The
Civil War in Callaway County
By Mark Douglas
One hundred and thirty five years ago, in mid
April, the War Between the States began for Callaway County. Two
Westminster College students were studying in the science building,
when another student rushed into the room and breathlessly told
the two students that war was declared and there was a rally at
the Courthouse. The two students rushed to the Courthouse square,
leaving their books open on the table.
Missouri, and the nation, were in turmoil. South Carolina seceded
from the Union on December 20th, 1860 and rapidly other southern
states were following. In February of 1861, a state convention
had been called in Jefferson City, and later moved to St. Louis,
to decide Missouri's position in the conflict. On March 4, 1861
the convention published it's results and found there was "No
adequate cause to impel Missouri to dissolve her connection with
the Federal Union."
Callaway County was pro-Southern in nature and was decidedly
against war. Mass meetings had been held all over the county since
President Lincoln's election in November of 1860. The outcome
of all of the meetings was that while no one wanted to see the
Union divide, if the South seceded, we should let them go without
military intervention.
Lincoln responded to Fort Sumter being fired upon by South
Carolina forces on April 12, 1861, by calling for 75,000 troops
to put down the secessionist forces. War had begun.
Missouri Governor C. F. Jackson refused to send troops to the
Federal Government. He called for an army to be raised to resist
Federal forces. The rally at Fulton's town square was called in
response to the Governors call. The two Westminster College students,
Daniel McIntyre and Joseph Laurie, arrived at the courthouse square
to find a crowd of agitated men. Many speeches were made and the
overwhelming sentiment was that we could not support the Union
in attacking the South and that we would defend our own state
from Federal intervention.
A call was raised to form a company of men. Sixty men volunteered.
They came from all walks of life and economic levels. Most were
the sons of everyday farmers. The Westminster student, Daniel
McIntyre, was elected Captain and the company named itself the
Callaway Guards.
Perhaps the most fortuitous volunteer was a stranger to Callaway
County by the name of John S. Hoskins. Hoskins was a soldier of
fortune. He had served with the American mercenary William Walker
in his seizure of Nicaragua in 1855. Walker's men fought many
battles where they were greatly outnumbered. Only well disciplined
and well trained men could have, and did survive these battles.
Hoskins volunteered his services as drill-master to the company
and was gladly accepted. According to John Bell, a surviving member
of the Callaway Guards, "He (Hoskins) was a soldier and nothing
more....His energy, capacity and enthusiasm were soon communicated
to every member of the company, and the rapid development of the
men and boys into well-drilled soldiers was the pride not only
of the members of the company, but of the citizens of the community
as well."
The company equipped itself the best it could and left without
fanfare to report to Governor Jackson in Jefferson City. Arriving
at the Capital City, the Callaway Guards went to the fairgrounds
to drill with the other companies arriving in Jefferson City.
Two companies were judged the best in appearance and drill,
the Callaway Guards and the Warsaw Gray's. Their reward was two
weeks of guard duty at the Capitol building, which was served
uneventfully.
Meanwhile, two distinct forces were at work in Missouri. General
Harney, the Federal Commander of Missouri, was meeting with President
Lincoln and the War Department in Washington, D.C. His adjutant,
Nathaniel Lyon, feared the secessionist forces forming in St.
Louis would capture the arsenal. Lyon, with a clever ruse, saved
the 60,000 stand of arms therein, and shipped the arms to safety.
On May 10th, Lyon and the staunch Unionist troops of St. Louis
county surrounded the secessionist camp, Camp Jackson. It was
a bloodless capture. Lyon marched the captured troops through
the city which enraged the pro-Southern crowds forming on the
streets. Strong words were exchanged, and subsequently, some by-standers
began to pelt the Federal troop with bricks and various objects.
The Federal troops opened fire upon the crowd killing 28 men,
women and children and wounding many more. The Camp Jackson Massacre
was the opening volley of the war in Missouri.
Governor Jackson and the State Legislature were incensed by
the actions of Lyon in St. Louis. They rushed a War Powers Act
through the State Legislature including a Military Bill allowing
the formation of a new state army to be called The Missouri State
Guard. They appointed ex-Governor Sterling Price to Major General
and Commander in Chief of the Missouri State Guard. The Callaway
Guards would be one of the first companies to be sworn in.
General Harney, commander of the Federal forces in Missouri,
returned from Washington and sought to repair the damage done
by the Camp Jackson Massacre and Lyon's strong-arm tactics. General
Harney recalled the troops surrounding St. Louis and negotiated
a compromise with General Sterling Price to allow Missouri to
stay out of the war if Missouri did not officially participate.
With tensions easing, Governor Jackson ordered the pro-Missouri
troops in Jefferson City to return to their home counties, but
to stand ready if hostilities occurred. The Callaway Guards returned
to Fulton and drilled and practiced with their weapons at the
fairgrounds west of Fulton (now Priest Field at Westminster College.)
Nathaniel Lyon seized the command of the Federal Forces away
from General Harney with the political help of Francis Blair.
Blair's brother, Montgomery, was one of Lincoln's cabinet members.
Lyon, now a Brigadier General, called for a meeting with Governor
Jackson and General Price.
They met at the Planter's House, a fashionable hotel in St.
Louis on June 11th. Lyon wanted only concession, not negotiation,
and at the end of a long diatribe declared "I would see you...
and every man, woman, and child in the state, dead and buried."
He then declared war on Missouri and gave the Governor and his
party an hour to leave.
Governor Jackson and General Price returned to Jefferson City.
In the early hours of June 12th, Missouri was voted by the legislature
to be at war. The Government of Missouri then evacuated Jefferson
City, and headed to Boonville which they thought was easier to
defend. General Lyon was quick to follow with troops, and captured
Jefferson City on the 14th.
When the news had reached Fulton, it was too late for the Callaway
Guards to join General Price at Jefferson City. On the morning
of the 16th, the Callaway Guards received a benediction from Dr.
Samuel S. Laws, D.D., President of Westminster College. They marched
out of Fulton on the Columbia Road (now State Road F) toward Boonville
to the beat of their young drummer, Frank Brewer. They were accompanied
out of town with the playing of a fife by Charles Hill, a local
veteran of the Mexican War.
By the time the Callaway Guards reached Columbia, they could
hear the booming of the cannons at Boonville. Delayed by the presence
of Federal troops at Glasgow, their crossing point of the Missouri
river, the Callaway troops missed the first major battle of the
war in Missouri, the Battle of Boonville.
The Callaway Guards joined the Missouri State Guard on it's
march to the southwest corner of Missouri from Boonville. On July
4th, 1861, The Callaway Guards formed with four other companies
to become Colonel Burbridges Regiment. The next morning, July
5th, they fought in their first engagement, the Battle of Carthage.
The Callaway Guards was officially designated as Company A,
1st Regiment (Burbridges), 3rd Division, Missouri State Guard.
They would fight in every western engagement thereafter of the
Missouri State Guard in 1861. They served with honor and bravery
befitting troops better equipped and trained. Their tenacity was
astounding by todays standards.
At the Battle of Oak Hill (Wilson's Creek), the Callaway Guards
fought at the center of the battle on Bloody Hill. The 1st Regiment
suffered 50 percent casualties that day. The Callaway Guards had
it's Captain severely wounded by a musket ball. 1st Lieutenant
Hoskins assumed command and was cut in two by a cannon ball while
trying, in vain, to save a group of men entrapped behind a tree.
Their last battle as the Callaway Guards was at Lexington,
Missouri, the third week of September, 1861. They fought alongside
of eight other companies that were from Callaway County. Four
of the eight companies were cavalry and four were infantry. The
"Callaway Infantry" was noted in General Thomas Harris
report to General Price for it's "gallant and distinguished
services" at Lexington.
Mid-October brought the end of the six-months enlistments for
the men of the Callaway Guards. Many survivors returned home to
check on the "old folks", only to find martial law in
effect. All of the Callaway Guards names had been published in
the May 31st, 1861, edition of the Fulton newspaper, THE MISSOURI
TELEGRAPH. They were wanted men by the Federal authorities.
Those unable to serve further, from wounds or illness, were
required to take an oath of loyalty to the Union and post bonds
for their freedom. Some went to southern Missouri to winter with
the Missouri State Guard troops. A large number stayed to hide
out in the woods, and fight as partisans locally. They served
in Jefferson Jones' army in the standoff with General Henderson
which created the Kingdom of Callaway.
Federal forces negated the compromise worked out by Jones and
Henderson by invading Callaway county. This infuriated the local
partisans and they began a campaign of guerrilla warfare in concert
with partisans in other counties. Their prime target was the North
Missouri Railroad that ran through Audrain County. In late December
1861 they wrecked the tracks at Jefftown (now Benton City,) and
burned bridges and tore down the telegraph lines.
Federal troops began a rout of Southern sympathizers in retaliation.
Orders were issued to kill all guerrillas on sight and to confiscate
their property. Numerous Federal troops, including "Kreckle's
Dutch" who were stationed in Fulton, viewed the orders as
a license to burn, loot, and arrest indiscriminately. These actions
forced many neutral men to take up arms and go to Arkansas to
join the Southern army in the spring of 1862.
A large number of the remaining able-bodied men, in early July
of 1862, joined Colonel Joseph Porter's NE MO Cavalry and fought
in northeast Missouri. On July 28, 1862, one-half mile south of
Moore's Mill (now Calwood) they fought in the only major battle
in Callaway County. In October they crossed the Missouri river,
with Captain David W. Craig, and went south to serve in Army of
the Confederacy.
Captain Daniel McIntyre survived his wounds at Bloody Hill
and led his troops through their remaining battles. He was captured
at Milford, Missouri, in December 1861, and was made a prisoner
of war. Paroled from a prison camp in Sandusky, Ohio, he was sent
south where he served with distinction throughout the war and
become Attorney General of Missouri after the war.
Tyre Harris Jameson, was Jefferson Jones' brother-in-law. He
assumed command of the company, at the Battle of Oak Hills (Wilson's
Creek), after Captain McIntyre was wounded and 1st Lieutenant
Hoskins was killed. In October of 1861 he carried the communications
back and forth between Colonel Jefferson Jones and Brigadier General
John B. Henderson, U.S., that would make Callaway County the Kingdom.
Dr. Samuel S. Laws, D.D., was arrested and tried for treason.
He was convicted on the evidence that he sanctified the Callaway
Guards and that he conferred degrees on Daniel McIntyre and Joseph
Laurie. McIntyre and Laurie had both left Westminster College
before graduation. Dr. Laws was banished from the United States
as punishment. He spent the rest of the war teaching in Europe.
Charles Hill, who played the fife while the Callaway Guards
marched out of Fulton, was a "strong Union man." Hill
was arbitrarily murdered by Union troops, along with William and
David Givens, a father and son, in September of 1862 at the "Prairie
Grove Massacre."
The youngest member of the Callaway Guards, at age 16, was
James Snedicor, who, less than a year after joining the Callaway
Guards, was arrested by his older brother, Provost Marshal Isaac
D. Snedicor. James Snedicor was tried and sentenced to death for
his participation in "guerrilla" activities in Callaway
County.
Many of the founding families of Callaway County were represented
by sons in the Callaway Guards or the Callaway Infantry. If you
had family in Callaway County before 1870 you can probably trace
your family lines to one of it's soldiers. The only known surviving
muster list of any of the companies is of the Callaway Guards.
It is listed here as it appeared in the May 31st, 1861, MISSOURI
TELEGRAPH.
THE CALLAWAY GUARDS
Captain - Daniel H. McIntyre
1st Lt. John S. Hoskins
2nd Lt. Henry Willing
3rd Lt. T. H. Jameson
Commissary Sgt. Joseph Laurie
Orderly Sgt. James Stewart
1st Sgt. S. E. Shoemaker
2nd Sgt. James K. Wells
3rd Sgt. Samuel Champlin
1st Cpl. F. W. Payne
2nd Cpl. John A. Craighead
3rd Cpl. W. Sing. Duncan
4th Cpl. Nick P. Craighead
Drummer Frank A. Brewer
PRIVATES
W. S. Austin
R. S. Bagby
J. D. Bartley
J. P. Bell
Henry T. Blow
James W. Boulware
T. C. Boulware
Geo. S. Collier
Geo. W. Davis
John W. Davis
Joseph B. Davis
Wm. H. Dawson
R. M. Douglas
John Dunlap
A. G. Fisher
Jesse Garner
James L. Grant
Benjamin Griggs
W. H. Hall
E. Hansard
B. S. Hite
James T. Jameson
J. L. Jones
Thomas S. Kames
A. W. King
F. W. Knight
Sanford Langley
James McClanahan
George McIntire
J. M. Meadows
E. M. Morris
S. W. Mosley
D. H. Muir
J. Muir
Chas. Prentice
J. W. Russell
Lucian Shotman
Thomas Shotman
James P. Snedicor
Robert H. Taylor
H. T. Terrell
Isaac S. Terrill
B. A. Walter
E. B. Walton
F. M. Warner
J. C. Watkins