If the idea of an attack by Gen. Lyon
was remote from Gen. McCulloch’s thoughts, it
was entirely absent from those of Gen. Sterling Price.
Gen. Price’s mind was concentrated upon the plan
to which he had wrung McCulloch’s reluctant
consent of advancing that morning upon Lyon in four
columns, and thereby crushing him, probably capturing
his army entire or driving him into a ruinous retreat
The first messengers bringing the news of Lyon’s
close proximity were received with contemptuous disbelief
by McCulloch, but on their heels came an Aid from
Gen. Rains with the announcement that the fields in
front of Rains were “covered with Yankees, infantry
and artillery.” This roused all to soldierly
activity. Neither Price nor McCulloch lacked anything
of the full measure of martial courage, and both at
once sped to their respective commands to lead them
into action.
After breaking up the council of war,
the previous afternoon, Gen. Lyon said very little
beyond giving from time to time, as circumstances
called, sharp, precise, practical orders. Naturally
talkative and disputatious, he was, when action was
demanded, brief, sententious, and sparing of any words
but what the occasion demanded. He had carefully
thought out his plan of march and battle to the last
detail-determined exactly what he and every
subordinate, every regiment and battery should do,
and his directions to them were clear, concise, prompt
and unmistakable.
He rode with Maj. Schofield,
his Chief of Staff, to the place where they halted
about midnight in sight of the rebel campfires and
slept with him in the brief bivouac under the same
blanket. To Schofield he seemed unusually depressed.
The only words he said, beyond necessary orders, were
almost as if talking to himself:
“I would give my life for a victory.”
Again, in response to Schofield’s
discreet criticism of the wisdom of dividing his forces
and giving Sigel an independent command, he said briefly:
“It is Sigel’s plan.”
Sige’s theoretical knowledge
of war and his experience were then felt to be so
overshadowing to everybody else’s as to estop
criticism.
The men of Lyon’s little army
lay down on their grassy bivouac with feelings of
tensest expectation. With the exception of the
few of the Regulars who had been in the Mexican and
Indian wars, not one of them had ever heard a gun
fired in anger. They had been talking battle for
three months. Now it was upon them, but none of
them could realize how sharp would be the combat,
nor how exceedingly well they were going to acquit
themselves.
At the first streak of dawn Lyon was
up-all activity and anticipation-to
open the battle. He had wisely selected the two
men who were to strike the first blows.
Capt. Jos. B. Plummer, who
commanded the Regulars deployed as skirmishers on
the left, and who sun should set, was a man after Lyon’s
own heart He was strongly in favor of the battle, and
afterward defended it as the wisest thing to do under
the circumstances. He was born in Massachusetts,
and had graduated in 1841 in the same class with Lyon
and Totten, whose battery was to do magnificent service,
and avenge the insults and humiliations of Little
Rock. Rummer’s standing in his class was
22, where Lyon’s was 11 and Totten’s 25.
He had been in garrison in Vera Cruz during the Mexican
War, and so had escaped getting the brevets “for
gallant and meritorious conduct” which had been
so freely bestowed on all who had been “present”
at any engagement, but had reached the rank of Captain
in 1862, a year later than Capt Lyon. He was to
rise to Colonel of the 11th Mo. and Brigadier-General
of Volunteers, and everywhere display vigor and capacity
in important commands, but to have his career cut
short by his untimely death near Corinth, Miss., Au,1862, at the age of 43 years. Maj. Peter
Joseph Osterhaus, who commanded the two companies
of his regiment-the 2d Mo.-deployed
on the right, was the best soldier in that wonderful
immigration of bright, educated, enthusiastic young
Germans who took refuge in this country after the
failure of the Revolution of 1848. At least, he
was tried longer in large commands, and rose to a
higher rank than any of them. Sigel and Carl
Schurz became, like him, Major-Generals of Volunteers,
but his service was regarded as much higher than theirs,
and he was esteemed as one of the best division and
corps commanders in the Army of the Tennessee.
After long service as a division commander he commanded
the Fifteenth Corps on the March to the Sea. He
was born in Prussia, educated as a soldier, took part
in the Revolution, migrated to this country, and was
invaluable to Lyon in organizing the Home Guards among
the Germans to save the Arsenal He still lives, a specially
honored veteran, at Mannheim, in Prussia.
Capt. Jas. Totten, whose
battery was placed in the center, was to win a Lieutenant-Colonel’s
brevet for his splendid service during the day, but
got few honors during the rest of the war. He
became a Brigadier-General of Missouri Militia, and
received the complimentary brevets of Colonel and
Brigadier-General when they were generally handed round
on March 13, 1865, but his unfortunate habits caused
his dismissal from the Army in 1870. He was then
Lieutenant-Colonel and Assistant Inspector-General.
There were many men among Lyon’s
subordinates whose conduct during the day brought
them prominence and started them on the way to distinction.
Maj. Samuel D. Sturgis, of the
4th U. S. Cav., a Pennsylvanian, who was that day
to win the star of a Brigadier-General of Volunteers,
and who commanded the First Brigade, afterward rose
to the command of a division, fought with credit at
Second Manassas, South Mountain and Fredericksburg,
for which he received brevets, and was overwhelmingly
defeated, while in command of an independent expedition,
by Forrest, at Guntown, Miss., June 10, 1864, and
passed into retirement. He became Colonel of
the 7th U. S. Cav. after the war. He was a graduate
of West Point in 1882.
Lieut-Col. I. F. Shepard, who
was Lyon’s Aid, became a Brigadier-General of
Volunteers.
Maj. John M. Schofield, Lyon’s
Adjutant-General, has been spoken of elsewhere.
Capt Gordon Granger, 3d U. S. Cav.,
a New Yorker and a graduate of the class of 1841,
was Lyon’s Assistant Adjutant-General, and won
a brevet for his conduct that day. He was a man
of far more than ordinary abilities-many
pronounced him a great soldier, and said that only
his unbridled tongue prevented him rising higher than
he did. He became a Major-General and a Corps
Commander, led the troops to Thomas’s assistance
at the critical moment at Chickamauga, but fell under
the displeasure of Sherman, who relieved him.
He afterward commanded the army which captured Forts
Gaines and Morgan, and received the surrender of Mobile.
Capt Frederick Steele, 2d U. S., Gen.
Grant’s classmate and lifelong friend, who had
won brevets in Mexico, commanded a battalion of two
companies. He was to become Colonel of the 8th
Iowa, Brigadier and Major-General, and render brilliant
service at Vicksburg and in Arkansas.
Maj. John A. Halderman, 1st Kan.,
who succeeded to the command of the regiment when
Col. Deitzler was wounded, was commended by all
his superior officers, for his handsome conduct.
He had been appointed by Gen. Lyon Provost Marshal-General
of the Western Army, and was afterwards commissioned
a Major-General. He entered the diplomatic service
under President Grant; became Minister to Siam, and
was praised all over the world for his success in
bringing that country into touch with civilization.
Lieut.-Col. G. L. Andrews, who
in the absence of Col. F. P. Blair, commanded
the 1st Mo., was a Rhode Island man, who afterward
entered the Regular Army, fought creditably through
the war, and in 1892 was retired as a Colonel.
In the 1st Mo. was Capt. Nelson
Cole, who was severely wounded. He served through
the war, rose to be a Colonel, became Senior Vice
Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic,
and was a Brigadier-General of Volunteers in the war
with Spain.
In the 1st Kan. were Col. Geo.
W. Detzler, who later became a Brigadier-General;
Capt. Powell Clayton, who was to become a Colonel,
Brigadier-General, Governor of Arkansas, Senator, and
Embassador to Mexico, and Capt. Daniel McCook,
who was to become Brigadier-General, and fall at Kene-saw.
In the 2d Kan. were Col. Robert
B. Mitchell, of Ohio, who rose to be Brigadier-General
and did gallant service in the Army of the Cumberland;
Maj. Charles W. Blair, who became a Brigadier-General,
and Capt. Samuel J. Crawford, who became a Colonel,
a brevet Brigadier-General, and Governor of Kansas.
In the 1st Iowa were Lieut.-Col.
W. H. Merritt, a New Yorker, who commanded the regiment
and afterwards became a Colonel on the staff, and
Capt. Francis J. Herron, who became a Major-General
of Volunteers and commanded a division at Prairie
Grove, Vicksburg, and in Texas.
There were very many in these regiments
serving as privates and non-commissioned officers
who afterwards made fine records as commanders of
companies and regiments and became distinguished in
civil life. Taken altogether, Lyon’s army
was an unusually fine body of fighting men. The
Iowa and Kansas men were ardent, enthusiastic youths,
accustomed to the use of the gun, and who hunted their
enemies as they did the wild beasts they had to encounter.
They were free from the superstition inculcated in
the Eastern armies that the soldier’s duty was
to stand up in the open and be shot at. When it
was necessary to stand up they stood up gallantly,
but at other times they took advantage of every protection
and lay behind any rock or trunk of tree in wait for
the enemy to come within easy range, and then fired
with fatal effect.
The older Regulars trained to Indian
fighting were equally effective, and speedily brought
the mass of recruits associated with them into similar
efficiency.
Nowhere else at that early period
of the war was the fire of the Union soldiers so deliberate
and deadly as at Wilson’s Creek.
The Confederates had no pickets out-not
even camp-guards. They had been marched and countermarched
severely for days, and were resting preparatory to
advancing that morning on Springfield. Many were
at breakfast, many others starting out to get material
for breakfast in the neighboring fields. Rains’s
Division was the most advanced, and Rains reports
that he discovered the enemy when about three miles
from camp, and that he put his Second Brigade-mounted
men commanded by Col. Caw-thorn, of the 4th Mo.-into
line to resist the advance. He says that the
brigade maintained its position all day, which does
not agree with the other accounts of the battle.
Before Gen. Lyon-a mile
and a half away-rose the eminence, afterward
known as “Bloody Hill,” which overlooked
the encampment of the Confederates along Wilson’s
Creek, and on which substantially all the fighting
was to take place. From it the Confederate trains
were in short reach, and the rout of the enemy could
be secured. Its central position, however, made
it easy to concentrate troops for its defense and bring
up reinforcements.
Capt. Plummer sent forward Capt.
C. C. Gilbert, 1st U. S., with his company to guard
the left of the advance, cross Wilson’s Creek,
and engage the right of the enemy. Capt.
Gilbert was a soldier of fine reputation, who was
to win much credit on subsequent fields; to rise to
the rank of Brigadier-General and the brief command
of a corps, and then to fall under the displeasure
of his commanding officers. Capt. Gilbert
moved forward rapidly until he came to Wilson’s
Creek, where his skirmishers were stopped by swamps
and jungles of brushwood, when Capt. Plummer
caught up with him, and the whole battalion finally
crossed the creek and advanced into a cornfield, easily
driving away the first slight force that attempted
to arrest them.
In the meanwhile quite a number of
the enemy was discovered assembling on the crest of
the ridge, and Gen. Lyon forming the 1st Mo. into line
sent them forward on the right to engage these, while
the 1st Kan. came up on the left and opened a brisk
fire, with Totten’s battery in the center, which
also opened fire.
This was about 10 minutes past 5,
when the battle may be said to have fairly opened.
The 1st Iowa and the 2d Kan., with Capt. Steele’s
battalion of Regulars, were held in reserve. Rains’s
Missourians responded pluckily to the fire, and Gen.
Price began rushing up assistance to them until he
says that he had over 2,000 men on the ridge.
The 1st Kan. and the 1st Mo. pressed resolutely forward,
delivering their fire at short range, and after a sharp
contest of 20 minutes the Missourians gave way and
fled down the hill.
There was a brief lull, in which the
Union men were encouraged by hearing Sigel’s
artillery open two miles away, on the other flank of
the enemy, and Lyon found his line preparatory to pushing
forward and striking the trains. Already there
were symptoms of panic there, and some of the wagons
were actually in flames.
Gen. Rains soon succeeded in rallying his men.
Gens. Slack, McBride, Parsons
and Clark rushed to his assistance with what men they
could hastily assemble, and Gen. Price led them forward
in a line covering Gen. Lyon’s entire front.
Both sides showed an earnest disposition to come to
close quarters, and a fierce fight lasting for perhaps
half an hour followed. Sometimes portions of the
Union troops were thrown into temporary disorder,
but they only fell back a few yards, when they would
rally and return to the field. The enemy strove
to reach the crest of the ridge and drive the Union
troops back, but were repulsed, while the Union troops,
following them to the foot of the ridge, were driven
back to the crest.
The Confederates brought up a battery,
which, however, was soon silenced by the fire concentrated
upon it from Totten’s battery and that of Lieut.
Du Bois. In the meanwhile Capt. Plummer had
been pushing his Regulars thru the corn and oat fields
toward the battery which he wanted to take, and was
within 200 yards of it when Capt. Mcintosh, an
officer of the Old Army, and now Adjutant-General
for McCulloch, saw the danger and rushed up the 3d
La. and the 2d Ark. against Plummer’s left The
Regulars made a stubborn resistance for a few minutes,
but their line was enveloped by the long line of the
two regiments, and they fell back with considerable
haste across the creek toward Totten’s battery.
Mcintosh saw his advantage and pursued
it to the utmost, sending his Louisianians and Arkansans
forward on the double-quick to prevent Plummer from
rallying. The watchful DuBois saw the trouble
the Regulars were in, and turning his guns upon his
pursuers enfiladed them with canister and shell with
such effect that they in turn ran, and were rallied
by Mcintosh behind a little log house, into which DuBois
put a couple of shells and sent them further back.
By this time the battle was two hours
old and the roar of the conflict died down, except
on the extreme right, where the 1st Mo. was still
having a bitter struggle with a superior force of fresh
troops with which Price was endeavoring to turn the
Union right flank.
Gen. Lyon, who had watched every phase
of the battle closely, ordered Capt. Totten to
move part of his battery to the support of the 1st
Mo., but as the Captain was about to open he was restrained
by seeing a regiment advancing to within a distance
of about 200 yards, carrying both a Federal and a
Confederate flag. It was the direction from which
Sigel had been anxiously expected, and as the uniform
of the advancing regiment was similar to that of Sigel’s
men, both the infantry and the artillery withheld
their fire until the enemy revealed his character by
a volley, when Capt Totten opened all his guns upon
them with canister and inflicted great slaughter.
Capt Cary Gratz, of the 1st Mo., was
so indignant at this treachery that he dashed out
and shot down the man who was carrying the Union flag,
only to be shot down himself almost immediately afterwards
by several bullets from the Confederates. The
2d Kan. was also hurried forward to support the 1st
Mo. Capt Steele’s battalion was brought
up and the 1st Iowa was sent in to relieve the 1st
Kan., which had suffered quite severely and was nearly
out of ammunition.
The battle was renewed with much greater
fierceness than ever, the Confederates advancing in
three or four ranks, lying down, kneeling, standing,
sometimes getting within 30 or 40 yards of the Union
line before they were forced back.
Gen. Lyon was everywhere where his
presence was needed to encourage the troops, rally
them, and bring them back into line. His horse
was shot, and he received a wound in the head and
one on the ankle. He continued to walk along
the line, but he was evidently much depressed by the
way in which Price and McCulloch succeeded in bringing
forward fresh troops to replace those which had been
driven from the field. He said to Maj. Schofield
sadly, “I fear the day is lost.” Schofield
replied encouragingly, dismounted one of his orderlies
and gave the horse to Lyon, when they separated, each
to lead a regiment It was now 9 o’clock, or
little after, and there was a lull in the fight, during
which time the enemy seemed to be reorganizing his
force, and Lyon began concentrating his into a more
compact form on the crest of the ridge.
Capt. Sweeny called Lyon’s
attention to his wounds, but Lyon answered briefly,
“It is nothing.”
Schofield moved off to rally a portion
of the 1st Iowa, which showed a disposition to break
under the terrific fire, and lead it back into action.
Gen. Lyon rode for a moment or two with the file closers
on the right of the 1st Iowa, and then turned toward
the 2d Kan., which was moved forward under the lead
of Col. Mitchell. In a few moments the Colonel
fell, wounded, and Gen. Lyon shouted to the regiment
to come on, that he would lead them. The next
instant, almost, a bullet pierced his breast and he
fell dead. Lehman, his faithful orderly, was near
him when he fell, and rushed to his assistance, raising
a terrible outcry, which some of the officers near
promptly quieted lest it discourage the troops.
After a bitter struggle of fully half
an hour the Confederates were driven back all along
the line, and the battle ceased for a little while.
The Confederates retired so completely that it looked
as if the battle was won, and Maj. Schofield,
finding Maj. Sturgis, informed him that he was
in command, and the principal officers were hastily
gathered together for a consultation. The first
and most anxious inquiry of all was as to what had
become of Sigel. It was all-important to know
that. If a junction could be formed with him
the army could advance and drive the enemy completely
from the field.
Sigel had crossed Wilson’s Creek
and come into line within easy range of McCulloch’s
headquarters, where Capt Shaeffer opened with his battery
upon a large force of Arkansan, Texan and Missourian
troops who were engaged in getting breakfast.
They were so demoralized by the awful storm of shells
that at least one regiment-Col. Greer’s
of Texas-did not recover its composure
during the day, and took little if any part in the
rest of the engagement.
Col. Churchill succeeded in rallying
his Arkansas regiment, but before he could return
and engage Sigel he received urgent orders to hurry
over to the right and help drive back Lyon. Sigel’s
men moved forward into the deserted camp, but unfortunately
broke ranks and began plundering it.
McCulloch had rushed over to his headquarters
in time to meet the fugitives, and by great exertions
succeeded in rallying about 2,000 men, with whom he
attacked Sigel’s disorganized men in the camps,
and drove them out. Sigel succeeded in rallying
a portion of his men, when McCulloch advanced upon
them with a regiment the uniforms of which were so
like that of the volunteers under Lyon that his men
could not be persuaded that it was not a portion of
Lyon’s troops advancing to their assistance,
and they withheld their fire until the Confederates
were within 10 paces, when the latter poured in such
a destructive volley that men and horses went down
before it, and Sigel’s Brigade was utterly routed,
with a loss of some 250 prisoners and a regimental
flag, which was afterwards used to deceive the Union
troops.
With the exception of the two troops
of Regular cavalry under Capt. E. A. Carr, which
seem to have done nothing during this time, Sigel’s
Brigade disappeared completely from the action, and
Sigel and Salomon, with a few men, rode back to Springfield,
where it is said that they went to bed. This
inexplicable action by Sigel bitterly prejudiced the
other officers against him, and was continually coming
up in judgment against him.
There is no doubt of Sigel’s
personal courage, but why, with the sound of Lyon’s
cannon in his ears, and knowing full well the desperate
struggle his superior officer was engaged in, he made
no effort to rally his troops or to take any further
part in the battle, is beyond comprehension.
Col. Salomon, who accompanied him in his flight
to Springfield, afterward became Colonel of a Wisconsin
regiment, and made a brilliant record.
It was yet but little after 9 o’clock,
and despite the stubbornness of the fighting no decisive
advantage had been gained on either side.
The Union troops were masters of the
savagely contested hill, but all their previous efforts
to advance beyond, pierce the main Confederate line,
and reach the trains below had been repulsed.
Had they better make another attempt?
The hasty council of war decided that
it would be unsafe to do so until Col. Sigel
was heard from. The army was already badly crippled,
for the 1st Kan. and the 1st Mo. had lost one-third
of their men and half their officers, the others had
suffered nearly as severely, and everybody was running
short of ammunition. They had marched all night,
and gone into battle without breakfast, had been fighting
five hours, and were suffering terribly from heat,
thirst and exhaustion.
The council was suddenly brought to
an end by seeing a large force which Price and McCulloch
had rallied come over the hill directly in the Union
front A battery which Gen. Price had established on
the crest of the hill somewhat to the left opened
a fire of canister and shrapnel, but the Union troops
showed the firmest front of any time during the day,
and Totten’s and DuBois’s batteries hurled
a storm of canister into the advancing infantry.
Gen. Price had brought up fresh regiments to replace
those which had been fought out, and it seemed as if
the Union line would be overwhelmed. But the
officers brought up every man they could reach.
Capt Gordon Granger threw three companies of the 1st
Mo., three companies of the 1st Kan., and two companies
of the 1st Iowa, which had been supporting DuBois’s
battery, against the right flank of the enemy and
by their terrible enfilade fire sent it back in great
disorder. On the right Lieut.-Col. Blair,
with the 2d Kan., was having an obstinate fight, but
with the assistance of a section of Totten’s
battery under Lieut. Sokalski the enemy was at
last driven back clear out of sight.
The battle had now raged bitterly
for six hours, with every attempt of the enemy to
drive foe stubborn defenders from the crest of the
hill repulsed. The slope on the eminence was
thickly strewn with the dead and wounded. The
Confederates had suffered fearfully. Cols.
Weightman and Brown, who commanded brigades, had been
killed, and Gens. Price, Slack and Clark wounded.
The loss of subordinate officers had been very heavy.
They had been clearly fought to a finish, and an attempt
of their cavalry to turn the Union right flank had
been repulsed with great loss by Totten’s battery
and several companies of the 1st Mo. and the 1st Kan.
The shells produced the greatest consternation among
the horses and men, as they were delivered at short
range with unerring aim. The entire Confederate
line left the field, disappearing thru the thick woods
in the valley to their camp on Wilson’s Creek,
somewhat to the right of the Union center.
Another brief council of war resulted
in an order from Maj. Sturgis to fall back.
Nothing could be heard from Sigel, the men were exhausted,
the ammunition nearly gone, and it seemed best to retire
while there was an opportunity left. As subsequently
learned this was a great mistake, because the Confederate
army was in full retreat, and an advance from the
Union army would have sent them off the field for good.
The Union officers did the best they
could according to their light, and their retirement
was in the best order and absolutely unmolested.
The retreat began about 11:30 and
continued two miles to a prairie northeast of the
battleground, where a halt was made to enable the
Surgeons to collect the wounded in ambulances.
Gen. Lyon’s body had been placed in an ambulance,
but by someone’s order was taken out again and
left on the prairie with the rest of the dead.
About 5 o’clock in the afternoon
the army reached Springfield, and there found Sigel
and Salomon and most of their brigade, with the others
coming in from all directions.
In spite of his conduct on the battlefield,
Sigel’s great theoretical knowledge and experience
in European wars decided that the command should be
turned over to him, and he was formally placed at the
head.
According to official reports the
casualties in the Union army were as follows:
The official reports give the casualties
in the Confederate army as follows: