1998). The Civil War Battlefield Guide (2nd ed.). Boston/New York: Houghton Mifflin. ISBN 978-0-395-74012-5.
  • McGhee, James E. (2008). Guide to Missouri Confederate Regiments, 1861–1865. Fayetteville, Arkansas: University of Arkansas Press. ISBN 978-1-55728-870-7.
  • Shea, William L. (2009). Fields of Blood: The Prairie Grove Campaign. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 978-0-8078-3315-5.

missouri, sharpshooter, battalion, also, known, pindall, missouri, sharpshooter, battalion, unit, that, served, confederate, states, army, during, american, civil, battalion, formed, late, 1862, compliance, with, earlier, authorization, confederate, states, co. The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion also known as Pindall s Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion was a unit that served in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War The battalion was formed in late 1862 in compliance with an earlier authorization by the Confederate States Congress for each brigade to have an associated battalion of sharpshooters When first formed the men had no unique qualifications to serve as sharpshooters and were drawn from a defunct artillery battery a partisan rangers unit and infantrymen The unit s first major battle was the Battle of Prairie Grove in December 1862 9th Missouri Sharpshooter BattalionPindall s Missouri Sharpshooter BattalionFlag of the type carried by the battalion 1 ActiveNovember 29 1862 to June 7 1865Country Confederate States of AmericaBranch Confederate States ArmyTypeSharpshooterSizebattalionEngagementsAmerican Civil War Battle of Prairie Grove Battle of Helena Battle of Pleasant Hill Battle of Jenkins Ferry The first half of 1863 saw the battalion serving at various points in Arkansas When a Confederate force attacked the Federal held city of Helena Arkansas on July 4 in the Battle of Helena the 9th Missouri Sharpshooters saw action The unit was present in the Little Rock area during the Little Rock campaign later in the year but saw no action In March 1864 it moved into Louisiana to oppose the Red River campaign during which it fought at the Battle of Pleasant Hill in early April After Pleasant Hill the battalion returned to Arkansas and was engaged at the Battle of Jenkins Ferry on April 30 The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion spent the rest of the war at various points in Louisiana and Arkansas before the Confederate forces in the Trans Mississippi Theater surrendered on May 26 1865 The steamboat carrying the unit back to Missouri sank in the Red River of the South killing at least 12 men of the battalion Contents 1 Background and formation 2 Service history 2 1 Prairie Grove 2 2 Helena and Little Rock 2 3 Pleasant Hill and Jenkins Ferry 2 4 War s end 3 Notes 4 References 5 SourcesBackground and formation editAt the beginning of the American Civil War in 1861 the state of Missouri was politically divided The Governor of Missouri Claiborne Fox Jackson supported secession and the Confederate States of America and created the pro secession Missouri State Guard Opposing the secessionists were troops from the Federal army 2 In July the anti secession elements of the Missouri legislature voted to remain in the United States while in November Jackson and the pro secession legislators voted to join the Confederacy The resulting Confederate government of Missouri functioned as a government in exile Pro secession and Confederate forces won several battles but by the end of 1861 were restricted to the southwestern portion of the state 3 In March of the following year a Federal victory over Confederate and Missouri State Guard forces at the Battle of Pea Ridge in Arkansas resulted in the Federals gaining control of Missouri 4 On April 21 1862 the Confederate States Congress authorized each brigade of infantry to be assigned a battalion of sharpshooters Per law these battalions were to be armed with long range rifles and were to consist of three to six companies On November 25 Major General Thomas C Hindman ordered his subordinate division commanders to form the sharpshooter battalions if practical One of Hindman s division commanders Brigadier General Mosby Monroe Parsons had two weeks earlier formed a sharpshooter company to serve with a brigade of Missouri troops Two more sharpshooter companies were formed on November 29 and the three were consolidated together into a battalion commanded by Major Lebbeus A Pindall at a camp near Fort Smith Arkansas According to historian James McGhee the men assigned to the sharpshooter unit do not appear to have been exceptional marksmen or to have been otherwise uniquely qualified to serve as sharpshooters 5 The first of the three companies was drawn from a defunct artillery battery Foster s Battery and a partisan ranger unit Lawther s Partisan Ranger Regiment while the others were pulled from infantry units 6 Service history editPrairie Grove edit nbsp nbsp Prairie Grove nbsp Van Buren nbsp Jacksonport nbsp Little Rock nbsp Helenaclass notpageimage Sites associated with the battalion in 1862 and 1863 After forming the battalion moved north as part of a brigade commanded by Parsons as Brigadier General Daniel M Frost was now in divisional command On December 6 Parsons brigade including Pindall s battalion along with some Arkansas cavalry advanced to Reed s Mountain This position controlled the Cane Hill road 5 The Arkansans were initially unable to drive a small force of Federal cavalry off the mountain so Parsons was asked to support them He sent Pindall s battalion into the fray Not long before sundown the Federal forces withdrew off of the mountain 7 On December 7 in the Battle of Prairie Grove Parsons brigade was held in reserve to guard against a Federal flank attack for the first part of the battle In the afternoon Parsons brigade moved to the front 8 but Hindman ordered Pindall s battalion to remain in the rear near a church with Tilden s Missouri Battery At this time the battalion was about 130 men strong It remained in the rear for about an hour 9 but was ordered forward when Parsons requested support for his right flank 10 Parsons ordered an attack 11 which had some success 12 Shortly before sunset Parsons ordered another attack 13 but it was repulsed 14 No surviving official report by Pindall about the unit s actions during the battle is known to exist 15 a The unit suffered three casualties during the fighting 16 all wounded 17 Pindall s battalion then served in front of the brigade line as a screen until the Confederates withdrew at around midnight Hindman s army initially fell back to Van Buren where it remained for about three weeks before retreating to Little Rock Pindall s battalion was stationed at Little Rock until May 1863 when it moved to a camp along the White River upriver from Jacksonport On June 7 the battalion was strengthened when a company from the 2nd Northeast Missouri Cavalry Regiment was integrated into the unit 17 b Helena and Little Rock edit Confederate Lieutenant General Theophilus Holmes led an offensive against the Federal held city of Helena Arkansas with hopes of relieving some of the pressure on Vicksburg Mississippi 19 In late June Pindall s battalion began moving towards Helena and arrived in the area on July 3 1863 17 When the Confederates attacked in the Battle of Helena the next day the battalion was aligned in front of Parsons brigade 20 Along with a unit of Arkansas troops from the local area Pindall s battalion drove in the Federal skirmish line 21 and the Missouri sharpshooters then opened fire on the Federal soldiers manning artillery pieces in a defensive work known as Battery C atop Graveyard Hill 22 Two Confederate attacks against Graveyard Hill failed but the third captured Battery C 23 The first Confederate soldier to enter Battery C may have been an officer from Pindall s battalion 24 However the Confederates who had taken Graveyard Hill were unsupported A continued attack towards Helena was repulsed and the Confederates on Graveyard Hill came under concentrated Federal fire and were forced to retreat 17 According to historian Ed Bearss Pindall s battalion suffered 43 casualties 25 historian James E McGhee states that the battalion s losses at Helena were instead 39 men It was only 190 men strong on July 5 After Helena the unit withdrew with the Confederate army to Des Arc and then back to Little Rock 17 In August Parsons without authority sought to transfer men from a cavalry unit to an artillery battery When the cavalrymen and their officers were not willing to switch branches of service Parsons brigade inspector used Pindall s battalion and part of the 10th Missouri Infantry Regiment to force the transfer 26 In August Federal forces from Helena advanced towards Little Rock in the Little Rock campaign 27 Pindall s battalion joined other Confederate infantry in building fortifications across the Arkansas River from the city 17 but Federal cavalry crossed the river further downstream avoiding the defenses While Confederate cavalry fought Federal forces in the Battle of Bayou Fourche on September 10 the rest of the Confederate troops abandoned Little Rock 27 Pindall s battalion saw no fighting in the campaign 17 Pleasant Hill and Jenkins Ferry edit nbsp Map showing movements leading up to the battles of Mansfield and Pleasant HillPindall s battalion withdrew with the rest of the Confederate army into southwestern Arkansas and spent the winter of 1863 1864 at Camden and Spring Hill 17 In March 1864 Federal forces led by Major General Nathaniel P Banks began the Red River Campaign a push up the Red River of the South towards Shreveport Louisiana The campaign was politically and economically motivated hoping to establish Abraham Lincoln s 1863 plan for political reconstruction in Louisiana prevent collaboration between Confederate forces and the Second French intervention in Mexico and acquire cotton to send back to Federal textile mills 28 Parsons brigade including Pindall s battalion was transferred to northwestern Louisiana in March to reinforce Confederate forces opposing Banks campaign While encamped south of Shreveport in late March 29 Parsons was elevated to division command and Pindall s battalion became part of a brigade commanded by Colonel Simon P Burns 30 McGhee believes that this time frame was when Pindall s battalion was formally designated the 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion 31 Parsons division began moving towards the front lines on April 5 but did not arrive until four days later too late to participate in the Confederate victory at the Battle of Mansfield After their arrival in the afternoon of April 9 Parsons division formed on the right of the Confederate line as part of the deployments for the Battle of Pleasant Hill 32 Parsons men attacked with initial success defeating a Federal brigade but were then counterattacked in the flank by additional Federal troops 31 The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion was caught in the resulting melee that ended with Parsons men being driven to the rear The collapse of Parsons division prevented a Confederate success like the one the day before at Mansfield 33 Pindall s unit lost 2 killed and 8 wounded in the fighting at Pleasant Hill 31 On March 23 Federal forces commanded by Major General Frederick Steele had left Little Rock with the intention of moving south towards Shreveport to join Banks campaign Steele s offensive has become known as the Camden Expedition With insufficient quantities of food and forage Steele decided to instead move towards Camden on April 12 which the Federal forces occupied three days later 34 As Banks campaign had been defeated Confederate General E Kirby Smith decided to take Parsons and two other divisions into Arkansas to attack Steele with the march beginning on April 14 35 Confederate troops defeated elements of Steele s army at the Battle of Poison Spring April 18 and the Battle of Marks Mills April 25 and having learned of Banks defeat Steele ordered a retreat from Camden on April 26 Smith s Confederates pursued 36 During the pursuit heavy rains began and the ground turned muddy and swampy The Confederates caught up to Steele on April 30 and attacked in the Battle of Jenkins Ferry The terrain was waterlogged and allowed for only a portion of the Confederate force to be engaged at one time 37 Burns brigade went to the Confederate right Charging Burns brigade forced Federal troops back about 0 25 miles 0 4 km before being repulsed by reinforcements Parsons men were eventually ordered to withdraw so that Walker s Greyhounds could enter the fighting 38 All of the Confederate attacks at Jenkins Ferry were repulsed and Steele s army was able to reach Little Rock safely in early May 39 The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion had 1 man killed and 4 wounded the unit was cited by Burns for sturdy and unwavering courage 31 War s end edit nbsp nbsp Tulip nbsp Haynesville nbsp El Dorado nbsp Monticello nbsp Jenkins Ferry nbsp Camdenclass notpageimage Post Jenkins Ferry encampments of the battalion Along with the rest of Parsons division the battalion spent the rest of the war camped at various points in Arkansas and Louisiana 31 On May 1 Smith s force moved to Tulip Arkansas where Parsons division remained until May 12 although the rest of the Confederate force continued south earlier The men then continued to the Haynesville Louisiana area before returning to Arkansas Parsons division made a long term encampment near El Dorado 40 When Parsons men left the camp near El Dorado in August the division was separated with Burns brigade sent to Monticello While at Monticello Burns brigade skirmished with Federal troops on September 10 which was the unit s last combat experience 41 Burns brigade spent the winter of 1864 1865 at Camden 42 Pindall s battalion was strengthened on January 20 1865 with the addition of two companies that had been recruited during Price s Missouri Expedition in 1864 31 That same day Pindall was promoted to lieutenant colonel Gabriel S Kendrick became the unit s major in place of Pindall The battalion now consisted of six companies all of whom consisted of Missouri troops they were designated with the letters A through F 43 Morale among the Confederate troops in the Trans Mississippi sank in May when news arrived of the surrender of the Confederate forces of Robert E Lee and Joseph E Johnston to the east On May 26 the Confederates in the Trans Mississippi surrendered as well 44 The 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion journeyed to Shreveport where the men were paroled on June 7 The battalion was sent back to Missouri on the steamboat Kentucky the vessel sank in the Red River during the trip 45 At least 12 men of the battalion died in the wreck Besides those who died when Kentucky sank 17 were killed in action and a further 24 died of various diseases during the time the battalion existed During the time the battalion existed about 550 men served in it 45 Notes edit Very few of the Missouri units below the brigade level filed official reports for Prairie Grove Frost s report did not address the repulsed attack at the end of the battle and Parsons report glossed over it 15 The 2nd Northeast Cavalry Regiment had briefly existed in mid 1862 during a recruiting expedition led by Joseph C Porter but had been disbanded 18 References edit Flag Pindall s 9th Battalion Missouri Sharpshooters C S A Missouri Digital Heritage Retrieved October 5 2022 Kennedy 1998 pp 19 20 Kennedy 1998 pp 20 25 Kennedy 1998 pp 34 37 a b McGhee 2008 p 253 McGhee 2008 pp 30 171 172 253 Shea 2009 pp 121 123 McGhee 2008 pp 253 254 Shea 2009 p 216 Shea 2009 p 228 Shea 2009 pp 230 231 Shea 2009 pp 233 235 Shea 2009 pp 235 Shea 2009 pp 237 238 a b Shea 2009 p 239 Shea 2009 p 240 a b c d e f g h McGhee 2008 p 254 McGhee 2008 pp 63 64 Kennedy 1998 p 175 Gurley 2013 p 119 Christ 2010 pp 126 127 Bearss 1991 p 1225 Christ 2010 p 129 Gurley 2013 pp 119 120 Bearss 1991 p 1243 McGhee 2008 p 124 a b Kennedy 1998 p 233 Johnson 1998 p 265 McGhee 2008 pp 254 255 Gurley 2015 pp 191 192 a b c d e f McGhee 2008 p 255 Gurley 2015 p 192 Gurley 2015 p 194 Kennedy 1998 p 273 Gurley 2015 p 196 Kennedy 1998 pp 273 274 Gurley 2015 p 197 Gurley 2015 pp 199 200 Kennedy 1998 pp 274 275 Gurley 2015 p 201 Gurley 2015 p 202 Gurley 2015 p 203 McGhee 2008 pp 252 253 Gurley 2015 p 204 a b McGhee 2008 pp 255 256 Sources editBearss Edwin C 1991 1986 The Campaign for Vicksburg Vol III Unvexed to the Sea Dayton Ohio Morningside Bookshop ISBN 0 89029 516 6 Note ISBN printed in book is 0 89029 516 3 Christ Mark K 2010 Civil War Arkansas 1863 The Battle for a State Norman Oklahoma University of Oklahoma Press ISBN 978 0 8061 4433 7 Gurley Bill 2013 Mosby Monroe Parsons Missouri s Forgotten Brigadier In Schott Thomas E Bergeron Arthur W Hewitt Lawrence L eds Confederate Generals in the Trans Mississippi Vol 1 Knoxville Tennessee University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1 57233 985 9 Gurley Bill 2015 Mosby Monroe Parsons Major General Murder Victim In Schott Thomas E Hewitt Lawrence L eds Confederate Generals in the Trans Mississippi Vol 2 Knoxville Tennessee University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1 62190 124 2 Johnson Ludwell H 1998 Military Strategy Politics and Economics The Red River Campaign In Kennedy Frances H ed The Civil War Battlefield Guide 2nd ed Boston New York Houghton Mifflin pp 265 266 ISBN 978 0 395 74012 5 Kennedy Frances H ed 1998 The Civil War Battlefield Guide 2nd ed Boston New York Houghton Mifflin ISBN 978 0 395 74012 5 McGhee James E 2008 Guide to Missouri Confederate Regiments 1861 1865 Fayetteville Arkansas University of Arkansas Press ISBN 978 1 55728 870 7 Shea William L 2009 Fields of Blood The Prairie Grove Campaign Chapel Hill North Carolina University of North Carolina Press ISBN 978 0 8078 3315 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 9th Missouri Sharpshooter Battalion amp oldid 1196630593, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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