Hello,
I am about
half way through the first volume (the year of 1862) of the four volume set of Guerrilla
Warfare in Civil War Missouri by Bruce Nichols. (That is before my Kindle Fire started to go down hill - see my previous blog entry.) By now, I feel I can reasonably give an
opinion on the book, as well as give a couple of examples of some actions that are covered in the book, but first is a quick review of the book itself.
9th Missouri State Militia Cavalry on parade in St. Joseph, Missouri (1862) |
The book
sort of has a Southern slant to it, but it is fairly neutral. The author admits in the preface that he was
going to be focusing more on the guerrillas and southern recruitment missions and
their leadership than on the Union forces.
I think he covered a fair bit on the various Union forces too, but I
wish that he did spend some more time covering them. The first book is broken down into four main
parts, covering the four seasons of 1862: Winter, Spring, Summer, and
Fall. Between the four seasons, the
author has a couple of chapters on various subjects, like why the guerrilla
bands started to be created, or the raising of the pro-Union Enrolled Missouri
Militia (a part-time militia force.)
Each seasonal part is then broken down into four regional sections of
Missouri, Northwest, Northeast, Southeast, and Southwest. This way the author discusses a events in the
northwest part of Missouri during the winter before moving on to discuss the
next region, until everything is covered for that season and proceeding on to
the next season in the same fashion. I
actually like this method as if you were only using the book to research the
events in the southwest region of Missouri, you can easily found the various
regional sections in each seasonal parts.
Finally, each regional section is broken down again into sub-sections
that covers specific events, leaders, actions, or counties which would help to
speed up research. Unfortunately, a lot
of actions are not very detailed as there is not much information on them other
than causalities listed.
Best name ever for an ACW commander - Odon Guitar, commander of the 9th Missouri State Militia Cavalry and later a Brigadier General. |
One of the
few things I started to noticed while reading the various accounts is that
Union forces, in general, came off better in any engagement with the guerrillas
or southern recruitment parties, even when outnumbered, except when the
guerrillas conducted an ambush and immediately ran away or when small group of
individuals, generally less than six, where encountered. This is even true when some of the poorly
armed Union cavalry companies get into a fight, like some of those from the 1st
Iowa Cavalry and 6th Kansas Cavalry that only had pistols and
sabers. But that is not to say that
there were not some big problems for the Union forces at times. In one encounter, a patrol of cavalry with
poor carbines had almost all of them fail in firefight with guerrillas and had
to promptly retreat.
Most of the
engagements were Union patrols or escorts of 20 to 40 men against larger
numbers of guerrillas or southern recruits.
But in some of the larger Union sweeps with a small battalion sized
force, they would sometimes even have a battery of light guns with them too. Two examples of a typical engagement are the
following:
June 15,
’62: A patrol from the 7th
Missouri Volunteer Cavalry (no size given) ran up against William Quantrill and about
30 men near Pink Hill in east Jackson County.
After the battle, the guerrilla losses were 2 dead, 2 wounded, and 3
captured. The Federals suffered no
losses. While there is no more detail
than that, I included this engagement as it had the feared Quantrill’s
guerrillas in it.
The ACW era Johnson County Courthouse in Warrensburg, MO - this was a vital building as it was one of the few brick building in the county during the war |
June 17,
’62: Prior to this engagement, a
guerrilla force of 80 to 90 men under the leadership of John Brinker (from
Warrensburg, MO) and Benjamin Snelling (from southwestern Johnson County) went
on a three day terror campaign. During
that time, they murdered a civilian farmer plowing his field and another man in
front of his family, in addition to wounding another man and his 13 year old
daughter who got in the way. They also
robbed four homes and burned another one or two homes as well. So on June 17, a patrol from the 7th
Missouri State Militia Cavalry (whom by this time were a veteran guerrilla
hunter force) with Lt Sandy Lowe and 18 men left out of Warrensburg to go
looking for the Brinker-Snelling guerrilla band. They discovered several of the guerrillas
sitting down for dinner at the home of Mrs. Davenport about 9 miles west of
Warrensburg. Lt. Lowe’s patrol charged
and scattered the guerrillas and chased them about a half of a mile through the
brush until they ran into the rest of the Brinker-Snelling band. Lt Lowe sent a messenger back to Warrensburg
to get reinforcements, while he was conducting a fighting withdraw. Lt Lowe’s patrol fought it out for about
thirty minutes and covered 6 to 7 miles back to Warrensburg before a relief
column under Major Emory Foster of the 7th Missouri State Militia
Cavalry arrived on the scene. With the
relief column showed up, the guerrillas fled.
So the only real fighting was between the 80 or so guerrillas and the 18
man patrol. The results of that fight was
11 guerrillas dead and the Union only lost 2 dead and 2 more wounded. After the fight, the Davenport’s home was
burnt by the Union for supporting the guerrillas and Benjamin Snelling’s sister
and younger brother were arrested on allegedly carrying messages for the
guerrillas. (Warrensburg was my old stomping grounds in college, so I had to include this engagement.)
Company D's Missouri Guerrilla Band 1 |
Company D's Missouri State Militia pack 1 |
As a gaming
note, there is a fairly new miniature company that now making 28mm figures
specifically for the Guerrilla in Missouri, called ‘Company D’ out of the
UK. I have not seen the figures in the
flesh, but as you can see from the pictures below of their figures from their
website, they are quite nice. They might
fit in the Foundry’s ‘dead’ Border War line, which is now in their Old West
line. Hopefully Company D will continue
down this road and release some Enrolled Missouri Militia and Kansas Redlegs
too. I am very tempted to order a set of
each, but I am waiting for the Missouri State Militia & Guerrilla command
sets to be released first.
Column of twos, March!
6 comments:
Fascinating stuff- really need to pick up a copy for myself.
Thanks for the heads up on the figures too- gives me something to consider for a future project. I was going to go for 20mm plastics but doing it in 28mm would look very nice though....
Cheers,
Pete.
Joe, are there any useful maps in the book if one were trying to make board setups for these engagements as wargaming actions?
@Dave
There is very few maps in the book and they are regional with not much details. The author stated that he purposely didn't put a lot of maps in the book as the there was no way of knowing actual routes or locations for many of the engagements.
However, somewhere, I have maps of the all of the railroad routes, the main roads, and listing of all of the main telegraph lines in Missouri during the ACW. I will have to dig around for them in a few weeks.
Sapper
There are tons of good books out there that do have maps. Being a direct descendant of one of Quantrill's Raiders, I find most companies miniatures of the period get the guerillas completely wrong. Someone finally glad someone got the look right,although not a fan of the sculpts themselves.
Great little bookstore here in Independence (site of 2 battles) called Blue and Gray.Has lots of small run books on the Missouri-Kansas border War. http://www.blueandgrey.com/
Thanks, BaronVonJ
I was without internet service for a while, so only got a chance to reply to this now. I will check out the link that you provided.
Cheers,
Joe
The old lady that runs it can be cantankerous but you shouldn't have to deal with her via internet.
Post a Comment