Battle of Poison Spring
Battle of Poison Spring |
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Part of the American Civil War | | Belligerents |
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Confederate States |
United States | Commanders and leaders |
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Samuel Maxey
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James Williams | Strength |
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1,800 cavalry |
824 infantry 291 cavalry 4 guns | Casualties and losses |
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34 dead and 218 wounded or missing |
117 dead and 184 wounded or missing | Location of Poison Spring in Arkansas |
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The Battle of Poison Spring (April 18, 1864) was fought in Ouachita County, Arkansas as part of the Camden Expedition, during the American Civil War. The battle is infamous for the Confederates' slaughter and mutilation of black U.S. soldiers of the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry.[1]
Background
Dwindling supplies for his army at Camden, Arkansas forced Union Army Major-General Frederick Steele to send out a foraging party to gather corn that the Confederates had stored about twenty miles up the Prairie D’ Ane–Camden Road on White Oak Creek. The party loaded the corn into wagons, and on April 18, Colonel James Williams started his return to Camden. Brigadiers-General John Marmaduke’s and Samuel Maxey’s Confederate forces arrived at Lee Plantation, about fifteen miles from Camden, where they engaged Williams.
Opposing forces
Union
Confederate
Battle
The Confederates eventually attacked Williams in the front and rear, forcing him to retreat north into a marsh where his men regrouped and then fell back to Camden. During the fight, Williams positioned the 1st Kansas Colored Infantry, a regiment made up of mostly ex-slaves, between the wagon train and Confederate lines; these black troops repelled the first two offenses, but ran low on ammunition and were beaten back by the third. The Confederates refused to take the wounded black soldiers as prisoners, and instead brutally killed, scalped, and stripped them. In all, the regiment lost nearly half of its numbers. The Union lost 198 wagons and all the corn. Estimated casualties were 301 for Williams and 114 for the Confederates.
Aftermath
A few months after the battle, one Confederate in an editorial approved of the Confederates' massacre of black U.S. soldiers in the battle, stating that "They did right."[1]
The site of the battle, the Poison Spring Battlefield is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is part of the Camden Expedition Sites National Historic Landmark.
In popular culture
- The battle is mentioned in the 2012 film Lincoln.
See also
References
Further reading
Further reading
External links
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| 1862 | |
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| 1863 | |
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| 1864 | |
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| 1865 |
- Battle of Dardanelle
- Battle of Ivey's Ford
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| Naval blockade | |
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| 1862 | Eastern Theater | |
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| 1863 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seabord Theater | |
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| 1864 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Trans-Mississ. Theater | |
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| 1865 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Major battles | 1861 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seabord Theater | |
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| Trans-Mississ. Theater | |
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| 1862 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seabord Theater | |
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| Trans-Mississ. Theater | |
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| 1863 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seabord Theater | |
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| Trans-Mississ. Theater | |
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| 1864 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seabord Theater | |
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| Trans-Mississ. Theater | |
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| 1865 | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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| Lower Seaboard Theater | |
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| Armies | Eastern Theater | |
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| Western Theater | |
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