In high
school and college, the teaching I received on the American Civil War via
teachers, lectures, and textbooks focused on the economic, social, and
political factors leading to the war; the slavery debate; the major battles of
the war; and the Reconstruction period. The major political and military
personalities were always covered – Abraham Lincoln, Jefferson Davis, Ulysses
Grant, Robert E. Lee – as were the major battles like Gettysburg, Vicksburg,
Bull Run, and more.
What
tended to be less covered were the events in the Border States – the slave
states that remained with the Union, like Maryland, Delaware, Kentucky, and
Missouri. I learned from other reading that Missouri’s decision to stay with
the Union was a very near thing indeed – the governor and likely most of the
populace favored secession; it was businessmen in St. Louis who played a crucial
role in marching on the Jefferson Barracks military base and securing it for
the Union, and thus helping to prevent secession.
I’d heard
the term but didn’t fully understand the meaning of “bushwhacker.” I tended
to lump it with other derogatory terms that came from the Civil War and
Reconstruction periods, like “scalawag” and “carpetbagger.” I didn’t
know that bushwhacker meant guerilla, and that it was a term especially applied
to Confederate guerillas. I didn’t know that many historians today consider the
bushwhackers as far more important to the development of the Civil War than
previously believed. I didn’t know they operated extensively in the border
states like Missouri, where they often engaged in pitched battles with federal troops.
And I didn’t
know that some of the most famous outlaws of the Old West, including Frank James
and Cole Younger, got their starts as bushwhackers in the Civil War.
In one
ebook volume, Sapere Books has published some of the key accounts of the
activities of the bushwhackers. The
Bushwhackers: Fighting For and Against the Confederate Guerillas in the
American Civil War is a collection of articles, memoirs, and
book-length histories of what the bushwhackers did in places like Missouri,
federally occupied Louisiana, Virginia and the mountains of North Carolina.
William Quantrell |
What is
particularly valuable about reading these accounts is how the same event – such
as the raid
on Lawrence Kansas in 1863 – could be described in such radically different
terms by people on the opposing sides. It was either a dastardly and vicious
attack on innocent townspeople (according to Judge J.D. Bailey) or revenge for
the burning of
Osceola, Missouri, by federal troops and the systematic plundering and
looting of farms and plantations by federal troops led by the
general who lived in Lawrence (according to bushwhacker John McCorkle).
"Bloody Bill" Anderson |
The stark
differences in accounts of the same events would be similar to the accounts of
the November 2016 election by a Hillary Clinton supporter and a Donald Trump
supporter – the descriptions are that starkly opposite.
The
accounts included in The Bushhackers
include Three Years with Quantrell by
John McCorkle; Quantrell’s Raid on
Lawrence by Judge L.D.Bailey; The
Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand; Ten
Days’ Experience with Colonel William T. Anderson by Sgt. Thomas Goodman; Fighting the Guerillas on the Lafourche,
Louisiana by Capt. Frederick Mitchell; The
Memoirs of Colonel John S. Mosby; Four Years with Morgan and Forrest by
Col. Thomas F. Berry; McNeil’s Last
Charge by J.W. Duffy; and The Border
Outlaws by James W. Buel (covering Frank and Jesse James, the Younger Brothers, and
others).
Some of
the highlights:
·
John
McCorkle was a bushwhacker who operated with the raiders of William
Quantrell (often spelled Quantrill) in the counties around Kansas City in
northwestern Missouri.
·
Judge
Bailey was visiting Lawrence and staying in one of the town’s hotels the day
Quantrell’s raiders attacked.
·
Sam
Hildebrand lived in southeastern Missouri and claimed he was driven to
joining with the Confederates even though he’d originally been a Union man.
·
Sgt.
Goodman was aboard the train that was stopped near Centralia,
Missouri, in 1864 by “Bloody Bill” Anderson
and his men; Goodman was the only soldier spared from a systematic execution of
all soldiers aboard the train.
·
John
Mosby was one of the most famous Confederate soldiers of the Civil War.
Arguably less a bushwhacker and more of a regular soldier and officer, Mosby’s
exploits included leading his men into a Union camp, capturing a general, and
bringing him back behind Confederate lines.
A depiction of the federal raid on Osceola, Missouri |
Common to
all of the accounts are the sense of ongoing violence; the motivation of
revenge; the heightened sense of outrage on both sides; the attacks on civilian
populations, including people in towns and living on farms; how anyone could
himself (or herself) accused of having the wrong kind of national sympathies –
all it took was one accusation and you could find your home burned down and
your crops confiscated or destroyed. A few of the accounts included in the
volume are contemporary; most are written years and sometimes decades after the
events they describe.
The Civil
War period was a bloody, vicious time, and not only on the famous battlefields.
The Bushwhackers reminds us of what
life could be like in total war.
Top photograph: the Quantrell raid on Lawrence Kansas in 1863, as depicted in Harper's Weekly.
2 comments:
We have similar terms for those folks today. One side claims they are freedom fighters. The other side declares them to be terrorists.
One of the real benefits of assembling original source documents like these is the ability to show the same event -- like the raid on Lawrence, Kansas by Quantrell's Raiders -- from the perspectives of both a raider and a resident of the town (in this case, a judge). You almost think they're describing entirely different events. The differences are similar to today's political rhetoric, dominated by extremes.
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