Major Emory Rogers
The governor of Arkansas, Henry Rector, was beyond furious. The Confederate defeat at Pea Ridge was bad
enough. Now, Major General Earl Van Dorn was taking his “Army of the West” east
of the Mississippi. Arkansas was now
wide open to Union invasion. Believing Little Rock, the state capital, was about to fall, Governor Rector moved the
state archives south to Hot Springs. He
issued a public proclamation stating Arkansas would have to fight it out alone,
implying Arkansas would secede from the Confederacy if it didn’t receive
military assistance soon. Desperate
measures would be required to raise a new army and restore public moral. General John Roane, a former Arkansas governor,
was assigned to do the impossible.
Victorious at Pea Ridge, Union General Samuel Curtis had Little
Rock well within his grasp, possibly the whole state as well. However, terrain
and distance would make it a difficult task at best. His nearest supply base was miles away at
Rolla, Missouri; miles traversed only by foot and wagon. Then there was the weather. The spring of 1862 brought record setting
rainfall that overflowed rivers and turned roads into quagmires. To make matters even worse, local farms and towns
had been emptied of their food supplies, thoroughly scavenged by both Union and
Confederate troops. Very little was left
for Curtis’ hungry troops.
Roane needed troops fast to defend Little Rock. After Van Dorn left, there were only 1,500
troops available against a vast Union army of 23,000. The only experienced troops available was a
small Texas spy company under Captain Alf Johnson, a near legendary scout who
once served under General McCulloch.
During a scouting mission near Springfield, Missouri, before the Battle
of Wilson’s Creek, Johnson found himself surrounded by Union troops outside the
home of a Confederate supporter. With the
blast of his shotgun, he broke out of of the encirclement and headed back to
McCulloch’s camp without a scratch. Roane stopped all
Confederate units leaving Arkansas to join Van Dorn. Heading toward Memphis, Colonel William
Parsons’ 12th Texas Cavalry Regiment was ordered to promptly turn around and
head toward Little Rock.
William Parson’s family heritage is anything but Southern, much less
Texan. He was a direct descendant of
New England Puritans that arrived on the second voyage of the Mayflower. That all changed when his father opened a
store in Montgomery, Alabama. Young
Parsons became fully immersed in Southern culture and habits. He attended Emory
University in Georgia then abruptly left to fight in the War with Mexico. Parsons later moved to Texas and published
newspapers in Tyler and Waco. After
Texas seceded, he received a commission to organize the 12th Texas Cavalry
Regiment in Hempstead. His officers came
up with rather unorthodox means to recruit members. Captain Jeff Neal gained recruits by offering
free liquor to potential recruits. Many awoke the following morning to a hangover
and unknowingly pledged to serve as a cavalryman in the Confederate Army. Parsons set up a training camp in Ellis
County. His new regiment developed a
liking for their new commander; one who fought for their needs while fighting
by their side in battle. After arriving
in Arkansas, the 12th Texas was later joined with the 19th and 21st Texas
Cavalry Regiments, Morgan’s Texas Battalion and Pratt’s 10th Texas Field
Battery. Parson’s regiment would become
Parsons’ Texas Cavalry Brigade.
The spirited Texans were welcomed by less than spirited Little
Rock residents; who were resolved to a Union occupation. The Confederate national flag was absent from
the capitol dome. The Texans were like a
tonic; Parsons’ troopers quickly took charge of the situation.
One elderly gentleman asked Captain Jeff Neal how long it would be
before Union troops arrived. Neal
replied brusquely, “Never! We will whip them back.” Writing his wife about the
missing flag, Lt. George Ingram wrote, “We will hoist one on the dome…Hurrah
for the Texans.”
Curtis, through Union scouts and spies, was aware of Van Dorn’s
move east. Fearing Van Dorn might
outflank him and then head for the Missouri border, Curtis moved his army east
to shadow him. East Arkansas proved anything but accommodating. Unlike the rolling Ozark hills in the
Northwest, East Arkansas was flat and swampy.
Disease was rampant and guerrilla bands began to harass Curtis’
flanks. Consisting largely of German
immigrants trained in staid European tactics, Curtis’ men were unaccustomed to
the rebels’ hit and run attacks. One such immigrant regiment was the 17th Missouri under Brigadier General Peter
Osterhaus.
At Pea Ridge, Osterhaus defeated Confederate troops under the
famed Texas Ranger, Major General Benjamin McCulloch, killing McCulloch in the
process. Before immigrating to America,
he was a reserve officer in the Prussian Army.
A St. Louis resident before the war, Osterhaus trained fellow immigrants
for militia service. The training would
reap dividends for the Union Army in Missouri.
Rising through the Union ranks, Osterhaus would later command an army
corps during Sherman’s march through Georgia and the Carolinas. While camped at Batesville, Arkansas (fifty
miles northwest of Little Rock), he sent out companies from the 17th Missouri
to forage.
Crossing the overflowing Little Red River, members of the 17th encountered 100 members of the 12th Texas Cavalry Regiment under Major Emory Rogers. Fifty Arkansas locals arrived on the scene to help Rogers. Dividing his command into three units, Rogers surrounded the foraging party at Whitney’s Lane near Searcy, Arkansas. Outmaneuvered, the foragers were forced to flee back across the river, picking up support from the 4th Missouri Cavalry to help fend off the swarming Texans. Fifty members of the foraging party became casualties. The Rebels suffered only two. A Union private later wrote, “Fighting the Texans was like walking into a den of wildcats.”
Crossing the overflowing Little Red River, members of the 17th encountered 100 members of the 12th Texas Cavalry Regiment under Major Emory Rogers. Fifty Arkansas locals arrived on the scene to help Rogers. Dividing his command into three units, Rogers surrounded the foraging party at Whitney’s Lane near Searcy, Arkansas. Outmaneuvered, the foragers were forced to flee back across the river, picking up support from the 4th Missouri Cavalry to help fend off the swarming Texans. Fifty members of the foraging party became casualties. The Rebels suffered only two. A Union private later wrote, “Fighting the Texans was like walking into a den of wildcats.”
Lauded by the Southern newspapers, Rogers’ small victory would
provide a huge moral boost for Arkansas residents while dampening the moral
fortitude of Curtis. His supply line
broke down completely; he abandoned his advance on Little Rock. Instead, he
opted for the capture of Helena on the Mississippi River. His starving army would now be supplied by
riverboat. Little Rock was saved for
another year.
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