Confederate Guerrilla War in the North? – The Northwestern Confederacy
A leading expert on guerrilla warfare commented in 1972: “In the Southern regions of Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois, and in Missouri there was a substantial number of people with Southern sympathies,…Here there was potential for guerrilla warfare which the Southern High Command exploited only superficially. If the Southern High Command had been able to exploit this potential fully, the success of the Union armies in the West could have been delayed or, perhaps, might never have taken place” (N.I. Klonis, Guerrilla Warfare – Analysis and Projections, p.8).
Not until the fall of 1863 an attempt was made to establish a Northwestern Confederacy. The plan was to send a Confederate strike force from Canada against the Union military prison on Johnson’s Island in Lake Erie near Sandusky, Ohio. The freed 3,500 Confederate prisoners would then head for Canada and from there attack the city of Buffalo.
A plan was made to secure four ships to be used for the strike and the return to Canada.
Someone, however, revealed the plan, and the British ambassador in Washington D.C. was notified. He in turn wrote the Union Secretary of War that groups hostile to the United States were plotting to invade and destroy the city of
Buffalo. Furthermore he thought it prudent to watch the steamboats on Lake Erie.
Union leaders were shocked. The governors of the northwestern states were notified and troop reinforcements dispatched . Media was tipped off and wrote about the plan.
During the winter 1863-1864 new efforts were made. A group under the leadership of Captain Thomas C. Hines, one of the famed Morgan raiders, came to Canada to plan in cooperation with the Confederacy’s commissioners a rising in the northwestern states.
Order of the Sons of Liberty (OSL) was the leading anti-Unionist organization in the northwest. The military branch of OSL was headed by Dr. William A. Bowles, who was for an armed uprising.
In June, 1864, Captain Hines opened negotiations with the OSL. Primary targets in the new action plan was again Johnson’s Island and also Camp Morton at Indianapolis and Camp Douglas at Chicago. In addition the Union prison and arsenal at Rock Island, Illinois, was to be secured. After Confederate prisoners were released and provided with weapons from the arsenal Louisville, Kentucky, would be attacked and secured for the Northwestern Confederacy. The Kentucky river city was an important stronghold of the Union. A rising would cause, so was intended, Grant to relax his pressure on Petersburg and Sherman would have been forced to come to the aid of Federal forces in the northwest. The rising, first set for July and then August, 1864, was to be aided by a raid by General Nathan Bedford Forrest into Kentucky. On an earlier raid in that state Forrest had left officers and men to aid the coming uprising. It did not, however, take place and a new plan to be set in action before the November, 1864, elections failed because Federal spies had been infiltrated into the OSL.
Had the plans been successful the stage might have been set for future control of northern Illinois. Armed with federal weapons released Confederate prisoners could have moved south toward Kentucky to meet with General Forrest’s forces. Lincoln had lost the election in Kentucky and Confederate guerrilla warfare and opposition raged in the state. Had Kentucky been secured as a Confederate base a new front could have been opened in the back of Grant and Sherman. But the Confederacy was hard pressed at the time and the Southern High Command was probably reluctant to put money, troops and resources into what they might have thought to be a gamble. General Morgan’s Ohio and Indiana raid should have been combined with efforts to have the predecessor of OSL, the Knights of the Golden Circle (KGC), start guerrilla warfare in support of Morgan’s troops. For such efforts more active preparations with money, weapons and military training would have been necessary. Also the full potential of the Confederate guerrilla warfare in Missouri could have been used combined with a strike of General Price’s forces from Arkansas.
Bertil Haggman©
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when he returned home to his North
Bennett H. Young - He Kept the Faith
Having earlier written on Young in this section (the St.Albans Raid)
I think he is worth many articles. Before the raid he was involved
in two unsuccessful attempts to release Confederate prisoners
from Northern camps.
Young (a General in the UCV) lived until 1919, a constant encourager
of his veteran compatriots. He settled later in Louisville, KY, and on
Youngland Avenue in that city one can stop and read about him
on a marker:
"Youngland
Home of Bennett H. Young (1843-1919). Member of famed CSA unit,
Morgan's Raiders. Lt. B.H. Young led 21 soldiers in raid Oct. 19,
1864 on St. Albans, Vt., Civil War's northernmost action. Robbed three
banks of over $ 200,000 and attempted to burn town. Captured in
Canada, they were released. After war, he became a business and
civic leader in Louisville."
His house is still standing and he is buried in Cane Hill Cemetery
in Louisville. No wonder the inscription on his gravestone is
"I have kept the faith".
Bertil Haggman
William T. Anderson Missouri – Capt. MO Guerrilla
Confederate States Army 1840 – 1864
He has been called "Bloody Bill". He had the highest qualities most admired by Missourians – horsemanship and marksmanship. The majority of guerrillas that fought under his leadership were 16 to 30 years. Only one was older than 40. Most of the Missouri guerrillas operated in commands of twenty to fifty men. This is the story about one of the captains of these commands.
His father had come with the family from Palmyra, Missouri, to Huntsville in 1847 or 1848. In 1850 Bill’s father went to California in search of gold leaving his family in Huntsville. Returning to Randolph County in 1854, the family moved to Breckinridge County, Kansas, in 1857. While living in Kansas Bill’s father was killed, and he later joined Quantrill’s command of guerrillas.
Two of the guerrilla’s sisters, Josephine and Mary Anderson, were among those Confederate women that were held by the Federals in a three story brick building located between Fourteenth and Fifteenth Streets on Grand Avenue in Kansas City. They were suspected of aiding the guerrillas. On August 13, 1863, the building collapsed killing for of the inmates, wounding one fatally and the rest were seriously injured. Among the dead was Josephine and Mary was badly injured.
It has been said that this incident was one of the major reasons for the raid on Lawrence on August 21. Bill is reported having said to a woman in Lawrence: "I’m here for revenge and I have got it."
In the fall of 1863 Quantrill’s guerrillas took up winter quarter in Texas. Here Bill Anderson married Miss Bush Smith. In June 1864 the guerrillas appeared again in Missouri and they made several raids. In July Bill sent letters to several newspapers. In one he wrote: "In reading…your papers I see you urge the policy of the citizens to take up arms to defend their persons and property. You are only asking them to sign their death warrants. Do you know, sirs, that you have some of Missouri’s proudest, best, and noblest sons to cope with?". He also wrote:
"Be careful how you act, for my eyes are upon you." One letter was signed "W. Anderson, Commanding Kansas First Guerrillas". If this wasn’t effective psychological warfare, what is?
On July 15, the Anderson guerrillas raided Bill’s old hometown, Huntsville. Seven days later a Union expedition of forty men were attacked near Allen. Union troops started hunting the command, but the guerrillas turned on the hunters. The result was a loss of six men, two horses and two men killed.
Anderson had eighty men when on July 23 a squad from the 17th Illinois Cavalry was attacked. Later in July Anderson and his men burned the 150 foot Shelbina and Salt River bridge on the Hannibal and Saint Joseph Railroad. August was to be a bloody month for Missouri. In the beginning of August the raids intensified so much that Union orders were to chase and kill the command. Anderson was to be followed "until he was dead". The interest was not so much in the other Confederate bushwackers. It was more an Anderson exterminating party. On the 19th of August it was reported that Anderson had joined with several other Confederate guerrilla commands, with leaders such as Caleb Perkins and Clifton Holtzclaw and that the number now totalled nearly 1,000 men in Boone County. In this county alone it is said that by this time there were from twenty to eighty guerrilla commands.
Saint Catherine was now attacked, resulting in the death of three Union militiamen and on September 20 the battle of Fayette took place. It resulted in the death of six members of the command and only one Federal was killed. The guerrillas had made a fatal error. Armed only with pistols they attacked a well defended blockhouse. Had the Federals been better marksmen a large number of guerrillas would have been killed.
But Anderson soon got revenge. A baggage train was attacked on September 23. Twelve Federals were killed and the whole train with quartermaster, commissary stores and all ammunition was captured. By joining with Todd’s and Gooch’s guerrilla commands Anderson was now up to the strength of 300 men.
Not much later Anderson had a victory that would secure a place in the history books, the one at Centralia. After stopping a train with Federal soldiers on leave and killing a number of passengers, Anderson’s guerrillas were chased by a company of Federal soldiers arriving at the scene (38th Missouri Infantry, USA) led by Major A.V.E. Johnson. Thought outnumbered Johnson decided to follow the guerrillas, a foolhardy decision, as he had only little trained infantry against fastriding Confederate guerrillas. Later the guerrillas were warned of the approaching Federals and decided to set a trap. Bill Anderson’s company was assigned to the center. Behind and partly overlapping was Dave Poole’s guerrillas. Major Johnson called out: "Wait for us, you damned cowards". Johnson was on horseback in front of his infantry. It was four in the afternoon and the sun was setting, as it turned out also setting on the Federals.
Johnson’s Federal infantry started moving forward and he commanded the men to fix bayonets. The fight was opened by Bill Anderson. Major Johnson had left every fifth man to hold the horses of his men so Anderson’s order was to charge, break through the line and go for the horses. The Federal infantry fired as the guerrillas attacked. Two of them was killed. Before the Federal infantry could reload the guerrillas were upon the line, shooting left and right with deadly accuracy. Some tried to reload, others used their bayonets, while others attempted to surrender. Now Poole’s guerrillas joined. The fight lasted only three minutes after Major Johnson gave the orders to fire. After a while the Federal soldiers started to run. Later the guerrillas could count 130 dead bodies in a square large as a city block. The others lay strewn along a distance from the battlefield of ten miles or more.
In October Anderson, Quantrill and Todd met with General Sterling Price in Booneville and an order was issued to Anderson:
"Special Order Headquarters Army of Missouri
Booneville, October 11, 1864
Captain Anderson with his command, will at once proceed to the north side of the Missouri river and permanently destroy the North Missouri Railroad, going as far east as practicable. He will report his operations at least every two days.
By order of General Sterling Price:
MacLean
Lieutenant Colonel and Assistant Adjutant General"
In September General Price invaded Missouri for the last time during the war. He was being constantly attecked and on 23rd October he made his final stand against an overwhelming Federal force at Westport. It has been called the Gettysburg of the West and it was the last large scale battle in Missouri. Only Confederate guerrillas would now remain active against the Federals in the State of Missouri.
The end for Bill Anderson came on October 26, 1864, in Ray County, near the present town of Orrick. Major Samuel P. Cox is credited with killing Anderson. He was in charge of a local unit of Missouri State Militia. There are many descriptions of the event. A woman had told him where Anderson’s command was camping. Here is part of Cox’s own story:
"Lieutenant Baker was sent ahead to reconnoiter and bring on the fight, and then retreat through our line….Baker dashed up to where Anderson and his men camped and opened fire. Instantly Anderson and his men were in their saddles and gave chase to Baker, who retreated under instructions and came dashing through our line. Anderson and some twenty of his men came on, a revolver in each hand. When my men opened fire many of Anderson’s command went down, others turned and fled, but Anderson and two of his men went right through the line shooting and yelling, and it was as Anderson and one of his men turned back that both of them were killed.
When Bill Anderson fell from his horse I took one of his pistols, and Adolph Vogel, who was bugler of my command, took six pistols from around his body. We also took $600 in money, one gold and one silver watch from his clothing and one of these watches, two of the pistols and the fine gray mare Anderson rode were afterwards give me by Brigadier General James Craig." (Donald R. Hale, _They Called Him Bloody Bill_ , 1975, p. 77).
The body was taken to Richmond, where now famous pictures were taken of the body of Bloody Bill. He was shot through the body and not the head and at the time described as of middle height, and weighing around 160 pounds. Anderson’s body was put in a coffin, dumped into a wagon and driven north. At a cemetery on the edge of town it was nailed shut and dumped in a hole in the ground with no markings. Later the grave was marked provisionally.
In 1908 Cole Younger, ex-guerrilla, who was in town as a manager of a street carnival, arranged for a service at Bill’s grave and in 1967 a U.S. government marker was placed at the grave with the text that is the headline of this article. The year of birth should be, though, 1839.
Unfortunately there is a lack of diaries, letters, and Confederate sources on the Missouri guerrillas. Therefore Federal sources to a great extent have to be used. No doubt William T. Anderson, using a policy of no quarter, was one of the most effective Confederate guerrilla leaders in Missouri. The Federals initiated a no quarter policy against the guerrillas, they in turn answered with the same policy, which made for a vicious war in Missouri.
The best account of William T. Anderson’s life and an war record, no doubt, is Donald R. Hale’s book mentioned in this text above
Bertil Haggman
LT. COL. JOHN M. MILLEN AND HIS PARTISAN RANGER BATTALION
John M. Millen (1828 – 1864) commanded the 20th Battalion Georgia Partisan Rangers. He was born in Chester Co., Delaware, but early settled in Savannah, Georgia, to become an attorney. In 1852 he associated with Hon. Wiliam Bennet Flemming in a law practice.
The year after he married Elizabeth A. Hayward (1831 – 1861) of Tallahassee, Florida, and they had four children. From 1856 to 1861 Millen was Judge of the City Court in Savannah. His wife died in Jauary 1861 and is buried in the Laurel Grove Cemetery in the city.
In May Millen joined the Pulaski Guards (Company K, 10th Regiment Georgia Infantry). He fought in Virginia with the unit but resigned in March 1862 to raise Millen’s Battalion Partisan Rangers, of which unit he was appointed major that month.
In the summer of 1863 the unit comprised seven companies and Millen was promoted Lt. Colonel in September 1863. The 20th Georgia Partisan Rangers served on the Georgia coast until the spring of 1864, when it was ordered first to Florida and then to Virginia.
Millen was killed in May 1864 at Haw’s Shop, Virginia, taking part in Stuart’s raid. He is buried in the Hollywood Cemetery in Richmond, Virginia.
20th Battalion Georgia Partisan Rangers (also named 20th Battalion Georgia Cavalry) was organized 15 May 1862 starting with three companies and later expanding to seven. This battalion served on the Georgia coast until early spring of 1864 when it was assigned to General P.M.B. Young’s Brigade, Army of Northern Virginia. From there the rangers participated in the Wilderness Campaign and the battles about Cold Harbor Virginia and several actions south of the James River.
The Organization
In July1864, the 20th Georgia Battalion was ordered to disband by Special Order #161, however this order was not completed until 25 October 1864. Three companies united with seven from the 62nd regiment to form the 8th Georgia Cavalry. Three other companies were called to form the new 10th Georgia Cavalry. Still another company (Company B), which had been added to the battalion, was placed in the Jeff Davis Mississippi Cavalry Legion as Company G.
The 10th had the following officers: Lieutenant-Colonel John M. Millen, Major Samuel B. Spencer, and William G. Thompson, Adjutant M. E. Williams, Assistant Quartermaster L. S. Varnedoe. The captains by company were:
Company A- Moses J. SmithCompany B- William G. ThompsonCompany C- J. G. CressCompany D- William A. LaneCompany E- A. J. Love and later Thomas L. Paine
- Company F- J. B. Peacock and later M. E. Williams
(Company F was referred to as Liberty Mounted Rangers or Liberty Dragoons)
Another source mentions that the 1st Battalion Georgia Cavalry #2 Partisan Rangers as being part of this regiment. It was composed of companies commanded by Captain O. G. Cameron, Captain John Shawhah, Captain James M. Thomas, Captain Ezekiel F. Clay, Captain John B. Holliday, Captain R.G. Stoner, and Captain P.M. Millen. This battalion later became part of the 20th Battalion Georgia Partisan Rangers. It was later designated the 15th Battalion of Georgia Cavalry Partisan Rangers organized with six companies on 18 June 1862, then increased to a regiment and designated as the 62nd Georgia Partisan Rangers Regiment on 1 August 1862. Major, then Lieutenant Colonel Joel R. Griffin was its first commander.
The 62nd regiment of Georgia volunteers also are part of the 20th Battalion Georgia Cavalry’s history. The 62nd regiment was organized with the following field officers: Colonel Joel R. Griffin, Lieutenant.-Colonel Randolph Towns, Major John T. Kennedy, Commissary T. Meara, Adjutant B. B. Bowers. The captains by company were:
Company A- John P. DavisCompany B- James W. NicholsCompany C- W. L. A. EllisCompany D- William H. FaucettCompany E- W. A. ThompsonCompany F- S. B. JonesCompany G- Pat GrayCompany H- Thomas A. JonesCompany I- John A. RichardsonCompany K- E. W. WestbrookL- Theodore T. Barham.
Seven companies of the 62nd regiment united with three of the 20th Cavalry Battalion to form a cavalry command identified sometimes in the reports the 62nd Georgia, and in the last year of the war, as the 8th Georgia Cavalry.
The 62nd Georgia served for a time in Georgia and North Carolina, then in the brigade of General James Dearing, at Petersburg, VA in 1864. The 62nd regiment was originally formed in part from the 15th Battalion Georgia Partisan Rangers. The following are some of the officers who succeeded those first named: Lieutenant-Colonel John T. Kennedy, Major W. L. A. Ellis, Commissary W. R. Baldwin, Adjutant W. A. Holson; The captains by company that have been found are:
Company B- B. B. BowerCompany D- R. DuvallCompany H- A. P. NewhartCompany K- S. L. Turner.
The 8th Georgia Cavalry regiment was organized with the following officers: Colonel Joel R. Griffin, Lieutenant-Colonel J. M. Millen, Major J. M. Millen, Adjutant T. J. Pond; and the captains by company were:
Company A- J.P. Davis
Company B- B. B. Bower
Company C- W. L. A. Ellis
Company D- T. R. Duval
Company E- W. H. Thompson
Company F- S. B. Jones
Company G- P. Gray
Company H- T. A. James
Company I- A. J. Love
Company K- S. L. Turner
Company L- T. G. Barham.
The 8th Georgia Cavalry regiment was formed of seven companies of the 62nd Georgia, and the first three companies of the 20th Battalion Georgia Calvary. The 62nd Georgia had been serving in North Carolina and Virginia, and the 20th Battalion had served in Georgia and Virginia. The 8th regiment was formed in July 1864, and served in Virginia until the end of the war. Some of the officers who succeeded those in command at the organization were: Majors. W. G. Thomas and S. B. Spencer, Adjutant M. E. Williams; and the captains by company were:
Company A- T. S. Paine, H. L. Norfleet and R. Towns
Company B- B. L. Screven, W. G. Thompson and J. N. Nichols
Company C- J. C. Smith
Company D-M. J. Smith, S. B. Spencer and W. H. Harrett
Company E- J. G. Cress, J. M. Turpin and W. J. Deas
Company F- M. E. Williams
Company G- J. R. Harper
Company I- J. B. Edgerton, J. A. Richardson, W. A. Lamand and J. T. Kennedy
Company K- E. W. Westbrook.
Assignments
From June 1862 to February 1864 Millen’s battalion was assigned to the Military District of Georgia, Department of South Carolina, Georgia and Florida.
Later it was stationed at Camp Millen, Chatham County, GA, located on a bluff one half mile towards Fort Jackson from Causton’s Bluff.
From December 1862 to 20 March 1863 the battalion base of operations was Camp Bonna Bella , Chatham County, GA, which was located on the Plantation of the same name about seven miles below Savannah.
From March 1863 to September 1863 Companies A-D were at Camp Jackson in McIntosh Co, GA, located about one mile from South Newport Church on the road to Harris Neck.
Company A is noted as being at Camp South Newport in April 1863 while
Company E is noted as being at Camp Lucas, Georgetown County SC 15 June 1863 to February 1864. This camp was on the North Santee River one mile below Managualt’s Ferry.
Company C was at Camp Brighton, McIntosh County, GA located near Darien from June to August 1863.
Headquarters from August to October 1863 with Company A, B, E, F present is listed as Camp Palmyra in Liberty County, GA. The camp was located at the Palmyra plantation on the banks of Dickerson Creek, eight and a half miles from Riceboro post office.
During September to December 1863 Company C is listed at Camp Price in McIntosh County, GA located near Darien.
Finally from May to October 1864 the battalion was assigned to General Young’s brigade, Hampton’s-Butler’s Division, Cavalry Corps, Army of Northern Virginia.
Battle Participation
Darien- 11 June 1863
The Wilderness- 5-6 May 1864
Battles around Spotsylvania Court House- 8-21 May 1864
North Anna- 23-26 May 1864
Haw’s Shop- 28 May 1864
Cold Harbor 1-3 June 1864
Siege of Petersburg June-October 1864
Williamsburg Road 27 October 1864
This Confederate correspondence identifies the 20th Battalion as part of the Department guarding the Georgia Coast.
This article could not have been written without the detailed research of John Griffin, who had four ancestors in Millen’s battalion.
Bertil Haggman ©
GUERRILLA FIGHTING FOR THE CONFEDERACY IN NORTH GEORGIA
There was opposition to secession among Unionists in North Georgia and it went as far as the formation of USA units, one being the 1st Georgia Infantry, USA, which welcomed in its ranks draft evaders and deserters from the Confederate forces. The state of Georgia fought back by forming Home Guard units from the state militia authorized to deal with the problem of desertion and evasion. Among the leading Home Guard units were the Picken's Co. Home Guard commanded by Captain Benjamin F. Jordon, the Cherokee Co. Home Guard commanded by Lt. Col. Benjamin F. McCollum and the Lumpkin Co. Home Guard (also 1st Georgia State Cavalry Home Guards) commanded by Col. James F. Findley.
When General Sherman invaded North Georgia in 1864 he found that the Unionists there could be used as spies and guides. Thus in 1864 there was a brutal war in the area between local Unionists supported by regular Union forces and the Confederate Home Guards. Canton, Georgia, was for instance burned by Union forces as an act of retaliation.
A leading Union spy was James G. Brown, civilian chief of scouts for Union General George H. Thomas. Brown raised the 1st Georgia and by August 1864 he had around 300 enlistees with himself as colonel. But the unit was never accepted into the US Army, because the precondition was that it would only serve in Georgia. But probably the real reason was their bad reputation.
It was Col. Findley who saw to it that Brown's unit suffered a major defeat in November 1864. A detachment led by Brown's next in command, Lt. Colonel Ashworth, was on a raid to steal horses and mules at Bucktown in Gilmer Co., when they met with Col. Findley and his unit. Col. Findley and his men captured Ashworth, a Captain McCrary and nineteen members of Brown's unit. Three others were wounded and four were killed. On the captured men were papers that gave away the names of local Union supporters, which later led to their arrest by the Confederate Home Guard.
But Brown's unit, armed and organized, took revenge and it led to a mercilous guerrilla war in the area. Brown's unit was disbanded on 15 December, 1864, receiving no pay, bounty or compensation. North Georgia was however plagued by revenge killings long after the WBTS and for forty years the men of the 1st Georgia tried to receive financial compensation without success. Their leaders died early, Ashworth during the war, Brown in 1866 and McCrary was ironically killed by Confederate guerrillas in early November 1864 not in Georgia but in Tennessee.
Bertil Haggman ©
A German Confederate Partisan Ranger
Robert August Valentin Albert Reinhold von Massow (Robert
von Massow), was born in Gumbin in 1839. In 1857, after officer
school, he was appointed second lieutenant in the Prussian 1.
Garde-Ulanen Regiment in Potsdam. Later he was transferred to
the 12th Infantry Regiment stationed in Posen. Von Massow was
allowed to emigrate in 1863 to America. In July, 1863, he arrived
in New York with the intention to join the C.S.A. It was not until
the fall that year he managed to cross the Potomac. He received
a recommendation of Col. Heros von Borcke, another Prussian in
Confederate service, who was a friend of General Stuart. Thus
von Massow was able to join the 43rd Virginia Battalion, Partisan
Rangers, of Col. John S. Mosby. On February 22, 1864, he was
wounded by a shot in the lung. After six months of recuperation von Massow
returned to Germany in the spring of 1865.
Robert von Massow was to reach the highest echelons of the
German army after the return. In 1866 he was lieutenant of the
newly established Pommeranian Dragoon Regiment No. 11.
In 1869 he moved to Stettin as Adjutant of the Third Cavalry
Brigade. In 1868 he had married Martha von Loeper. During
the French-German War that followed he took part as Adjutant
of the First Cavalry Division and received the Iron Cross.
He moved after the war to Oldenburg. Here his wife died
in 1872 and von Massow married a second time (Elisabeth
von Throtha). He had two children from his first marriage
and his new wife, a war widow, brought two children into the
family. In 1877 von Massow was promoted to Captain in the
Great General Staff, and soon became Major. After serving
on several regimental staffs he in 1884 returned to the
Great General Staff in Berlin. Soon he was promoted to Lt. Colonel
and received command of a regiment of his own. In 1888 he was
commanding Colonel of 2. Garde-Ulanen-Regiment. In 1890
he was Major General of the German cavalry, 1894 Lieutenant
General and in 1899 General. In 1903 he was appointed President
of the Military Court of the Reich and soon received in the Order of
the Black Eagle through the emperor. After this exceptional
career he left the military in 1906. First he settled in Oldenburg
to later move to Wiesbaden, where he passed away in 1927.
Robert von Massow was one of the leading members of his family.
His wife died in 1919. Germany had suffered the great
defeat in 1918 and her passing away made the experience
even harder for the old General.
Bertil Haggman ©
A Partisan Ranger Hero – Brig. General Adam R. Johnson, CSA
Adam Rankin Johnson was a Kentuckian but made a name for himself before the WBTS in Texas. Born in Henderson, KY, in 1834 he went to Texas in his 20s and settled in Burnet County not far from Austin. Starting as a surveyor he was also an Indian fighter and was for some time in charge of several stations on the Overland Mail Route. In January, 1861, he married and when Texas seceded, he made his wife comfortable in Burnet and decided to go back to Kentucky. Meeting with Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest he enlisted as scout with Forrest and came to serve with Forrest’s later Chief of Scouts, Colonel Robert M. Martin.
It was with Martin that Johnson in 1862 was to infiltrate Kentucky and form the later famous Breckinridge Guards. Johnson rose to form the 10th (Johnson’s) Kentucky Cavalry, Partisan Rangers, CSA. After Fort Donelson Forrest sent Johnson and Martin to Texas with secret dispatches for Confederate Governor Lubbock. Returning they were sent by General John C. Breckinridge, a fellow Kentuckian, with dispatches in cipher too important to be put on paper. Thus Johnson and Martin had to carry memorized cipher dispatches to Henderson, Johnson’s home town.
Johnson commanded a brigade during Morgan’s Indiana and Ohio raid. Escaping and returning to northern Kentucky, he organized his own command. With only a few of these men he captured Newburgh, Indiana. In November, 1862, Johnson asked the War Department to form his men into a regiment, which was authorized. In September, 1864, he was promoted to Brig. General to rank from June 1, 1864. In all Johnson was responsible for recruiting 3,000 men fighting and operating effectively against transportation by river and rail to Sherman’s army.
Late in August, 1864, Johnson was wounded by a bullet that destroyed both his eyes. Captured he was nursed back to health but was now blind. First sent to Louisville, KY, he was later transferred to Fort Warren, Boston Harbor. Refusing to sign Union paper for his swapping against Union general officers he remained in prison until February, 1865. During that time he also fell into the basement of the prison and was seriously crippled.
In Partisan Rangers of the Confederate States Army (1904) Johnson wrote on his POW time:
" At Fort Warren there were about four hundred Confederates confined; there were nine general officers in our barracks – Generals Trimble, of Maryland; Ed. Johnson, Cabell and Jones, of Virginia; Marmaduke, of Missouri; Henry Jackson, of Georgia; G. W. Gordon and Smith of Tennessee. Smith had been severely wounded, after he had surrendered, by a Federal colonel, who cut him over the head with his word several times, and so injured his brain that he never recovered…We had eleven ounces of bread and about the same amount of cold beef issued to us daily, with an abundance…of water " (p. 198). His co-prisoners, if they could, were very helpful.
Released via New York and Fortress Monroe he was in Richmond received by Governor Lubbock of Texas. The Confederate authorities tried to have him resign, but Johnson refused.
After a while he was given orders and transportation. He wanted to go to north Missisippi to join his men from the 10th. After a dangerous journey often threatened by a new Federal capture, Johnson with escort arrived at Macon, Mississippi. Here were around 150 of his men under command of Captain Shanks of the 10th. They declared themselves ready to return to fight in Kentucky but receiving the news of Lee’s surrender, Johnson collapsed. He wrote that this was the blackest day of his life. He was contacted by some of his men in Kentucky, who complained that the yankees were attempting to charge them with horse stealing during the war. Johnson returned to Kentucky and testified that they were enlisted men and under orders to impress horses. The cases were dismissed. Johnson in September, 1865, returned to Texas intent on continuing his work from before the war.
For the next years he, his wife and children lived in Burnet. Being blind, temporarily crippled, stripped of his property, in debt and his health generally shattered Johnson came back. His son drove him around and Johnson established himself buying land. He even founded a town at a place he had first seen in 1854. It was named Marble Falls because water was pouring over a marble ledge into a river. In 1887 lots were on sale in Marble Falls. Johnson purchased and established a cotton factory. The community now became known also as "The Blind Man’s Town".
Outside the town is Granite Mountain, a 866 feet high dome of pink granite, a site chosen to provide granite for the Texas capitol in Austin. But there was no transportation and that threatened to halt the deal. Johnson now traveled to Austin and offered to provide right-of-way if a railroad was built from Burnet to Granite Mountain. Others provided the same right, a narrow gauge railway was built, and with the coming of the railroad business picked up in Marble Falls.
In his autobiography Johnson declared that he was at peace and content with his life. He died in 1922. He and his wife rest in the Texas State Cemetery in Austin. Johnson was one of the greatest Confederate Partisan Ranger heroes and belongs both to Kentucky and Texas.
Bertil Haggman©