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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #51118 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/51118)
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-<body>
-<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, A History of Southern Missouri and Northern
-Arkansas, by William Monks</h1>
-<p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States
-and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no
-restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it
-under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this
-eBook or online at <a
-href="http://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you are not
-located in the United States, you'll have to check the laws of the
-country where you are located before using this ebook.</p>
-<p>Title: A History of Southern Missouri and Northern Arkansas</p>
-<p> Being an Account of the Early Settlements, the Civil War, the Ku-Klux, and Times of Peace</p>
-<p>Author: William Monks</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 3, 2016 [eBook #51118]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND NORTHERN ARKANSAS***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4>E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (<a href="http://www.pgdp.net">http://www.pgdp.net</a>)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (<a href="https://archive.org">https://archive.org</a>)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- <a href="https://archive.org/details/monksmissouri00willrich">
- https://archive.org/details/monksmissouri00willrich</a>
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div class="tnotes covernote">
- <p>The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">[Pg 1]</a><br /><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">[Pg 2]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i002.jpg" width="580" height="446" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>COLONEL MONKS AND WIFE.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">[Pg 3]</a></span></p>
-<div id="titlepage">
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h1><span class="xlarge">A HISTORY</span><br />
-
-<span class="medium"><em>of</em></span><br />
-
-Southern Missouri and
-Northern Arkansas<br />
-
-<span class="medium p6">Being an Account of the Early Settlements,
-the Civil War, the Ku-Klux, and
-Times of Peace.</span></h1>
-
-<p class="p6"><span class="large">By William Monks</span><br />
-West Plains, Mo.</p>
-
-<p class="small p6">West Plains Journal Co.<br />
-West Plains, Mo.<br />
-1907
-</p>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">[Pg 4]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="small p6">Copyright 1907<br />
-by<br />
-William Monks
-</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
-
-<div class="center">
-
-<ul><li><a href="#Introduction">Introduction.</a></li>
-<li><a href="#EARLY_SETTLEMENTS">EARLY SETTLEMENTS.</a></li>
-<li><a href="#MISSOURI_AND_THE_CIVIL_WAR">MISSOURI AND THE CIVIL WAR.</a></li>
-<li><a href="#REMINISCENCES">REMINISCENCES.</a></li>
-<li><a href="#THE_KUKLUX">THE KUKLUX</a></li>
-<li><a href="#TRANSCRIBERS_NOTES">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES</a></li>
-</ul>
-
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="Introduction" id="Introduction">Introduction.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Now the author was born in the state of Alabama, in
-Jackson county, on the north side of the Tennessee River,
-near Huntsville. He was the son of James Monks and
-Nancy Monks. The father of James Monks came over
-from Ireland during the Revolutionary War and served in
-that war until the independence of the United States was
-acknowledged. Afterwards he married a lady of English
-descent and settled down in the State of South Carolina.
-His father died when he was but an infant. His mother
-removed to the state of Tennessee, being left with five children,
-James being the youngest. Growing up to manhood
-in that state, he removed to the north part of the state of
-Alabama and there married Nancy Graham, who was a
-daughter of Jesse Graham. They were originally from the
-state of Virginia.</p>
-
-<p>James Monks enlisted in the United States Army and
-served in the Indian war that was known as the Seminole
-war, in the state of Florida. After his term of service had
-expired he returned home and sold his farm and had a flatboat
-built and placed in the Tennessee River near Gunters
-Landing, with the intention of moving to the state of Florida.
-Taking his brother-in-law, a Mr. Phillips, on the
-boat with him, they went down the river by Decatur, were
-piloted through the Mussell Shoals, and at the foot of the
-shoals at what is known as Tuscumbia, the writer remembers
-seeing a part of the Cherokee Indians that were being
-removed from the state of Alabama to their present location.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</a></span>
-The writer can remember seeing the Cherokee Indians before
-they were removed from the state of Alabama.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching Southern Illinois, eight miles from Paducah,
-my father landed his boat and looked over the country
-and came to the conclusion that that country was good
-enough, and located in what was then Pope County. Afterwards
-they cropped a piece off of Pope and a piece off of
-Johnson, and created a new county and named it Massack,
-after the old government fort, and located the county seat,
-named Metropolis. My father resided nine years in that
-state, then sold out and started to move to the state of
-Texas. On arriving in Fulton county, Arkansas, he concluded
-to locate in that county.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after his arrival, in the latter part of June or July,
-1844, the writer was employed to carry the United States
-mail from Salem, the county seat of Fulton County, to
-Rockbridge, then the county seat of Ozark county, Missouri.
-My father and mother taught me to be loyal to my
-government from my earliest remembrance, and I don't
-think that two persons more honest than they ever lived.
-They taught me from my earliest recollection to be honest
-and upright, and I have tried, and believe I have lived up
-to their teaching to the very letter; and no man or woman
-before the war, during the war, nor since the war, can say
-anything else and tell the truth. Religiously, my father
-and mother were Baptists, and I believe that they were
-Christians.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="EARLY_SETTLEMENTS" id="EARLY_SETTLEMENTS">EARLY SETTLEMENTS.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In the year 1844 father sold out and in May started
-to move to the state of Texas; crossed the Mississippi
-river at Green's old ferry, came by the way of Jackson,
-Missouri, and traveled the old military road made by the
-government troops in removing the Cherokee Indians from
-the state of Alabama to their present location&mdash;only road
-leading west&mdash;and in July of the same year (learning that it
-was very dangerous for a man to take his family into the state
-of Texas on account of the Indians), he concluded to locate
-in Fulton county, Arkansas, purchased an improvement
-and located on what is known as Bennett's river, about 25
-miles from where West Plains is now located. The family
-at that time consisted of six persons, to-wit: father,
-mother and four sons, the author then being in his fifteenth
-year; father, being a farmer by occupation, went to work
-on the farm. The country at that time was very sparsely
-settled. The settlements were confined to the creeks and
-rivers, where were found plenty of water and springs. No
-place at that time was thought worth settling unless it had
-a spring upon it. The vegetation was luxuriant, the broom
-sedge and blue stem growing as high as a man's head&mdash;and
-he upon an ordinary horse. The table lands, which were
-thought at that time to be worthless, had very little timber
-growing on them, but were not prairie. There were what
-were known as post oak runners and other brush growing
-on the table lands, but the grass turf was very heavy and
-in the spring of the year the grass would soon cover the
-sprouts and the stranger would have taken all of the table<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</a></span>
-lands, except where it was interspersed with groves, to have
-been prairie. The country settled up&mdash;some of the settlements
-being 15 miles apart&mdash;yet the early settlers thought
-nothing of neighboring and assisting each other as neighbors
-for the distance of 15 miles. At that time Fulton
-county contained all of the present territory that now includes
-Baxter, Fulton and a part of Sharp counties; and
-but a short time previous to the organization of Fulton, all
-of the territory that now embraces Fulton, Baxter and Sharp;
-Izard belonged to Independence county and Batesville was
-the county seat. My father located about five miles from
-the state line.</p>
-
-<p>Ozark county, in Missouri, joined Fulton county on
-the state line and all of the territory that now comprises
-Ozark, Douglas and the west half of Howell, belonged to
-Ozark county and Rockbridge, its county seat, being located
-on Bryan's Fork of the North Fork, about 50 miles from
-the state line. Oregon county contained all the territory
-that now comprises Oregon, Shannon, and the east end of
-Howell; and a short time previous all of the territory that
-now comprises Ripley, Oregon, Carter and Shannon belonged
-to Ripley county; and all of the territory that now
-comprises Texas, Dent, Wright and Crawford counties belonged
-to Crawford county. The country at that time
-abounded in millions of deer, turkeys, bears, wolves and
-small animals. I remember as my father was moving west
-and after he had crossed White Water near what was known
-as Bullinger's old mill, that we could see the deer feeding
-on the hills in great herds like cattle, and wild turkeys were
-in abundance. Wild meat was so plentiful that the settlers
-chiefly subsisted upon the flesh of wild animals until they
-could grow some tame stock, such as hogs and cattle. This
-country then was almost a "land of honey." Bees abounded
-in great number and men hunted them for the profit<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span>
-they derived from the beeswax. There was no such thing
-known as a bee moth.</p>
-
-<p>Honeydew fell in such quantities as to completely kill
-the tops of the grass where it was open. I have known
-young turkeys, after they were large enough for use, to
-have their wings so gummed with honeydew that they
-could not fly out of the way of a dog&mdash;have known lots of
-them to be caught with dogs when they wanted to use
-them. There was no question in regard to there being
-honey when you cut a bee tree, if the hollow and space in
-the tree were sufficient and the bees had had time to fill it.
-I have known bee trees being cut that had 8 and 10 feet of
-solid comb that was candied and grained. When my father
-first located, beeswax, peltry and fur skins almost constituted
-the currency of the country. I remember that a short
-time after my father located, a gentleman came to my father's
-house and wanted to buy a horse and offered to pay
-him in beeswax and peltry, and as I had been accustomed
-to paper currency in the state of Illinois, I asked my father
-what kind of money peltry was. He laughed and remarked,
-"Well son, it is not money at all; it is deer skins." A
-man thought nothing of buying a horse or a yoke of oxen,
-or to make any other common debt on the promise of discharging
-the same in beeswax and peltry in one month's
-time.</p>
-
-<p>The immigration consisted mostly of farmers and
-mechanics. Among the mechanics were coopers who would
-make large hogsheads for the purpose of holding the honey
-after it was separated from the beeswax, and a man then had
-his choice to use either candied honey or fresh honey. I
-knew whole hogsheads that were full of candied honey.
-When men would make a contract to deliver any amount or
-number of pounds of beeswax, and within a given time,
-especially in the fall of the year, they would either take a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span>
-yoke of cattle or two horses and a wagon and with their
-guns and camp equipage go out from the settlements into
-what was then termed the "wilderness," and burn bee comb.
-In a short time the bees would be working so strong to the
-bait that they could scarcely course them. In the morning
-they would hunt deer, take off pelts until the deer would
-lie down, then they would hunt bees and mark the trees
-until the deer would get up to feed in the afternoon, when
-they would again resume their hunt for deer. After they
-had found a sufficient number of bee trees and marked
-them, the morning following they would go out and kill
-nothing but large deer; case-skin them until they had a sufficient
-number of hides to contain the honey that they expected
-to take from the trees, take the hides to the camp, tie a
-knot in the fore legs of the hide, take dressed buckskin and
-a big awl, roll the hide of the neck in about three folds,
-run two rows of stitches, draw it tight, then go to their
-wagons with ridgepole and hooks already prepared, knot
-the hind legs of the skins, hang them over the hooks, take
-their tub, a knife and spoon, proceed to the trees, stop their
-team a sufficient distance from the tree to prevent the bees
-from stinging the animals, cut the tree, take out the honey,
-place it in the tub, and when the tub was filled carry it
-to the wagon where the hides were prepared, empty their
-tubs into the deer skins, return again to another tree and
-continue cutting until the hides were all filled with honey;
-then they would return home, take the hides from the hooks
-on the ridge pole on the wagon, hang them on hooks prepared
-for the purpose in the smokehouse and then the men's
-work was done.</p>
-
-<p>The labor of the women then commenced. They would
-proceed to separate the honey from the beeswax, pouring
-the honey into hogsheads, kegs or barrels prepared for
-it, and running the beeswax into cakes ready for the mar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span>ket,
-while the men were stretching and drying the deerskins.
-As soon as the deerskins were dried and the honey
-was separated from the beeswax, they were ready for the
-market and took their place as currency, while the flesh of
-the deer, sometimes, when bread was scarce, took the place
-of both bread and meat, with a change, whenever the appetite
-called for it, to turkey and other wild game.</p>
-
-<p>At night they would hunt for fur animals, such as raccoon,
-fox and mink, and stretch their hides; a first-class
-raccoon hide would sell for 40 to 50 cents; fox, 25 and 30
-cents; mink, from 65 to 75c. I have often known the people
-to pay their taxes, when the collector came around,
-with fur skins, such as raccoon and fox. The collector
-would take the hides right at the house and give them a
-clear receipt for their taxes, both state and county. I have
-seen collectors leading a horse for the purpose of carrying
-his fur skins. I have seen the horse completely covered
-with fur skins, so you could see no part of him but
-his head and his hoofs and tail&mdash;one could not have told
-there was a horse beneath the load unless he had known it.</p>
-
-<p>The people then had many advantages that they are deprived
-of now, in the way of wild meat, abundance of honey
-and fine range. A man could raise all the stock in the
-way of horses and cattle that he could possibly look after;
-the only expense was salting and caring for them&mdash;didn't
-have to feed, winter nor summer, except the horses in use
-and the cows used for milking purposes. While, on the
-other-hand, they labored under a great many disadvantages,
-in the way of schools and churches. During the residence
-of my father in the state of Illinois, we had a very good
-common school system, and we had three months of school
-every fall. My father being a farmer, sent me only the
-three months' term in the fall. I had acquired a limited
-education before his removal to Arkansas, yet he was in<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>terested
-in giving his children an education. At that time
-there were no free schools, only subscription schools; teachers
-generally were incompetent and employed through favoritism,
-and not upon their qualifications to teach. In a
-year or two after my father located, the settlement got together
-and located a school-house site, took their teams,
-hauled round logs, built them into walls, made a dirt floor,
-cut out a large window in the side, split a tree and made a
-writing desk, split small trees, hewed them and made
-benches for seats, cut a hole in one end of the house, erected
-a wooden chimney, what was then known as a stick and
-clay chimney, chinked and daubed the cracks, made a
-clapboard roof, hung the door with wooden hinges, then
-the house was considered ready for the school and had the
-name of teaching a three-months' subscription school; and
-very often half of the pupils were better scholars than the
-teachers. All they gained in their education was by attention
-to study. As the country improved in population, the
-people improved in the erection of school-houses and
-church-houses and constructed, in place of the round log
-school-house and dirt floor, hewed log school-houses with
-puncheon floors, stick and clay chimneys.</p>
-
-<p>Those pioneer settlers took a great interest in each
-other's welfare, and the different settlements met together
-from a distance of 15 to 40 miles and adopted rules and
-customs binding each other to aid and assist in helping any
-person who met with any misfortune in the way of sickness,
-death or other causes that might occur, and I must say
-that there was more charity and real religion practiced
-among those pioneer settlers, although many of them were
-looked upon as being crude and unlettered. There was a
-great deal of sickness along the streams, especially chills
-and fever. Immigrants came in, generally in sufficient
-numbers to form a settlement; and I have known them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span>
-very often, after they had located and opened out 10 to 15
-acres and put it in cultivation and broke the ground and
-planted their corn, for the whole family to be taken down
-at one time with chills and fever, not able even to help
-each other or administer to their wants. As soon as the
-information reached the other settlements for a distance of
-15 miles or more, the different settlements would set a day
-to meet at the place with their horses, plows, hoes, wagons,
-etc.; also provisions, such as bread-stuff and salt. On
-meeting, they would ascertain the condition of the family
-or families and learn what they needed in the way of provision,
-medicine, nursing, etc.; they would then and there
-agree that the different settlements should divide up the
-time, set the day for each one to furnish waiters to wait
-upon them in their sickness, such medicine as they needed,
-provisions and everything that was necessary to render
-comfort, and in the morning before breakfast they would
-go out and kill a deer and as many turkeys as they needed,
-dress them, prepare them for the cook, who had been
-brought with them, go into the field after breakfast, plow
-and hoe the corn, clean out the garden, leave the families in
-charge of nurses and return again to their respective settlements.
-Those families, as soon as they were well, not
-being acquainted with the customs and rules, would meet
-them and inquire as to what amount they owed them for
-what they had done for them during their sickness. They
-would be readily informed, "<em>Nothing.</em> You are not acquainted
-with our rules and customs. Now, we have obligated
-and pledged ourselves together not to let any sick or
-other disabled person suffer for the want of necessary attention,
-and the only thing we require of you is, if any
-other person should move into the country and locate, and
-should be taken down and confined through sickness or
-any other cause, that you help in furnishing such aid and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>
-necessaries as they may need until they are able to again
-take care of themselves." Now, I have just remarked that
-there was more real charity and religion practiced among
-pioneers than there is in the present day. The people then
-all appeared to be interested in bettering the condition of
-society.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as it was possible, the different settlements
-erected church-houses built of hewed timber, floored with
-puncheons, hewed seats, size of house generally from 18 by
-20 to 22 by 25 feet, chinked and daubed. The churches or
-denominations then were Baptists and Methodists. There
-didn't appear to be any antagonism or hatred existing between
-the denominations; the doors were thrown wide open
-for any minister that might travel through and they all
-turned out, and you heard nothing said then in regard to
-"my church" or "your church." They appeared to recognize
-the fact that it was the Lord's church and that they
-were the Lord's people. In going to church, sometimes
-from 1 to 10 miles, they would see flocks of turkeys and
-herds of wild deer, both going and coming. As soon as
-the crops were laid by, they would agree among the different
-settlements as to where a camp-meeting should be held;
-they would then erect camps or huts, make boards to
-cover them, erect an arbor, fill the center of it with straw,
-and to the distance of 25 to 35 miles they would all turn
-out, irrespective of denomination, and all appeared to enjoy
-themselves, and the love of Christ appeared to dwell in each
-heart, and they appeared to be proud of the privilege of
-meeting each other and worshiping together. If any
-member belonging to either of the denominations defrauded,
-or in any way wronged his brother, he was at once waited
-upon and requested to make reparation to his brother and
-acknowledge to his brother and to the church, or he was
-withdrawn from or turned out of the church. The immi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>gration
-was chiefly from the Middle States, some from the
-Southern States and very few from the Northeastern States.
-They were frugal, energetic, honest, intelligent and industrious.
-As the country increased in population, the facilities
-of both schools and churches improved.</p>
-
-<p>The customs and habits were entirely different from
-those existing now; the wearing apparel was entirely home-made;
-they would raise their cotton, pick it out with their
-fingers or a hand gin, women would spin their warp, spin
-their filling, get their different colors from different barks
-for men's wear; the women used indigo and copperas for
-the main colors in manufacturing the cloth for dresses,
-wound their stripes on a stick and then wove it into cloth;
-you could scarcely visit a house but what you would see a
-loom, big spinning-wheel and little wheel; sometimes you
-would see three or four wheels at one house. They made
-both their every day and Sunday wear; the women appeared
-to take great pride in seeing who could weave the nicest
-piece of cloth, make it into a dress, make cloth and make it
-into what was known as Virginia bonnets, and the men
-tanned their own leather, made shoes for the whole family.
-When the women were dressed completely in their homespun
-they appeared to enjoy themselves, in church, in company
-or any other gathering, and felt just as independent
-and proud as the king upon his throne; they appeared to
-meet each other and greet each other and all appeared to
-realize the fact that they were human and they had but one
-superior and that was God. The women spun the warp,
-spun the wool, wove it into cloth, procured the different
-barks from the woods and dyed it, the general color being
-brown, made it with their own hands into coats, pants, undershirts;
-made overshirts out of homespun cotton and the
-whole suit was home-made, and very often a cap, made
-either of the raccoon or a fox, was worn on the head.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>
-When men met each other at any public gathering they
-appeared to be proud of meeting each other; appeared to
-realize the fact that they were all American citizens and
-human, bound together by the ties of love and affection, and
-the highest ambition appeared to be to make each other
-happy and help one another in time of need.</p>
-
-<p>I don't believe there was as much dissipation by partaking
-of intoxicants, or other wickedness, as exists to-day
-among the same number of persons. It is true that then
-any man who was able to purchase a little still and had a
-spring could erect his own still house and make his own
-whiskey without paying any tax or duty upon the same, and
-anyone of his neighbors who wanted a gallon of whiskey
-could carry a bushel of corn to the still-house and get a
-gallon of whiskey in exchange for it. And if men became
-drunk on the whiskey it did not appear to make them wild
-and crazy as the whiskey of to-day does.</p>
-
-<p>Men then, as well as now, would have disagreements
-and fall out and fight, but the custom that prevailed among
-that class would not tolerate nor allow a man to use weapons,
-and if two men had a disagreement, one of them being
-a large, stout man physically, the other being a small man,
-not equal in strength&mdash;if they were together in a public
-place and the large one would challenge the weaker to fight
-him, before he could hardly open his mouth, some man
-present who considered himself to be his equal in physical
-strength, would just say to him "now then, if you want to
-fight, that man is not your equal, but I am; get your second
-and walk out and I will do the fighting for this other man."
-I have, on different occasions, seen the large man who was
-challenging the weaker for a fight reply to the challenge and
-say, "My friend, I have nothing against you; this other
-man hasn't treated me right," or set out some other reason
-that he ought to whip him; the man in reply would say, "I<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>
-don't want to hear another word from you in regard to
-wanting to fight this other man, and if I do you have got
-me to fight." Very often I have seen the man shut his
-mouth and turn away and say nothing more. On the
-other hand, I have heard a man say to another, "If you
-want to fight, I am your man; the other man is unable to
-fight you," and in an instant the other would reply.
-"Well, sir, I am your man; just as leave fight you as
-anybody else." They would select their seconds, take a
-drink of whiskey together, enter into an agreement that
-whenever the seconds said either one was whipped, that
-they were to abide by it, unless they found out before their
-seconds did that they were whipped, and if so, they would
-manifest it by holloing "enough," when the other person
-was to stop at once and inflict no more injury. I have often
-seen them fight until they were both as bloody as butchers
-and in the end the seconds would have to hollo for one
-or the other. As soon as they were separated they would
-go to the same pool or place where there was water and
-wash themselves, and walk arm-in-arm, laughing and talking
-and drinking together and remark, "We are now fast
-friends and we have settled the matter as to which was the
-best man." And if a man would produce a weapon on
-either side his own friends would turn against him and he
-would be forced to put it up at once. Men then appeared
-to be governed by that higher inspiration, that a man
-should not use anything that would permanently disable or
-take the life of his fellow-man; but if one man became
-pregnant with fight or desire to maim his fellow-man, in
-order that he should not be disappointed, some man would
-readily volunteer, who believed that he was his equal
-physically, and deliver him of all his fighting propensities.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Dow Bryant and a Gallon of Whisky</h3>
-
-<p>I will here relate an instance that I well remember. A
-man by the name of Bridges lived just above where Bakersfield
-is now located, owned a little mill at the same place
-where they still continue the work of the mill just above
-Bakersfield. The mill ground from twelve to fifteen bushels
-per day; most of us carried our sacks on horseback,
-and ground by turns. Bridges had employed a man by the
-name of Math Shipman to run the mill. He was a small
-man weighing only about 135 pounds, and there was a
-man by the name of Dow Bryant, lately from the state of
-Tennessee, quite a large man, weighing 225 pounds, who
-delighted in fighting under the old style, and claimed that
-he had whipped two of the best men in Tennessee at the
-same time. Shipman had made some statement that reflected
-upon Bryant; so Bryant procured a gallon of whiskey,
-and, taking two men with him, went from Bennett's
-river over to the mill and informed Shipman of what he
-had heard he had said in regard to him, and said to Shipman
-that if he had said it and didn't take it back, he would
-have to whip him, and the only thing he hated about it
-would be the whipping of as little a man as he was. Shipman
-replied that he need not take that matter into consideration,
-and that his father had always taught him that if
-he told anything and it was the truth, not to take it back
-under any consideration, and that what he had said was
-true; and as to his whipping him, his father had always
-taught him never to admit anything until he knew it was
-true; and "I have my doubts about you being able to whip
-me; but if you will get your second ready, as soon as the
-corn that is in the hopper is ground out and I refill the
-hopper I will get my second and we will go out into the
-mill yard so you can test it." They accordingly got their
-seconds, went into the mill yard, formed a ring, and when<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>
-the word was given by the seconds, they went together.
-Shipman bit every finger on the right hand and three fingers
-on the left hand to the bone; and Bryant's friends,
-seeing he was going to be whipped, proposed parting them.
-Bryant returned home, and when his neighbors would
-meet him with his fingers all bound up, they would say,
-"Hello there! What's the matter?" His reply would be,
-"I went over into the wilderness and got hold of a wildcat,
-and it like to have eaten me up before I could get
-loose from it." He would further say that Shipman
-was all mouth, and that he could not put his hands anywhere
-about his head unless he got them in his mouth.</p>
-
-<p>I will give another instance touching the same man
-(Bryant). He went over to Salem during circuit court.
-The sheriff of the county was a man by the name of Dick
-Benton, quite a small man, and the constable of the township
-was named Moore and a very small man. Bryant was
-drinking some, and wanted to fight as usual, and became
-noisy. The judge ordered the constable to arrest him;
-but when Bryant saw the constable coming, he backed behind
-an old building, and ordered the constable not to
-rush upon him. When the constable came in reach, he
-knocked him down, came walking around, and remarked
-that no tickey officer could arrest him. The judge then
-ordered the sheriff to arrest him. When the sheriff came
-within reach, he knocked him down, came walking back,
-and remarked, "I thought they understood me when I told
-them that a tickey set of officers could not arrest me."
-During the time the father-in-law of the sheriff had come
-out. Bryant walked up to him, and with a d&mdash;&mdash; said:
-"I want to know what you are doing here." Without any
-more words being passed, the sheriff's father-in-law knocked
-Bryant down, jumped onto him, but he holloed, and
-they took him off. Bryant straightened himself up right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
-into his face again and remarked, "I have told a lie, I am
-not whipped." Without any more words he knocked him
-down again and gave him a considerable pelting. Bryant
-holloed again, and after they had taken him off, he
-straightened up and walked off about ten steps distant,
-turned around, and remarked, "I have told a lie, I am not
-whipped; but I am not going to say it within reach of that
-old man any more." On the same day some men knocked
-him down, taking a common clapboard, hit him three licks
-while he was running on all fours, then got a piece of
-chalk and wrote on it, "Dow's board," and nailed it up
-on the corner of the square.</p>
-
-<p>The drinking class for years used all manner of
-language and obscenity in the streets, and even in the
-hearing of the court. There was a man by the name of
-Neeley who became a candidate for circuit judge, and one
-of the main reasons he urged for his election was that, if
-elected, he would punish all offenders of the public peace,
-and force all persons to respect the court, and he would
-discharge the duties with some dignity and respect for
-himself and the people. Shortly after he was elected and
-during his first court, a man by the name of Smith, who
-lived just north of Salem on the South Fork, and who had
-worked for his election, came into the court room after the
-court was in session, walked around to the judge, took
-him by the hand and remarked, "Judge, I want to congratulate
-you on your success, and I hope things will
-change." The judge turned to the clerk and remarked,
-"Mr. Clerk, assess a fine of five dollars against Mr.
-Smith." Smith soon retired from the court room and declared
-that Neeley was a tyrant, and that if he had his vote
-back he would not support him. In the afternoon the
-judge ordered the sheriff to bring Mr. Smith into the court
-room and said to him, "Mr. Smith, you were a warm<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
-friend of mine in my canvass, worked for my election, and
-no doubt contributed much to my success. Now I don't
-want to disappoint you in any promises that I made during
-the canvass, but after court is convened and the judge on
-the bench, it is contempt in any gentleman to come up and
-take him by the hand and congratulate him on his success;
-and now I hope that you, with all others of my friends, and
-those who are not, will support and protect me in enforcing
-the dignity of the court." Mr. Smith at once became
-pacified, and said that the judge was right.</p>
-
-<p>We remember another instance that occurred during
-the same court. There was a young lawyer, who came
-into court, wearing a very fine pair of boots, and, standing
-on his feet, he would occasionally raise onto his toes, and
-you could hear his boots creak all over the court room.
-The judge turned to him and remarked, "Mr., what did
-those boots cost you?" The lawyer quickly replied, "Ten
-dollars, sir." The judge remarked to him, "I think you
-got the boots too cheap. I think they ought to be worth
-twenty dollars. Mr. Clerk, assess a fine of ten dollars
-against this man."</p>
-
-<p>On the next day a man by the name of Cage Hogan, a
-man who was widely known, in company with others, got
-on the public square, near the saloon, and began to curse
-and swear, and use all manner of obscenity. The judge
-ordered the sheriff to go down and see who was making
-the disturbance. The sheriff went out to the place and
-stated to the crowd that the judge had ordered him to see
-who was creating that disturbance, and to arrest the party.
-Hogan remarked, with an oath, "You go back and tell the
-old judge that it is Cage Hogan, and that I suppose he has
-heard of me before, and I don't allow sheriffs to arrest me
-until I get ready." The sheriff came back and reported to
-the court, and the judge made an order for him to proceed<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>
-at once and arrest Mr. Hogan and all others that he might
-find acting in a boisterous manner, and if necessary to
-take the power of the county, and if he didn't immediately
-bring him into the court room he would assess a fine
-against him of $100. The sheriff returned and informed
-Mr. Hogan of what the court had said, and that he would
-be bound to arrest him and take him by force if he didn't
-go without it. Hogan remarked that if it would be any
-pleasure and consolation to the old tyrant he was the man
-who could go into the court room. When he came into
-the court room, the sheriff said, "Here is Mr. Hogan."
-Mr. Hogan remarked, with an oath, "I am here, judge,
-and I would like to know what you want." The judge replied
-that there were some parties creating a disturbance in
-the hearing of the court and that he had ordered them arrested
-and brought in. "Do you know who the parties
-are?" Hogan, with an oath, replied, "I am the man;
-and, judge, I want you to understand that I am a horse,
-and if you hain't become acquainted with old Cage Hogan,
-you will." The judge remarked to him that they had
-a stable and that was the place for horses, and that he
-would assess a fine of $50 against him, and ordered the
-sheriff to take him to jail until it was paid. Hogan, remarking,
-"I always carry the money to pay my way, and
-you need not put yourself to any trouble to have the sheriff
-carry me to jail," pulled out his pocket book, took out
-$50, and said, with an oath, "Here is the money, and I
-want you to understand that I am no jail bird, and you
-can't stick me in your old jail." The judge then said,
-"Mr. Hogan seems to have plenty of money; Mr. Clerk
-assess another $50 fine against him." At that Hogan appeared
-to hesitate and reflect, and, pulling out a quart bottle
-of whiskey from his pocket, started to approach the
-judge, who was on the bench, saying with an oath, "Here,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
-judge, let's drink together and be friends and stop this
-foolishness." The judge turned to the clerk and said:
-"Mr. Clerk, assess another fine of $50 against him," and
-ordered the sheriff to take him forthwith to jail and keep
-him there until further orders, for he considered him an
-unlawful horse, and he did not think it safe for society
-for him to run at large. The sheriff, with a considerable
-posse, carried him to the jail, and with considerable
-trouble put him in and shut him up. He remained in jail
-two days, and at the evening session of the second day the
-sheriff came into court and said that Mr. Hogan was very
-desirous of seeing the court. The court then ordered him
-brought in. On his being brought in, the court asked him
-if he still thought he was a horse. Hogan replied, "No,
-sir; I am not anything now but Cage Hogan." The judge
-said: "As you have now arrived at the conclusion that you
-are human and not animal, are you willing to respect the
-laws of your land and the dignity of this court?" Hogan
-replied: "I am, judge, with all my heart." The judge
-then said to him, "What about that money of yours; are
-you able to pay the $150 fine?" Hogan said, "No, judge,
-I don't feel like I could pay $150 this evening; I don't
-feel as rich and as brave as I did when you first brought
-me into court, and I want you to be as lenient with me as
-possible." The court said, "Mr. Hogan, if you will promise
-me that you will neither disturb the dignity of this
-court nor incite others to do so, I will remit all of your
-fine except $50." Mr. Hogan then and there paid the $50
-fine and was released. From that time up to the end of
-his term there never was any disturbance of any nature in
-the hearing of the court, and if you went into the court
-room everything was so quiet that you could almost hear a
-pin drop.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>The Tutt and Evert War.</h3>
-
-<p>My memory is that it was in the year 1846 that an incident
-occurred in Marion county that I will now relate.
-It was known as the Tutt and Evert war. They were once
-fast friends. They met in Yellville, the county seat, and
-while there one of the Everts purchased a set of silver
-spoons at the store of one of the Tutts. Afterwards a misunderstanding
-grew up between them as to the payment
-for the spoons, which led them into a fight. Afterwards,
-which was often, when they would meet in Yellville, they
-would hardly ever get away without some fighting taking
-place between the parties. There was a large gathering
-and a public demonstration to take place within a few
-weeks. The Tutts declared, backed by the Kings, that if
-the Everts came into town that day they would kill them
-outright. Both parties came in early in the day, heavily
-armed. After coming under the influence of intoxicants to
-some extent, Evert went into the public square and stated
-what he had heard from the Tutts, and said that if they,
-the Tutts and Kings, were ready for the conflict, there
-never was a better time than then, and that they, the Everts,
-were fully ready. Both parties, in short range, opened
-fire. One of the Kings shot Simm Evert during the fight,
-supposed to be through the heart. One of the Kings, just
-previous to the shooting of Evert, had been shot through
-the hips and so disabled that he could not stand upon his
-feet. After Simm Evert had received the wound, he
-turned around, and, within a few steps of the wounded
-King, picked up a large stone, raised it in both hands,
-and, stepping up to King, came down on King's head with
-the stone with all the force possible, completely crushing
-King's head. Then, turning around and walking about
-three steps, he remarked, "I am a dead man," and fell to
-the ground and expired within a few minutes. When the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
-smoke cleared away and the fighting ceased, an examination
-showed that there were eight or ten left dead on the
-ground. The stoutest men afterwards went to the stone,
-but there wasn't one of them that could raise it from the
-ground. The surviving Kings made arrangements and attempted
-to leave the country. At that time the sheriff of
-the county was a man by the name of Mooney. A writ
-was placed in his hands and he arrested them. Shortly after
-the arrest, the Everts and their friends came upon the
-sheriff and his posse and demanded the prisoners. The
-sheriff gave them up, and they were all shot. The sheriff
-then appealed to the governor for aid; he sent the militia,
-who aided the sheriff in the arrest of the Everts, a man by
-the name of Stratton, and some others of their friends.
-The governor ordered them to be taken to Lawrence county
-and placed in the Lawrence county jail at Smithville,
-the county seat of that county. I saw the militia in charge
-of the prisoners pass my father's house on their way to
-Smithville.</p>
-
-<p>In about ten days after they were put in prison, late
-one evening, strange men commenced dropping into the
-town, who were unknown to the citizens, until they reached
-to about the number of sixty-five. Somewhere near
-midnight they paraded the streets, and the jail being a log
-jail, they prepared levers and pried it up and let the prisoners
-all out, and they all left together, Evert, Stratton,
-and their friends proceeding directly to Texas. After their
-families had reached them and everything had quieted
-down, they sent in and notified Hamp Tutt, whom they
-charged with being the inciter and leader in bringing on
-the original trouble, that if he would "hull out" and leave
-the state they would not kill him. Tutt was a man of considerable
-wealth and declared he would not leave the state.
-He at once hired a young doctor, who claimed to be a very<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>
-brave man, to act as his body guard, and kept himself very
-close to the town for about the space of two years. One
-day, however, he declared that he was going to take a ride
-out on the main public road for his health. He, in company
-with the young doctor, then rode out about one mile.
-On returning, not more than a quarter of a mile from the
-town, after they had passed the place where they were
-concealed, they, (the Everts) discharged a volley. Two
-balls entered the back of Tutt, and his horse made but a
-few leaps when he fell to the ground. The young doctor
-ran for dear life, reached the town, and gave the alarm.
-Parties immediately went out to the place, but found that
-Tutt was dead. On examining the place where the parties
-had lain in ambush, they found that they had lain
-there for months watching for the opportunity. So ended
-the Tutt and Evert war.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Indians Chase a Sheriff Ten Miles.</h3>
-
-<p>Now the author will relate another incident that occurred
-in Marion county, Arkansas, in the early settling of
-this country. There was a large relation of the Coker
-family who lived in that county. One of the Cokers raised
-two families, one by a white woman and the other by an
-Indian woman. The Indian family, after they had grown
-up and become men, resided a part of the time in the Nation,
-where the mother lived, and a part of the time they
-remained in Marion county where their father and other
-relatives lived. They were very dangerous men when
-drinking, and the whole country feared them. They had
-been in different troubles, and had killed three or four
-men, and if the authorities attempted to arrest them, they
-defied them, and would go to the Nation and remain
-awhile. There was a deputy sheriff in the county by the
-name of Stinnett, who claimed to be very brave, who said<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>
-he would arrest them if he found their whereabouts. The
-Cokers learned what Stinnett had said, and that the warrant
-for their arrest was in his possession, so they got some
-good tow strings and vowed that whenever they met him
-they would arrest him and take him to Yellville and put
-him in jail. A short time afterwards they met him in the
-public road. As soon as Stinnett recognized them,
-and having heard of the threats they had made, he
-wheeled his horse and put spurs to him. They drew their
-revolvers and put spurs to their horses in pursuit, commanding
-him to halt. But Stinnett spurred his horse the
-harder. They pursued him a distance of about ten miles;
-but Stinnett's horse proved to be the best, and he made
-his escape. They again returned to the Nation.</p>
-
-<p>The good people, generally, of the county were terrorized
-and afraid to raise their voices against them, and it
-became a question as to whether they had a man in the
-county who had the courage to attempt their arrest. They
-made it a question in the next election, to elect a man that
-would make the arrest, if such a man could be found in the
-county. There was a man living in the county by the
-name of Brown, who was a cousin of the Cokers, and he
-told the people that if they would elect him, he would arrest
-them or they would kill him. He was elected by a
-large majority, and, after he had qualified, took charge of
-the office. The first time the Cokers came into the settlement,
-he summoned two men, thought to be brave, who
-pledged themselves that if it became necessary they would
-die for him. He then went to the house of one of the
-Coker family where the Cokers were staying, and on his
-arrival found the two Coker brothers sitting in chairs in
-the yard. He was within some thirty feet of them before
-they saw him. Their guns were sitting near them, and
-they seized them; but before they could present them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>
-Brown had his revolver cocked and leveled at one of their
-heads, and told him not to attempt to raise his gun or he
-would kill him. Coker turned his back to him with his
-gun on his shoulder, secretly cocked it, and leveled it upon
-Brown as near as possible without taking it from his shoulder
-and fired, missing his aim. About the same time
-Brown discharged his revolver at Coker and made a slight
-scalp wound. The other Coker threw his gun upon Brown
-and fired, killing him instantly. The two men who were
-acting as a posse for the sheriff turned and fled, leaving
-Brown lying dead on the ground. After the shooting the
-Cokers fled to the Nation and remained there.</p>
-
-<p>The author will now relate another incident that occurred
-in the same county. For years the Cokers and Hogans
-had been intimate friends, and drank, gambled, and
-horseraced together a great deal. There came up a trouble
-between Coker and one of his brothers-in-law, and one
-evening Coker, in company with Hogan, went to the house
-of this brother-in-law. Both had been drinking. Coker
-swore that he would ride onto the porch of his brother-in-law,
-and made the attempt. His brother-in-law caught
-the horse by the bridle and warned him not to ride onto
-porch, and that if he did he would kill him. Coker drew
-his revolver, spurred his horse, but as he entered the porch
-his brother-in-law shot him dead. Coker being a cousin
-of the Indian Cokers, they charged Hogan with inducing
-him, while drinking, to go to his brother-in-law's house,
-so as to give him a chance to kill him, and that Hogan's
-life should pay the penalty. Shortly afterwards Hogan
-was traveling on an old trail that led along the bluff of
-White river. The river here made a bend in horseshoe
-shape, following the bluff all around. The Cokers learned
-that Hogan was going to pass through this gap, and they
-lay in wait for him, cutting off all avenues of escape possi<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>ble
-so he would be forced into the horseshoe for his escape.
-When he came in sight they raised the Indian war-whoop,
-and drew their revolvers. Hogan looked around and saw
-that his pursuers were in about a hundred yards of him.
-He saw his predicament, as for a quarter of a mile he confronted
-the bluff, and that there was only one avenue of
-escape. He went to the edge of the precipice and looked
-over. There, under the bluff, lay the deep, blue waters
-of White river, 150 feet below. Again he turned his eyes
-toward his pursuers. He knew it meant death if they
-caught him; so he made the fearful leap over the bluff,
-striking the water where it was about twenty-five feet deep.
-Hogan was a wicked man and cursed a great deal. He
-swore it didn't take him long to reach the water, but that
-he thought considerable time intervened from the time he
-struck the water until he reached the top again. He swam
-to the bank which was but a few feet distant. His pursuers
-came to the precipice, looked over, and said that they
-had made Hogan do something they had intended to do,
-and that was, to take his own life, as they supposed no human
-being could make the leap and live. After cutting
-his saddle and bridle to pieces, they turned his horse loose,
-and reported that Hogan was killed. Hogan traveled
-around under the bluff for about two miles, made his way
-home, wound up his business, sold his farm, and moved
-into Fulton county, Arkansas, which ended the trouble between
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The author will relate another incident that occurred
-in Marion county, Arkansas. There was a widow residing
-in that county, who was left with a family of children,
-among them a boy about twelve years of age. Her horse
-ran away, and she sent her boy in pursuit of it. After he
-had found it and was returning home, leading the horse,
-Hogan and one of his friends met him in the road. They<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
-had both been drinking, and seeing the boy, concluded to
-have some fun out of him. Hogan, with an oath, said,
-"What are you doing with my horse?" The boy replied,
-"It is not your horse, it is mother's horse." Hogan
-sprang off his horse, and, thinking to scare the boy and
-have some fun with him, said: "Here, you know it's my
-horse; give him up." The boy pulled a barlow knife out
-of his pocket, and, opening it, said, "You attempt to come
-near me, and I will stick this knife into you." Hogan
-stepped up to him and said, "You little rascal, would you
-attempt to cut me with a knife?" The boy, without any
-further words, made a stroke at him with the knife, and
-the blade entered his body near the left breast. Hogan
-declared afterward that he jumped about ten feet high.
-He turned to his friend and remarked: "I believe our fun
-with the little bugger has caused my death, or at least a
-serious wound." He went to a physician, had the wound
-probed, and found the knife had penetrated a rib and
-reached the inside. The physician informed him that had
-it passed between the ribs it would have killed him instantly.
-Hogan remarked to the boy, after he stabbed
-him, "My son, you are made out of the right kind of
-stuff. I had no intention of hurting you or taking your
-mother's horse from you, I merely wanted to have some
-fun; but I see I have struck the wrong boy this time. Go
-on and take your horse to your mother."</p>
-
-<p>The author will refer to another incident that occurred
-in Howell county, Missouri. In the year 1860 there was a
-man who resided in West Plains by the name of Jack McDaniel,
-who was a blacksmith by trade. This same Hogan
-came to town, soon became under the influence of
-whiskey, went down to McDaniel's shop with a horse, and
-ordered him to shoe him. McDaniel had two other horses
-in the shop at the time to be shod, and said to Hogan that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>
-as soon as he had shod those two horses, he would shoe
-his. Hogan said, "I am in a hurry, and I want you to
-shoe mine now." McDaniel told him that he could not
-shoe his horse until he had shod the other two horses.
-Hogan said, "If you don't shoe him at once, I will whip
-you." McDaniel then pulled a barlow knife out of his
-pocket, and, opening it, said: "Yes; and if you fool with
-me, I will cut your throat from ear to ear." At this remark,
-Hogan moved right up to him and said, "Just smell
-of my neck." McDaniel struck at him with the knife,
-and the blade entered just under the ear, cutting to the
-bone all the way around into the mouth. Hogan went to a
-physician in West Plains and had the wound dressed. He
-then went to a glass, looked in, and said that he had lived
-a long time, been in many tight places, but he had never
-had such a mouth as he had now, and remarked, "My
-mouth looks as if it was spread from ear to ear."</p>
-
-<p>The people then generally gave their time to growing
-stock, especially horses and cattle, as hogs and sheep had
-to be kept close around the farms and penned of a night, especially
-the pigs, on account of wolves and other wild animals.
-I have known the wolves to kill 2 and 3 year old
-cattle. Farmers fed their corn chiefly to cattle, horses and
-mules. They always commanded fair prices. Cattle, at the
-age of four years and upwards were driven to Jacksonport,
-Arkansas and from there shipped to New Orleans. Horses
-and mules were driven to Louisiana, Mississippi and some
-to the Southern part of Arkansas and there put upon the
-market. Prices generally ranging from $75 to $150. All
-of our groceries were purchased in New Orleans, shipped
-to Jacksonport, from there they were conveyed by wagons.
-Our dry goods were mostly purchased at Lynn Creek, Missouri
-and brought through by wagon, but in the early settling
-of the country they hauled dry goods all the way<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
-from St. Louis except what were brought into the country
-by peddlers. The peddlers would go to St. Louis on horse
-back with one and sometimes two led horses, buy the
-goods, pack them, place them on their horses and peddle
-all the way from St. Louis and still further west and take in
-exchange all kinds of fur skins.</p>
-
-<p>I have seen peddlers with one horse still loaded with
-goods and the other covered with fur skins, and I have
-seen them again after they had disposed of all their goods
-with all three horses completely covered with fur skins and
-sometimes so heavily loaded that the peddler would either
-be walking and leading or driving.</p>
-
-<p>Money was scarce but the people spent very little
-money, were not in debt and lived much better and easier
-than they do now. Their counties were out debt and the
-county warrants were always at par.</p>
-
-<p>When my father first located here, there were about four
-or five settlers in all of the territory that now belongs to
-Howell County; there were but three men that resided upon
-what is known as the middle bayou, William McCarty and
-his sons, Green and Willis.</p>
-
-<p>In about three years after my father settled here, McCarties
-sold out and located on the bayou above Bakersfield.
-In 1844 there was a man by the name of Thomas
-Hall who resided about 10 miles southwest of West Plains,
-a man by the name of Cyrus Newberry resided about 10
-miles from where West Plains now is, and a man by the
-name of Braudwaters resided near where Moody is now located.</p>
-
-<p>There was not a settlement in all the territory that
-now includes Howell valley. There had been a settlement,
-by a man who was a hunter, made at what is now termed
-the town spring at West Plains who had cleared five or
-six acres, but had left it. All the valleys in Howell coun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>ty
-were considered worthless on account of there being no
-water.</p>
-
-<p>When the country commenced settling, there was no
-attention paid to congressional lines. As they settled on
-the streams, they would make conditional lines&mdash;blaze
-across the bottom until they would strike the table-lands;
-and the next men who might come in and settle would
-blaze his conditional line across, and for years there was
-but little land entered. Men only sold their improvements,
-and there was a fixed law, or custom, that prevailed among
-them&mdash;that no man should enter the land and take another
-man's improvements without paying him for them. A few
-such instances occurred to my knowledge. The man was
-at once waited upon, and informed of the rules and customs
-of the country; and besides the rules and customs, it
-was not right nor honest to take a man's labor without
-paying him for it; and that it was the intention and purpose
-of the people to see that justice was done every man;
-and he was therefore notified to proceed to the late owner
-of the improvements and pay him the value of the improvements;
-and if they couldn't agree upon the value, submit
-it to two disinterested neighbors; and if they couldn't
-agree let the third man be brought in, which finding would
-be final. In every instance if the man who had made the
-entry failed to comply with the terms, he was at once notified
-that his absence from the settlement and a speedy departure
-from the country would be satisfactory to the settlement;
-and that if he failed to comply, he would have to
-submit to the punishments that would be inflicted upon
-him. If the improvements, which were always reasonable,
-were paid for, the party would move off, blaze out another
-claim, and go to work to improve it; but if he didn't receive
-pay for his improvements, he remained on the land
-and the other fellow's whereabouts would soon be un<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>known;
-and when the land was sold for taxes, the man
-owning the improvements would buy it in by paying the
-amount of taxes and costs without an opposing bid.</p>
-
-<p>When my father first located in this country, a large
-portion of the territory had never been sectionized. What
-was known as the old survey, including range seven and a
-part of range eight (now in this county) formed a part of
-the old survey. Congress passed a law graduating the
-price of land according to the length of time it had been
-upon the market. The government price was $1.25 per
-acre. The first reduction was twenty-five cents upon the
-acre; then they reduced the purchase price every few
-years until all the land included in the old survey went
-down to a bit an acre. The graduation law allowed each
-man to take up 320 acres by making actual settlement and
-cultivating it. But the land speculators took advantage of
-the law and hired men to go upon the land and make a few
-brush-heaps, and in the name of some man apply for the
-entry, until all of the graduated lands were taken up, and
-there was not a bona fide settler who had complied with
-the law in one out of every hundred.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the land in Howell, Gunters, Peace, and
-Hutton valleys, and the land where West Plains is now
-situated, were entered at a bit per acre. After the entries,
-the valley lands commenced settling rapidly. When the
-time came to procure a patent to the land, speculators went
-to Washington and engineered a bill through Congress to
-allow the parties to prove up without making proof of actual
-settlement, and in that way fraudulently obtained patents
-to two-thirds of all the land above referred to. The
-next thing, the speculators went East, sold their lands (or
-mortgaged them) by representing that all of the table lands
-were bottom lands and covered with walnut, hackberry,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span>
-box elder, and other bottom growths. They let the mortgages
-all be foreclosed.</p>
-
-<p>The merchants, who procured title to the lands, sent
-out agents to examine the land, who went back and reported
-that the lands were valueless and were not worth the taxes
-and refused to pay taxes on them. With some few exceptions
-the lands were offered time and again for taxes,
-would not sell for the amount of the taxes and thousands
-of acres remained in that condition until a short time before
-the building of the Kansas City &amp; Memphis railroad.
-All of the table lands were looked upon by the people as
-being entirely worthless and fit for nothing but range.</p>
-
-<p>My father in the year 1849 sold out and removed from
-Bennett's river, Fulton county, to the North Fork of White
-river, in Fulton County but two miles from the State line,
-dividing Missouri and Arkansas. In the year 1852 father
-took the winter fever, died and was buried in the cemetery,
-three miles above the State line, known as the Teverbauch
-cemetery.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1854 my mother and one brother died with
-the bloody flux, leaving three sons of the family, William,
-the oldest one living, F. M. and James I. Monks. The
-author was married on the 10th day of April 1853 to Martha
-A. Rice, a daughter of Thomas and Nancy Rice. He
-continued to reside upon the old homestead and was a farmer
-by occupation. The country commenced settling up
-rapidly. All the land on the streams was settled, with very
-few exceptions, with a frugal and intelligent class of people,
-mostly from the middle states. In the year 1856 Howell
-county was created by taking a part of the territory of
-Ozark and a part of the territory of Oregon, to-wit: Ranges
-7 and 8 and a small part of 9 were taken from Oregon
-county and the remainder of 9 and 10 was taken from
-Ozark county. Andrew V. Taber, &mdash;&mdash; Johnson (and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span>
-name of the other commissioner we have forgotten at the
-present time) proceeded to locate the county seat and purchased
-40 acres near the West Plains spring and laid it out
-into lots, got the county seat near the center, as a sufficient
-amount of water was necessary, taking into consideration
-the town spring and then what was known as the Bingiman
-spring. The lots sold rapidly and the town grew beyond
-any expectation and the country was improving and
-settling up with the town.</p>
-
-<p>In 1858 the author sold out on the North Fork of
-White river and moved into Howell county and located 11
-miles southwest of West Plains upon sections 2 and 11,
-range 9, was appointed constable of Benton township and
-in the year 1860 was elected constable of Benton township,
-commenced reading law in the year 1858. In the year
-1860 West Plains was said to be the best, neatest, prettiest
-town in South Missouri and contained about 200 inhabitants;
-had a neat frame court house in the center
-of the square, a first-class hewed log jail, had four first-class
-stores (for the country at that time) which kept continually
-on hand a general assortment of merchandise, had
-two saloons, tan yard and the county was out of debt, with
-money in the treasury; a county warrant then was good for
-its face value in gold, and the country was prosperous in
-every respect. The people generally were fast friends and
-their chief interest was to develop the resources of the
-country and aid and help each other.</p>
-
-
-<h3>How a Mob Was Prevented</h3>
-
-<p>In 1860, a man resided about three miles below West
-Plains by the name of Collins Coffey on the farm recently
-owned by Thomas Bolin and some men by the name of
-Griffiths and Boles&mdash;(some of them resided in West Plains
-and some of them resided in Thomasville, Oregon county)<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
-and they and Coffey had a falling out with each other and
-the enmity between them became very great. So the Griffiths,
-who lived at West Plains went down to Thomasville
-and they and the Boles with a few other friends declared
-that they would come up to Coffey's and mob him.</p>
-
-<p>They went to work and made for themselves a uniform,
-procured a bugle, fife and snare drum, procured a hack,
-made them a place for a candle and aimed to come up in
-the night.</p>
-
-<p>Coffey owned considerable stock among which was a
-bull about four years old. The range then was luxuriant
-and there was a pond near the side of the road that led
-from Thomasville and West Plains and the bull with other
-cattle had lain down on the edge of the road about one
-mile from Coffey's residence. They armed themselves,
-procured their musicians, got into their hack, drawn by
-two horses and started off to the scene of action with a
-bright light, with a flag flying and the music playing.
-When they reached the place near where the male
-was laying, he rose to his feet, squared himself and fetched
-a keen bellow as though (although he was animal) he
-might have some information as to their mission. They
-paid no attention to the action of the bull and on their driving
-within about ten feet of him he made a desperate lunge
-forward; they supposed that he intended to gore the horses,
-but missed his aim, struck the hack near the coupling, broke
-the coupling pole and turned head over heels, and fell
-right between the horses. The horses became frightened,
-made a desperate lunge to extricate themselves, and the
-bull at the same time was scuffling to extricate himself.
-Both horses fell, the bull and horses were all piled into a
-heap, grunting and scuffling. The occupants of the hack
-were all piled out in a heap, almost in an instant, and before
-they could extricate themselves and get onto their feet<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span>
-the bull had gotten up and was moving in the direction of
-his master's house bellowing every step as if to say, "I
-dare you to come any further." As soon as the posse got
-to their feet, having prepared, before they started, with
-plenty of whiskey, and being pretty well filled at the time
-of the occurrence, Boles got to his feet, drew his pistol,
-cocked it and swore he could whip any bull he ever saw,
-especially a one horned Coffey bull.</p>
-
-<p>The hack was almost demolished and the occupants
-considerably bruised, both horses crippled, and after consultation,
-they concluded that as the Coffey bull had proved
-so successful they had better abandon their trip and retreat
-"in good order" to Thomasville, leaving their horses
-hitched by the roadside and the shattered hack piled up at
-one side of the road.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning they sent out a team and brought
-the horses and hack back to Thomasville, and they were
-wiser and perhaps better men, as they never again attempted
-to mob Coffey.</p>
-
-<p>The strange feature about this matter is that the bull
-was never known to be cross before this occasion, when
-his master was to be mobbed.</p>
-
-<p>The society of the country had increased with the
-population, and school houses and churches were erected
-all over the country, nice farms were opened up, the dwellings
-changed from round log to hewed log and frame, the
-people all manifested a great deal of interest in schools and
-churches and the general development of the country.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Religion and Politics.</h3>
-
-<p>The prominent religious denominations from 1849 to
-1860 consisted chiefly of Methodists, Baptists and the
-Christian order; but all appeared to recognize each other<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>
-as Christians and would very often work together, as they
-had in the early pioneer days.</p>
-
-<p>Everything had the appearance of pointing to the day
-when Howell county would become the garden spot of
-South Missouri.</p>
-
-<p>Politically, the country was largely Democratic. In
-political campaigns the Whig and Democratic candidates
-would canvass the country together, and while on the
-stump speaking they would assail each other's platforms in
-most bitter terms. After the speaking was over they would
-go to the same hotel or boarding place and laugh and talk
-together as though they belonged to the same political party,
-and after the election was over the successful party
-would be recognized by the people as the officers of the
-whole people. You would see no partisan line drawn by
-the different courts between political parties, but the appointments
-of all local officers were made according to the
-qualifications of the man and not as to what party he belonged.
-The author, having been born and raised by
-Democratic parents, was a Democrat and acted with the
-Democratic party, his first vote for president having been
-cast for James Buchanan. In 1860 a great political question
-of the nation began to be agitated and a very bitter
-feeling was manifested from the stump between the Republican
-and Democratic parties.</p>
-
-<p>After the Democratic party divided and the bolters
-nominated Breckenridge for president, the author took part
-in the canvas and was a strong advocate of Stephen A.
-Douglas, the regular nominee of the Democratic party, and
-at the election cast his vote for Stephen A. Douglas for
-president.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="MISSOURI_AND_THE_CIVIL_WAR" id="MISSOURI_AND_THE_CIVIL_WAR">MISSOURI AND THE CIVIL WAR.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United
-States. Soon after the election they began to discuss the
-question of seceding from the Government. The author
-again took the field in opposition to secession, and delivered
-a number of speeches.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time the people that had been the closest of
-friends and trusted a neighbor with the most sacred thing
-they possessed became bitter enemies and arrayed themselves
-against one another and as the discussion of the great
-question of war continued to grow more bitter the people
-appeared to align themselves for and against secession.
-The people soon grew so bitter that they often talked of
-fighting each other.</p>
-
-<p>Before the firing on Ft. Sumpter and after several of
-the states had actually seceded the Union sentiment prevailed
-so strongly in the state of Missouri that Clabourn
-Jackson, the then acting Governor, was compelled to order
-an election in the state of Missouri to settle the matter by a
-vote, of the people as to whether Missouri should secede or
-remain in the Union. The author then took the stump and
-advocated that the state remain in the Union and manifest
-her loyalty to the preservation of the Union. In this campaign
-the feeling of the war grew more bitter. The result,
-however, of the election was that the state remained in the
-Union. In the mean time, Ft. Sumpter had been fired upon
-by the rebels.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Clabe Jackson, the Governor, appeared to be determined
-upon the state seceding either by fair or foul means.
-Without regarding a majority vote of the people of the
-state, Clabe Jackson, the then acting Governor, issued his
-proclamation convening the Legislature in extra session for
-the purpose of passing ordinances of secession.</p>
-
-<p>At that time Gen. Frost was in the command of the
-militia and some state troops stationed in St. Louis Barracks
-but he was in heart and sympathy a rebel. Everything appeared
-to have been greased and prepared for the occasion.</p>
-
-<p>As the Governor had the whole machinery of the state
-completely under his control he believed that it would be
-an easy matter for the legislature to pass ordinances of secession
-and carry the state out of the Union, but the Government
-authorities at Washington learned of the critical
-condition and deep laid scheme of the Governor to carry
-the state out of the Union and at once ordered Capt. Lyons
-of the Regular Army, (who afterward became General of
-the volunteer forces and fought the battle at Wilson Creek,
-Missouri) to come to St. Louis; he, being a captain in the
-Regular Army, outranked Gen. Frost, took possession of
-the troops, arms and amunitions, etc., reorganized and rapidly
-increased the army by volunteers.</p>
-
-<p>On information reaching Gen. Lyons that the legislature
-had been convened in extra session he at once took his
-available troops and left St. Louis with the intention of
-surrounding the Capitol and taking the members of both
-houses, the Governor, with all his state officers, prisoners;
-when the Governor learned that the Government troops were
-en route for Jefferson City and their purpose, he ordered the
-bridge to be burned across the Gasconade river near its
-mouth, on what was then known as the North Pacific R. R.
-This delayed the troops for several hours. On their approach
-to Jefferson City the Governor and state officers and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>
-the members of both houses of the legislature and all the
-troops that had been ordered to the Capital by the Governor
-retreated to Boonville, Missouri.</p>
-
-<p>I heard our representative in a speech delivered a
-short time afterwards, say they came so near getting him
-while he was getting out of Jefferson City that he lost
-his umbrella. Lyons pursued them and at Boonville they
-made a stand and on Lyon's arrival with his troops he
-attacked them and they fought for a short time. They
-again retreated, went into the extreme west part of the
-state to a place known as Lone Jack. There they made
-a stand again, Lyons still pursuing. He again attacked
-then at Lone Jack and after a short fight they retreated
-again into the State of Arkansas, and there Governor
-Jackson convened the legislature and they passed ordinances
-of secession declaring the State of Missouri out of
-the Union and that she was attached to the compact forming
-the Confederate States.</p>
-
-<p>General Lyon returned to St. Louis, increasing his
-force considerably, several regiments being attached to his
-command from other states. The government ordered him
-to prepare his troops and move west to Springfield.
-The terminus of the South Missouri Pacific R. R., at
-that time was at Rolla, Missouri. While Lyon was massing
-his troops and preparing to march to Springfield the
-most intense excitement prevailed in the entire State of
-Missouri.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Big Confederate Meeting at West Plains.</h3>
-
-<p>The Confederate authorities at once commenced recruiting
-for the Confederate service and the Confederate
-recruiting officers published a public meeting at West
-Plains about the first or tenth of July and while the Confederate
-authorities were moving, the union or loyal ele<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>ment
-of the country was not idle, but was watching every
-move, openly and secretly preparing for the conflict.</p>
-
-<p>A few days before the meeting was to be held at West
-Plains the Confederates sent to the pinery and procured
-a long pine pole, hoisted it at the corner of Durham's store
-at the northwest corner of the public square and swung
-to the breeze the stars and bars. At the same time, or
-near the same time, the Union men sent to the pinery
-and procured a pole. They hoisted it on the northeast
-corner of East Main street by the corner of McGinty's
-store where the S. J. Langston Mercantile Co., building
-now stands and swung to the breeze the stars and stripes.</p>
-
-<p>It was freely published throughout the county by the
-Rebels that if any Union man attempted to open his mouth
-on that day he would be shot as full of holes as a sifter
-bottom. There was a beautiful grove then growing just
-east of the branch on East Main street running from the
-town spring. Large preparations were made by the Rebels
-for the occasion. It was published that there would be
-leading Confederates from all over the state and different
-other states to speak on that day and one of the main
-features of the day would be recruiting for Confederate
-service. A big speaker's stand was erected with hundreds
-of seats. When the day arrived the town was crowded
-with people and the friends of both parties were armed
-and appeared to be ready for the conflict. The stars and
-bars attracted a great deal of attention, being the first
-flag that had ever been seen by the people that antagonized
-the stars and stripes and threatened to destroy the
-United States Government.</p>
-
-<p>There was soon a number of determined men gathered
-under each flag. A number of their prominent speakers
-were on hand, among them Judge Price, of Springfield,
-known as "Wild Bill" Price. They readily took in the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>
-situation and saw that a conflict was imminent, and
-as they were not ready for it they met together in
-council and agreed that their men should not bring on
-the conflict on that day. Quite a number of the parties
-prepared themselves at the speaker's stand. When different
-speakers were introduced to address the people, many
-of the men would sit, either with their guns in their hands
-or with their guns near to them, and the most fiery and
-extreme speeches were made that I ever heard.</p>
-
-<p>The author well remembers the speech of Judge William
-Price. He told them that the lopeared Dutch had
-reached Rolla, Missouri, the terminus of the railroad, and
-that they were complete heathens; that Abraham Lincoln
-had given the state of Missouri to them, if they would send
-enough lopeared Dutch to conquer the state, and that to
-his knowledge they had gone out into the country and
-taken men's wives and daughters and brought them into
-the camps, and that he saw them, in the presence of the
-mothers, run bayonets through their infant children and
-hoist them up and carry them around on their bayonets;
-that Abraham Lincoln had offered a reward for all of the
-preachers that were in favor of the South. He bursted
-into tears and asked the question, "I want to know who
-the man is, and the color of his hair, that won't enlist in
-the interest of his home, his wife, his children and everything
-that is sacred and good, to drive out lopeared Dutch,
-a certain class of Hessians, from our land." He urged
-them to come forward and place their names upon the rolls.
-Nearly all the preachers present placed their names on the
-recruiting list first.</p>
-
-<p>The excitement grew still more bitter. In the afternoon
-they began to threaten openly that the stars and
-stripes should be hauled down; that no flag should be allowed
-to float in West Plains that countenances and toler<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>ates
-heathen in our land. The Union men declared that
-the stars and stripes should not be lowered unless it was
-done over their dead bodies. Quite a number of Union
-men had assembled under the flag. The Union men were
-led by a man named Captain Lyle. He had been warned
-and cautioned by his friends not to open his mouth, for the
-reason that he would be shot full of holes. Late in the
-evening there was a lull in the speaking. The author
-walked up into the speaker's stand, called the attention of
-the people, saw a number of rifles grasped in their hands,
-and announced to them that they had been sitting all day
-listening to Confederate speeches, but on the next Saturday,
-if they would meet him at Black's store, about ten
-miles west of West Plains, they could hear Union speeches
-and the constitution of the United States would be read;
-thanked the crowd and stepped down. Quite a number of
-guns were raised in the hands of parties and a shower of
-groans and hisses, and remarks openly from a number that
-"We ought to shoot his black heart out now."</p>
-
-<p>It appeared for a while that it would be impossible to
-evade a conflict of arms. A number of orders being sent
-to the Union men to draw down their flag or they would
-fire on it and the men who supported it, an answer was returned
-that the rebels were requested to draw down their
-flag as it was a stranger in the land and unless they lowered
-their flag the stars and stripes wouldn't be lowered an
-inch, unless it was done over their dead bodies. At last a
-proposition came that they would agree for the sake of
-averting bloodshed to commence lowering both flags at the
-same time which proposition was accepted; so wound up
-that day's proceedings.</p>
-
-<p>On the Saturday following, the author, with several
-other Union speakers, met at Black's store where there
-were several rebel captains and lieutenants. The author<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>
-made a speech in favor of remaining in the Union and
-stated that the attempt to secede by some of the states
-would eventually result in sad disaster, besides bringing
-untold suffering upon the people. Several other Union
-speeches were made after which the author read the constitution
-of the United States and urged that all lovers of
-republican form of government would comply with the demand
-of the supreme law of the land and, if necessary, sacrifice
-property and life in defence of the same; so ended that
-day's proceedings.</p>
-
-
-<h3>McBride Establishes Military Law.</h3>
-
-<p>As the organization of the confederates proceeded they
-still grew more bitter against the Union men and declared,
-by meeting and passing resolutions, that every Union man
-should show his colors in favor of the South or be hung as
-high as Hamen. In the meantime the Union men had secretly
-organized and met together, to take into consideration
-as to the time when they should act.</p>
-
-<p>The prevailing sentiment was, that they should remain
-dormant and let the rebels shed the first blood, while the
-minority thought the time had come for action, and that
-they ought to act before the rebels crippled them and tied
-them up in such a manner that, when the time did come,
-they would be entirely helpless and at their mercy.</p>
-
-<p>McBride, who had been elected judge of the 18th Judicial
-circuit, which included Howell county, whose home
-was in Texas county, was made Brigadier General of the
-Confederate forces and commenced organizing and massing
-his troops. On the arrival of the federal troops at Rolla,
-Missouri, he became fearful that they would attack him,
-rout him and destroy his forces, so he concluded to march
-south to West Plains and make his headquarters at that
-place until he could organize his forces and prepare for<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>
-marching west, where he intended to join the forces of Gen.
-Sterling Price and Gen. McCullough who then were massing
-their forces to march on Springfield, Missouri, to attack
-the federal forces who were then stationed at Springfield
-under the command of Gen. Lyon and Gen. Seigle.
-On his arrival at West Plains he opened up headquarters,
-issued his proclamation that all Union men or any men
-that were unfriendly to the Confederate cause should come
-in and take the oath and the civil law was declared to be
-suspended and the military law completely in force.</p>
-
-<p>Then was when the dark day and trouble began to
-hang over the Union people. As soon as it was known
-that the civil law was suspended little bunches of rebels organized
-all over the country and also in the state of Arkansas.
-In a short time after Gen. McBride's arrival in West
-Plains a man who was a door neighbor to the author came
-into his field where he was cutting wheat, asked him if he
-had seen the order of McBride. My answer was "No."
-He remarked, "Well, he has made a general order, requiring
-all Union men, especially those who have been
-open and active in behalf of the Union, to come in and take
-the oath, and unless they do they are going to hang them
-as high as Hamen." The author replied to him that he
-was a Union man and he knew it; he had been open and
-outspoken for the Union and had voted for McBride when
-he was elected Judge, but now he thought he was acting
-outside of the law and humanity.</p>
-
-<p>I had neither violated the law of my land nor harmed
-any man and I didn't consider that McBride had any right
-to order me to take an oath to take up arms against my
-country or support those who had taken up arms. If this
-did become a general war, I thought they were making a
-blunder, for the Government, or the lopeared Dutch, as
-they termed them, would have the advantage in the way of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>
-transporting forage and commissaries and amunitions of
-war, while the Confederates would have to rely mostly for
-their resources upon the county; that I was a peace officer
-and while I was a strong Union man wasn't taking up arms
-and I thought that those who wanted to fight, if there had
-to be a fight, should go out into the open fields, and not
-force the war onto non-combatants, and that the country
-would suffer enough at best. Now you know I am a Union
-man, and I know that you are in favor of the Confederate
-cause, and I think this is the course that ought to be
-pursued at the present time. The Confederates are in
-control of the country, and they will come around and say
-they must have forage for the support of the army, and ask
-you if you know of any Union men; you could tell them,
-"My neighbor right here is a Union man, but he is not
-disposed to take up arms and go into the fight; take as little
-from him as you can possibly do with, and as little from
-myself; in return, if this war goes on, and the Federal authorities
-extend their jurisdiction, they would be out hunting
-rebels for the purpose of getting forage and commissaries,
-and I could say to them that my neighbor here is a
-rebel but take just as little as possible from him, and as
-little as possible from me, as we are going to have a hard
-time to get through the war any way. But if you pursue
-the policy you say has been adopted by the Confederates,
-you will force all non-combatants into arms or drive
-them from the country and completely depopulate it." He
-burst into a big laugh and remarked, "Your promises are
-like a broken stick, you will never see the lopeared Dutch
-in this country." I said to him, "My friend, if this war
-goes on, before the end of it you will see what you call
-lopeared Dutch as thick as blackbirds;" and we separated.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>General Lyons Drives Rebels from Rolla.</h3>
-
-<p>About June 10, 1851, the rebels were having a big
-meeting at Rolla, Phelps county, Missouri, for the purpose
-of recruiting. General Lyons at St. Louis, learned of the
-meeting, and at once placed quite a force in the cars,
-well armed and closed them up so they would not be detected
-and started for Rolla with the intention of capturing
-the whole outfit.</p>
-
-<p>On the day set for the rebel meeting, quite a number
-of them had assembled and a certain young lawyer was
-delivering an address, telling them that one southern man
-could whip five lopeared Dutch and all they wanted was
-just an opportunity; in the meantime Lyon's forces had
-reached Dillon, the next station east of Rolla about five
-miles distant. There the forces were taken from the cars
-and divided, some marching southwest and the others
-northwest, making a flank movement for the purpose of
-surrounding the whole place. While they were marching
-some person, who was a rebel, went with all the speed
-possible and informed the meeting that the Dutch were
-right upon them; that the woods were full of them and to
-get out of there as quick as possible, if they wanted to
-save their lives.</p>
-
-<p>The lawyer who was addressing them sprang from the
-speakers stand and holloing at the top of his voice as he
-went, "Get away from here, the Dutch are upon us." It
-was said that the lawyer ran so fast that if a glass of water
-had been sat upon his coat tail it would not have spilled.
-They scattered to the woods in all directions. The Federal
-force came in; but their birds had all flown and left the
-citizens who had remained to tell the sad tale.</p>
-
-<p>The rebel forces at once retreated to Salem, Missouri,
-where they again concentrated their force. The Federal
-scout, in a few days followed them to Salem, and there<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>
-again routed them and they retreated directly to West
-Plains, joining the command of McBride at that place.
-The rebels, hurriedly, concentrated their forces from all
-the south and southeastern counties of Missouri and from
-the northern counties of Arkansas.</p>
-
-<p>General McBride made an order to gather all the arms,
-amunitions, and horses that were fit for the service, as
-speedily as possible and the report was put in circulation
-that he had given the county over to the leading rebels,
-who resided in it, whose action, whatever they did touching
-the Union men, would be indorsed and carried out by
-General McBride. The leading rebels of the county at
-once sent out word that they were going to take all the
-arms, amunition and available horses from the Union men
-and that McBride required each and every one of them to
-report and take the oath at once, and if they failed to comply
-with said order, speedy action would be taken against
-them.</p>
-
-<p>They would either be arrested, imprisoned or forced
-into the Confederate army to fight and their leaders would
-be hung.</p>
-
-<p>On the issuing of the said order the wildest excitement
-prevailed among the Union men. They immediately met
-for the purpose of consultation as to what their final action
-would be. There were divers opinions among them; some
-of them were for acting at once; others (and a majority of
-them) were in favor of waiting until the rebels shed the
-first blood. Those who refused to report and take the oath
-had to place themselves in hiding at once. The rebels
-made a general move to raid, harass and capture the Union
-men. Then real danger confronted a man who claimed to
-be a Union man. The rebels had made a general amnesty,
-upon the condition that they would join the Confederate
-army and become loyal to the Confederate States. About<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>
-two-thirds of the men who had been open and avowed
-Union men saw the danger that confronted them, and
-joined the Confederate army and claimed that they would
-be loyal to its cause. The remainder of the Union men
-were disarmed at once, except those who kept themselves
-concealed in the mountains and hills.</p>
-
-<p>After they had completely disarmed them and forced
-many of them to join the Confederate service, had taken
-most of their horses, cattle and hogs for the use of the
-army, the leading rebels in the county claimed that they
-had organized for the purpose of ridding the country of all
-Union men who had refused to join the Confederate forces;
-that when McBride moved west he was going to leave the
-whole matter in their hands, and they intended to string up
-the Union men to limbs and shoot them, so they would
-soon be rid of the class of men who were friends of the
-lopeared Dutch and were nigger lovers.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Testing of Loyal Hearts.</h3>
-
-<p>Small bunches of rebel troops came in from Arkansas
-and joined the bands that were raiding the country, and
-the Union men were hunted like wild beasts. Then set in
-the darkest day that ever any class of patriots, true to their
-government, had to confront.</p>
-
-<p>The author remembers well when the Union men
-would meet together, that they took the proposition made
-by McBride into consideration, and it was discussed pro
-and con. Some men would say, "While I am a Union
-man and for the government, all that I have in the world
-is here in Howell county; my little home, my property
-and, above all, my wife and children. They have promised
-us protection provided we will join the rebel army.
-Had we not better accept the proposition and wait for results?"
-Others would arise, with tears dripping from their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>
-eyes, and remark that this state of affairs is hard indeed.
-"Can I afford to abandon my wife and children that I love
-so well and leave them unprotected in the midst of an open
-state of war, at the mercy of a mad and distracted people,
-who are thirsting for the loyal blood of the nation, and be
-alienated from them, perhaps, never more to see them?"
-Others would arise and remark that "We have seen this
-danger coming for months and we are satisfied that the
-worst has not come, and I know that I love my wife, my
-family, my little children, as I love my own heart; I love
-to meet them around my fireside and enjoy their sweet
-company, and I have delighted in laboring to furnish them
-food and raiment and shelter while they were growing into
-manhood and womanhood, but I have read and heard read
-that my highest duty was to God and my second duty was
-to my country; and the organic law of the nation requires
-at my hands that whenever it becomes necessary to preserve
-my government, that I owe to it my life, my honor
-and the welfare of my family; and the trying ordeal is now
-at hand and I don't know what the final result will be&mdash;if I
-am forced away from my family, I know they will be left
-at the mercy of an intolerant and unrelenting enemy, but
-I now and here lay my life, my family, my property and
-my future happiness upon the altar of my country, and let
-come what will, weal or woe, I intend, with all my feeble
-effort, to defend the stars and stripes, and stand up openly
-and courageously in defense of and for the preservation of
-the Union." That proposition prevailed and was unanimously
-adopted by the Union men.</p>
-
-<p>At this time there was no government aid in reach of
-these loyal hearts, that were controlled by nothing but love
-of country. Uncle Sam could do nothing for them. They
-were completely surrounded in an enemy's country, and
-while they (the men), with what arms they had preserved,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>
-could by strategy evade the arrest and slaughter of themselves,
-their families were completely at the mercy of a mad
-and howling mob, thirsting for the blood of Union men.</p>
-
-<p>While the loyal men in the North were enlisting in the
-interest of their country, Uncle Sam paid them $13.00 per
-month, clothed them, and their families were left in the
-care of friends; they knew nothing about the war, except
-what they read; but not so with the Union men who were
-surrounded in an enemy's country. They, without a single
-word of protection or comfort from the government for
-themselves or their families, but their love and devotion to
-their country led them to furnish themselves, to leave their
-families as best they could, at the mercy of a howling mob,
-for the defense of their country.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Rebels Defeated in Douglas County.</h3>
-
-<p>The loyal men in Douglas county and the north part
-of the county of Ozark were in the ascendency. A rebel
-force organized from the county of Howell, Missouri, and
-Fulton county, Arkansas, wanting to have some fun hunting
-Union men, learned that on Bryant's Fork on the north
-fork of White river in Ozark county there was a bunch of
-Union men. So they armed and equipped themselves,
-furnished themselves ropes, and marched to hunt the place
-these men were said to be. The Union men hearing of
-their intention hurriedly prepared a temporary barricade
-around the house, and about sixty of them gathered together
-with their squirrel rifles in readiness to repel the attack
-in case it was made. The rebel scout consisted of
-two hundred and fifty men.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the morning reliable information reached the
-Union men that the rebel forces were well under way and
-would reach them some time in the afternoon. One of the
-Union men, who had always borne the reputation of being<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
-a brave man and would fight anything, became impatient
-as the time drew near that they were to be attacked. He
-had been a great hunter and was considered a first-class
-shot, and he remarked to the Union men, "I can't wait for
-the rebels to attack us, I want to get a shot at one so bad
-with Old Betsy (his gun). I know of a bald knob, about
-a quarter of a mile from here, where the rebel force is
-bound to pass. I am going there; place yourselves in
-waiting, and when you hear 'Old Betsey' belch, you may
-know there is one dead rebel, and be certain that they are
-coming." In about an hour after the man referred to had
-left, the rebel advance came in sight, but they never heard
-"Old Betsy" belch. They vigorously attacked the Union
-men inside their fortifications, and after fighting for about
-an hour, they retreated, leaving one man dead upon the
-field and one wounded. The Union men received no injury
-whatever. They became very uneasy in regard to
-their friend and "Old Betsy," supposing he had fallen into
-the hands of the enemy and they had used the rope on
-him. Search was made all along the line of march of the
-rebels for the missing man, but no information could be
-learned of his whereabouts. However, in about one week,
-news came from Douglas county that their friend and "Old
-Betsy" arrived safely at another rendezvous of Union men
-in Douglas county, about forty miles distant, and reported
-that the Union men had had a fight with the rebels, and
-they were all captured or killed, with the exception of himself,
-and he had made his escape after the fight.</p>
-
-<p>Just before McBride broke camps to march west to
-join Gen. Price and Gen. McCullough, he made a general
-order that they arrest and seize every Union man possible,
-and after he left the country, that the committee who had
-been organized to take charge of the county, would at once
-exterminate every Union man who had failed to take the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>
-oath or to join the Confederate army, giving them full
-power as to what disposition they would make of them.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Rebels Capture Col. Monks.</h3>
-
-<p>On the 7th of July, 1861, one of my neighbors came
-to me and informed me that the time had come that every
-Union man had to show his colors and unless they reported
-and took the oath or joined the Confederate army, they
-would hang as high as Haman. While the Union men
-were on their guard and watching their movements, once in
-a while they would slip in home to see how the family was
-getting along. My family at that time consisted of a wife
-and four children, three girls and one boy. My wife had
-never been accustomed to staying alone and I came in
-home late on the evening of the 7th, thinking that I would
-leave the next morning before daylight. Sometime after
-the family had retired, not far from 11 o'clock in the night,
-I was awakened by a rapping on the door. My wife, suspecting
-who the parties were, answered them, and demanded
-to know what was wanted; one of them, who claimed to
-be an orderly sergeant, remarked that he wanted to know
-if Monks was at home. She replied that he was not. A
-man by the name of William Biffle, whom the author had
-been acquainted with for years, replied, "He is here, I
-know, for I coursed him into this house late yesterday evening."
-The author at once arose to his feet and remarked,
-"I am here, what is wanted?" A man by the name of
-Garrett Weaver, who claimed to be an orderly sergeant
-and in charge of the squad, also a neighbor to the author
-said, "I have been ordered by Gen. McBride to arrest
-you, bring you in and make you take the oath." I owned
-at that time a first-class rifle and there was also another
-rifle gun in the house. I took my gun into my hands
-and my wife took hold of the other gun. I told them that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>
-a general order had gone forth, so I was informed, that they
-wanted to hang all the leading Union men and "if that is
-your intention I will die before I surrender." Weaver replied
-they were not going to hang me, but they were just
-going to take me to McBride to take the oath and I should
-be protected. Upon those terms I agreed to surrender,
-made a light in the house and found that the house was surrounded
-by a posse of twenty-five rebels. As soon as the
-light was made, a part of them rushed into the house, took
-my gun and jerked the one my wife had in her hand out
-of her possession, almost throwing her to the floor, began a
-general search of the house for other arms and such things
-as they said the army needed.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as I dressed, they ordered me to move. They
-didn't even give me time to say good-bye to my wife, nor
-to imprint a kiss upon the cheeks of my loving children.
-Closely surrounding me, they marched me about 250 yards,
-came to their horses, where two more of their posse guarded
-the horses, they having dismounted, to approach the
-house on foot so they might not be heard.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i057.jpg" width="580" height="396" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>COL. MONKS ARRESTED AND TAKEN FROM HOME</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>"Billy, You Ought Not to be So Saucy."</h3>
-
-<p>When within a few feet of the horses the author was
-halted. It was just starlight. I noticed a man by the
-name of Wilburn Baker, a man with whom the author had
-been acquainted from a boy, go to the horn of one of the
-saddles, lift therefrom a coiled rope and move toward the
-author. The author quickly arrived at the conclusion that
-the time had come to enforce the order of hanging. Baker
-ordered the author seized by the arms, drew them behind
-him and securely tied him. The author asked, just
-as they had completed the tying, "What do you mean?
-Are you going to cage me?" Baker replied, "Billy, you
-ought not to be so saucy, for you don't know the danger
-you are in." I was at once ordered placed on a horse.
-One of the posse rode up to my side and placed the other
-end of the rope around his body and the posse moved west.
-A short time before daylight they arrived at the house of
-William Nicks, who was a rebel lieutenant. They dismounted
-and took the author into the house. There appeared
-to be a general rejoicing among them. Nicks said,
-"You have got him, have you? We had become uneasy
-about you, and thought it might have been possible that he
-had his Union forces around him and that you had met
-with disaster; but I feel satisfied that we have now captured
-the leader and the counselor of the Union forces and the
-remainder will be easily extinguished." Gen. McBride in
-the meantime, being uneasy for fear the Federal troops
-would attack him, had removed his forces from West Plains
-to the south part of Howell county, camping at what was
-known as the Flag pond.</p>
-
-<p>I was closely guarded until daylight. McBride's forces
-had broken camp at the Flag pond on the morning
-of July 8th and were marching west with the intention of
-joining the forces of Gen. Price and Gen. McCullough, who
-were then moving in the direction of Springfield, Missouri,
-with the intention of attacking the Federal forces at that
-place, commanded by Gen. Lyon and Gen. Siegel. Very
-early on the morning of the 8th the party started in a southwest
-direction, with the author closely guarded. On
-coming near the head of Bennett's river, Fulton county,
-Arkansas, the posse commenced cheering and remarked:
-"Listen! Do you hear the drums and the fife? That is
-Gen. McBride's command moving west to kill them lopeared
-Dutch that you Union men have brought into the
-state of Missouri. Do you know what we are going to
-do with such men as you are? Those of you that we don't
-hang, the first fight that we get into with the <span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span>lopeared
-Dutch, we will make breastworks out of to keep the
-bullets off of good men."</p>
-
-<p>About one mile further we came in sight of the moving
-column. We rode along the line, when there was general
-cheering until we reached a company that was organized
-in Oregon county and commanded by Capt. Simpson.
-Simpson said, "Why have you brought a Union man in
-here alive! If my company had possession of him, he
-could not live ten minutes."</p>
-
-<p>We soon reached a company commanded by Capt.
-Forshee which was organized in this county to whom the
-whole posse that made the arrest, belonged. The author
-was well acquainted with all of them and over half of them
-resided in the same settlement and were his neighbors.
-On reaching the company Captain Forshee walked out of
-the line and remarked to them "Why have you brought
-him in here alive?" Some of the posse remarked, that
-he had been a neighbor and they had all been friends up to
-the war and they hated to kill him. Forshee said "When
-I saw him at West Plains at the speaking when he got up
-and contended that there was a union and the government
-ought to be preserved, I wanted to shoot his black heart
-out of him and I feel the same way yet."</p>
-
-<p>The author was kept in close confinement and on the
-night of the 8th the command went into camp near what
-is known as the old Steve Thompson farm. The author,
-with several other prisoners, was placed in the guard house
-and orders were given that he be closely guarded.</p>
-
-<p>After they had taken their suppers, men that the
-author had been acquainted with from his boyhood, and
-men who had been acquainted with his relatives, came to
-the guard house in considerable numbers and remarked,
-"Hello, Monks?" "I never expected to see you under
-arrest." "What have you been doing that they have ar<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>rested
-you? I thought you was a good Democrat." "Have
-you left your party." "The Democratic party is in favor of
-the South." The author replied to them that when they
-thought he was a good Democrat they were right. But that
-he was not a slave to party and that he held country higher
-than party and if Democracy meant secession and nullification,
-that was one part of the principals of Democracy that
-he had never learned; that true Democracy, as understood
-by the author, taught every man that in case his country
-was invaded either externally or internally that he owed
-his honor and property in the support of it and for those
-reasons he was for the preservation of the Union at all
-hazards. Some remarked that "We ought to hang him
-right now without waiting any longer" Others remarked
-that "We have been acquainted with his people both
-on his mother's and father's side and they were all southern
-people and Democrats and they are all of them, almost,
-in favor of the South. It is strange indeed to see
-the course that he has taken." The author remarked that
-"There were always some shabby sheep in a flock and I
-suppose from your reasoning that I am one of them."
-They all retired, the officers giving orders that the most
-vigilant watch be kept over the prisoner. After he had
-retired a gentleman by the name of Joseph Teverbaugh
-who resided in Ozark county, a merchant and the owner
-of about twenty negroes, who had been well acquainted
-with the author from his boyhood, brought up the conversation
-as to what disposition they thought ought to be
-made of the author. The author could easily hear all the
-conversation inside of the guard line. Many opinions were
-expressed. Quite a number said, "Hang him outright."
-That was the only way to get shut of the Union men, to
-make short work of it, and forever rid the country of that
-element.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Others said that appeared to be too harsh, that they
-were in favor of taking him to Little Rock and confining
-him in the penitentiary until the war was over, for it wouldn't
-take but a short time to rid the country of the lopeared
-Dutch and those who were friends to them. Others remarked
-that "that would be too easy for a man who was in
-favor of the lopeared Dutch; that we are in favor of taking
-all like him right into the army and making them fight and
-if they won't fight, the first engagement we get into, pile
-them up and make breastworks out of them, so that they
-will catch bullets off of good men." At this juncture Teverbaugh
-remarked, "I have been acquainted with Billy from
-a boy and you never can force him to fight against what he
-believes to be right, that he was a good boy and since he
-has grown up to be a man he has been an honorable and
-straightforward man and quite an active man politically and
-my advice would be to confine him in the State Penitentiary
-until the war is over, for I tell you now if he ever gains his
-liberty you are going to have him to fight."</p>
-
-
-<h3>Sold as a Beef Cow.</h3>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 9th they broke camp and marched
-near the mouth of Bennett's river and went into camp at
-what was then known as Talbert's mill. A short time after
-we had been in camp Capt. Forshee, who had charge of the
-prisoners, came to the guard house and the author requested
-him that he be allowed to take the oath and return
-home, as his wife and children were almost scared to death
-owing to the reports that were currently circulated all
-through the country, his wife would believe they had hung
-him. The captain replied that they were not going to allow
-him to take the oath. They had plenty of proof against
-him, that he had been communicating to the lopeared Dutch
-and as soon as they had formed a junction with Price and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>
-McCullough he would be tried as a spy. He gave orders
-to the guard to see that he was kept in close confinement,
-and about 11 o'clock in the night as near as the author can
-guess, it being starlight, the Captain came down to the
-guard house in company with one of his men, Frank Morrison.</p>
-
-<p>The author was lying on the ground pretending to be
-asleep. The Captain came inside of the guard, called out,
-"Monks, are you asleep?" The author raised up in a sitting
-position and said, "Captain what is wanted"? The
-Captain remarked, "I want you to go up to my camp fire,"
-which was about 75 yards distance from the guard house.
-The author said, "Captain, this is a strange time of night to
-come down and order me to your camp fire." He said;
-"Not another word out of you, rise to your feet." He
-ordered Morrison to step behind him with the same gun
-that he had recently taken from the author and cock it and
-"if he makes a crooked step from here up to the camp fire
-shoot him through." The author heard Morrison cock
-the gun and about half way between the guard house and
-the camp fire the Captain remarked to the author, "Do you
-know Kasinger?" The author, suspecting that he was
-going to be delivered to a mob, said "I know him very
-well; we have grown up together from boys." The Captain
-said, "I thought he was a mighty nice man. I have
-sold you to him for a beef cow." The author remarked
-there was but one thing he was sorry for; that if he had
-known he was going to be delivered to a mob he never
-would have surrendered and had some satisfaction for his
-life. The Captain said, "I thought I was doing mighty
-well to sell a black Republican or a Union man for a beef
-cow where we have as many good men to feed, as we have
-here."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>His camp fire was under a gum tree with a large top.
-The fires had all died down, it being in July and nothing
-but the stars were giving the light. On coming within
-two or three feet of the tree the Captain ordered the author
-to halt. He and Morrison walked about ten paces
-and said, "I have brought you up here to liberate you.
-We have got plenty of good men here to feed without feeding
-men who are friends to the lopeared Dutch." The
-author replied to the Captain, "you may think you are dealing
-with a fool. I have neither violated the civil nor military
-law; have demanded a trial and you refuse to give it
-to me. You can't bring me up here at this time of night
-and pretend to turn me loose for the purpose of escaping the
-responsibility of an officer and deliver me into the hands
-of a mob."</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Confederate Army or Hell.</h3>
-
-<p>The author was satisfied that he could then see a
-bunch of men standing in readiness. The Captain replied,
-"Sit down or you will be shot in half a minute." The
-author sat down and leaned against the tree. He had on
-strong summer clothing, wearing an alpaca vest and coat.
-In an instant, about twenty-five men, led by Kasinger, and
-a man by the name of William Sap, approached the author;
-Kasinger, holding a rope in his hand with a noose in it,
-walked up to the author, held the noose of the rope
-above his head and said, "Monks, you have half a minute
-to say you will join the army and fight, or go to hell, just
-which you please." The author replied that it was said
-that "hell was a hot place," but he had never been there,
-and that he had always been counted a truthful man until
-he had been arrested, and since his arrest he had been
-asked divers questions of the whereabouts of the lopeared
-Dutch, and that he had told them in every instance he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>
-knew nothing of them and had been cursed for a liar. "If
-I was to say that I would join the army and fight, I might
-have a cowardly set of legs and they might carry me away;
-and in the next place, I am a Union man, first, last and all
-the time. I suppose your intention is to hang me, and
-there is only one thing I am sorry for, and that is that I
-ever surrendered; but there is one consolation left, when
-you kill me you won't kill them all, and you will meet
-plenty of them that won't be disarmed as I am now."</p>
-
-<p>Kasinger replied, "No damn foolishness, we mean
-business," and made an attempt to drop the noose over my
-head, which was warded off with my arms.</p>
-
-<p>At this juncture the author appealed to the Captain for
-protection from the mob, saying that he was a prisoner,
-unarmed and helpless, and if he suffered him to be murdered
-by a mob his blood would be upon the Captain's
-head. No reply being made by the Captain, all of the parties
-being considerably under the influence of whiskey, Sap
-raised his left hand, pushed Kasinger back and remarked,
-"I have been shooting and wounding some of these black
-Republicans who are friends of the lopeared Dutch, but I
-intend to shoot the balance of them dead." At the same
-time he drew a pistol from his right-hand pocket, cocked
-it, stooped over, ran his fingers under the author's clothing,
-gave them a twist and commenced punching him around
-the chest with the muzzle of the revolver, and after, as the
-author thought, he had punched him some fifty or sixty
-times with the revolver, the author said to him, "William
-Sap, there is no question but that your intentions are to
-kill me, and you want to torture me to death. You know
-that if I was armed and on equal footing with you, you
-would not do this." He made a quick jerk with his left
-hand, intending to jerk the author upon his face, remarking
-to the Captain at the same time, "Captain, you promised
-him to us and we are going to take him." The author,
-with all force possible, leant against the tree, Sap's
-hold broke loose, tearing off all the buttons that were on
-the vest and coat.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i065.jpg" width="580" height="409" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>A NARROW ESCAPE FOR COL. MONKS.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The author again appealed to the Captain for protection
-from the mob. The Captain then remarked to Sap,
-"Hold on for a moment, I will take a vote of my company
-as to whether we will hang him or not." The company at
-that time was lying on the ground, most of them apparently
-asleep. The Captain called out aloud to his company,
-"Gentlemen, I am going now to take a vote of my
-company as to whether we will hang Monks or not. All
-in favor of it vote, aye; all opposed, no." He then took
-the affirmative vote and the negative vote. They appeared,
-to the author, to be almost evenly divided. Sap again
-remarked to the Captain "You promised him to us, we
-have bought him and paid for him and he is ours."</p>
-
-<p>The author again appealed to the Captain for protection.
-The Captain replied to Sap, "He claims protection
-and as I am an officer and he a prisoner I reckon
-we had better keep him until we reach McCullough and
-Price and then we will try him for a spy and there is plenty
-of evidence against him to prove that he has been
-writing to the lopeared Dutch and after he is convicted
-will turn him over and you men can take charge of him."
-At this juncture a brother in-law of the Captain said,
-"Captain, I have one request to make of you. I want
-you to take Monks in the morning and tie him hard and
-fast, with his face to a tree, and let me shoot with a rest
-sixty yards and show you how I can spoil a black Republican's
-pate." The Captain replied, "As soon as he is
-convicted you can have the gratification of shooting him
-just as often as you please."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The Captain and Morrison again took charge of the
-author, carried him back and delivered him to the guard
-with instructions to the guard to be diligent in keeping
-him closely confined so that he would have no possible
-chance of escape. On the morning of the 10th we
-broke camp and went into camp that night just beyond
-where Mountain Home now stands. Dr. Emmons, of West
-Plains, who was a strong Union man and who afterwards
-became captain in the 6th Missouri Cavalry, attempted to
-go through to the Federal forces but was pursued by the
-rebels, captured somewhere in Texas county and brought
-back to the camp. He was also a prisoner at the same time;
-but being a master mason, was paroled to the limits of the
-camp and on the night of the 10th made his escape and
-got through to the Federal lines, enlisted and was made
-captain. Of him we will speak later.</p>
-
-
-<h3>In Camp at Yellville.</h3>
-
-<p>On July 11th they broke camp and reached Yellville,
-Marion county, and on the 13th reached Carrolton, a small
-town in Arkansas, and went into camp. The author well
-remembers the spring. It ran out of the steep, rocky gulch
-and the branch ran a little south of west and a beautiful
-grove of timber surrounded the spring. The prisoners were
-marched down within a few feet of the spring and there
-placed under guard. As usual, the abuse that had been
-continually heaped upon the prisoners during the march was
-renewed and in a short time a man who was said to be from
-one of the counties north of Rolla, Mo., commenced making
-a speech and inciting and encouraging the soldiers to mob
-the prisoners at once; that he had disguised himself and entered
-the camps of the lopeared Dutch at Rolla, and that to
-his own personal knowledge they had men's wives and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>
-daughters inside of their camps, committing all manner of
-offenses possible, and that they were heathens; didn't resemble
-American people at all and that he would not guard
-nor feed any man who was a friend to them; that they
-ought to be killed outright.</p>
-
-<p>The men who enlisted in the Confederate army from
-Howell and adjoining counties, before starting, went to the
-blacksmith shops and had them large butcher knives
-made; made a belt and scabbard and buckled them around
-them, and said that they were going to scalp lopeared Dutch.
-In a short time the tenor of the above mentioned speech
-had incited over 400 men and it had become necessary to
-double the guard. The grove of timber was filled with
-men and boys looking over, expecting to see the prisoners
-mobbed every minute. There was a man who drew his
-pistol, others drew knives and made different attempts
-to break lines and mob the prisoners. The man in possession
-of the pistol declared that he intended to shoot them.
-He was on an elevated place and they called him "Red,"
-and there were three or four men holding him to prevent
-his firing. The author remarked to him that: "The time
-will soon come when you will meet men who are not disarmed.
-You had better save your bravery until you meet
-them, and my opinion is that you won't need any man to
-hold you then." Just about this time on the north side of
-the spring&mdash;the land dropped toward the spring, on a descent
-of about 45 degrees&mdash;the author heard the voice of a
-man ordering the guard to "open the lines and let these
-ladies come in." The author at once arose to his feet and
-spoke out in an audible voice to the guard to give away and
-let the ladies come in and see a Northern monkey exhibited,
-that the monkeys grew a great deal larger in the north than
-they did in the south. At this juncture it appeared to take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
-one more man to hold Red who said that "he would kill
-the saucy scoundrel if it took him a week to do it."</p>
-
-<p>When the posse came in we saw that the ladies were
-accompanied by eight or ten Confederate officers with
-about fifteen ladies. All the ladies carried small Confederate
-flags, the first ones that the author had ever seen. On
-coming very close to the prisoners they halted and one of
-the officers remarked, "These are the Union men that are
-friends to the lopeared Dutch. Couldn't you tie the knot
-upon them to hang them?" I think almost everyone spoke
-out and said "we could." After heaping other epithets
-and abuse upon the prisoners they and the officers retired
-outside of the line. The speaker was still talking, urging
-and insisting that the prisoners should be mobbed at once,
-that they should not be permitted to live.</p>
-
-<p>At about this stage of the proceedings a man's voice
-was heard on top of the bank saying, "Men, I believe
-your intentions are to kill these prisoners. You have all
-started out to fight and you don't know how soon you
-might be taken prisoner and you would not like to be treated
-in any such manner; I know Billy, (referring to the
-author) and all you have against him is the political side
-that he has taken and I order the orderly sergeant to double
-the guard around the prisoners so there will be no possible
-chance for the mob to get through, and move with the
-prisoners south to a large hewed log house and place the
-prisoners therein, and place a guard around the walls and
-suffer no man to approach the house without an order
-from the officers."</p>
-
-<p>As the prisoner began to move, the excited soldiers,
-who were wanting to mob them, brought out an Indian yell,
-and it appeared to the author he could almost feel the
-ground shake. After they were put into the houses,
-among the prisoners were some who were deserters,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span>
-the author whispered to the Union men and told them to
-lie down close to them so that they could not distinguish
-from the outside one from another. The author was informed
-by Maj. William Kelley, of the Confederate army,
-who resides at Rolla, Phelps county, Missouri, at the present
-time, that he was the officer who made the order to
-remove the prisoners into the house and place a heavy
-guard around them to prevent their being mobbed. This
-ended the excitement for the evening.</p>
-
-<p>The author had always been a believer in the realities
-of religion. About one-tenth of the officers appeared
-to be Baptist and Methodist preachers, and frequently
-when they would go into camp would call a large number
-of the men together and very often take the prisoners and
-place them near by under a heavy guard, and then convene
-religious services. They always took for a text some
-subject in the Bible and the author remembers well of the
-taking of the subjects in the book of Joshua, where
-Joshua was commanded to pass around the fortifications of
-the enemy and blow the ram's horn and the fortifications
-fell, and, the God of Joshua was the same God that existed
-to-day and there was no question but that God was
-on the side of the South and all they had to do was to
-have faith and move on, attack the lopeared Dutch and
-God was sure to deliver them into their hands.</p>
-
-<p>The author could not help but add, in his own mind,
-that when the attack is made that God set the earth to
-shaking and all around where the lopeared Dutch are standing
-that the earth will open and swallow them up just
-leave their heads above the surface; so that those Confederates
-who were so furious could take their big knives
-and scalp the Dutch as they had said on divers occasions
-they intended to do.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Makes His Escape.</h3>
-
-<p>The author was determined to make his escape whenever
-the opportunity offered; and he could learn all about
-the whereabouts of the Federal soldiers from the excited
-Confederate scouts who would ride along the lines and say
-that the lopeared Dutch were as thick as rats at Springfield,
-Missouri, moving around in every direction and they
-might be attacked at any time and General McBride was
-looking every day to be attacked by the Federal forces to
-cut off his forming a junction with Generals Price and
-McCullough.</p>
-
-<p>In about four or five days they reached Berryville, near
-where the Eureka Springs are, and went into camp just
-west of Berryville right at the spurs of the Boston mountain.
-The prisoners were placed in the guard house near a
-little creek that was then dry. Captain Forshee's company
-went into camp next to the company commanded by
-Captain Galloway of Howell county. As the weather was
-very hot and dry and the author had been marched barefooted
-(one of his shoes having worn out) until his feet
-were badly blistered, he was lying down, feigning sickness.
-The guard has become a little careless. Just about sundown
-heavy thunder set in the west. The clouds continued to
-increase, the elements grew very dark. In the mean time
-they had put out a chain guard all around the encampment
-and said guard was about thirty steps from guard
-house. The low lands were all bottom, covered with
-heavy timber and a large oak had fallen across the creek
-and reached from bank to bank and the bark had all slipped
-off. About thirty feet from the top of the tree the foot
-of a steep mountain set in. The guard fire was about sixty
-yards south of the guardhouse. The clouds soon came
-up and a heavy rain set in, with terrific thunder and light<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>ning,
-and as the army had temporary tents the guards all
-crawled in under the tents and left the author by the fire.
-The rain soon quenched the fire.</p>
-
-<p>The chain guard were walking up and down the dry
-creek and they met at the log referred to. The author
-thought now was his time to make his escape, if ever; knowing
-that he would have to have a shoe, slipped to one of the
-tents, got hold of a shoe, and then the thought struck him
-that he would like to have a revolver, but on further examination
-found their revolvers to be placed in such a position
-that it was impossible to get one without waking the
-men. He then slipped to the butt of the log and heard the
-guard meet at the log and turn again on their beat. He at
-once crossed on the log on the other side, walked into
-the brush, reached the foot of the mountain about twenty
-steps distant and halted. Everything appeared to be quiet,
-the release around the guard fire were singing, whooping
-and holloing.</p>
-
-<p>The author then took the mountain which was about
-one quarter of a mile high, and it always has appeared to
-the author that he crossed the log and went up the mountain
-as light as a cat. On reaching the top, still raining
-heavily, the thought came into his mind that "I am once
-more a free man, but I am in an enemy's country, without
-friends," and at once determined in my mind to reach
-Springfield, Missouri, if possible. I sat down, pulled on
-the shoe that I had taken and it just fitted without a sock;
-I then procured a dead stick for the purpose of holding
-before me as I traveled for fear I would walk off of some
-steep cliff or bluff, as it was very mountainous.</p>
-
-<p>Having the guard fire for a criterion I moved northwest,
-soon struck the leading road west that the army was
-marching on, traveled the road for about one mile, came
-onto the pickets, surrounded the pickets, struck the road<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>
-again, traveled all night until just gray day, directly west
-or nearly so. A slow rain continued all night. As soon
-as it became light enough to see I found myself in a country
-completely covered with pine timber. I turned square
-from the road, went about 350 yards up to the top of a
-high knob, found about one quarter of an acre level bench.
-A large pine had turned out by the roots and the hole was
-partially filled with old leaves. The author always had
-been afraid of a snake but the time had come when he had
-more fear of a man than a snake, so he rolled himself
-down into the hole in the leaves and at the time had become
-chilled with the steady rain. About 9 or 10 o'clock,
-as well as the author could guess, he heard the beat of the
-drum which told that the army was marching on the same
-road that he had traveled in the night. In a short time
-the army passed where the author was lying in the sink.
-The author could have raised himself up and have seen the
-procession pass but he had seen them just as often as he
-wanted to and he remained still. Late in the evening a
-company of about 65 men passed. The author was informed
-afterwards that they had been detailed to make search
-for the prisoner, with orders if they found him, to shoot
-him at once. The author was further informed by Confederates
-who belonged to the command that as soon next
-morning as it was reported that the author had made his
-escape that the chain guard declared that no man could
-have passed between them and they were satisfied that
-the author was still inside of the lines.</p>
-
-<p>They at once made a large detail and commenced
-searching. There were quite a large number of box elders
-with very heavy, bushy tops. They said every single tree,
-every drift and possible place of hiding, was examined.
-Orders were at once issued by the commander, who sent
-word back to the home of the author, that he had made his<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
-escape and to watch for him and as soon as he came in home
-to arrest him and either shoot him or hang him at once.</p>
-
-<p>In the afternoon of the same day it cleared off and just
-as soon as dark came, the author was determined to try to
-reach Springfield, being in a strange country and knowing
-that if he was re-captured it would be certain death. He
-knew somewhere about the distance he had traveled west.
-He located the north star which he used as his pilot or guide
-and set out for Springfield, having no arms of any kind, not
-even a pocket knife and had become very hungry. He came
-to a slippery-elm tree, took a rock, knocked off some of the
-bark, ate it and proceeded on his journey, traveling all
-night. When gray day appeared again, he went to a hickory
-grub, broke the grub off with a rock, cut the top off
-with a sharp edged rock, to be used for a weapon, placed
-himself in hiding, remained all day. As soon as night came,
-again he proceeded on his journey, traveled no roads except
-when they run in direction of the north star. On the second
-morning he went into a small cave surrounded by a
-thicket, about 10 o'clock in the day he found that he was
-near enough to some rebel command to hear the drilling.
-As soon as dark came on he proceeded on his journey.
-The nights were dark and only star light until the after part
-of the night. He went near a spring house, but when he
-got to it, there wasn't a drop of milk in it. He passed
-through an Irish potato patch, grabbed two or three small
-Irish potatoes and ate them; passed through a wheat field,
-rubbed out some dry wheat in his hand, ate that; ate a few
-leaves off of a cabbage. On the third morning, went into
-hiding, remained until the darkness came again and resumed
-the journey.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of the 4th at daylight I had reached an
-old trace, pulled off my clothes and wrung them and put
-them on again as the dew was very heavy and every morn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>ing
-my clothes would be wet. I went about 30 or 40 yards
-from the old trace and thought to myself, if I saw any person
-passing that was not armed, that I would approach
-and learn where I was. Hadn't been there more than
-a half hour when I heard a wagon coming. As soon as the
-wagon came in sight I saw that there was a lady driving,
-accompanied by a small girl and boy, I got up and moved
-into the road, walked on, and met the wagon, spoke to the
-lady. She stopped the wagon and I asked her if she would
-be kind enough to tell me where I was, that I had got lost,
-traveled all night and didn't know where I was. She told
-the author that he was in Stone county, Missouri, and
-asked him where he was from. I told her that I was from
-the state of Arkansas. She wanted to know if there was
-much excitement there. I told her that there was; that
-men were enlisting and going into the Confederate service
-and the people were generally excited over the prospect of
-war. I asked her if there was any excitement in this country.
-She replied that there was&mdash;that the rebels a day or
-two ago had run in, on White River, and killed four Union
-men and drove out about 40 head of cattle and "that's why
-I am going out here in this wagon. My husband belongs
-to the home guards and has come in home on a furlough
-and is afraid to knock around the place for fear he will be
-waylaid and shot by the rebels."</p>
-
-<p>I then asked her if she would allow me to ask her a
-civil question. She replied that she would. I asked her
-what her politics were, and she told me that she was a
-Union woman. I told her, then, that I would tell her the
-truth; that the rebels had had me prisoner and that I had
-made my escape from them and had been traveling only in
-the night time; that this was the fourth morning since I
-had made my escape, and I asked her how far it was to the
-house; that she was the first person I had spoken to since<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
-I had made my escape. She said it was about 350 yards
-around the point, to go on down to the house, and as soon
-as she got some light wood she would be back. I went to
-the house, halloed at the fence, a man came to the door
-and invited me in. I walked in, and at once I began to
-look for arms, and to my great delight I saw a Springfield
-musket lying in the gun rack, with a cartridge box with
-the letters U. S. on it. O! the thrill of joy that passed
-through my mind. I had often heard the old adage quoted,
-that "a friend in need is a friend indeed," but had never
-before realized its full meaning. In a short time the lady
-returned. She went to work cooking, soon had me something
-to eat, but I had almost lost my appetite, having
-fasted so long.</p>
-
-<p>After I ate something and while she was preparing
-provisions to carry with me the man told me there was
-but one place that we could cross White river without
-being placed in great danger of being captured by the
-rebels, for they were patrolling up and down the river
-every day. I told him I never had attempted to travel
-a foot in daylight since I had made my escape. He told
-me he thought if we could get safely across the river, he
-knew of an old trace that led across the mountains
-and intersected Taney county and as soon as we reached
-that settlement they all belonged to home guards and a
-man would be in no danger in making himself known.</p>
-
-<p>The woman baked enough biscuit and tied up bacon
-and red onions with them, the author thought, to have
-lasted a hungry man three days, for him to carry with
-him and we at once, after taking leave of the good
-woman followed by her best wishes that I would get
-through to the Federal lines safely, started for White river,
-about two miles distant. Just before reaching the river
-he left the author standing in the road, went into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span>
-house near by and soon came out with two other men in
-company with him. On reaching the river where there
-was a canoe tied to the bank they stepped aside by themselves,
-held a short consultation; then all got into the canoe,
-carried me across the river, piloted me across the river
-bottom to where the old trace left the bottom; there we
-separated, they hoping that I would get through to the
-Federal lines safely. They didn't think there was any
-danger in traveling in daylight, because there wasn't a
-single settlement for the entire distance of 25 miles.</p>
-
-<p>The author traveled on until dark had overtaken him.
-The moon gave no light until the after part of the night.
-The author laid down by the side of the road, took a nap,
-after the moon came up proceeded on his journey and in
-about two miles came to a house. Hallooing at the gate, a
-lady came to the door and said: "Come in." They appeared
-to have a very savage dog. I remarked to the
-lady that I believed the dog would bite me and noticed at
-the same time that she stood off to one side of the door.
-She remarked: "Go in; that dog will not bite you."
-As I stepped into the door I was confronted by a man
-standing in the middle of the floor in his night clothes
-with his old Springfield musket cocked and presented and
-he called out, "Halt!" The author halted, of course, and
-the next remark was, "Who are you and where is the balance
-of your crowd?" The author replied: "There is no
-balance of them and there is not much of myself left. The
-Confederates have had me prisoner and I have made my
-escape from them and I am now trying to reach Springfield,
-Missouri."</p>
-
-<p>The man ordered his wife to strike a light, and after
-viewing the author critically, placed his Springfield musket
-near the bed and invited the author to take a seat, while
-he dressed himself. Being not more than two hours until<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
-daylight, his wife asked me to go to bed and rest. I told
-her that I wasn't fit to lie in bed; that I had lain on the
-ground like a hog ever since I had been arrested. She
-said that it didn't matter how dirty a Union man was, he
-was welcome to sleep in her bed, and to lie down and she
-would proceed at once to get breakfast; that there were
-some refugee wagons, about two miles distant, making their
-way to Springfield, and that she would have me up in time
-to reach them. Accordingly, after eating breakfast before
-daylight, and starting with the purpose to reach the wagons
-before they broke camp, the man remarked to the author,
-"My captain lives just this side of where the wagons are
-camped and I know he would love to see you and learn about
-the movements of the rebels."</p>
-
-<p>When we got to the house, he hallooed and the captain
-came out, asked the author his name, where he lived and
-when he was taken prisoner. The author gave him his
-name and place of residence, and on learning that he was
-from Howell county, asked him if he was acquainted with
-a man by the name of Washington Galloway. The author
-informed him that he was well acquainted with him. He
-inquired as to which side he was on, the Confederate or
-Union. The author informed him that he was on the rebel
-side and was a captain commanding one of the rebel companies;
-that I saw him and had had a conversation with
-him on the evening before I made my escape. He said,
-"He is an own brother of mine. My name is Jesse Galloway;"
-and the tears ran from his eyes like a whipped
-child. He said, "Get down; you are not in a condition to
-travel any further at the present time." He gave me a
-change of clothing and had my clothes washed and sent me
-through to Springfield by one of his men on horseback.</p>
-
-<p>About three weeks after I left him the rebels slipped
-up near his house, lay in ambush, and when he came out<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
-into the yard they shot him to death while he was holding
-an innocent child in his arms.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Arrives at Springfield.</h3>
-
-<p>On reaching Springfield, I was conducted directly to
-the head quarters of Gen. Lyon, gave him all the information
-in my possession and told him I had been entirely
-stripped, had no means with me for support and I would
-like to join the army. He remarked to me, "I don't want
-you to join the army; we intend to move south next
-spring and you are one of the men that will be in great demand.
-We have a position for you and the Government
-will pay you good wages."</p>
-
-<p>A short time after I arrived I met a man by the name
-of Percy, a lawyer, who resided at West Plains, a bitter
-rebel, who was in there as a spy. I was alone and there
-were very few persons that I was acquainted with living in
-Springfield. Percy had been posing as a Union man and
-offered that if I would go with him, he would carry
-me safely through home; tried to get me to agree to go outside
-the lines with him after dark, but knowing that he
-was a bitter rebel and had been taking an active part in
-the rebel movement I discarded him as quick as possible.
-In a day or two Benjamin Alsup, who resided on Hutton
-Valley, Howell county, happened to meet him in town,
-and he being acquainted in and about Springfield, had him
-arrested at once. A man by the name of Moore, who
-was a strong Union man, lived about two miles from
-Springfield on the Wilson creek road took me home with
-him for the purpose of resting up. He was the owner of a
-fine dapple gray gelding four years old. He made Gen.
-Lyon a present of him. About five days before the Wilson
-Creek battle it was reported that the Rebels were on Cane
-creek, west of Springfield, in considerable force. Gen.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
-Lyon moved out with a considerable force, riding the same
-horse, but on seeing the federal forces approaching they
-retreated. On the 8th day of August the rebels appeared
-in large force, being commanded by Gen. Price and Gen.
-McCullough.</p>
-
-
-<h3>General Lyon Killed at Wilson Creek.</h3>
-
-<p>Gen. Lyon sent out scouts with glasses for the purpose,
-if possible, of ascertaining their number. The rebels
-had gone into camp about ten miles from Springfield,
-with the avowed purpose of attacking Gen. Lyon the next
-day at Springfield, and as the scouts were not able with
-their glasses to see the largest force of rebels, which was
-encamped around a point out of sight, reported as to
-what they thought the number was. Lyon and Siegel
-came to the conclusion that by strategy they could easily
-whip them, so on the morning of the 10th, about midnight,
-they broke camp at Springfield, taking all of their available
-men. The morning being very foggy and misty, they easily
-surrounded the pickets and took them prisoners without
-the firing of a gun, then drew up and fired the artillery
-into them before they knew they were there.</p>
-
-<p>So the memorable fight known as the battle of Wilson
-Creek was begun. Gen. Lyon rode the horse above referred
-to at the time he fell on the battlefield. Both the
-Confederate and Union side were founding all their future
-hopes upon the result of that battle, as to settling the question
-in Missouri. The author heard the artillery all day.
-Late in the evening word came to the Union men that Gen.
-Lyon had been killed and that the Federal army was retreating
-in the direction of Rolla, Missouri, and that all the
-Union men and the home guard would fall in and meet
-them at once. O! the scene that followed. Men would
-hurriedly ride around, meet their wives and children, tell<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
-them that the battle was lost and they were then retreating
-and they had only time to come around and bid them good-bye,
-and to do the best they could; that they didn't know
-that they would ever be permitted to see them again. We
-could hear the wife and children crying and sending up
-the most pitiful petitions to God to have mercy.</p>
-
-<p>Everything on the Union side appeared to be dark,
-although it was a drawn battle and the rebels commenced
-retreating at the same time, and retreated about twenty-five
-miles west, but on learning that the Federal troops
-were retreating, they faced about, taking possession of the
-battle-ground and all of the southern and western portion of
-the state; and then the rebels, being encouraged by the
-late victory, determined to rid the country of all Union
-men at once.</p>
-
-<p>About that time about 350 men mostly from Oregon
-county commanded by two very prominent men, made a
-scout into Ozark county, Missouri. On reaching the North
-fork of White river they went into camp at what was known
-as Jesse James' mill. The owner, a man of about 55 or 60
-years of age, as good a man as resided in Ozark county,
-was charged with grinding grain for Union men and their
-families; at the time he, and a man by the name of Brown,
-were cutting sawlogs about two miles from home in the
-pinery. They went out and arrested them, arrested an old
-man by the name of Russell and several others, carried them
-to a man's house, who was a Union man, and had fled to
-prevent arrest. They took Brown and James about 300
-yards from the house, procured a rope, hunted a long limb
-of a tree, rolled a big rock up to the first rope where it was
-tied to the limb, placed the noose around James' neck,
-stood him on the rock, rolled the rock from under him and
-left him swinging, rolled the rock to the next rope, stood
-Brown on it, placed the noose around his neck, rolled the
-rock out and left Brown swinging in the air, went to the
-third rope, placed Russell on the rock, and just as they
-aimed to adjust the noose, word came that the home guards
-and Federals were right upon them in considerable force.
-They fled, leaving Russell standing upon the rock and both
-Brown and James dangling in the air.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i082.jpg" width="580" height="391" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>HANGING JESSE JAMES AND MR. BROWN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Their Wives and Other Women Bury Them.</h3>
-
-<p>Every Union man now having fled in fear of his life,
-the next day the wives of Brown and James, with the help
-of a few other women, buried them as best they could.
-They dug graves underneath the swinging bodies, laid bed
-clothing in the graves and cut them loose. The bodies fell
-into the coffinless graves and the earth was replaced.
-So the author is satisfied that the bones of these men
-still remain in the lonely earth underneath where they met
-their untimely death with no charge against them except
-that they had been feeding Union men, with no one to bury
-them but their wives and a few other women who aided.</p>
-
-<p>Some of the men who were in the scout and present
-when the hanging was done are still living in the counties
-of Howell and Oregon.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A General Jackson Soldier Shot Down.</h3>
-
-<p>A short time after this hanging there was a man by the
-name of Rhodes, who resided on the head of Bennett's
-Bayou in Howell county. He was about eighty years of age
-and had been a soldier under General Jackson. His head
-was perfectly white and he was very feeble. When he
-heard of the hanging of Brown and James he said openly
-that there was no civil war in that, and that the men who
-did it were guilty of murder.</p>
-
-<p>Some two weeks from the date of the hanging of Brown
-and James, about twenty-five men, hearing of what he
-had said, organized themselves and commanded by Dr.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
-Nunly and William Sapp, proceeded to the house of
-Rhodes, where he and his aged wife resided alone, called
-him out and told him they wanted him to go with them.
-His aged wife came out, and being acquainted with a part
-of the men, and knowing that they had participated in the
-hanging and shooting of a number of Union men, talked
-with them and asked: "You are not going to hurt my old
-man?" They said: "We just want him to go a piece
-with us over here." Ordering the old man to come along,
-they went over to a point about one quarter from the house
-and informed him of what he had said. There they shot
-him, cut his ears off and his heart out. Dr. Nunly remarked
-that he was going to take the heart home with
-him, pickle it and keep it so people could see how a black
-republican's heart looked.</p>
-
-<p>They left him lying on the ground, proceeded directly
-to Joseph Spears', who resided about six miles west of town
-on the Yellville road, declaring that they were going to treat
-him the same way. They reached his house about two hours
-in the night, all full of whiskey. When they arrived there
-Spears was sick in bed. They dismounted, came in, ordered
-their suppers and their horses fed. Spears at that
-time owned a negro man, and he ordered him to put up the
-horses and feed them, and his wife to get them supper.
-After supper, they concluded to remain until morning.
-During the night they became sober, and concluded, since
-Spears owned a "nigger," that it could not be possible
-that he was a Union man, and the reports that they had
-heard that he was a Union man might be untrue, and they
-would let him alone until they could investigate further.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i085.jpg" width="580" height="412" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>CUTTING OUT RHODES' HEART.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, Rhodes not having returned home,
-and not a single Union man left in the country that Mrs.
-Rhodes could get to look after him, and having heard
-when they reached Joseph Spears' that the old man was
-not with them, although very feeble, she still continued the
-search; on the second day, about fifty yards from the road
-and about a quarter of a mile from home, while she was
-looking for him, she heard hogs squealing and grunting as
-though they were eating something. She proceeded to the
-place and found the hogs were just about to commence eating
-the remains of her husband. The Union men having
-fled, she notified some of the neighbors, and the women
-came in and helped dress the body and buried him the best
-they could; and neither at the taking down or burial of
-Brown and James and the burial of the old man Rhodes did
-a single rebel put in an appearance.</p>
-
-<p>There never was a man arrested by the Confederate
-authorities, or a single word of condemnation uttered, but
-as far as could be heard there was general approval. It was
-said that the means used were desperate, but that was the
-only way to get rid of the men and strike terror to them so
-they could neither give aid nor countenance to the lopeared
-Dutch.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Benjamin Alsup Taken to Little Rock.</h3>
-
-<p>In a few days following they proceeded to arrest Benjamin
-Alsup, residing in Hutton Valley, who was a strong
-Union man, took him to Little Rock, placed him in the
-state penitentiary, and kept him there until after Little
-Rock fell into the hands of the Federals, when they exchanged
-him with other prisoners. While they had him in
-prison they worked him in a bark mill by the side of an
-old mule, with a strap around his breast and two leather
-hand holds. He pulled so much in the mill that his little
-finger was calloused and he almost entirely lost the use of it.</p>
-
-<p>After they had hung, shot, captured and driven
-from the country all of the Union men, they called a public
-meeting for the purpose of taking into consideration what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
-should be done with the families of the Union men, which
-meeting had a number of preachers in it. After discussing
-the premises, they arrived at the conclusion that if they
-let the families of the Union men, who had escaped and
-gone into the Federal lines, remain, they would return and
-bring in the lopeared Dutch. They didn't believe that
-both parties could ever live together, and as they now had
-the country completely rid of the Union men, they would
-force their families to leave. They at once appointed men,
-among whom were several preachers, to go to each one of
-the Union families and notify them that they would not be
-allowed to remain; because if they let them stay, their men
-would be trying to come back, and they didn't believe both
-parties could live together. They stated at the same time
-that they were really sorry for the women and children, but
-nobody was to blame but their husbands and sons, who
-had cast their lot with the lopeared Dutch. Also, as they
-had taken up arms against the Confederate states, all the
-property they had, both real and personal, was subject to
-confiscation and belonged to the Confederate authorities;
-but they would allow them to take enough of the property
-to carry them inside of the lines of the lopeared Dutch,
-where they supposed their men were and where they then
-could care for them.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Loyal Women Driven From Their Homes.</h3>
-
-<p>They said they might have a reasonable time to make
-preparations to leave the country, and if they didn't leave,
-they would be forced to do so, if they had to arrest them
-and carry them out.</p>
-
-<p>The wildest excitement then prevailed among the
-women and children. They had no men to transact their
-business and make preparations to leave. Little had they
-thought, while they were chasing, arresting, hanging and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
-shooting their men, that they, too, would become victims
-of the rebel hatred and be forced to leave house and home,
-not knowing where their men were or whether they were
-dead or alive. All they knew of their whereabouts was,
-that those who escaped arrest had left their homes, aiming
-to reach the nearest Federal lines.</p>
-
-<p>Women were at once dispatched to reach the nearest
-Federal lines, if possible, and inform them of the Confederate
-order, and procure help to take them out. Their
-homes and houses were being continually raided by small
-bands of Confederates roaming over the country, claiming
-that they were hunting Union men, taking all classes of
-property that they might see proper to take, without any
-restraint whatever.</p>
-
-<p>When the Union men heard that an order had been
-made requiring their families to leave, not thinking that a
-thing of that kind would ever occur, having left them with
-comfortable homes and plenty to eat, the wildest consternation
-reigned amongst them.</p>
-
-<p>The Federal authorities were willing to give them aid,
-but were placed in such a condition that they needed every
-man in the field, and for that reason couldn't give them
-any help in getting out. The women had to speedily fit
-up as best they could, close their doors and start for the
-Federal lines, leaving the most of their property in the
-hands of the rebels. The rebels proceeded at once to take
-possession of and occupy most of the homes.</p>
-
-<p>The suffering that followed the women and children is
-indescribable. They had to drive their own teams, take
-care of the little ones, travel through the storms, exposed
-to it all without a man to help them, nor could they hear a
-single word of comfort spoken by husband, son or friend.
-On reaching the Federal lines, all vacant houses and places
-of shelter were soon filled, and they were known and styled
-as refugees. Many of them went into soldier huts, where
-the soldiers had wintered and covered the tops of their huts
-with earth. They had to leave home with a small amount
-of rations, and on the road the rebels would stop them and
-make them divide up the little they had started with, and
-reaching the Federal lines they would be almost destitute
-of food and many of them very scantily clothed.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i089.jpg" width="580" height="382" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>MRS. MONKS AND CHILDREN BEING DRIVEN FROM HOME.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>They would at once commence inquiring for their husbands
-and sons. Numbers of them never found them, as
-they had been captured, killed and imprisoned while
-attempting to reach the Federal lines. O! The untold
-misery that then confronted them! After they had traveled
-and half starved and suffered from cold and exposure,
-promising themselves that when they reached the Federal
-lines they would again meet their loved ones who could
-again care for them, they were doomed to disappointment,
-in a large number of instances.</p>
-
-<p>Those who did meet their husbands and sons were also
-disappointed; they had either joined the service or been
-employed by the government as guides and scouts, and the
-small amount of pay they received from the government,
-wouldn't provide food and raiment for their families. They
-were compelled to still be absent from their families,
-although they were suffering greatly for all of the
-necessaries of life and for clothing and shelter. The
-women's task of caring for and looking after the family and
-the little ones was just as great after they had reached the
-Federal lines as before. The government ordered that
-wherever aid could be given, rations should be issued to the
-families, and while the government did all it could in this
-way, it was not able to furnish shelter and houses for their
-comfort. Winter came on and they underwent untold suffering;
-disease set in from exposure, besides the contagious
-diseases of smallpox and measles, and hundreds of them<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
-died for want of proper attention, while their men were in
-the lines of the service of the government.</p>
-
-<p>Here let the author speak a word in behalf of the devotion
-and patriotism manifested by those loyal women who
-had given their husbands and their sons to be placed upon
-the altar of the country, and sacrificed their homes and
-their firesides, had become exiles and wanderers, without
-home or shelter, had undergone untold suffering, had faced
-disease and death, had seen the little ones die, calling for
-papa, shivering with cold, suffering with hunger&mdash;all for
-the love of their country. Yet when they would see the
-Federal troops move by, with the stars and stripes unfurled,
-they would cheer the boys in blue as they would
-pass, and urge them to save the country they loved so well
-and had made so many sacrifices for and were still willing
-to suffer and wrestle with all the ills that a desperate war
-had brought upon the country, and wanted to live to once
-more be returned to their own hearthstones and be permitted
-to live under their own vine and fig tree, where no man
-dare molest them or make them afraid, to again enjoy all
-the sweet comforts of life.</p>
-
-<p>We revere and honor every Federal soldier who enlisted
-in the interest of his country from the Northern States,
-where they knew nothing about war except what they read,
-their families being left in comfortable circumstances,
-with plenty to eat and wear and friends to speak works of
-comfort to them, while their husbands and sons had gone to
-the front and were willing to sacrifice themselves on the
-altar of their country, if it became necessary. But O! the
-comparison between the sacrifices made by the loyal element
-in those portions of the country where they were
-completely surrounded by the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>Those who were willing to lay upon the altar of their
-country, their fathers and sons, their wives and children,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
-their property and their sacred honor in support of the
-government they loved so well, with no protection from
-the government; no arms, amunitions, rations, clothing or
-pay from the government, was thought of for a moment.
-The only question that prompted, ruled and controlled them
-was their patriotism to their God and their country. When
-we come to compare the sacrifices, privations, suffering
-and services between the two classes of loyalists the first
-referred to, sink into insignificance.</p>
-
-<p>O! never let us forget to honor and revere patriotism
-and sacrifices that were made by the loyal men and women
-that were surrounded in the enemy's country and continual
-fighting without and within. Their husbands and
-sons were shot and hung and imprisoned all over this
-country, whose bodies never were even honored
-with a burial. Orders being made by the rebels that they
-should not be buried; but yet they live and speak in
-thunder tones to the living. Let us plead with the living
-to revere and honor the stars and stripes that were maintained
-and supported by the blood and lives and sacrifices
-of the loyal men and women of the South.</p>
-
-<p>After the rebels had completely driven all the loyal
-element out of the country and had but one political party
-left they exclaimed, "Now the means that we have been
-forced to use are very harsh but the line has been drawn and
-all of the parties who are giving aid and comfort to the lopeared
-Dutch are all outside of the Confederate line and we
-will never be troubled with them and the lopeared Dutch
-any more."</p>
-
-<p>The author went back in retreat with General Siegel,
-after the Wilson Creek battle. On reaching Rolla, Missouri,
-Siegel went into quarters for the winter. The author
-was almost worn out with exposure and traveling, and as
-General Siegel informed him that there would be no ad<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>vance
-made south until the spring of 1862, and as his family
-had been left in comfortable circumstances, with plenty
-to eat and wear, and he, being acquainted with some men
-by the name of Cope, who lived near Jerseyville in Jersey
-county, Illinois, went to that place, remained a month, and
-being taken sick with lung fever, came very near dying.
-He told his friends where he was staying that if he died, he
-would die dissatisfied; that he wanted to live and be able
-to move with the Federal command in the spring of 1862
-when it moved south. After he had partially recovered he
-learned that a Mr. Cope, who was living neighbor to
-him at the time of his arrest and capture, had moved
-into Randolph county, Illinois. He visited the family
-at once, hoping to hear from his family at home, and
-remained there about a month. His wife, among many
-others, being notified to leave, had been informed that the
-author had made his escape, reached Springfield, and had
-gone back with Siegel in his retreat to Rolla. She was
-permitted to dispose of just enough of the property, at the
-rebels' own prices, to enable her to move, the family consisting
-of herself and five small children. She was followed
-on the road and her wagons searched for arms, and
-the rebels threatened to take her to Little Rock, Arkansas,
-but to enable her to reach Rolla, Missouri, she posed as
-the wife of a rebel who had gone into the Confederate service,
-and said she was trying to reach her father, who resided
-near Rolla. By making that impression, her wagons
-were not disturbed any more. On reaching Rolla, she
-went to Colonel Phelps, who was afterwards governor of
-the state, and inquired if he knew anything of the whereabouts
-of the author. He informed her that he had no
-knowledge of his whereabouts at that time, but he
-would take her name, place an advertisement of her arrival<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
-at Rolla, in the paper, and if he was alive it might reach
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Every house and cabin was full, it being in the dead
-of winter, and a deep snow upon the ground, but through
-the aid and assistance of one Cyrus Newberry, who had
-escaped through the lines in Howell county, she procured
-a shelter about three miles north of Rolla, which was very
-uncomfortable; her clothes were partially frozen on her at
-that time. In a short time the advertisement reached the
-author in Randolph county, Illinois. He at once set out
-for Rolla, Missouri, to meet his family. The house that
-she had first got into was used by her but a short time, and
-she had been forced to go into one of the huts that had
-lately been occupied by the soldiers and had been made
-vacant by their moving west to Springfield.</p>
-
-<p>On the arrival of the author, O! the horror and the
-joy that were intermingled! I was proud to once more
-meet my wife and children, but in a moment the thought
-would pass through my mind, "I left you in a comfortable
-home, with plenty to eat, and now to see you here in this
-'dug-out,' suffering for food and shelter! O! the war,
-the horrible war! What is it that men won't do?" I set
-out at once to procure a comfortable shelter for my family
-and to get in readiness to move south with the army.
-Gen. Curtis, then in command of the western department,
-was preparing to make a general move south. I was employed
-by the government as a guide, receiving $1.50 per
-day, with rations and clothing.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Establishing a Federal Post at West Plains.</h3>
-
-<p>The army soon broke camp and moved southward. On
-arriving at West Plains, the Federal army located a post
-there. Capt. McNulty, of the First Illinois cavalry, who
-had been wounded in a battle with Gen. Mulligan, was made<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
-Provost Marshal. The author was at once detailed and
-placed in the Provost Marshal's office as assistant, as he was
-well acquainted with all of the people in the surrounding
-country. The Provost Marshal would order the author to
-be seated in a conspicuous place in the office, and as a general
-order had gone forth from Curtis requiring all rebels
-and rebel sympathizers to come in and take the oath, and
-as hundreds of them were daily coming into the office for
-that purpose, the Provost Marshal ordered the author to
-watch every person who entered the office and whenever
-any person entered who had been taking an active part in
-committing depredations, just to put his hand upon his
-forehead and move it down over his face, and he would
-order them to the guard house for further examination,
-without any further words being said at the time.</p>
-
-<p>Many of the rebels who were taking the oath couldn't
-see how he could draw a line between the different persons;
-let some take the oath and be released at once, and others
-ordered to the guard house without a word being spoken.
-Among the persons who came in and took the oath and
-were released, was the man who was present at the time
-Capt. Forshee attempted to deliver the author to the mob,
-who asked the Captain at the time to tie the author with
-his face to a tree, and let him shoot him in the back of the
-head, to show him how he could spoil a black Republican's
-pate.</p>
-
-<p>The author remembers one incident that occurred during
-the stay at West Plains. A man named Lusk, who was
-constable of Howell township, and resided in West Plains,
-was a strong Union man at the beginning of the war; when
-the general order was made that every man who had been
-a Union man had to join the Confederate service and show
-his colors or be hung, Lusk enlisted in the Confederate
-army and went out with McBride's command.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Three or four days after the capture of the author by
-the rebels, Lusk came up to him in a braggadocio manner
-and says, "You ought to have your black heart shot out of
-you." Lusk had taken the oath and been released before
-the author reached West Plains. The author met him in
-West Plains and remarked to him: "Hallo, Lusk! How
-are you getting along? And what are you doing here?"
-He replied that he had taken the oath; that he was tired of
-fighting. The author asked him if he felt like he did when
-he wanted to shoot his black heart out. Lusk replied:
-"Captain, I am sorry for what I did, and Captain Emmons
-so maltreated me the other day that I could scarcely sit in
-my saddle." The author remarked to him: "I will just
-give your face three good slaps with my hand." After
-giving him three raps, the author let him pass.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Lusk Sees Some Lopeared Dutch.</h3>
-
-<p>Soon meeting Captain Emmons, who belonged to the
-6th Missouri Cavalry, had asked him what the trouble was
-between him and Lusk. He said that while he was
-prisoner Lusk came to him with his big knife belted
-around him, and said that he was just equal to ten lopeared
-Dutch and he had that knife for the purpose of taking
-ten Dutch scalps before he returned home, and otherwise
-abused him for being a Union man and a friend to the
-Dutch.</p>
-
-<p>On the arrival of the troops in West Plains he inquired
-of the citizens if Lusk had returned home. They informed
-him that he had and was residing on Spring Creek,
-about six miles from town. About half of Emmons' company
-were Germans. He went immediately to his company,
-ordered the Orderly Sergeant to make detail of ten
-men and he wanted them all to be Germans. He ordered
-them to be mounted and ready for a scout at once. Tak<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>ing
-charge of them in person he proceeded to the house of
-Lusk, about six miles west of West Plains at the head of
-Spring Creek, rode up to the house and holloed. Lusk
-immediately came out into the yard and recognized Dr.
-Emmons and said "O! Doctor! Is that you? I am proud
-to see you." The Doctor said to him, "I am proud to see you,
-too." The Doctor at once informed him of what he had
-said to him when he was a prisoner in regard to being
-equal to ten lopeared Dutchmen and how he had his knife
-prepared to take that number of scalps before he came
-back home, and wanted to know if he got the scalps before
-he came home. Lusk replied that if he killed a single
-Dutchmen he didn't know it and that he got all of the
-fighting that he wanted, didn't want to fight any more.</p>
-
-<p>The Doctor wanted to know if he ever saw any lopeared
-Dutch and Lusk replied that he "didn't know that he
-had." The Doctor replied, "I have selected ten of the
-smallest sized of the full stock and I want you to step over
-the fence and view them." He then ordered the scouts to
-dismount and form in line. Lusk told the Doctor he
-didn't want anything to do with them whatever. After
-they had formed a line the Doctor made him step in front
-and view them; asked him what he thought of them. He
-said "They are good looking men." The Doctor said to
-him, "If you didn't get the chance when you were out in
-the service to fight ten of them, and you say you didn't
-get any scalps, I have brought these ten down and intend
-that you shall fight them." Lusk pleaded with the Doctor
-that he didn't want to fight them and for God's sake not to
-let them hurt him. Emmons said to him "Why Lusk!
-you said you were equal to ten of them and intended to
-bring back ten of their scalps and there will be nothing
-now unfair about this fight. I intend to give you a fair<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>
-show." He ordered Lusk to get his horse and get onto it
-and get ready to march.</p>
-
-<p>There were some four-foot clapboards stacked up near
-Lusk's house, and Emmons ordered six of the Germans to
-get a board apiece. They were all soon mounted and moving
-toward West Plains, soon coming to a "horsen" log.
-Emmons ordered them to dismount and form a line, placing
-the men about ten paces from Lusk, then said to Lusk,
-"Now, prepare yourself, and if you can whip these ten lopeared
-Dutch I will let you go back home and give you a
-chromo." Lusk pleaded pitifully to not let the Dutch
-abuse him. Emmons ordered the six who had the clapboards
-to move one pace in the rear, leaving four of the
-number to attack Lusk; he then ordered the four men
-to seize Lusk, take him to the "horsen" log and take
-down his clothes. Two of them were to take him by the
-hands and two by the legs and buck him tight against the
-log; if they succeeded, the six would proceed, one at a
-time, and strike him three licks across that part of the body
-that he generally used for sitting on.</p>
-
-<p>He then turned to Lusk, saying, "Prepare to meet
-them; if you are a better man than they are, down them
-and pile them up." At the command of Capt. Emmons,
-the four men advanced on Lusk, who did not attempt to
-move, seized him by the arms, led him to the log, bucked
-him over it, two holding him by the arms and two by the
-legs, ordered the six men to advance, one at a time, strike
-three licks with the flat side of the board, march on a few
-paces and give room for the next.</p>
-
-<p>After the performance had been completely carried out
-as commanded, the Captain declared that he could have
-heard Lusk holloing a mile distant every time the clapboard
-hit him.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After he had received the boarding, Emmons said that
-Lusk's setter was blistered where the boards had hit him,
-and that he never saw ten Germans enjoy themselves as
-much in his life. He then asked Lusk, in their presence,
-how he felt now in regard to fighting lopeared Dutch.
-Lusk declared that he had nothing against the Dutch and
-that he never would want to fight another one as long as
-he lived, and he hoped that Dr. Emmons would not
-let them do him any more harm. He dressed himself, they
-were all mounted, formed a line, and Lusk was brought
-into West Plains and took the oath, under the promise that
-he never would fight another lopeared Dutchman.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Goes to Washington City.</h3>
-
-<p>After the post was discontinued at West Plains, the
-author was again ordered back to Rolla. The state had
-made a proposition to the Federal authorities that if the
-government would arm, feed and clothe the troops, it could
-place a number of regiments of state troops in the service,
-and they would be able to send some of their regular troops
-to the front. A delegation was appointed by the state to
-visit Washington City, wait upon the President and see
-what the government could do for the state. The author
-was appointed as one of the delegates, and on the night
-following the departure of the delegation for Washington
-City, a rebel scout appeared at the house where the author's
-family was living and demanded the author. His wife
-replied that he was not at home, that he was one of the
-delegation that had left that morning for Washington City.
-She distinctly heard one man remark: "I expect that is
-so, for there was a delegation left this morning for Washington
-City." The house wasn't more than a quarter of a
-mile from the picket posts.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After parleying for some little time, they left the house,
-marched west about a mile, where some refugees were located
-in a house, and demanded their surrender. The house
-was full of women and children, there being also one boy
-and two men, to-wit: Peter Shriver and a man named
-Johnson. They ordered the doors opened; the inmates
-refused; then the rebels knocked down the door, and fired
-a volley right into the house. Shriver and Johnson being
-armed, returned the fire, killed one of the rebels on the
-spot, and fleeing through the rear part of the house, made
-their escape. The rebels killed one boy and severely
-wounded a girl and young Johnson, and retreated south,
-leaving their comrade dead.</p>
-
-<p>It was learned afterwards that most of the scout
-were men from Howell county who had learned that the
-author had placed his family just outside of the Federal
-lines and had marched all the way there, with the avowed
-purpose of capturing the author and either shooting or
-hanging him.</p>
-
-<p>On arrival of the delegation at Washington City they
-organized the delegation and made Chas. D. Drake their
-spokesman. He was afterwards elected to the United
-States Senate. Soon after the arrival President Lincoln
-informed us that he would be prepared to meet the delegation
-in a large hall, near the mansion, at which time and
-place he desired to be introduced to the whole delegation.
-When the delegation entered the hall the President and
-his secretary were seated together.</p>
-
-
-<h3>The Delegation Meets the President.</h3>
-
-<p>The delegation entered the hall in a single file. Chas.
-D. Drake approached the President and when within a few
-feet of the President and secretary, they arose to their
-feet and as the delegation marched by each one was intro<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>duced
-to them. Afterwards they were seated, and the
-petition and address of the people of the State of Missouri
-was delivered in an audible voice by Chas. D.
-Drake. In the opening of the address we addressed the
-President and called ourselves his friends.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as the address was read the President rose to
-his feet and proceeded to deliver an address to the delegation
-and the author never will forget the impression that
-was made upon his mind in a part of that address. He
-said: "You should not address me as your friend; I am
-the President of the whole people and nation and while
-I am President, I expect to try to enforce the law against
-all violators of law and in the interest of the whole people
-of the nation; but if I have any friends in Missouri I suspect
-you men compose a part of them. I listened to your
-petition and offers, which make me proud for the patriotism
-that you manifest, in offering your services to your
-country in the darkest hour of her peril and I would be
-glad if the government was able to grant every request
-that you have made. The government at the present
-time is not in a condition to furnish clothing and commissaries
-for the number of men that you propose to put
-in the field, but the government will furnish all the arms
-that they can possibly spare, amunitions and commissaries
-and authorize the state to organize and put in the field any
-number of state troops, not to exceed sixty regiments."
-He said he would do all in his power to feed them but in
-the present condition of the government the state would
-have to pay them.</p>
-
-<p>The delegation returned and informed the state of
-what promises the government had made and at once went
-to organizing and putting state troops into the field. The
-author was commissioned as lieutenant of Company H. and
-the regiment was ordered into active service for the period<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
-of sixty days. At the expiration of the term of service, the
-government ordered that a company of scouts be organized
-and that the author be made Captain of the company,
-to receive first lieutenant's pay and be clothed and fed by
-the government, be ordered on duty at once and placed
-under the direct command of Captain Murphy, who was
-then commanding the post at Houston.</p>
-
-<p>The company scarcely saw an idle day, it was kept
-continuously scouting and fighting. The counties of
-Texas, Dent, Wright, Crawford, LaClede and Phelps,
-outside of the post, being completely under the
-control of the rebels. Not a single Union man nor his
-family could remain at home outside of the post.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Incidents of 1863.</h3>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1863, Colonel Livingston, who was acting
-in the capacity of Brigadier General, was ordered to
-proceed to Batesville, Arkansas, and there erect a post.
-The author was transferred, by order of the government,
-and made chief of scouts receiving Captain's pay and ordered
-to move with the command of Colonel Livingston
-and be under his command and control until further
-orders. On or about December 15, 1863, Colonel Livingston,
-who was Colonel of the 1st Nebraska regiment and
-the 11th Missouri Cavalry regiment, broke camp at Rolla,
-and marched in the direction of Batesville, Arkansas.
-Colonel Livingston, on leaving Rolla, issued a general
-order and sent the same in all directions, that all rebels,
-or "bushwhackers," who were captured wearing Federal
-uniform, would be court-martialed and shot; or all persons
-who were captured in robbing or plundering houses
-would be court-martialed and shot.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival at West Plains the advance of the command
-captured three Confederates dressed in Federal uni<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>forms,
-near what was known as the Johnson farm. One of
-them broke from custody and escaped; the other two were
-court-martialed and shot, while the command was camped
-at West Plains. After those men were shot, some of the
-Confederates, dressed in Federal uniforms, came inside the
-Federal lines, while in camp at West Plains, just after dark,
-and took nine black cavalry horses from the line and made
-their escape. The soldiers saw them take the horses, but
-thought it was their own men taking them to water.</p>
-
-<p>The command, breaking camp at West Plains, marched
-in the direction of Batesville, passed through Salem, Ark.,
-and on Big Strawberry encountered the rebels and had quite
-an engagement. The weather was quite cold. I remember
-that after the fighting ceased, some of the soldiers had
-been fighting with their revolvers, and their hands had become
-so benumbed that they had lost the use of their fingers,
-and couldn't return their revolvers to their scabbards,
-and the revolvers had to be taken from their hands; the
-hands of some of them were badly frostbitten.</p>
-
-<p>The command again renewed its march for Batesville.
-Small bands of bushwhackers and rebels kept up a continuous
-fire every day on the advance, and committed depredations
-by pillaging; claiming they were Federal forces,
-most of them being dressed in Federal uniforms. The pillaging
-grew so annoying that Col. Livingston, just before
-breaking camp, divided the advance into two columns,
-marching from a mile to two and a half miles apart. Late
-in the afternoon, one wing came onto a number of those irregular
-Confederates, or bushwhackers, robbing the house
-of a Union woman whose husband was in the Federal army.
-Nearly all of them were dressed in Federal uniforms, claiming
-to the woman to be Federal soldiers. They had all
-dismounted and gone into the house to plunder it, except
-their captain, Elliott, whom they had left on guard. The<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>
-road came around in a short bend and concealed the approach
-of the Federals until they were within a hundred
-yards of the house. There was a large gate in front of the
-house. The woman was standing in the yard about ten
-steps from the gate. She saw the troops coming before
-they were discovered by the captain, and supposed them
-to be of the same command. They were all cavalry. As
-soon as they saw the captain, they put spurs to their
-horses, and with revolvers in hand, charged upon them.
-The captain gave the alarm, and fled as rapidly as possible
-on horseback, a part of the Federals in hot pursuit after
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Every avenue of escape was cut off from those who
-were in the house, and they were forced to retreat through
-a ten-acre open field, before they could reach the timber.
-The woman of the house, seeing them flee, knew at once
-that they didn't belong to the same command. While the
-Federals were approaching the gate at full speed, she ran
-to it and threw it open, so that they would not be checked
-in their pursuit. They overtook them about two-thirds of
-the way across the field, as the rebels were cut off from
-their horses and were on foot. Three of the rebels were
-killed, and three taken prisoners. They had everything in
-their possession&mdash;bed clothing, domestic, knives and forks,
-and even axes, that they had been taking from Confederates
-as well as from Unionists; also a number of women's dresses.
-All of the dresses were given to the woman whose house they
-were robbing at the time of their capture. The soldiers
-had a fine time after they reached camp, by turning the
-domestic into new towels.</p>
-
-<p>Just after supper, the author was notified to appear at
-the provost marshal's office, to see whether or not he could
-identify the prisoners. On his appearing and entering into
-conversation with the prisoners and inquiring their names,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
-one claimed to be named Smith, another Taylor and the
-other Johnson. One of them lisped a little when talking.
-The author soon recognized one of them and said to him:
-"Your name is not Smith. You had just as well give your
-proper name, for I know you." The Provost Marshal
-asked him if he knew the author. He hesitated to answer.
-On the Provost Marshal urging him to answer, he said:
-"I ought to know him, as he was one of my near neighbors
-when the war commenced. My name is Calvin Hawkins."
-The author replied, "That is correct," and turning to the
-other prisoner for a second look, recognized him. He remarked,
-"Taylor is not your proper name." The Provost
-Marshal asked him if he knew the author. He hesitatingly
-replied that he did. His proper name was then demanded,
-which he gave as Jacob Bridges. The other was a boy
-named Hankins, 13 years of age.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Court-Martialed and Shot.</h3>
-
-<p>The Provost Marshal asked them if they had ever read
-or heard of the general order that had been issued by Col.
-Livingston. They replied that they had. He said to
-them: "You have violated the order in every particular;
-you are wearing Federal uniforms, and have been caught
-robbing and pillaging citizens' houses. Tonight your cases
-will be submitted to a court martial, except the boy's." He
-then ordered the author to take them to a room and inform
-them that they would certainly be convicted by the court
-martial, and the only way they could escape death would
-be to give the rendezvous and names of all irregular troops
-in their knowledge, and agree to pilot a scout to the different
-places of resort.</p>
-
-<p>The author informed them of what the Provost Marshal
-had said, and further informed them that Col. Livingston,
-then acting in the capacity of Brigadier General,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>
-would have the only power to commute their sentences,
-after they were convicted. They refused to give any information
-that would aid the authorities in capturing the
-different irregular roving bands. The author bade them
-good-bye, told them he was sorry for them, that they were
-in a bad condition, but had brought it upon themselves and
-each of them had better prepare for death, for they were
-certain to be court-martialed that night. He then left the
-prisoners, the guard taking charge of them. The court-martial
-convened that night; charges and specifications
-were preferred before the Judge Advocate of violating both
-orders. They were accordingly convicted, and the next
-morning, before we broke camp, the author saw the detail
-that had been selected to execute them; saw the prisoners
-under guard moving out to the place selected for the
-execution, heard the discharge of the guns, and soon
-learned that they both had been shot. Somewhere on the
-head of Big Strawberry, in Izard county, the boy's mother
-came to us, and he was turned over to her.</p>
-
-<p>The command broke camp and proceeded on the way
-towards Batesville, with more or less skirmishing with the
-rebels every day; and on the 25th of December, 1863, we
-had come to within about three miles of Batesville, Independence
-county, the rebels in considerable force then
-being in possession of the city. They had a strong picket
-about a quarter of a mile from the main city, leading right
-down Poke bayou. Another road turned to the right and
-entered the lower part of the city. The commander halted
-and threw out a considerable force in advance. The author
-was placed right in the front of the advance, with orders to
-charge the pickets, and on their retreat, to charge the enemy,
-and if they found them in too strong a force to fall
-back on the main command.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The rebel ladies had procured a large hall in the city,
-situated upon High street, leading west through the city.
-They were all dressed in gray, and had any amount of egg
-nog and other delicious drinks in the hall and all through
-the public parts of the city. A large number of the Confederate
-soldiers were in the hall dancing, a number of
-them belonging to Col. Freeman's command. On reaching
-the rebel pickets, they fired, and the commander ordered a
-charge with revolver and saber, and we followed close upon
-their heels. On reaching the city, the firing became promiscuous.
-The rebels retreated south, a number of them
-retreating in the direction of White river, and swam the
-river with their horses, while many of them abandoned
-their horses and swam the river. One part of the rebel
-command filed to the right, thinking that it was a Federal
-scout, and attempted to retreat upon the lower road. The
-Federals saw them coming, and knew from their actions
-that they were retreating. They at once deployed two lines
-in front of the command, one on each side of the road. Before
-the rebels found out their real condition they were
-completely into the trap, and they surrendered without
-the firing of a gun.</p>
-
-
-<h3>How Received by the Batesville Ladies.</h3>
-
-<p>After the fighting had subsided, the author, with a
-part of the command, rode up High street to the hall where
-they had just been dancing. There must have been as
-many as two hundred and fifty or three hundred ladies in
-the hall and on the roof. Some of the boys dismounted,
-went up into the hall and drank some of their eggnog,
-although there were strict orders against it.</p>
-
-<p>The main command reached the east end of High
-street, marching in a solid column of two, with a brass band
-and drums and fifes playing, and striking up the tune of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>
-"Yankee Doodle," they came marching down High street,
-in the direction of the hall. The women began to use the
-strongest epithets possible in their vocabulary against the
-Union soldiers, calling them "nigger lovers," "lopeared
-Dutch," "thieves" and "murderers." The author spoke
-to them saying, "You are mistaken. These men are gentlemen,
-sent here by the government to establish a military
-post, and if you treat them nicely you will receive the same
-kind of treatment."</p>
-
-<p>About this time the front of the command had moved
-up to the hall. At once a number of the ladies began to
-make mouths at them and spit over the banisters toward
-them, calling them vile names. The soldiers then began
-to hallo at the top of their voices: "O, yonder is my
-Dixie girl, the one that I marched away from the north to
-greet." "God bless their little souls, ain't they sweet;
-sugar wouldn't melt in their mouths." "I am going to get
-my bandbox and cage up one of the sweet little morsels and
-take her home for a pet."</p>
-
-<p>The voices of the soldiers completely drowned the
-hearing of anything the women were saying. In a little
-while the women hushed. As the column was passing by,
-one of the women remarked, "I believe that gentleman
-gave us good advice; I think we had better stop our abuse
-and we will be treated better." We marched down to the
-west end of High street, marched across to the next main
-street, then the head of the column turned east again up
-Main street, and striking up the tune of "Hail, Columbia,
-My Happy Land," marched up to the east end of Main
-street, and ordered a guard placed around the whole town,
-to prevent the escape of the rebel soldiers that were concealed
-in the town. The author never saw as much confusion
-as there was there, for a short time, among the citizens,
-especially the women. Some were laughing, some<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>
-were abusing the soldiers, some crying, and some cursing.</p>
-
-<p>After things had quieted down the soldiers went into
-camp. Colonel Livingston began to hunt suitable buildings
-for his head quarters and for an office for the Provost
-Marshall and Judge Advocate. It became a fixed fact
-with the citizens of the city that the Federals were going
-to locate a permanent post at that place.</p>
-
-<p>While they were in pursuit of the rebels the author
-remembered an incident that attracted his attention.
-There were four or five negro men standing upon the street
-corner and one of the officers holloed out to the negroes;
-"Which way did the rebels go?" On one corner of the
-street there was a bunch of rebel citizens standing and as
-soon as the corner was turned and they were out of sight
-of the rebel citizens they answered the officer, "Massa,
-we don't know which way the rebels went;" one of them
-dodged around the corner in an instant, and in a low tone
-of voice, and with a motion of his hand, said, "Massa dey
-went right dat way," almost in an instant came back
-around the corner and said in hearing of the rebel citizens
-"Massa, I declare I don't know the way dem rebels went."</p>
-
-<p>The next morning Livingston issued a general order
-for all persons who claimed protection from the Federal
-army to come in and report and take the oath. The author
-remembers an incident that occurred on the evening of the
-fight. There had been two or three men killed just across
-the bridge and they placed a guard there with orders to let
-no person cross it without a pass. Shortly after dark
-a young lady who had secreted around her waist under
-her clothes, two pistols, a belt and scabbard which belonged
-to a Confederate soldier, just after dark came to
-the bridge and wanted to cross. The sergeant of the guard
-ask her if she had a pass, to which she replied that she
-had not. He informed her that he could not let her go<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
-over. Among the guards was an Irishman and the young
-lady remarked to the sergeant that "it was very hard"
-that she "had a relative that was killed just across the
-bridge and she wanted to go over and see him and that a
-woman couldn't do any harm and they might let her go
-over without a pass."</p>
-
-<p>The Irishman sprang to his feet and remarked "Be
-Jasus, women can do a divil of a sight of harm, can convey
-more information, can carry more intelligence through
-the lines to the rebels than twenty men and there are so
-many of our officers, if she happens to be good looking,
-would let her pass through." The sergeant believing
-that she was a near relative of one of the men that was
-killed a short distance from the bridge, let her pass over,
-and that night she delivered the pistols to the Confederate
-soldiers. She afterwards admitted this when she was arrested
-for refusing to take the oath.</p>
-
-
-<h3>If You Will Grease and Butter Him.</h3>
-
-<p>She declared that she "wouldn't swallow old Lincoln,"
-and the commander ordered all persons who refused to take
-the oath, either men or women, arrested and sent to
-Little Rock. When she found that she had to take the
-oath or go to Little Rock, she said to them that "if they
-would grease and butter the oath she would try to swallow
-it." Afterwards she became very intimate with one of the
-young Federals, married him and when the command
-broke up left the post, left the country and went with him.</p>
-
-<p>The author remained there all that winter, being in
-active service almost every day, capturing some of the
-worst men that there were in the country. In a short
-time after the post was located the west side of the river
-was all in the control of the rebels. The rebels began to
-boast and brag that those Northern Yankees could stay<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
-around the open field and around cities but whenever they
-crossed the river they would show them just how rebel
-bullets would fly. Colonel Freeman's head quarters were
-near the head of Silamore creek, they would get on the
-mountains, on each side (as the Yankees knew nothing
-about mountains) and roll rocks down on them and what
-they didn't kill with rocks and bullets would be glad to
-get back across the river to Batesville.</p>
-
-<p>There were no ferry boats on the river, they had all
-been sunk or run out by the rebels.</p>
-
-<p>The weather was very cold. White river froze over
-solid. The old residents there said it was the first time
-they ever knew of the river freezing over solid. The ice
-was so thick that it would hold the weight of horses and
-wagons. Col. Livingston ordered lumber hauled and laid
-the planks flat on the ice. He then sent some men who
-resided in Nebraska when at home, to make a test. They
-reported that the ice was safe for a command to pass over.
-The commander at once organized a force, crossed the
-river on the ice, and took up the line of march for the purpose
-of attacking Freeman's forces, which were distant
-about ten or twelve miles. As soon as the rebel forces
-found that they were moving up Silamore creek in the direction
-of Freeman's headquarters, they placed men on the
-hills on each side of the creek, and as soon as the Federal
-forces came within reach, they opened fire, and commenced
-rolling stones. The commander halted, deployed skirmishers,
-ordered them to fall back, march on foot and flank the
-rebels, while they would continue the march up the creek
-and attract their attention until they would have them completely
-flanked, and then close in on them. While the
-main force moved up the creek slowly, under almost continuous
-fire, all at once a general fire opened up on both
-sides of the hills. I never before saw rebels running and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
-dodging in all directions, trying to make their escape, as
-they did then. A number of them were killed and wounded,
-and the others taken prisoners. The remainder got
-down from the hills, wiser men, and made a hasty retreat
-up the creek. Upon the Federal column reaching the
-headquarters of Freeman, it was so unexpected that he had
-to retreat, leaving all his camp equipage, his trunk and
-clothing, and about $5,000 in Confederate money.</p>
-
-<p>They retreated in an almost northerly direction. Our
-force returned to Batesville. The scouts, with a small
-force of troops, were sent up White river to find where the
-line of march of the rebels was. They found that they had
-crossed White river near the mouth of the north fork and
-were moving in the direction of Pocahontas. There had
-been two Federal companies detailed and sent out northeast
-in the direction of Spring river. Freeman's command
-surrounded them and made prisoners of one of the companies.
-The other company, commanded by Capt. Majors,
-made a charge on the lines and cut their way through.</p>
-
-<p>Reinforcements were at once dispatched in the direction
-of the moving columns of rebels. In the meantime, the
-rebels had reached Pocahontas, on Black river, and had
-effected a crossing onto the east side of Black river, except
-the rear guard, which were in their boat about midway of
-the river, when the Federal forces reached the west side of
-the river. They fired on the parties in the boat, wounding
-some of them, but they succeeded in reaching the bank,
-and turned their boat loose. A strong line of rebels was
-drawn up on the east bank of Black river, and opened fire
-on the Federal forces on the west side. After considerable
-firing, both sides ceased. The rebels appeared to move
-east; the Federal forces again countermarched and returned
-to Batesville.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The country on the west side of White river was still
-under the control of a strong force of rebels commanded by
-Col. Weatherford and three or four other Confederate commanders.
-About three weeks after their return, an order
-was issued for two wagon trains with six mule teams and a
-detail of two companies, to escort it. The train moved
-out, for the purpose of getting corn and other forage, about
-fifteen miles distant on White river. After they had arrived
-at their destination and were loading their wagons, a
-large force of rebels surrounded them, charged on them,
-and made prisoners of about half of the escort. The Federal
-captain, who belonged to one of the 11th Missouri
-companies, surrendered, handed his pistol, about half
-shot out, to a rebel soldier, who turned his own pistol
-on him and shot him dead. The scouts who escaped capture,
-retreated with all possible haste to Batesville.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the rebel forces cut the wagons
-down, piled them in heaps and set them on fire; while the
-mules, with all their gear and breeching on were put into
-White river and swam across to the other side. As soon
-as the news reached headquarters, a force was speedily
-organized, and started on a forced march. Upon reaching
-the scene of action the rebels were all safely across on
-the other side of the river, harness and wagons were just
-about completely burned up. No chance of any boats to
-cross the river and the river being full, they countermarched
-and returned to Batesville again.</p>
-
-<p>The whole winter was taken up in scouting and
-fighting small bands of rebels. Sometime in the latter
-part of the winter the commissaries and forage were becoming
-scarce and the nearest Federal post down White
-river was at Duvall's bluff. The commander called on
-the author, who was Captain of scouts, for a detail of two
-men who could procure a canoe and try, if possible, to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
-reach Duvall's Bluff and inform the Federal authorities
-there of the conditions of the post. The author detailed a
-man by the name of Johardy Ware and a man by the
-name of Simon Mason. They were to procure a canoe
-and travel in the night, drawing it, when daylight came,
-into thick brush, and in that way, if possible, reach the
-Federal post. They succeeded in reaching the post and
-in a short time commissaries and provisions, with forage,
-were forwarded up the river on two small transports, with
-a number of troops to force its passage up the river. Sometime
-in the latter part of the winter the boats reached
-Batesville and supplied all of the wants and short rations
-of the soldiers and again made everything merry and
-happy.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Give an Oyster Supper</h3>
-
-<p>In April, 1864, the author had promised to return to
-Rolla for the purpose of aiding and recruiting a regiment,
-known as the 16th Missouri Cavalry Volunteer. He informed
-the commander and asked for his recommendation
-which was granted. He wanted to know when I wanted to
-start so that he could make preparations to send me around
-by water. The author informed him that he intended to
-march through by land. The commander thought it was
-a thing impossible, that scouting bands of rebels had possession
-of the country, from a short distance outside of
-Batesville almost to Rolla, Missouri. The commander
-and Provost Marshall gave the author an innovation, made
-an oyster supper for him and his company of scouts, said
-they were loath to give them up, that they had performed
-so much valuable service, and he didn't know where he
-could get any other men to take their places.</p>
-
-<p>After taking leave of the officers and soldiers, the author
-took a small flag, fastened upon a staff, fastened it to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
-the browband of the bridle and remarked to the officers
-as he bid them good bye, that the stars and stripes should
-float from Batesville to Rolla or the author would die in
-the attempt. The company then set out for Rolla, Missouri.
-Colonel Woods of the 11th Missouri cavalry had
-been on detached service and Lieutenant Colonel Stevens
-had been commanding the regiment. He had received
-orders to join his regiment at Batesville, Arkansas, and,
-with a considerable force of men, reached the state line
-about 12 o'clock, and came in sight of the command.</p>
-
-<p>They saw our company approaching, at once drew up
-in line of battle, and as many of the rebels had procured
-Federal uniforms, both parties sent out couriers to ascertain
-who the forces were. On learning that both sides were
-Federals, we marched up and went into camp with them.
-The author was immediately taken to Col. Wood's headquarters.
-He informed him that he had camped near West
-Plains the night before, and that the bushwhackers had kept
-up a continuous fire until after they got a considerable distance
-down South Fork; and he believed it impossible for
-as small a force as I had to reach Rolla without great disaster
-and perhaps annihilation. He said that the author
-and his company of scouts were the very men he wanted,
-and offered to increase his salary to $7.00 per day if he
-would go back with him and remain with his command.
-The author told him that he was honor bound to return to
-Missouri and assist in organizing a regiment of cavalry for
-the United States service, and if the bushwhackers didn't
-keep clear, he would give some of them a furlough before
-he reached Rolla.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner Woods broke camp and moved in the
-direction of Batesville, and we in the direction of Rolla.
-Near where the last firing was done they had arrested a
-man named Craws, who really was a Union man, and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
-author had been well acquainted with him before the war
-commenced, but Woods' soldiers could with difficulty be
-restrained from shooting him. On my informing the Colonel
-that I was well acquainted with the man and that there
-was no harm in him, he agreed to turn him over to the
-author and let him bring him back home with him. After
-we had started, Craws informed the author that he
-knew the parties who had been firing on the Federal troops;
-that their headquarters were about two miles from where he
-then resided; and that he was satisfied from the last firing
-he had heard, that they had turned off from the main road
-and gone up what was called the Newberry hollow. After
-passing the old Newberry farm, they had a plain trail that
-turned to the right and led directly to the camp. They
-were commanded by two men named Hawkins and Yates.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching his house he agreed to continue with us
-to the road he thought they had gone, and then return
-home. I think he was the happiest man I ever saw when
-he found he had been turned over to my care, believing
-that Woods' command intended to shoot him.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching the road, we found a fresh rebel trail
-leading right up the creek; we moved on until near the
-Newberry residence, which we had been informed by Craws
-was occupied by Hawkins' wife. We turned from the road
-and halted, and the author, with two or three of his men,
-being familiar with the country, reached a high point from
-which we could distinctly see one horse standing at the
-door. Supposing the rebel scouts were all there, we went
-back to the company, moved cautiously toward the house,
-and gave orders to charge upon them as soon as our approach
-was discovered. On coming within fifty yards of
-the house, which was unenclosed, a woman stepped outside
-the door, looked toward us, and then wheeled for the house,
-and we charged. Hawkins' horse was hitched to a half<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>
-of a horse shoe driven in at the side of the door, the bridle
-rein looped over it, his halter rein being already tied over
-the saddle horn. The author had ordered all to charge
-with pistols in hand. As Hawkins reached the door and
-made an attempt to take his bridle rein, he saw that it was
-impossible. The author demanding his surrender, he attempted
-to draw his pistol and had it half way out of its
-holster and cocked, when the author fired upon him. He
-fell back, still holding his pistol. The author, supposing
-more of the enemy were inside the house, dismounted, and
-rushing to the door, demanded the surrender of every person
-that might be in the house. As the author entered the
-door, he heard Hawkins, still holding his pistol, remark:
-"Monks, you have killed me." The author replied
-that that was what he intended to do, and he must let go
-of that pistol or he would be shot again. He took his hand
-loose from the pistol and in a short time was dead. His
-wife asked the author to lay him out, which request was
-complied with.</p>
-
-<p>We mounted and again took the rebel trail and by
-this time it had grown so dark that we lost it and went on
-to the residence of Captain Howard, dismounted, fed our
-horses and got our supper.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Howard afterwards informed the author that
-he had just been home and started back to the rebel camp
-and heard the horses feet, stepped behind a tree and that
-we passed within fifteen feet of him; said if it hadn't been
-dark we would have been certain to have found the rebel
-camp; that that day some one of the rebel soldiers had
-killed a deer, stretched the skin and had it hanging up and
-the camp wasn't more than two hundred yards from the
-main road. After we ate our suppers and fed our horses
-we again resumed our march and reached Rolla, Missouri,
-on the second day afterwards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Another Meeting With Captain Forshee</h3>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1863 General Davidson was ordered
-to move from Rolla, Missouri, directly south to Little
-Rock. On breaking camp and marching in the direction of
-West Plains the author, with his company of scouts,
-was ordered to report to him for service. On reaching
-West Plains he went into camp. West Plains and vicinity
-were completely covered with tents and troops.
-All of the hills adjoining West Plains were literally covered
-with tents, Davidson's headquarters being inside of the
-town. The author being sent out on a scout, came to the
-home of a man named Barnett residing in Gunter's Valley
-and not being able to reach town, went into camp near
-Barnett's. In a short time Barnett came in home. He had
-been a lieutenant in the company where the author was
-prisoner. He informed the author that he had been to
-Thomasville Mill and that Captain Forshee, who lived
-about one mile below, had also returned with him.</p>
-
-<p>The author at once placed a guard around Barnett's
-house (Barnett being the father-in-law of the Captain) detailed
-two men to accompany him, prepared, mounted, and
-started to the residence of Forshee fully determined to kill
-him. The author instructed his men that if Forshee remained
-in the house and didn't attempt to run, to play off and
-tell him that they belonged to Colonel Woods, a Confederate
-officer on White river. The author then being
-clothed in Federal uniform and having but a limited acquaintance
-with Forshee before the war did not think that
-he would recognize him. On reaching the house we repaired
-to the door, hallooed, and his wife invited us in. The
-author had his pistol under the cape of his coat still determined
-upon killing him. On entering the house, found
-him in bed with one of his children, his wife did not have<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
-the supper on the table. The author asked him if
-he had ever been in the Confederate service; he answered
-that he had, went out in the six months provisional
-Confederate service; didn't stay his time out,
-resigned and came home. The author asked him if they
-had taken any prisoners while they were in service; he
-hesitated a moment and replied that they did. The author
-asked him if he remembered the names of any of
-them; he said he remembered the names of two of them
-well. The author asked him if he knew what became of
-them; he said that Black enlisted in the Confederate
-service, served his time out and then substituted himself
-and was now in the eastern Confederate army; he
-again hesitated. The author asked him if he knew what
-became of the other man; he said that he didn't; that he
-made his escape from the Confederate army and he had
-heard that he was a captain in the Northern army. The
-author said with an oath "How would you like to see
-him;" he replied "I would not like to see him very well."
-The author then said, with an oath, "I am here, look at me
-and see whether you think I am worth a beef cow or not."
-At this his wife sprang between him and the author and he
-said to the author, "Captain, there ain't one man out of
-ninety-nine but what would kill me for the treatment you
-received while a prisoner but I have always thought that if
-I ever met you and you would give me the time to explain
-the cause of it, you wouldn't kill me, and I want to live
-to raise my children."</p>
-
-<p>The thought passed through the mind of the author
-that he could not kill him in the lap of his family; but he
-would take him to Barnett's house where he had some
-more prisoners and on the next day he would kill him on
-the way; ordered him to get out of that bed; Forshee
-again appealed and said that he would like to know<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
-whether the author was going to kill him or not; that he
-wanted to live to raise his children. The author replied
-to him with an oath that "you ought to have thought of
-these things when you was pulling me away from the
-bosom of my family, never gave me time to bid them good-bye;
-get out of that bed." There was about a six months
-old child in the cradle. He slid out of the bed, kneeled
-down by the cradle, and was in the act of praying, his
-wife still standing close by. The author ordered him
-to get up; that it was too late to pray after the devil came;
-that I had been appointed by the devil to send him up at
-once and lie had the coals hot and ready to receive him
-and that I didn't want to disappoint the devil. He arose
-to his feet and again asked the author if he was going to
-kill him; said he wanted time to give me the whole truth
-of the matter; went on to say Hawkins, Sapp, Kaiser and
-others were the cause of all the mistreatment, but would
-admit that he done wrong in agreeing to deliver the author
-to them for the purpose of having him mobbed and for
-abusing him, himself.</p>
-
-<p>His wife had hot coffee on the table and she asked that
-he be allowed to sit down, saying that she wanted to see
-him sup coffee once more. The author told her that they
-never gave him time to bid his wife good-bye, let alone to
-sup coffee with her. After taking a few sups of coffee, the
-author said that he couldn't fool any longer with him; that
-he must strike a line and move out. His wife said that she
-was going with him, but her husband told her she had no
-business going, as it was then snowing and the ground was
-considerably frozen. The author told her that if she was
-determined to go, the boys could take her and the children
-behind them, but the Captain would have to walk right in
-front of the author, and if he made a crooked step from
-there until he reached Barnett's, he would shoot him<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
-through. The boys took his wife and children on the
-horses, and the author started the Captain in front of him.
-He had thought that he would be compelled to shoot him
-on the way, but he could not shoot him in the presence of
-his family; so he thought he would take him to the guard
-house and keep him until morning, and then on the
-way to West Plains he would make a pretext to kill
-him, for he thought he must kill him.</p>
-
-<p>In the morning, after breakfast, we broke camp and
-moved in the direction of West Plains. The author had
-now become cool, and while he believed he ought to kill
-him for what he had done, he could not afford to shoot, or
-cause a prisoner to be shot, while he was in his charge; so
-on reaching West Plains, the prisoner was turned over to
-the guard house.</p>
-
-<p>The morning following was very cool, and the ground
-was covered with snow. Gen. Davidson had ordered out
-a large scout for the purpose of marching towards Batesville
-and White river, to feel the strength of the enemy, and
-the author's company composed a part of the detail. After
-the command was mounted and waiting for orders to move,
-the sergeant of the guard came out and inquired if there was
-a Captain Monks in that command. The Colonel informed
-him that there was. He said there was a prisoner in the
-guard house who wanted to see him. The author got permission
-to ride to the guard house, and on reaching the
-door, who should meet him but Capt. Forshee, who told the
-author that he had almost frozen the night before, and
-wanted to know if the author couldn't loan him a blanket.
-He was told that he was the last man who should ask the
-author for the use of a blanket. Forshee replied: "That's
-so, Captain; but I believe that you are a good man, and
-don't want to see a man, while he is a prisoner, suffer from
-cold." The author asked him if they had any gray backs<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
-in the guard house. He said he had none on himself, but
-didn't know in what condition the others were.</p>
-
-<p>The author had two new government blankets that he
-had paid $5 apiece for a short time previous, on the back
-of his saddle. He told Forshee that he didn't know as he
-would need them both until he had gotten back from the
-scout, and would loan him a blanket until he returned.
-Forshee replied: "I will never forget the favor." The
-author handed him one of the blankets, and immediately
-started on the scout. While the scout was south reconnoitering
-with the enemy, Gen. Davidson received orders
-from headquarters countermanding the order to march to
-Little Rock by land, and that he would march his forces to
-Ironton, Missouri, and there await further orders. He at
-once broke camp and resumed his march in the direction
-of Ironton, carrying the prisoners with him, with orders for
-the scout on its return to move up and overtake him, as
-they were all cavalry. So the author never saw Capt.
-Forshee nor his blanket any more, but was informed that
-he was paroled at Ironton, took the oath, returned to Oregon
-county, and died shortly after the close of the war.</p>
-
-<p>Upon the return of the scout to West Plains, a part of
-the command that belonged to Gen. Davidson's forces
-moved on after the army, while the author, with two companies,
-remained in West Plains about half a day for the
-purpose of resting up. While in West Plains a rebel that
-the author was well acquainted with, came to him and told
-him he had better be getting out of West Plains, for a force
-of five hundred rebels was liable to come into West Plains
-at any moment. The author pretended to become considerably
-alarmed, and reported that he was going to march
-directly to Rolla with the two companies then under his
-command. After marching about fifteen miles in the direction
-of Rolla, he made a flank movement, marched into the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
-corner of Douglass county, was there reinforced, and the
-next day marched directly to the west end of Howell county.
-The rebels, believing that the Federal troops had all left the
-county, came in small bunches from all over the county.
-The author made a forced march and reached the west
-end of the county about dark, turned directly toward West
-Plains, took the rebels completely by surprise, had a number
-of skirmishes with them, reaching West Plains with
-more rebel prisoners than he had men of his own. On the
-next day we turned in the direction of Rolla, and by forced
-march reached Texas county. On the next morning we
-reached the Federal post at Houston, in Texas county,
-and turned over the prisoners, among whom were several
-prominent officers. Capt. Nicks was one of them. On
-the night of his capture the author said to him: "It appears
-to me that it is about the same time of night that they
-brought me prisoner to your house." He answered: "I
-declare I believe it is." After the rebels found the small
-number of the force that had made the scout, they declared
-that it was a shame to let Monks run right into the
-very heart of the rebels and carry out more prisoners than
-he had men.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Murdering Federal Soldiers.</h3>
-
-<p>Some time in June, 1863, a rebel scout and a Federal
-scout had a fight about twenty miles northwest of Rolla.
-The rebels were forced to abandon a number of wagons and
-mules, and the Federals, owing to the emergency that confronted
-them at the time, did not wish to be encumbered
-with them, so they employed a farmer to keep the mules in
-his pasture until the government should send for them.
-The Federal scouts from Rolla and Jefferson City would
-meet occasionally while scouting. On the scout's arrival
-at Rolla, another scout composed of about one company of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
-Federals was sent out to bring in the wagons and teams.
-Just before reaching the place where the wagons and teams
-had been left, they saw a command of about two hundred
-and fifty men, all dressed in Federal uniforms, and they at
-once took them to be a Federal scout from Jefferson City.
-On approaching each other, they passed the army salute,
-and marched right down the Federal line; they, being unsuspecting,
-believed them to be Federal troops. As soon
-as they were in position each man had his man covered
-with a pistol. The rebel scout outnumbering the Federal
-scout more than two to one, they demanded their surrender.
-The Federals, seeing their condition, at once surrendered.
-They were marched about a quarter of a mile, near where
-the wagons and teams were left, dismounted and went into
-camp, as the rebels claimed, for dinner. Several citizens
-were present. They marched the Federal company together,
-surrounded them in a hollow square, brought some
-old ragged clothing, and ordered them to strip. After they
-were all stripped completely naked, and while some were
-attempting to put on the old clothing, all their uniforms
-having been removed a short distance from them, at a certain
-signal the rebels fired a deadly volley into them. Then
-followed one of the most desperate scenes ever witnessed by
-the eye of man. The men saw their doom, and those who
-were not killed by the first volley rushed at the rebels,
-caught them, tried to wrest their arms from them, and a
-desperate struggle took place; men wrestling, as it were,
-for their very lives.</p>
-
-<p>A number of the Federals had their throats cut with
-knives. After the rebels had completed the slaughter and
-hadn't left a man alive to tell the tale, they ate their dinner,
-and taking the mules and wagons, moved southwest with
-them. The citizens at once reported the affair to the commander
-of the post at Rolla.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The men who were killed belonged to an Iowa regiment,
-and the author believes it was the 3rd Iowa, but will
-not be positive. A strong detail was made and sent at once
-to the scene of the late tragedy, with wagons and teams to
-bring the dead back to Rolla. On their arrival with them,
-it was the most horrible scene that the author ever looked
-upon. After they were buried, the regiment to which they
-belonged declared and avowed that they intended to take
-the same number of rebel lives. The commander, knowing
-their determination, and being satisfied that they would
-carry it into effect if the opportunity offered, transferred
-them to another part of the country.</p>
-
-
-<h3>A Rebel Raid.</h3>
-
-<p>Some time in the fall of 1863 the Federal authorities
-at Rolla learned that the rebels were organizing a strong
-force in Arkansas, for the purpose of making a raid into
-Missouri. The rebels were under the command of Gen.
-Burbrage. The author, being still the commander of the
-scouts, was ordered to take one man and go south, for the
-purpose of learning, if possible, the movements of the
-rebels. The author left Rolla, came by way of Houston,
-where there was a post, thence to Hutton Valley, where
-there was living a man named Andy Smith, who was a
-Union man, but had made the rebels believe he was in
-favor of the south. The author approached Smith's house
-after dark, got something to eat and to feed his horses,
-and learned from Smith that the rebels were about prepared
-to make the raid into Missouri. On the next day the
-author was informed by Smith that Burbrage was then
-moving with his full force in the direction of Missouri.
-The author at once started, intending to reach the nearest
-Federal force, which was in Douglas county. In the
-meantime, Gen. Burbrage, with his whole force, reached<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
-the Missouri line, leaving West Plains a little to the right,
-taking an old trace that ran on the divide between the
-waters of the North fork of White river and of Eleven
-Points river, this being afterwards known as "the old
-Burbrage trail." The author, expecting they would march
-by way of West Plains and on through Hutton Valley,
-thought he would be able to keep ahead of them and make
-his report; but owing to their marching an entirely different
-route, the author crossed their trail. He found that a
-large force of men had just passed and he, in company with
-a man named Long, examined the horse tracks, found that
-the shoes contained three nails in each side, and knew at
-once that it must be Burbrage's command. They had
-passed not more than three hours before this time. Making
-a forced march, the author and Long followed on the
-same trail, and soon came to a house, holloed, and a lady
-coming out, we inquired how far the command was ahead.
-The lady informed us that they hadn't been gone more than
-three hours, and she exclaimed: "Hurrah for Gen. Burbrage
-and his brave men! The Yankees and lopeared
-Dutch are goin' to ketch it now, and they intend to clean
-them out of the country!" We then became satisfied as
-to whose command it was, and their destination. We rode
-on about two hundred yards from the house, turned to the
-left, and started with all possible speed, intending, if possible,
-to go around them and get the word in ahead of
-them. On striking the road at the head of the North Fork
-of White river, we looked ahead of us about a hundred
-yards and saw twenty-five men, about fifty yards from the
-road, all in citizen's dress, wearing white hat bands.
-The state had ordered all the state militia to wear white
-hat bands, so that they might be designated from the
-rebels. The author remarked to Long: "I guess the
-men are militia, but we will ride slowly along the road and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
-pass them, for fear they are rebels." They remained still
-on their horses until after we had passed them, then
-they moved forward and came riding up and halted us, and
-wanted to know who we were. The author told them his
-name was Williams and Long told them his name was
-Tucker. They asked us if we had ever heard of the Alsups,
-and we told them we had. Then they wanted to
-know where we were going. We told them we were going
-into Arkansas, near Yellville; that a general order had
-been made in the state of Missouri that all able-bodied men
-must come and enroll their names and those who were not
-in the state service would have to be taxed; that we didn't
-want to fight nor pay a tax to support those who were
-fighting. They ordered us to dismount, surrounded us,
-with cocked pistols, and ordered us to crawl out of our
-clothes and give up our arms. We commenced to strip.
-Long had on a very fine pair of boots, for which he had
-just paid $5.00, and while the author didn't know at what
-moment they would be shot, he could not help but be
-tickled at the conduct of Long when they ordered him to
-take off his boots. He crossed his legs and commenced
-pulling, with the remark: "My boots are tight." The
-pistols were cocked and presented right on him, not more
-than six feet away, and they told him to hurry up or they
-would shoot his brains out. While he was pulling at his
-boots he appeared to be looking right down the muzzles of
-the revolvers. As soon as he had pulled off his boots and
-pitched them over, they remarked: "Hell, a right brand
-new pair of socks on. Pull them off quick and throw them
-over." A part of these men were dressed in the dirtiest,
-most ragged clothes the author had ever seen&mdash;old wool
-hats, with strings tied under their chins, old shoes with
-the toes worn out, and old socks that were mostly legs;
-but claiming all the time to be militia. They ordered us to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
-get into their old clothes and shoes, and placed their old
-hats upon us. Our clothing and hats all being new, the
-author thought that was one of the hardest things they had
-ordered him to do; that he was just as apt to get out of
-the garments as to get into them. After we were dressed
-in their old clothing, one of them asked: "What did you
-say your name was?" Long replied, "Tucker." One
-that was standing a little back came running up with his
-pistol cocked, and remarked that if he was a certain Tucker
-(naming the Tucker): "I am going to kill him right
-here." Another of the number said: "Hold on, this man
-is not the Tucker that you are thinking of." Then their
-leader said, with an oath: "We belong to Gen. Burbrage's
-command. He is just ahead. Do you want us to
-take you up to headquarters?" We told him we had heard
-of Gen. Burbrage, and expected that he was a good man,
-so if they wanted to take us to his headquarters all right:
-but we did not want to fall into the hands of the militia, as
-we wanted to get through to Yellville while Gen. Burbrage
-was in the country. One of the men looked at the horses
-we were riding and remarked: "Let's take the horses.
-We have orders to take all horses that are fit for the service."
-Another said the horses were rather small for the
-service, and as we would have a great deal of water to cross
-between there and Yellville, it would be a pity to make us
-wade it. Then their leader remarked: "We are Confederate
-soldiers, out fighting for our country, and you men
-are too damned cowardly to fight. We have got to have
-clothing, and as we suppose you are good southern men,
-when you get to Yellville you can work for more clothes."
-They then ordered us to take the road and move on, and
-tell the Alsups that the country was full of rebels.</p>
-
-<p>We mounted our horses and rode away, feeling happy
-on account of our escape. They remained in the road and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
-watched us until we were out of their sight. The author
-looked over at Long's feet and saw his toes sticking out of
-his old shoes; could see his naked skin in several places
-through his raiment. He hardly looked natural&mdash;didn't
-look like the same man. We hadn't gone more than a
-mile until we struck a farm and a road leading between the
-farm on one side and the bluff and river on the other, and
-looking in front, saw about fifteen men coming. The
-author said to Long: "What shall we do? Shall we attempt
-to run, or had we better pass them?" We concluded
-that it was impossible to get away by running; the only
-chance left being to try to pass through them without
-being recognized.</p>
-
-<p>We rode up to meet them, and they halted us and
-wanted to know where we were going. We told them we
-were going to Marion county, Arkansas, near Yellville.
-They asked us our names and we again gave the names of
-Williams and Tucker. A man named Charley Durham
-who had resided at West Plains and had met me several
-times, rode up near us and asked me; "What did you say
-your name was?" I replied, "Williams." He asked:
-"Did you ever live down here about the state line?" I
-told him I never did, but I might have had relatives who
-lived on the state line. He said: "I am satisfied that I
-have seen you somewhere." One of the crowd asked us
-if we had met about twenty-five soldiers just ahead, and
-when we informed them that we had, they remarked:
-"Bully for the boys; we had better be moving on or we
-will be late." They moved on, and we continued down
-the road. As soon as we were out of sight I said to Long;
-"We will not risk our chances in passing any more of
-them; there are too many men down here that are acquainted
-with us. If it hadn't been for my old clothes,
-Charley Durham would have recognized me beyond a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
-doubt." We then left the road and took to the woods,
-reaching the Federal forces about midnight. They had not
-heard a thing regarding the approach of the rebels. They
-hurriedly began to gather in all the forces, and at once set
-out to find, if possible, the destination of Gen. Burbrage.
-It was learned that he had completely cut us off from reaching
-either Houston or Rolla. On the next day the Federal
-forces met Gen. Burbrage at Hearstville, Wright county,
-Missouri, and there fought a battle with him. The commander
-of the post at Houston, who was in command of
-the Federals, was killed on the first fire from the artillery
-of Gen. Burbrage. Col McDonald, during the engagement,
-was shot dead at the head of the town spring.
-Burbrage retreated on the same route that he had come up
-on. His command was separated into several divisions, to
-get food.</p>
-
-<p>Long and I had been furnished clothes and arms.
-Capt. Alsup being in command, moved near the road that
-leads down Fox Creek, saw a rebel scout moving down Fox
-Creek, composed of a part of the same men we had met the
-day before. Capt. Alsup said he thought that by striking
-the road and taking the rebels by surprise we could rout
-them. On marching about a mile we came in sight of
-them, dismounted for dinner at the house of a man
-named Ferris. I proposed to Capt. Alsup that we charge
-them. He thought it might be too dangerous; that they
-would have the benefit of the house, and might outnumber
-us, and we would be compelled to retreat and might be cut
-off from our horses. He ordered us to dismount, formed a
-line, left men to hold the horses, and on moving about ten
-steps, the rebel picket, who was placed just outside of the
-line, discovered us. They opened fire from each side of the
-house, and along a picket fence which enclosed the house.
-We returned the fire. The first volley that was fired, a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
-ball passed near my ear, and wounded the horse that I
-was riding. The firing continued for some time. We had
-them cut off from their horses, unless they came outside
-and faced the continual firing. One man attempted to
-leave the house and reach his horse, but about ten feet from
-the door he received a wound in the face and fell to the
-ground. In a moment he arose to his feet, and he and several
-others again retreated into the house. The firing continued
-for fifteen or twenty minutes, when the rebels retreated
-on foot, by taking advantage of the house, except
-one man, who reached his horse, cut the halter, sprang
-into the saddle, turned his horse down the lane, leaning
-close to the horn of the saddle, put spurs and made his escape.
-In the meantime the wounded man attempted to
-make his escape by taking advantage of the house and retreating.
-Capt. Alsup, when he saw the rebels were retreating,
-ordered a charge. The wounded man was again
-wounded, and fell to the ground, helpless. All the other
-rebels reached the woods, and made their escape.</p>
-
-<p>Farris, the man who owned the house where the rebels
-were stopping, received a serious wound in the breast.
-They left sixteen horses with their rigs, saddle-riders filled
-with new clothing, in our possession. Gen. Burbrage retreated
-from the state, and the author reported to his command
-at Rolla.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Rescuing Union Families.</h3>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1862 some of the Union men whose families
-were still residing in Ozark and Howell counties went
-to the Federal post and were promised arms and ammunition
-in order to return and try to get their families out, as
-it had become almost impossible for their families to get
-through alone, on account of being robbed. About fifty of
-them procured arms and started for Howell county, from the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>
-outpost of the Federal authorities. They marched at night
-and lay by in the day, and on reaching the western part of
-Howell county, informed their families to get ready to move,
-still keeping themselves in hiding. About twenty families
-prepared for moving, and had assembled on the bayou, near
-where Friend's old mill was located. Just about the time
-they were ready to start, a bunch of rebels came up and
-opened fire on them. They returned the fire and held the
-rebels at a distance while they moved all their wagons up
-close together, and started in the direction of Ozark county.
-One of the men who had come to assist in the escort became
-excited upon the first fire from the rebels and ran,
-never stopping until he reached the Federal lines. The remainder
-of the men bravely repelled the rebels, while their
-families kept their teams steadily moving. On reaching
-the big North Fork of White River, and while the families
-in their wagons were in mid-stream, the rebels reached the
-bluff and opened fire on them. The Union men vigorously
-returned the fire. They all reached the opposite side of
-the river without one of their number being killed; some of
-the women and children had received slight wounds, but
-nothing serious. The rebels still continued to fire upon
-them until they reached the northern part of Ozark county,
-when further pursuit was abandoned, and about twenty
-families were enabled to reach the Federal lines. In a
-short time the Union men attempted to again reach their
-homes, for the purpose of helping destitute families to get
-out. They traveled only at night, keeping themselves concealed
-in day time. In this way they reached Fulton
-county, Arkansas, when the rebels found out that some of
-the Union men were in the country. The rebel forces at
-once became so strong that the Federals had to retreat
-without getting any of their families, passing back through
-the western part of Howell county, over into Ozark, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
-went into camp on the head of Lick Creek. Shortly after
-they got into camp the rebels slipped up on them and
-opened fire, mortally wounding a man named Fox and
-slightly wounding several others. They had to scatter at
-once to avoid being captured, and when they reached the
-Federal lines they were almost worn out. At this time all
-of the Federal posts had numbers of refugee families stationed
-near them, entirely destitute of food and raiment,
-and relying entirely for their preservation upon the small
-amount of help they received from the government.</p>
-
-
-<h3>General Price's Raid.</h3>
-
-<p>Upon my return from Batesville, Arkansas, in the
-spring of 1864, I commenced recruiting for the 16th Missouri
-Cavalry Volunteers, the most of the regiment being
-composed of men who had been in the state service. The
-required number to form the regiment was soon procured,
-and the regiment was organized, electing for their Colonel,
-John Mahan. The author was elected Captain of Co. K.
-The regiment was at once placed in active service, being
-quartered at Springfield, Missouri, up to the time of Gen.
-Price's raid. Then the regiment was divided, one half of
-it being sent in pursuit of Price. The other half, which
-was known as the second battalion, was placed under my
-command and held at Springfield, it being expected that
-Gen. Price would change his line of march and attack the
-city. As soon as the fact was ascertained that Price was
-marching north and west of Springfield, orders were made
-to send every available man that could be spared from the
-post. Among the troops sent out was the author's battalion.
-We were ordered on a forced march in the direction
-of Utony, for the purpose of cutting off Price's retreat. We
-reached Utony about 10 o'clock at night, where they had a
-strong Federal garrison. Two thousand rebels of Price's<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
-command had just marched across the road before we
-reached the garrison, and gone into camp in sight of the
-town. Strong pickets were thrown out on each side.
-About daylight the Federal forces broke camp and moved
-on the rebel camp, soon coming in sight of the rebel forces,
-and fire was opened on both sides. The rebels commenced
-retreating, the Federals pursuing, and continuous firing and
-fighting was kept up until we came near the Arkansas line.
-A number of rebel prisoners were taken, besides some of
-their commissary wagons falling into the possession of the
-Federals. The Federal commander then ordered a retreat
-back to Springfield. Price's forces had torn up all the
-railroads as they passed over them, cutting off all supplies,
-and the soldiers and prisoners had been placed on quarter
-rations. The prisoners, numbering about three hundred
-and fifty, were ordered to be taken to Rolla, Missouri.
-After the first day's march from Springfield they met a
-Federal train carrying commissaries to Springfield and
-other western points. The men being then on quarter rations,
-the Colonel took possession of some of the commissaries
-and issued them to the soldiers and prisoners, for
-which he was afterward arrested and court-martialed. On
-reaching Lebanon, Missouri, I saw the quartermaster haul
-in about five or six loads of shucked corn, which was distributed
-to the soldiers and prisoners. I well remember
-that while they were distributing the corn to the prisoners,
-a general rush, which appeared to be almost uncontrollable,
-was made around the wagon. The corn was thrown out
-on the ground among them, they picked it up in their arms,
-and at once retired to their camp fires, so that they might
-parch and eat it. After leaving Lebanon, the prisoners
-were all placed in charge of the author. He remembers
-one rebel prisoner who had on a fine dress coat, with a
-bullet hole right in the center of the back, and the soldiers<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
-had to be watched closely to prevent them from shooting
-him, as they believed it to be a coat that had been taken
-from the body of some Union man, after he had been shot.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching Rolla, the author turned over all the prisoners
-to the commander of the post, and they were sent
-directly to Rock Island, there to be held as prisoners until
-such time as they might be exchanged. I again returned
-to Springfield and reported to my regiment. A short time
-thereafter, the loyal men of the counties of Howell, Dent,
-Texas, Phelps, Ozark and Douglas, in Missouri, and of
-Fulton, Izard and Independence counties, in Arkansas,
-with a number of the officers and soldiers, including the
-commander at Rolla, petitioned Gen. Schofield, who was
-then in command of the western district, to have the author
-detached from his regiment, then at Springfield, and sent
-south of Rolla to some convenient place, and given command
-of a post, as it was almost impossible to send commissaries
-through from Rolla to Springfield, on what was
-known as the wire road, on account of the roving bands of
-rebels, who had complete control of the country, a short
-distance from the military post.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Capt. Monks Establishes a Post at Licking.</h3>
-
-<p>Gen. Schofield at once made an order that Capt. Monks
-be detached from his regiment and report at Rolla, with his
-company, for further orders. Gen. Sanborn, then in command
-at Springfield, informed the author of his final destination;
-that on reaching Rolla, he would be ordered by
-Gen. Schofield to Licking, Missouri, to establish a post.</p>
-
-<p>It soon leaked out, and the rebels swore openly that if
-he established a post at Licking or at any other southern
-point, they would soon drive the post into the ground and
-annihilate him and his men. I went to Gen. Sanborn and
-requested that he send a telegram to Gen. Schofield, and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
-ask him to countermand that part of the order that required
-Capt. Monks to report at Rolla for further orders, and order
-him to move directly from Springfield to Licking. The
-General hesitated for sometime, as to whether it would be
-good policy, owing to the large numbers of rebels in the
-country through which I had to pass. He didn't believe
-that I would be able to reach Licking with the one company,
-but he finally decided that if I was willing to risk it,
-he would ask Gen. Schofield to change his order. On Gen.
-Schofield's receiving the telegram, he made an order that I
-be detached from my regiment, be furnished two company
-wagons, be well supplied with arms, and proceed directly
-to Licking. On reaching Licking I was to report by courier
-to headquarters for further orders; and in obedience to said
-order, two company wagons, with tents, commissaries, arms
-and ammunition were at once furnished, and I set out for
-Licking, Texas county; passed Hartville, the county seat
-of Wright county, and struck the waters of Big Piney.
-There was considerable snow on the ground at the time. I
-took the rebels by complete surprise. While they were
-expecting me from Rolla to Licking, I struck them from
-the direction they least expected. On reaching Piney, I
-encountered a rebel force of about sixty men. We had a
-fight, two or three rebels were killed, and the rest retreated
-south. From that time until we reached Licking, we had
-more or less fighting every day. We would strike trails of
-rebels in the snow, where there appeared to be over one
-hundred men, but they were so sure that it was a large
-scout from Springfield that they did not take time to ascertain,
-but retreated south at once. On reaching Licking, I
-sent a dispatch to Gen. Schofield, telling of my arrival,
-and immediately received orders to establish a post and
-erect a stockade fort, and to issue such orders as I believed
-would rid the country of those irregular bands of rebels and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
-bushwhackers and protect all in their person and property,
-especially the loyal men. I immediately selected a frame
-building for my headquarters, with an office near by for the
-man acting as provost marshal; issued my order requiring
-all persons who claimed protection from the Federal authorities
-to come in and take the oath, and bring with them
-axes, shovels, picks and spades, with their teams, for
-the purpose of erecting a stockade fort. And further
-setting out in said order, requiring all persons who
-knew of any irregular bands of rebels or bushwhackers
-roaming or passing through the country, to report
-them at once; and if they failed to report them, they
-would be taken as bushwhackers and treated as such. In
-a short time I had erected a complete stockade fort with
-port-holes, and room enough inside to place all the cavalry
-horses in case of an attack by the rebels. I had these orders
-printed and sent out all over the country. In a short
-time, a man who had been known to be a rebel, but had
-stayed at home unmolested, but who had been giving aid
-and comfort to the rebels, came into the office and said:
-"Captain, I want to see you in your private room." On
-entering the room he said: "I have read that order of
-yours. You don't intend to enforce it, do you, Captain?"
-I said to him that I did or I wouldn't have made it; that
-the rebels and I could not both stay in that country. He
-said to me, "Captain, of all the post commanders we have
-had here, there never was one of them issued such an order
-as that. You know if I were to report those rebel
-bands they would kill me." I replied, "Very well; you
-have read my order, and I have said to you and all others
-that if you fail to report them I will kill you; and you say
-if you do report them, they will kill you; now, if you are
-more afraid of them than you are of me, you will have to
-risk the consequences; for, by the eternal God! if you fail<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>
-to report them, I have said to you that I would treat you
-as a bushwhacker, and you well know how I treat them."
-He dropped his head for a few minutes, then raised it and
-said: "Well, it is mighty hard, Captain." I replied that
-there were a great many hard things now; asked him
-where all of his Union neighbors were. He said that they
-had been forced to leave their homes and were around the
-Federal posts for the reason that they claimed to be Union
-men. I told him that "a lot of you rebels have lain here
-in the country and made more money than you ever made
-before in your lives, and at the same time you have been
-giving aid, comfort and encouragement to all of these irregular
-bands&mdash;giving them all the information that they
-wanted, so that they might know just when to make their
-raids, and now I propose to break it up and stop it, unless
-they are able to rout me and drive me away. The government
-proposes to protect all of you who will come in and
-take the oath and comply with every requirement set out
-in the order. All I ask of you men is to give me information
-of these irregular rebel bands and their whereabouts,
-and you can again return home and your information will
-be kept a secret; but this much you are required to do."
-In a short time a large number of them had come in and
-enrolled their names, took the oath and went to work on
-the fort like heroes.</p>
-
-<p>Occasionally one would come in and say "Captain, I
-want to procure a pass for me and my family through the
-Federal lines; I want to leave." I would ask him;
-"What's the matter now? You have stayed here all
-through the war, up to the present time, and now I have
-come among you, and offered to protect every one of you
-who will take the oath and comply with orders." He
-would reply with a long sigh, "Yes, Captain but that
-order that you have made." I would ask him "what<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
-order." "You require all citizens, especially we people who
-have been rebels, and stayed at home, to report all of the
-roving bands of rebels and bushwhackers; if we don't do it,
-you will treat us like bushwhackers; if we were to report
-them, they would kill us." I said, "Now, you must chose
-between the two powers; and if you are more afraid of the
-rebels than you are of me, you will have to risk your
-chances. You say if you report them, they will kill you.
-Now, by the Eternal, I am determined to enforce everything
-that I have set out in that order. This day you
-must settle in your own mind whom you will obey. As
-soon as the first roving bands of rebels and guerrillas
-reached the country for the purpose of raiding the wire
-road between Rolla and Springfield, the night never was
-too dark but that this same class of men would come in
-and report them. I would at once make a detail, send
-these men right out with them. As soon as they would
-get near to the rebels, they would dismiss these men and
-let them go home."</p>
-
-<p>The rebels, for several years, had been sending out a
-large scout from North Arkansas and the border counties
-of Missouri and when they would reach Texas and Pulaski
-counties they would divide into small squads and travel the
-byways and ridges; on reaching the wire road they would
-then concentrate and lay in wait until the wagon trains and
-non-combatants who were merchants, were moving through
-from Rolla to Springfield under the protection of an escort;
-and all at once they would make a charge upon them
-from their hiding places, rout the escort, capture the train
-and all others that might be in company with it, cut the
-mules loose from the wagon, take all the goods that was
-not cumbersome, especially coffee, sugar, salt and dry
-goods, place them on the backs of the mules, travel a
-short distance, divide up again into small parties, take<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
-byways and mountains, travel fifteen or twenty miles, go
-into camp; on reaching the counties of Oregon and Shannon,
-Fulton and Lawrence, of Arkansas, they would concentrate
-their forces, go into camp, eat, drink, and be
-merry. As soon as their supplies would run short, they
-would make another scout of a similar nature. The
-commanders of the post, as soon as they would attack the
-trains, would order out a scout to pursue them. They
-would strike their trail and follow them a short distance
-to where they would separate and take to the mountains.
-They would abandon the pursuit, return and swear
-that the country wasn't worth protecting. In that way
-they completely outgeneraled the Federal forces and held
-complete possession of the country almost in sight of the
-post.</p>
-
-<p>On one occasion, when the weather was very cold and
-bleak, I knew of their capturing some of the Federal soldiers
-within one mile of the fort, kept them until the coldest
-part of the night, just before day, stripped them naked,
-turned them loose, and they were compelled to travel a
-mile before they could reach a fire, and they were almost
-frostbitten. Every Union man was driven away from his
-home and moved his family to different posts.</p>
-
-<p>The author had declared that he and the rebels could
-not both remain in the country together; that he would
-either rout them or they would have to rout him, and for
-that reason every man that remained in the country would
-have to aid him in the work. So, in every instance, when
-he would send a force in pursuit of those raiding bands, he
-would order the scout to follow them, and when they divided
-to still continue pursuit of the most visible trail, and
-when they came in sight to not take time to count noses,
-but charge them and pursue them until they were completely
-annihilated. They would go into camp and move<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
-at their leisure, but not so when my scouts got in pursuit
-of them. In a number of instances they would overtake
-them from twenty to twenty-five miles from the wire road,
-in camp, having a jolly good time, and the first intimation
-they would have would be the boys in blue charging in
-amongst them, shooting right and left, and they would
-scatter in all directions.</p>
-
-<p>It was but a short time until they remarked to some of
-the rebel sympathizers that they had never seen such a
-change in the movements of the Federal scouts; that they
-used to consider themselves safe from a Federal scout as
-soon as they left the main road and divided into small
-squads; but now they were in as much danger in the most
-secluded spot in the mountains as they were in the traveled
-roads; therefore, their commanders would have to change
-their tactics in regard to the scouts, and abandon that part
-of the country, as almost every scout that they had made
-to the wire road had proved disastrous since "Old Monks"
-had been placed in command of the post. In a short time,
-the Union men, who had been driven from the country,
-began to return and go onto their farms, and about five
-months after I had been placed in command of the post,
-the civil authorities came and held circuit court, Judge
-Waddle, of Springfield, then being circuit judge.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Skirmishes with the Rebels.</h3>
-
-<p>Some time in the summer, Col. Freeman, who was
-commanding the rebels in northeastern Arkansas, whose
-headquarters were near the Spring River mill, made a raid
-and threatened to capture the Federal forces that were then
-at the Licking post. I soon gained information of his intention,
-made every preparation to repel the attack, also
-informed the commander at Rolla of the intended raid.
-Col. Freeman, accompanied by other rebel commanders,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>
-concentrated all of the available rebel force then at his command,
-raided the country, came within about five miles of
-the post, learned that reinforcements had been sent to the
-post, countermarched and retreated to his headquarters near
-the head of Spring river.</p>
-
-<p>A regiment of Federal troops, known as the Fifteenth
-Veterans, was sent as a reinforcement, with a part of the
-Fifth Missouri State Militia that was then stationed at Salem,
-with orders to remain at the post. I received orders
-to organize all of the available troops and pursue the rebel
-forces, and, if possible, to reach the Spring River mill, in
-Fulton county, Arkansas, and destroy the mill, which
-Freeman was using at that time for grinding meal. The
-Federal force composing the scout, aggregating about three
-hundred and fifty men, moved from the post at Licking.
-The author divided his forces, ordering one wing of them
-to move through Spring Valley, in Texas county; the other
-wing to move directly in the direction of Thomasville, with
-orders to form a junction about seven miles from Thomasville,
-where there was a rebel force stationed. On reaching
-the Wallace farm, in Oregon county, we came onto a
-force of rebels, commanded by James Jamison, who had
-met for the purpose of receiving ammunition which had
-been smuggled through from Ironton. After an engagement,
-the rebels fled, leaving one man dead; James Jamison
-received a flesh wound in the thigh. The Federal
-force which had been ordered through Spring Valley had
-had an engagement near the head of the valley, which had
-delayed them. The plans of the author had been frustrated
-by coming in contact with the rebels sooner than he expected.
-As they had retreated in the direction of Thomasville,
-where the main force was said to be stationed, I continued
-my march, and in about one mile came onto a rebel
-camp, where the rebels had cabins erected for quarters;<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
-here another spirited engagement took place, the rebels
-retreating in the direction of Thomasville, the Federal
-forces still pursuing.</p>
-
-<p>Just above Thomasville the command encountered a
-strong picket force, fired upon the command, intending to
-halt it, but being satisfied that there was a trap laid I ordered
-a charge. The picket force retreated to the left, up a
-steep hill, and at once the whole rebel force opened fire
-from the side of the mountain; the bullets flew just above
-our heads like hail, one ball passing through my hat.
-We still continued the charge and on reaching the top of
-the hill, routed the whole rebel force and they again retreated.
-The author marched into Thomasville, selected
-his camping ground inside of Captain Olds' barn lot, giving
-us the advantage of the barn, in case we were attacked
-by a superior rebel force. I at once dispatched a forage
-train with strong escort to gather in all the forage
-possible, as it was very scarce in the country. After we
-had been in camp about an hour I inquired of Captain
-Olds if he knew of any corn. He said he did not. In
-about a half hour my attention was called by one of
-the captains pointing to a large smokehouse, and on
-looking, saw the soldiers taking down any amount of
-first-class corn. I informed the captain that Captain
-Olds had claimed that he had no corn; to take the quartermaster
-and let him place a guard over the corn, to
-see that it was not wasted, and that it was properly
-apportioned. In a short time the author saw Captain
-Olds coming. He went to one of the other captains
-and inquired who the commander was. He was informed
-that it was Capt. Monks. He came to the author
-laughing and remarked: "You found my corn, did
-you? I told you that I had none; I had to secrete
-it in that building to keep it so that the rebels<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
-could not find it." I just remarked to Captain Olds:
-"You needn't try to hide anything from these lopeared
-Dutch, for I don't care where you put it they will
-find it." The men who discovered the corn were all
-Germans and belonged to a German company. He asked
-us to feed just as sparingly as possible and leave him a
-part of the corn, which we did. He then attempted to
-warn the author of his danger and asked him if he
-intended to camp there for the night; said that Colonel
-Freeman had over one thousand men which he could concentrate
-within five or six hours and that he would
-cut the author's command all to pieces. The author
-replied to the captain that that was his business, that Freeman
-had come up on the scout and claimed that he was
-wanting a fight; the author prepared for him and expected
-to accommodate him but he changed his notion and retreated,
-devastating the country as he went, and now the
-author was hunting him and his forces and wanted to fight.
-If he came up that night and attacked the author's command
-that it would save any more trouble hunting him.</p>
-
-<p>Just about that time the author saw the other part of
-the command approaching and called the attention of
-Captain Olds and asked him if he thought that was a part
-of Freeman's command. After looking a few minutes he
-said to the author: "They are Federal troops." I
-asked him if he thought we would be able to remain there
-until morning? He said that he thought we would and
-invited me to come into his house and eat supper. While
-at supper asked if we intended to march any further south.
-The author informed him that if his information was correct
-in regard to Freeman's forces we were about as
-far away from home as we ought to get and that we had
-better move back in the direction of the post. The author
-ordered the command to be ready to march by early day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>light,
-next morning broke camp and moved in the direction
-of Spring river. On reaching the head of Warm
-fork of Spring river, we encountered another rebel force;
-had a short engagement, and they again retreated. On
-reaching the head of Spring river about the middle of the
-afternoon, we again met a rebel force; after considerable
-firing they retreated.</p>
-
-<p>The author moved up near the mill and went into
-camp. The mill was grinding corn with quite a lot of
-corn on hand, but the miller left and retreated with the
-rebels. The author soon placed a substitute in his place
-and the boys had a fine time baking corn cakes.</p>
-
-<p>After supper, some of the men had just retired to rest,
-when the rebels again made a fierce attack; after fighting
-for twenty or twenty-five minutes they retreated a short
-distance and went into camp, the river dividing the two
-forces. During the night the two pickets would dare each
-other to cross the river. During the night there came a
-heavy rain and made the Warm fork of Spring river swimming;
-there was no way to cross except on the mill dam.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning about daylight the author ordered
-them to take the millstones and break them up and destroy
-the machinery so it would be impossible to grind; dismounted
-about one hundred men, placed them in hiding
-and marched away a short distance, thinking the rebels
-would cross over and we would surprise and capture them.
-But on seeing the Federals break camp and marching up
-on the west side of the river, they broke camp and marched
-up on the east side of the river. The author then mounted
-his men and marched up the Warm fork to where he effected
-a crossing, marched about ten miles, went into camp for
-the purpose of getting breakfast. Just after breakfast, the
-author noticed the advance of a rebel force march out on
-another road; as soon as they discovered that the Federals<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
-were in camp, they fell back and the author at once
-mounted his men. On the other road, as there was a considerable
-hill that hid them from sight, he formed his men
-in two lines in a V; detailed a strong advance force, ordered
-them to move onto the rebels and charge them, and
-in case they found that they were too strong, to retreat
-back between the lines for the purpose of drawing the rebel
-forces in between the lines. After a fierce conflict, lasting
-but a few minutes, the rebels again retreated, leaving a
-rebel Major dead upon the ground. We then marched into
-Thomasville and had another running fight with the rebels,
-went into camp and the next morning marched back in the
-direction of the post at Licking, reaching the post about 10
-o'clock that night. The author again took command at
-the post and the Fifteenth Veterans returned to Rolla.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Ridding the Country of Bushwhackers.</h3>
-
-<p>It soon became very rare to hear of a rebel scout north
-of the mountain. Both rebel and Union men who claimed
-protection by the Federal authorities began to repair and
-improve their farms again. During the time that the
-author was in command of the post, which continued up to
-the time that peace was made, his command had routed
-and completely driven from the country all irregular and
-roving bands of rebels and bushwhackers and had had
-numbers of small engagements in which there had been
-from eighty to ninety of the most desperate class of men
-that ever lived, killed, which was shown in the adjutant
-general's report. After they had been driven out of the
-county, they located in the counties of Oregon, Shannon
-and Dent, and at once commenced pillaging and robbing
-all classes of citizens, irrespective of their political adherence.
-Col. Freeman sent a courier through the lines with
-a dispatch, stating the condition of affairs, and asking that<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
-an armistice be entered into between Col, Freeman's scouts
-and the scouts which might be sent out from the post, with
-an understanding that they were going to aid each other in
-routing and driving out these irregular bands.</p>
-
-<p>While engaged in that work they were not to fire on
-each other, but to co-operate. The author was to enter
-into the agreement if it could be effected. Col. Freeman
-sent Capt. Cook into Oregon and Shannon counties to locate
-those roving guerrilla bands, and in some way, unknown
-to either Col. Freeman or myself, they gained the
-information, and while Capt. Cook was in Oregon county
-locating them, they waylaid him and killed him. Col.
-Freeman, realizing the fact that they had come into possession
-of the whole scheme, came to the conclusion that we
-had better abandon the agreement. He organized scouts
-and captured and shot some of the most desperate characters
-that were leaders, while the author kept a vigilant
-watch to keep them from crossing over into Texas or adjoining
-counties. At the time peace was made, it was admitted
-by the law-abiding people, irrespective of party,
-that the command of Col. Monks had completely rid the
-country of all irregular bands of rebels and had made it
-safe, in a short time after he had taken command of the
-post, for forage trains and all other classes of citizens to
-pass on the wire road from Rolla to Springfield unmolested,
-and that very often they passed through without an escort.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Battle at Mammoth Spring.</h3>
-
-<p>Col. Wood, commanding the Sixth Missouri cavalry,
-left Rolla on the 7th day of March, 1862, with about two
-hundred and fifty men, for the purpose of making a scout
-south into the counties of Oregon and Howell and Fulton
-county, Arkansas, to ascertain the strength of the rebel
-forces in that portion of the country; reached Licking and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
-went into camp. The next morning he broke camp and
-marched to Jack's fork, in Shannon county, and on the
-morning of the 9th marched to Thomasville; on the 10th
-he marched to Mammoth Spring, Arkansas. On reaching
-Mammoth Spring they learned that there was a rebel force
-in camp on the south fork of Spring river, just below Salem,
-and on the morning of the 11th they broke camp and
-marched upon the rebels. On reaching the rebel encampment
-they found they had cut timber and blockaded the
-road, so that it was impossible to reach the forces, except
-on foot. In coming within a few hundred yards of the
-rebels, lying concealed behind the timbers, they opened
-fire upon the advance of the Federal forces. The Federal
-forces had two small pieces of artillery that they unlimbered
-and brought into use. The rebels having no artillery,
-were soon dislodged from the first line of works, and they
-stubbornly fell back about one quarter of a mile, and went
-in behind the second fortifications that had been hurriedly
-erected. After fighting for an hour and a half or two hours
-the Federal force being greatly outnumbered, and the rebels
-having themselves so obstructed, Col. Woods saw that
-it was useless to further continue the fight and retreated.
-On the next night he reached Howell Valley just below
-West Plains and went into camp and on the morning of
-the 13th they broke camp and marched in the direction of
-Houston, Missouri, reaching Houston sometime after night.
-The Federal loss in the battle referred to was seven killed
-and wounded. The Confederate loss was said to be
-twenty-five or thirty killed and wounded. Colonels Coleman
-and Woodside were commanding the Confederates.</p>
-
-<p>Col. Woods being in command of the post at Houston,
-learning that there was considerable of a rebel force, standing
-at West Plains, Missouri, under the command of Coleman
-and others, organized a scout and on the 24th day of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
-February, 1862, broke camp and marched in the direction
-of West Plains, for the purpose of attacking the rebel forces
-stationed at that place, taking two small mounted
-howitzers strapped on mules, made a forced march, and in
-the early part of the day on the 25th reached West Plains.
-West Plains had a frame court house in the center of the
-square where the present court house is located. The road at
-that time led due north where Washington avenue is located
-until it struck the hill; also there was a road which led east
-where East main street is now located and on passing what
-was known as the Thomas Howell farm, turned directly
-north in the direction of Gunters Valley. The rebels had
-a strong picket thrown out on both roads; a part of the
-rebel command was quartered in the court house. Woods
-being advised of the condition of the rebels and where
-they were all quartered, supposing that they would take
-advantage of the court house when the attack was made,
-selected a high position where the road first struck the
-hill, planted his artillery, divided his forces and made a
-flank movement, ordered them to strike the lower road and
-advance on the pickets and as soon as they were fired upon,
-to charge them, while he would remain with the other
-part of the force in readiness to dislodge them with his artillery
-in case they used the court house as a fortification.
-On the advance coming in sight of the rebel pickets, they
-fired and retreated with the Federal forces pursuing. The
-rebel forces at once rallied their forces and took possession
-of the courthouse. As soon as Col. Woods saw them file
-into the house he leveled his cannon and fired a shell which
-struck the house near its center and passed clear through;
-that was the first artillery that the rebel command ever had
-heard. They filed out of the house faster than they went
-into it; then Col. Woods moved with his forces directly upon
-the forces near the court house when a general engage<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>ment
-ensued. The rebels retreated west on the road near
-where West Main street is now located and a running fight
-was continued for about one mile, when Woods abandoned
-the pursuit, marched back into West Plains, and again returned
-to Houston. The losses on both sides were light,
-several, however, being killed or wounded.</p>
-
-
-<h3>"Uncle Tommy" and His Crutches.</h3>
-
-<p>I will relate an incident which occurred during the fight.
-Old "Uncle Tommy" Howell as he was familiarly known,
-resided just below the town spring a short distance from the
-road; he had a sister living with him who was an old maid,
-and was known as "Aunt Polly". Howell being one
-among the early settlers of Howell Valley, had taken an
-active part in organizing Howell county, which took its
-name from him and he had been once representative of the
-county. The author heard him relate the circumstance in
-a speech delivered in West Plains after the war was over.
-He said when the fight came up that he was sitting on his
-front porch: all at once he heard firing commence, and
-heard horses feet and saw the rebel pickets coming on full
-gallop horseback, with the Federals close onto them with
-pistols in hand firing on them; he had been afflicted with
-rheumatism for years and one of his legs was drawn crooked
-and he hadn't attempted to walk without a crutch for
-several years; when he saw the men coming and the others
-shooting at them, he supposed that every shot was killing
-a man; he said they came right by his door and he never
-became excited while they were passing; as soon as they
-got near the court house they then made a stand, where it
-appeared to him that there were thousands of shots being
-exchanged every minute. They had all passed his house
-and he was sitting there unmolested, when his sister, who
-was known as "Aunt Polly" ran out on the porch and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
-cried out at the top of her voice "Lord a massy, Uncle
-Tommy, run for your life; you have been a public man and
-they will kill you, sure." He said it so excited him
-that he sprang to his feet. All below his house the valley
-was covered with hazel brush and snow was lying on the
-ground. He first looked toward where the firing was
-going on and said "My God! they certainly have got
-them very near all killed in this time" for he was under
-the impression that every shot killed a man. He started
-southwest from his house, ran about a quarter of a mile,
-jumped over behind a log; he had hardly gotten still when
-he imagined he heard the horses feet of the Federals in pursuit
-of him; he raised up and looked, could not see any
-person, so ran about another quarter, jumped over behind
-another log and as soon as he got still, the first thought
-came into his mind that they were still in pursuit, for he
-could hear the horses' feet, but on reflecting a moment he
-found that it was his heart beating; he said he could still
-hear the firing and he thought they intended to kill them
-all before they quit. He had a son-in-law by the name of
-Hardin Brown living on the Warm fork of Spring river,
-about twenty miles distant, and he started on foot and
-never stopped traveling until he reached his house. On
-reaching the house, his daughter asked him how, in the
-name of God, he ever got there without his crutches. He
-said that was the first time that he had thought of his
-crutches. He began to notice his legs and the crooked leg
-was just as straight as the well leg. He said that it completely
-cured him of his rheumatism and he had the use of
-that leg just the same as he ever did the other leg, and
-never used a crutch afterwards. After the war he removed
-to Oregon county and was elected to the legislature, and
-died a member of the legislature.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Disposing of Union Men.</h3>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1862 there was a man by the name
-of Mawhinney, living about six miles below West Plains,
-in Howell valley, a Union man, but who had taken no part
-either way, except to express an opinion. About fifteen
-men belonging to a rebel scout went to his house, called
-for their dinners, some of them had him shoe their horses,
-and after they had their horses shod and got their dinner,
-they told him that they wanted him to go with them. His
-wife said to them "It ain't possible that after you have
-been treated as kindly as you have been you are going to
-take Mr. Mawhinney prisoner; you men certainly
-will not hurt him." They made no reply, carried him
-about one half mile from his home, shot him off of
-his horse, took the horse and went on, leaving the
-body on the side of the road. His wife with what other
-help she could get brought him in and had him buried.</p>
-
-<p>About two weeks afterwards, in the spring of 1862,
-there was a man by the name of Bacon who lived near West
-Plains, who has some relatives living in this county at the
-present time. He was a Union man but had taken no part
-either way, except to express himself openly in favor of
-the Union. There came a scout of about twenty men and
-arrested him, started west with him in the direction of
-South Fork, and on reaching the vicinity where Homeland
-is located, left the road a short distance, shot him off of his
-horse. Went on to a house about one mile distant, called
-for their dinner. The woman in preparing dinner fried
-some bacon; after they were seated at the table she passed
-the bacon to them; several of them remarked that they
-didn't want any, that they had had some bacon, but had
-just disposed of it a short time before they reached the house.
-After Bacon had laid where he fell dead for two or three
-days he was found and being considerably decomposed a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
-hole was dug and the body placed into it and covered up,
-where his dust remains until the present day.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Union Supplies Captured by Rebels.</h3>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1862, the department commander reestablished
-the military post at Springfield. All of the
-commissaries and forage had to be conveyed from Rolla to
-Springfield, as the terminus of the railroad was at Rolla,
-by wagon trains, a distance of one hundred and twenty
-miles. It required a large escort of soldiers to guard the
-trains to prevent the rebels from capturing them. All of
-the country south of the wire road was in possession of
-the rebels. There was scarcely a wagon train that passed
-on the road without being attacked by the rebels. They
-made their attacks generally on the front and rear of
-the trains, and before the wagon masters could corral the
-trains, they would capture some of the wagons, make the
-teamsters drive into the woods, cut the mules loose from
-the wagons, take sacks of coffee, salt, sugar and other
-commissaries, tie them on the backs of the mules, divide
-into small bunches and retreat into the hills. Very often
-the escort would have to send back to Rolla for reinforcements.
-The train would be tied up from twelve to fifteen
-hours before it could move on. It became a mystery to
-the Federal commanders how the Confederates could concentrate
-a force of men numbering from fifty to three hundred,
-and the first intimation the escort would have, they,
-the rebels, would come out of the brush at some secluded
-spot, yelling, whooping and shooting, and charge upon the
-wagon train. They would generally capture more or less
-of the loaded wagons with the above results, and it became
-a question with the military authorities at Rolla and Springfield
-how to capture or rout these bands, and as to how
-they managed to keep that number of men near to the wire<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
-road and yet the Federals were unable to discover their
-hiding places.</p>
-
-<p>About the 15th day of August, the department commander
-ordered Capt. Murphy to take five hundred men
-and two pieces of artillery and move south from Rolla; to
-go as far south as he thought it would be safe, without
-placing his men so far inside of the Confederate lines that
-they might be captured; and, if possible, to learn the rebel
-movements and location of their troops. Capt. Murphy
-broke camp at Rolla and moved south about fifteen miles,
-was fired on by the rebels from the brush, marched about
-twenty-five miles, went into camp; on the next morning
-resumed the march, hadn't marched more than five miles
-until they were fired on from the brush; they were fired
-on four or five times that day, and went into camp near
-Thomasville. The next day he threw out skirmish lines
-on each side of his command, and resumed the march down
-the Warm fork of Spring river. There was more or less
-skirmishing all day. He camped on the Warm fork and
-the next morning marched over to the Myatt, where we
-had quite a skirmish. The rebels again retreated in the
-direction of the Spring River mill, where they were said to
-have a thousand men.</p>
-
-<p>Here the command countermarched back to Rolla,
-having captured fifty or sixty prisoners; the Federals had
-a few men wounded.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1862, the Federal troops advanced
-on Springfield from Rolla. The rebels retreated west and
-the Federals again established a military post at Springfield.
-The rebels continued to retreat west until they
-reached Prairie Grove, where they concentrated their
-forces and the memorable battle of that name was fought,
-the Federal troops being victorious. The Confederates retreated
-from the state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The military post at Springfield being over one hundred
-miles west of Rolla, the terminus of the South Pacific railroad,
-three-fourths of the distance being in possession of
-the rebels, all the forage and commissaries had to be conveyed
-by wagon train. The main rebel forces having been
-driven from the state, and all of the country south of the
-wire road, with few exceptions, being in possession of the
-rebels, the Union men with their families having been
-driven from their homes. The leading Confederate officers
-met and held a council of war and decided to change their
-tactics. The first thing was to place two or three hundred
-well-armed Confederate soldiers south of and near
-the wire road leading from Rolla to Springfield, and so
-harass the wagon trains that the government wouldn't be
-able to get forage and commissaries through to Springfield,
-and thus force the Federals to abandon the post. In furtherance
-of this move, they ordered their soldiers to be
-taken near to the line of the road and divided into squads
-of from five to twenty-five men, conceal their arms and
-claim to be private citizens, live off the country and be so
-arranged that when a wagon train was about to leave Rolla,
-they could be called together on short notice; and when
-they wanted to make a more extensive raid, Confederate
-soldiers from as far south as the head of Spring river would
-march up and meet them and make a general raid.</p>
-
-<p>The government had considerable trouble to learn the
-hiding places of these men, but they finally got officers who
-were acquainted with the country and men who were bona
-fide citizens, and knew who were citizens and who were
-not, and broke up their hiding places and drove them further
-south. It was learned that a part of this Confederate
-force was composed of men who claimed to be citizens
-when they were not making their raids.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Bravery of Captain Alsup.</h3>
-
-<p>In the summer of 1863, the Federal authorities established
-a military post at Clark's mill, in Douglas county,
-Missouri, on Bryant's fork of White river, erected a post
-and stationed some Illinois troops under the command of a
-Colonel, with Capt. Alsup's company, which was composed
-entirely of Douglas county citizens, in all about two hundred
-and fifty or three hundred men. Gen. Joe Shelby, a
-Confederate, with about five hundred troops, made a forced
-march from Arkansas and during the night time surrounded
-the fort, and the next morning had his artillery in readiness
-to open fire. He ordered a complete surrender of the
-garrison. The captain of the fort asked for a few minutes
-to consider the matter; at the expiration of the time, the
-Colonel in command agreed to surrender, stack up the
-guns and side arms in the fort, march his men outside and
-make an unconditional surrender. When the commander
-of the fort ordered his men and officers to stack their arms
-and march out, Capt. Lock Alsup and his company refused,
-and being cavalry, ordered his men to arm themselves and
-be ready to move whenever he ordered. While the commander
-of the fort was having the remainder of the garrison
-stack their arms, Capt. Alsup and his company made a
-bold dash for liberty, came out of the fort shooting right
-and left, took the rebels by surprise, broke the rebel line,
-went through, being mounted on good horses, retreated up
-Bryant's fork with the rebels in pursuit. While going
-through an old field that had grown up to burrs about as
-high as a man's head, Fritz Krause, father of the assistant
-postmaster at West Plains, was thrown from his horse,
-rolled under the burrs, the rebels passed by and never saw
-him. He laid in the burrs until dark, then made his escape
-and rejoined his company at Springfield. The rebels
-pursued them for about two miles, then returned to their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>
-command. Gen. Shelby paroled the prisoners, and such
-things as he could not carry with him he destroyed, the
-fort being burned. He resumed his march in the direction
-of Springfield and was reinforced by about five hundred
-troops. During this time, Capt. Alsup and his men had
-reached Springfield and, strange to say, hadn't lost a man;
-had a few slightly wounded. Gen. Brown, who was in
-command of the post at Springfield, was said to be a
-brother-in-law of Gen. Shelby, and on Shelby's arrival at
-Springfield he demanded the surrender of the garrison.
-The Federal troops held a consultation and concluded to
-fight. After a brief engagement, Gen. Shelby drew his
-troops off and moved north; there were several killed and
-wounded on both sides. Gen. Brown's arm was broken
-by a piece from a shell. Gen. Shelby continued his raid
-towards the Missouri river, had several small engagements
-and then retreated from the state. Capt. Alsup and his
-brave men should be held in memory by all comrades, especially
-by the loyal people of Douglas and Ozark counties,
-for their heroic action in charging through the rebel lines
-and making their escape after the post commander had attempted
-to deliver them into the hands of the rebels.</p>
-
-<p>The fort at Clark's mill was never rebuilt. Capt. Alsup
-and the loyal men of Douglas and Ozark counties and
-part of Wright county built a temporary fort near the center
-of Douglas county, and old and young organized themselves
-into companies and armed themselves. With the
-help of Capt. Alsup's company, they appointed a few of their
-men as scouts, while the others worked in their fields.
-The scouts were out night and day along the state line and
-if a rebel scout attempted to raid the counties, notice was
-given all along the line and the men were all up in arms
-and ready to meet the raiders. It reminds one of reading
-the history of the early settlements along the Indian bor<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>der.
-The settlers would build forts and put out sentinels;
-if the Indians were seen advancing, word was given and
-the families would hurry to the fort and the men arm themselves
-to drive the invaders back. So this organization,
-with some assistance from the post at Springfield, held
-Douglas and a part of Ozark and Wright counties during
-the remainder of the Civil War, and after the war was
-over, Douglas county gained the title of "Old Loyal Douglas
-County." These old soldiers and comrades are fast
-falling and very soon there will be none left to tell of the
-heroisms and sacrifices they made for the country they
-loved. Will these comrades and their sons and daughters
-be so ungrateful that they will let their heroism and sacrifices
-die with them and be forgotten, never to be written in
-history? The answer will be no, a thousand times no.
-The history of their heroism and sacrifices shall be written
-and go down to their children and their children's children,
-and may "Old Glory" ever wave over the country that they
-love so well and for which they made so many sacrifices.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Bushwhacking in Howell County.</h3>
-
-<p>The writer wants to say that there was not a Union
-man nor a single Union family left at home, from Batesville,
-Ark. to Rolla, Mo., a distance of two-hundred miles. The
-writer especially wants to speak for Howell County, Mo.
-The rebels took quite a number of Union men from their
-homes and shot them, some of them being old men. I
-will name a few of them that were shot: Morton R. Langston,
-the father of T. J. and S. J. Langston, while he was
-hauling wood; Jeff Langston, one of the firm of Langston
-Bros, was riding on the wood at the time his father was
-shot. I asked a leading rebel after the war, why they shot
-Langston. His reply was: "He talked too much." Shot
-Mawhinney, Bacon and a number of others. Now I want<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>
-to say right here, notwithstanding the treatment the Union
-men received from the rebels, not a single Confederate
-was ever taken from his home and shot or otherwise injured
-during the whole Civil War and no truthful Confederate
-will say to the contrary. There never was but one
-Confederate hurt after being taken prisoner in Howell
-County and he wasn't a citizen of Howell County; was
-said to be a north Missouri bushwhacker, charged with
-being one of the parties that shot old Mr. Langston, Mawhinney
-and Bacon. A Federal scout in the year 1864
-captured him below West Plains and the next morning
-they hung him to a smokehouse rafter. Notwithstanding
-a few of the friends of the bushwackers will tell to
-strangers that the writer shot a man in this county, by
-the name of Hawkins, in the lap of his family, which is a
-positive lie; the facts are these; Hawkins was one of the
-worst bushwhackers and murderers that ever lived in
-Howell County and was commanding a company of bushwackers
-at the time he was shot. A short time before
-he was shot he had captured one of his cousins, by the
-name of Washington Hawkins, a Federal soldier, and taken
-from him a fine mare with his saddle and rig complete.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1864, a battalion of the 11th Missouri
-Cavalry, commanded by Col. Woods, had been
-ordered to report to Col. Livingston at Batesville, Ark.
-The writer had been ordered to report at Rolla, Mo., with
-his command. Col. Woods had camped near West Plains
-the previous night, the next morning resumed his march
-towards Batesville; after he had passed West Plains a few
-miles, Hawkins and his bushwhackers fired on them from
-the brush and they continued to fire on them every few
-miles for sixteen miles. Our force met the force of Col.
-Woods at the state line where Col. Woods informed me
-how they had been firing upon his men all morning. He<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>
-had taken a man prisoner by the name of William Krause,
-whom he turned over to me. Both forces resumed the
-march, he in the direction of Batesville, Ark., and I in the
-direction of Rolla, Mo. The prisoner told the writer that
-he knew the parties who had been firing on Col. Woods'
-command; that they had a camp by a pond in a secluded
-place, and were commanded by Hawkins and Yates; that
-it was about four miles almost west. I told Krause if he
-would place me on trail he could then go home. He
-did so and I then released him. Krause said there were
-about fifty rebels in the command.</p>
-
-<p>We trailed them about two miles and came in sight
-of a house that belonged to old Mr. Newberry, a Union
-man. He and his family had been run off from home.
-I saw a horse hitched to the side of the door, and supposed
-there were more inside of the house; there was a skirt
-of timber that enabled us to get within about sixty yards of
-the house. I ordered my men, when we reached a given
-point, to charge upon the house, dismount and reach the
-wall of the house and demand the surrender of all persons
-that might be within. We were about fifteen feet from
-the door when Hawkins came out and attempted to mount
-his horse. The author demanded his surrender, but he
-drew his pistol to fire, the author having his pistol already
-in hand and presented, fired on him; the author was sitting
-in his saddle when he fired on him.</p>
-
-<p>The men examined the house and found he was the
-only man in it. The horse he was riding was the one he
-had taken from his cousin, Washington Hawkins, a short
-time previous, with a government rig complete. Washington
-Hawkins resided at Bakersfield, Mo., and got his horse
-and rig again. We took the trail again, but dark came on us
-and we lost it. These are the facts surrounding the whole
-case, the killing of Hawkins, one of the worst bandits and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>
-guerrillas that ever roamed through South Missouri and led
-the worst band of men in the state. I had previously taken
-him prisoner and he took the oath of allegiance, went
-right back and joined his command and, if possible, he
-was worse than before. I must say that there are few men
-in Howell county that claim to be Confederates, who
-tell strangers that Monks shot Hawkins down in the lap
-of his family and that he, Hawkins, was a good man.
-The writer wants to say that no truthful Confederate will
-tell any such a thing; they will tell you that Hawkins
-was a bad man. Ask such Confederates as Capt. Howard,
-Mark Cooper, Judge Dryer, John Ledsinger, Harvey
-Kelow, Daniel Galloway, P. N. Gulley and a number of
-others, if Hawkins was a good man.</p>
-
-<p>The writer wants to say that he don't believe all the
-Confederates were in favor of killing and driving out
-the families of Union men, but the most bitter element
-got in power and being backed by the order of Gen.
-McBride, to force all the Union men to join the Confederate
-service, or hang them, those Confederates who
-were opposed to such treatment were afraid to open
-their mouths for fear they would receive the same treatment.
-You don't hear these same men, that talked about
-Monks shooting Hawkins, say a word about Hawkins
-and his bushwhackers shooting Union men all over Howell
-county. There never were but two houses burned in
-Howell county by the Union men during the Civil war,
-and houses owned by these men had been previously
-burned by the Confederates. The town of West Plains
-was burned by the Confederates to keep the Federals
-from holding a post at West Plains.</p>
-
-<p>The writer wants to say that on his return after the
-war, in the spring of 1866, he met the rebels, both those that
-had been officers and soldiers, and never spoke a harsh<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>
-word to them, asked them if they thought both parties
-could now live together; their answer was, that they
-thought they could. All that they asked was that
-they be protected. The writer assured them that both
-Federal and Confederates would be protected by the civil
-laws and all they would be asked to do would be to aid
-in a strict enforcement of civil laws, which they readily
-promised to do. The Union men who had returned to
-their homes and the late Confederates joined together
-and went to building and repairing old church houses and
-school-houses and soon were found worshiping together
-in the same church and sending their children to the
-same school-houses and the old ties that had existed before
-the war were being re-united. The country appeared
-to be prosperous and the old war spirit appeared to
-be fast dying out among the people.</p>
-
-<p>I suppose the writer holds more commissions than
-any other man in the state, both military and civil and
-there never was a charge preferred against the writer of any
-failure to discharge his duties by the government or
-state. While in the military service thousands of dollars
-passed through the hands of the writer for forage
-and commissaries and ordinance stores and clothing,
-every dollar was accounted for and all contraband property
-was turned over to the government. I never converted,
-to my own private use, five cents of any man's
-property or money, before or after the war, in the war,
-nor since the war.</p>
-
-<p>The writer is now residing within about twenty-five
-miles of where his father located in the year 1844 and
-there are several persons yet living that have been intimately
-acquainted with the writer since his boyhood up
-to the present time, namely James Kellett, Sr., Marion
-Kellett, present county treasury of Howell county, Wash<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>ington
-Hawkins of Bakersfield, Mo., and quite a number
-of others that have been acquainted with the writer
-from forty to fifty years. The writer wants to say right
-here that he is not ashamed of anything he did before
-the war, in the war, nor since the war, and on his return
-home to Howell county on meeting the late rebels;
-he never spoke a harsh word to one of them, but received
-them kindly and said to them that the civil laws
-should be strictly enforced against all alike, Confederate
-and Federal.</p>
-
-<p>In the year 1861, sometime in the month of September,
-after the Federals retreated from Springfield, Mo. and the
-Confederates had taken possession of Springfield, there was
-one Capt. Brixey who was captain of a company of home
-guards residing in the edge of Webster County, Mo.; soon
-after the Confederates took possession of the post, they
-ordered a captain belonging to a Texas regiment to detail
-one company and proceed to the residence of Capt. Brixey
-and arrest him. Capt. Brixey having no notice of the
-approach of the scouts, he and one of his men were sitting
-in the house; the first they knew they had a line within
-thirty yards of his door, hailed them and presented their
-guns and demanded their surrender. Capt. Brixey said,
-"The &mdash;&mdash; you say." Both parties fired on each other
-about the same time, the man with Brixey fell dead,
-Brixey shot and killed the Confederate captain and wounded
-one or two other Confederates; he retreated through his
-house and into his orchard and made his escape; one of
-his arms was broken by the shot from the rebels from
-which he entirely recovered and lived many years afterwards,
-and has a son residing in this county at the present
-time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Colonel Freeman's Second Raid.</h3>
-
-<p>Sometime in the Spring of 1862 Col. Freeman, not being
-satisfied with his first raid on the Federal troops at
-Salem, planned the second raid to attack the troops then
-stationed at Salem, Missouri; he organized his scout and
-compelled one Robert Bolin, who now resides in Howell
-County, to pilot him through the lines, as he, Bolin, had
-lived near Salem before the war. On reaching Salem, Col.
-Freeman halted his troops and planned his attack.</p>
-
-<p>The Federal troops had no knowledge of the approach
-of any rebel forces; they were in squads around Salem.
-Freeman divided his forces and gave them a countersign
-and selected a spot near a deep ditch in the road and instructed
-them, if they were defeated and got scattered to
-concentrate at that ditch which was beyond the Federal
-lines a distance of some miles; on reaching the ditch
-they were to remain until they all were collected. After
-the first ones reached the place, it being dark, if they saw
-others approaching they would halt them and demand the
-countersign, and if they couldn't give it they were to fire on
-them without any further delay, knowing they were enemies.
-On reaching the public square they encountered a
-bunch of the Federal troops in a building; fired on them,
-wounded a few, a man by the name of Jacob Shoffler now
-residing in Howell County was in the house at the time,
-and they cut his clothes in about twenty different places
-with bullets and never drew blood; Maj. Santee was commanding,
-with one other officer. After they had rallied,
-all being in disorder, Maj. Santee ordered a charge on the
-rebels. Armed with an old pistol he met Col. Freeman of
-the Confederate side. Freeman had just shot out; Maj.
-Santee ordered his surrender. Col. Freeman started to
-run, Maj. Santee in close pursuit, snapped his old pistol,
-which failed to fire. He then threw the pistol at Col.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
-Freeman, struck him somewhere between the shoulders,
-drew his sabre, and still continued the pursuit. There
-was a creek near by and a stone fence had been built along
-the side of it; the creek had been frozen over and a skiff
-of snow on it at the time. Just as Freeman reached the
-stone fence Maj. Santee made a thrust at him with his
-sabre, inflicting a slight wound; about that time, for the
-purpose of escaping, Col. Freeman sprang over the stone
-fence and lit into the creek. Maj. Santee, being on
-horseback, could not pursue any further. The rebels by
-this time were scattered in all directions, started to retreat.
-It being very dark, the first ones fifty or sixty in number
-reached the ditch, halted to wait for the remainder of them
-to collect. In a short time about thirty or forty more of
-them appeared in sight, retreating with considerable speed;
-they were halted, the countersign demanded. They had
-become so excited in the fight they had forgotten the
-countersign and failed to give it. So those who arrived
-first opened fire and wounded several of them, scattering
-them to the woods. They failed to concentrate until they
-had retreated south about 30 miles where they learned of
-the mistake they had made and that they had fired upon
-their own men. Maj. Santee being of the opinion that he
-had seriously wounded Freeman with his sabre, concluded
-to investigate. On reaching the stone fence where he made
-his leap they looked over into the creek on the ice and
-(Col. Freeman being a large man) it looked like a large ox
-had been thrown over from the hole that he made in the
-ice. They saw that he had crossed the creek and reached
-the other side and saw no signs of blood. In the engagement
-there were about five or six wounded and killed.</p>
-
-<p>In the summer of 1863 there was a Federal scout organized
-at Springfield, commanded by Col. Holland. It
-was ordered to move by way of Douglas county, get rein<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>forcements
-then stationed at the fort, and from there march
-through the county of Ozark. They entered the county of
-Fulton, Ark., where they had several small engagements.
-After considerable fighting and capturing a number of prisoners,
-they returned to Springfield; loss, killed and
-wounded, very small.</p>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1863, Col. Tracy, with a force of rebels,
-made a raid from Fulton county, marched up through
-Ozark county, and on reaching the Union settlement in
-Douglas county, he shot and killed nearly every man he
-captured, robbed houses, took everything in the house and
-out of doors, and burned the houses as he went. After
-raiding and pillaging a number of houses, he came to a
-house where a Union man by the name of Mahan and one
-by the name of McCarty were working in the blacksmith
-shop, with their arms near them. They were members of
-the home guard. The rebels demanded the surrender of
-the two men, and as it was generally believed that if a man
-surrendered to those irregular forces that it was sure death,
-they refused to surrender. When the forces of Col. Tracy
-commenced firing through the cracks of the shop, the men
-returned the fire. Mahan killed one rebel, and they
-wounded two or three others. The rebels shot McCarty
-down, shooting him eight or ten times after he fell, knocked
-the door down and rushed upon Mahan, disarmed him, took
-him prisoner and then continued their retreat. After reaching
-Fulton county, near the bayou, they took Mahan into
-the woods, stripped him naked and shot him, leaving his
-body lying on the ground unburied. Strange to say, in
-regard to McCarty, after he had been shot eight or ten
-times and left for dead, he recovered from the wounds and
-became hearty and stout.</p>
-
-<p>Some time in the early part of the spring of 1864, a
-man by the name of Mahan deserted from the 11th Missouri<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
-cavalry, stationed at Batesville, and on reaching Howell
-county, about two miles from where Valley Star school
-house is now located, a bunch of bushwhackers commanded
-by B. F. Hawkins and Thomas Yates captured him,
-took him into the woods a short distance, stripped him
-naked and shot him, leaving his body lying on the ground,
-unburied. After he had lain there nearly a week, a man
-now residing in Howell county took a hoe and shovel and
-raked up some rocks and pitched them upon the decomposed
-body and threw a few shovels of dirt on him. As it
-was but a short distance from the road, the stench from the
-decomposing body was offensive to persons who traveled
-by.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Col. Monks Enforces the Civil Law.</h3>
-
-<p>In the month of July, 1865, the author was ordered to
-declare the civil law in force in the counties of Texas, Dent,
-Shannon, Oregon, Howell, Ozark and Douglas and report
-to his regiment again at Springfield for the purpose of being
-discharged. The long-looked-for and final result of the
-war had come with victory couched upon every man who
-had borne his flag to the breeze of his country, and to those
-who had lain themselves on the altar of their country and
-died that it might live.</p>
-
-<p>There was general rejoicing among the loyal people,
-that there was not a foot of territory on American soil but
-where the stars and stripes once more floated unmolested,
-either by foreign or domestic enemies, and while the Confederates
-had fought manfully for what they conceived to
-be right, and had laid many of their sons on the altar and
-sacrificed them to a cause that they believed to be right,
-yet a large majority of them rejoiced when they learned
-that the cruel war was over. Although their cause was
-forever lost, yet the country that they had loved so well
-and the flag still floated and invited them back as erring sons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The 16th regiment, with a large number of other regiments,
-was discharged at Springfield. Then a scene ensued
-that Americans had never witnessed before; the blue
-and the grey began to meet and greet each other as friends
-and seemed to forget that just a few months previous they
-had been meeting each other armed, for the purpose of
-slaying one another. A general amnesty proclamation had
-been granted by Gen. Grant to all the rebels who had surrendered.
-Their officers and commanders should discharge
-them and they should be allowed to retain their side arms
-for their own protection and return home for the purpose
-of again building up and establishing their homes; again
-meet their wives, their children, fathers and mothers,
-neighbors and friends, and once more be united in all the
-ties of love; to again reinstate churches, and instead of
-studying and practicing the art of war, they should beat
-their swords into pruning hooks and aid in establishing and
-building up society and good government.</p>
-
-<p>But, lo! one of the most sad and heartrending scenes
-confronted many Confederates and Federals on returning to
-the places where they had once had happy homes and
-sweet families, they were not found. During the terrible
-war, many of the loved ones that they had left behind had
-been called from time to eternity. The home had disappeared
-and nothing was left but the soil; all of the improvements
-being entirely destroyed. But they, with the
-courage of heroes, gathered the fragments of their families,
-went to work improving and building houses, refencing
-their farms, reerecting church houses and school houses,
-and in a short time the men who had lately been enemies
-and borne arms against each other, were again neighbors
-and friends, associating together, sending their children to
-the same school, becoming members of the same church;
-all experienced the difference between a civil war and peace<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
-and fraternity. Many of them expressed themselves that
-they had read of civil wars, but never realized the effect of
-civil war until after they had passed through the present
-one: but they could not understand why they called it
-"civil" war, for if there was anything civil about the war
-they never experienced that part of it.</p>
-
-<p>The author's family had been residing at Rolla during
-most of the time of the war. He commenced making preparations
-to return to his home in Howell county in the fall
-of 1865. He began to organize an immigration party of
-men who wanted to locate in Howell county and a number
-of men who had left their homes in that county. Just a
-short time before the parties were ready to leave Rolla for
-Howell county, he was met by several men who asked:
-"Why, Monks, ain't you afraid to go back to Howell county?
-You have fought the rebels so bitterly and contested
-every inch of ground during the whole war, and some of
-them hate you so badly, that I would be afraid that they
-would kill me." The author replied that he felt like Gen.
-Putnam, when the British attempted to bribe him and said
-that the colonies never could succeed in gaining their independence,
-and that he had better return and renew his
-allegiance to the Crown. The General's reply was, "D&mdash;n
-a man that is not for his country." Now, my reply to you
-is, that I have forfeited almost all of my means and shattered
-the happiness of my family in contending and fighting
-for the preservation of the government; besides, myself
-and family have been exiled and banished from our
-home, and if the rebels had succeeded, all would have been
-gone. But now the government has been victorious in
-crushing the rebellion, liberty and protection have been once
-more guaranteed to every citizen, high or low, rich or poor,
-and, in the language of Gen. Putnam, I say, "D&mdash;n a man
-that is afraid to go back and enjoy the fruits of his victory."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Within a few days about twenty-five families left Rolla
-for West Plains, and on arriving at West Plains, went
-into camp. There was not a single building left in West
-Plains, as the Confederates had burned the whole town in
-time of the war, with the exception of one store building,
-which was burned by the Federal troops. The Confederates'
-object in burning the town was to prevent the Federals
-from establishing a post. The author procured some
-clapboards, built an addition to an old stable about two
-hundred yards south of where James' livery stable is now
-located.</p>
-
-<p>Soon after we had reached West Plains and gone into
-camp, Capt. Howard, Capt. Nicks and a number of other
-rebels who were residing in the county, came in, met the
-author and said to him: "Captain. I am proud to meet
-you." The author replied, "I am proud to meet you.
-What do think now in regard to the two parties living together?"
-They said that they were satisfied that both parties
-could live together, that all they wanted was protection.
-The author remarked that the rebels had been in control of
-the country for several years, but the loyal men were going
-to take charge of it and run it now, and as the loyal
-men had been contending for the enforcement of the law
-and claimed that every American citizen was entitled to
-the protection of the law, the author could promise them
-that, if they would fall into line and help enforce the law,
-they should receive equal protection with any other class
-of citizens; to which they replied that they were willing to
-do so, but there were roving bands of rebels and guerrillas
-which had not been subject to the control of the Confederate
-authorities, and still refused to lay down their arms,
-and might yet cause some trouble.</p>
-
-<p>The author was appointed sheriff of Howell county,
-W. Z. Buck circuit and county clerk and Peter Lem<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>ons,
-Judge Alsup and &mdash;&mdash; were appointed county judges.
-There had been an old school house about a quarter of a
-mile east of West Plains that was still standing. They
-met at that school house, organized and set the civil government
-of the county in working order. Soon after, Governor
-Fletcher ordered an election and the author was
-elected to the state legislature, tendered his resignation as
-sheriff, which was accepted and W. D. Mustion was appointed
-to the vacancy. In a few weeks the author went
-to Jefferson City, tendered his credentials and was sworn
-in and became a member of the legislature.</p>
-
-<p>Everything, so far as Howell county was concerned,
-appeared to move off quietly, while the counties of Oregon
-and Shannon, with a few of the border counties, were entirely
-controlled by irregular bands of late rebels, who
-openly declared that the civil law should not be enforced
-in those counties; that the Confederacy was whipped, but
-they were not and they intended to live off the government;
-they were armed to the teeth.</p>
-
-<p>During the winter of 1865 and the year 1866, Howell
-county settled up faster than ever it had at any period before
-the war; the men who had homes in it and had been
-forced away on account of the war, mostly returned and
-commenced to improve their farms. Their houses, outhouses
-and improvements, generally, having been destroyed,
-the soil was the only thing left. The town also built up
-rapidly and in the year 1866 the inhabitants had increased
-to six or eight hundred.</p>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1866 at the general election the author
-was re-elected to the legislature and Capt. Alley, who
-had been a Confederate all through the war, was elected
-to the legislature from Oregon county. The author again
-qualified and was present in the legislature during the
-whole time, when the great question was brought up be<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>fore
-the legislature, as to what disposition the State would
-make of the first liens held by the state on the different
-railroads for aid that had been given to the railroad
-corporations in the way of state bonds in 1850. In 1855
-the state issued her bonds, delivered them to the companies
-and they went east and put them upon the market
-in New York and Boston to procure money to construct
-roads, and the bonds with all the accruing interest, were
-due the state.</p>
-
-<p>Then for the first time the author learned that many
-of the men who had been selected to represent the people's
-interest in the State Legislature, failed to discharge
-the duties that their constituents had imposed upon them,
-betrayed their trust, and, through money, were entirely
-controlled in the interest of the railroad corporations. The
-author believing that it was one among the greatest duties
-that were imposed upon men of a representative government,
-to strictly contend and do all in his power to enact
-legislation in the interest of the people, therefore took a
-strong stand in favor of closing out all of the state liens
-against the different roads, held by the state. During the
-session of the winter of 1866 what was then known as the
-South Missouri Pacific, which terminated at Rolla, Missouri,
-was ordered to be closed out and the road declared
-forfeited. A resolution passed through both houses of the
-legislature ordering the Governor to seize it, and that said
-road be run by the state. In the meantime the Governor
-was to advertise and sell it. The Governor by authority
-of law advertised it and sold it for $550,000. Sometime in
-April the legislature adjourned, to meet in an adjourned
-session in December, 1867. The author returned home.</p>
-
-<p>The immigration into the country rapidly increasing,
-prosperity appeared to be on every side; people had
-plenty of money, good crops, wheat was worth $1 to $1.50<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span>
-per bushel, stock of all kinds brought first-class prices,
-peace so far as Howell county was concerned, prosperity
-and the bettering of the condition of society were moving
-hand in hand, and the author felt thankful that the war
-was over.</p>
-
-
-<h3>Outlaw Rule in Oregon and Shannon.</h3>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1867, the counties of Oregon and Shannon,
-were still controlled by those roving bands of outlaws
-who ruled the counties with an iron hand. A despotism,
-unequalled at any stage of the war, existed there. There
-was a public gathering in the fall of 1867 in Thomasville.
-Col. Jamison, one of the leaders of these outlawed
-bands rode into town at the head of about fifty men, well
-armed, shot two men's brains out, paraded the streets and
-swore that any man that attempted to enforce the civil law
-against them, would fare the same; rode out unmolested
-and there was not a single attempt made by the civil authorities
-to arrest one of them. In a few days Jamison with
-some of his men rode into town and a man by the name of
-Philip Arbogast, the father-in-law of Mr. Hill, one of the
-firm of Hill-Whitmire Mercantile Co., now doing business
-in West Plains, who had been a Confederate all
-through the war, remarked in the hearing of Jamison,
-that the war was over, and he believed that the civil law
-ought to be enforced. Jamison at once dismounted, cocked
-his pistol, approached Arbogast and commenced punching
-him with the muzzle of it until he inflicted some wounds
-remarking to him that if he ever heard of him uttering a
-word again in favor of the civil law being enforced that he
-would hunt him up and shoot his brains out.</p>
-
-<p>Some time previous to that occurrence, two men who
-had been discharged from the Federal army and had once
-resided in Oregon county, came into the county to look at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
-their old homes. Col. Jamison, with about forty men, arrested
-them, took them to the house of the sheriff, informed
-the sheriff that no "Feds" could ever reside in Oregon
-county, and no damn Black Republicans could ever cast a
-vote at any election that was held in the county; that they
-were going to make an example of the men, that others
-might take warning; that they were going to take them out
-far enough away that their stench would not annoy good
-Confederates. Accordingly, they started from the house,
-took them about one-half mile, stripped them naked, shot
-them to pieces, returned to the sheriff's house with the
-clothing, which was the uniform they had worn in the service,
-horse and mule and saddles which they had been riding;
-gave the mule to the sheriff, took the horse with
-them, published what they had done, and said that those
-men shouldn't be buried and that if any Confederate buried
-them, they would share the same fate.</p>
-
-<p>Capt. Alley, who had been a Confederate all through
-the war, but was an honest man and wanted to see the law
-enforced, informed Governor Fletcher of the condition of
-the county. Governor Fletcher at once appointed him an
-enrolling officer, ordering him to enroll and organize the
-county into militia companies, to form a posse-comitatus to
-aid the sheriff in enforcing the law. As soon as he received
-his commission, he rode into the different townships, put
-up his notices requesting the people to meet him for the
-purpose of enrolling. Jamison, with about forty men, rode
-into the township where his first meeting was to be, posted
-another written notice on the same tree, the purport of
-which was that if Capt. Alley, the old, white-headed
-scoundrel, appeared on the day to carry out the orders of
-the Governor, he would meet him and shoot his old head
-off his shoulders. Alley, being satisfied that he would
-carry out his threat, went to the place before daylight and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
-concealed himself nearby. About 10 o'clock on the day
-appointed, Jamison and about forty followers came charging
-in on their horses, revolvers in hand, cursing and declaring
-that they would like to see the old white-headed
-scoundrel put in an appearance so they could make an example
-of him; that they didn't intend to let any man enforce
-the law against them. As soon as they retired Alley
-returned home and wrote to the Governor again, stating
-the acts, conduct and threats that Jamison had openly
-made, and that troops would have to be sent into the counties
-to aid him and others in organizing, so the civil law
-could be enforced. He asked the Governor to appoint
-Capt. Monks to command the troops which he might send.</p>
-
-<p>The author received a letter from the Governor informing
-him of the condition; also stated in the letter that
-while Howell county was peaceable and law abiding,
-that her citizens were not safe, by any means, while such
-a desperate band of outlaws were right at their very door,
-bidding defiance to the civil law, committing all manner of
-crimes from murder down and begging the author to consent
-to his being appointed Major of State troops; that he
-would make an order for the author to organize the men
-in the county of Howell and include Howell county in his
-order, declaring them to be under martial law especially
-when it had been requested by Capt. Alley, who had been
-a life-long Confederate. The author took the matter
-under advisement, and as Jamison, with his band of men,
-had threatened time and again to raid Howell county and
-kill the author with other Union men, he decided to give
-his consent to the Governor, wrote him while he reluctantly
-would consent to accept the appointment he had thought
-that he had discharged his duty in the late war and would
-not be required to take part in any further military operation.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Colonel Monks Commissioned by the Governor.</h3>
-
-<p>The governor at once appointed and commissioned the
-author Major of state troops and ordered him to at once
-proceed and organize a company of militia, and at the same
-time sent one hundred Springfield rifles and one hundred
-rounds of amunition for each gun. And soon as it was
-organized, he was to proceed to Oregon county, for the
-purpose of aiding and supporting Captain Alley who had
-been appointed enrolling officer of Oregon county, to enroll
-and form companies for the purpose of aiding the
-sheriff in enforcing the civil law. He was to pursue, arrest
-and drive out those roving bands of murderers from
-the counties of Oregon, Shannon and Dent. The author
-at once organized a company in Howell county, composed
-of men who had been in the Confederate and Federal
-service. On Jamison and others in Oregon county
-learning that the author had been appointed Major and that
-he was organizing, and the state was arming the men
-with orders to enter the counties of Oregon, Shannon
-and Dent to drive out the murdering bands and aid
-Captain Alley in organizing a posse comitatus to aid the
-sheriff in enforcing the civil law, they publicly declared
-that "old Monks might get into Oregon county but that
-he would never get out alive."</p>
-
-<p>At that time there was a secret order in the counties of
-Oregon and Shannon known as the Sons of Liberty. The
-author was informed that on a certain night they would
-hold a meeting on Warm fork of Spring river. The author
-made a forced march and, on reaching the place where
-they had assembled, surrounded the house and took all the
-inmates prisoners, among them being the sheriff of the
-county and a few other prominent men. The next morning
-Capt. Alley met the author, put up his notices ordering
-every man to come in and enroll his name. The auth<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>or
-remained over the next day near the place, got in possession
-of their papers, with a secret oath placed upon
-them, and the aims and objects, binding themselves together
-to prevent the enforcement of the civil law, and further
-binding themselves to capture or take property from
-any man who had been in the Federal army, and, when it
-became necessary to enforce it, to shoot men down. They
-claimed to have lawyers connected with it, so that if they
-should be arrested they were to make a pretense of a trial
-and allow no man to go onto the jury except those who belonged
-to the order.</p>
-
-<p>Capt. Greer, who had been a Captain in the Confederate
-service all through the war, and afterwards was elected
-to the state legislature, remarked that, "I can soon tell
-whether those grips, obligations and oaths were in the organization
-known as the Sons of Liberty;" said that "Old
-Uncle Dickey" Boles, a short time previous, came to him
-and informed him that the Sons of Liberty were going to
-hold a meeting in a big sink on the mountain and they
-wanted him to come and join it; that he was looked upon
-as a business man and he didn't know anything about what
-was going on right at his door; that if he would come and
-join it, in a few years he would be a rich man. Capt.
-Greer said he replied to him, "Uncle Dickey, I have always
-been an honest man and have worked hard, and if a
-man can get rich in two or three years by joining that order,
-there must be something dishonest in it." Old Uncle
-Dickey replied: "You won't be in a bit of danger in
-joining it, for we are so organized that the civil law can't
-reach us." Capt. Greer said he had a son-in-law who was
-requested, at the same time he was, to attend the meeting,
-and that after the meeting he saw him and asked him what
-kind of an organization it was. He said his brother-in-law
-told him, "I dare not tell you; I took the bitterest oath<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>
-that I have ever taken in my life not to reveal the workings
-of the order on penalty of death. But I will tell you
-enough; Captain, I know that you are an honest man and
-that that organization is a damn jay-hawking institution,
-and you want nothing to do with it." Captain Greer at
-once sent for his brother-in law; he came, and the signs,
-grips and by-laws that were captured at the place of the
-meeting were submitted to him and he said he believed they
-were word for word the same, and contained the very same
-oath that they swore him to on the night that he went to
-their meeting.</p>
-
-<p>The author was informed that Jamison was then lying
-in wait on the road that led from Warm Fork to Frederick
-Fork township, the next place where Alley had notified
-them to meet, waiting for the author to pass with his men,
-so that he might fire on them from the brush. Then the
-hardest task confronted the author that he ever had had to
-meet, to study out a plan to prevent Jamison firing on his
-men from the brush as he marched by. He held four men
-as prisoners, whom he knew were Jamison's right-hand
-bowers; he had just been informed that Jamison had a spy
-then on the ground to learn the time the author would
-break camp and move in the direction of Fredericks Fork.
-He ordered a wagon brought up with three spring seats,
-took the four prisoners and set them in the two front seats,
-tied a small rope around their bodies and around each seat,
-with two guards in the back seat; then arrested Jamison's
-spy, informed him what his business was, which he admitted
-and said that Jamison was lying in wait to learn what
-time I would move out, and that he intended to fire on me
-as soon as I came within reach. I took him to the wagon
-and asked him if he was acquainted with the prisoners.
-He said that he was. "Well," said I, "I am going to release
-you and I want you to go and tell Jamison that, just<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
-as certain as he fires from the brush and kills one of my
-men, I will retaliate by killing these four men, whom I
-know are his right-hand bowers." The author also wrote
-a letter containing the same statement, and sent another
-man, who was a Confederate, with Jamison's spy, to see
-that the message was delivered.</p>
-
-<p>On reaching Jamison, they delivered the message and
-informed him of what I had said, and told him that there
-was no possible chance for these men to escape, for there
-was a rope tied around each man's body and fastened to
-the spring seat, and they were also under a strong guard.
-The man who went to carry the dispatch said that after
-Jamison read it, he appeared to be in trouble and remarked:
-"Well, we will have to desist and not fire, for just as certain
-as we fire on him and kill some of his men, he is sure
-to kill our men." One of the prisoners, after he was placed
-in the wagon and heard the message sent to Jamison, remarked
-to the other prisoners: "We are dead men, for
-Jamison is sure to fire on them." We soon broke camp,
-and on reaching the place where Jamison had been waiting,
-saw the camp fire and where their horses had been tied and
-fed, but there was not a man to be seen, neither was there
-a gun fired.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i180.jpg" width="580" height="579" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>COL. AND MRS. MONKS AT CLOSE OF WAR.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On reaching Fredericks Fork township, Capt. Alley
-made a speech to the people and said, among other things,
-that the counties of Oregon and Shannon had been controlled
-by one of the most desperate class of men that ever
-lived. That they had ridden through the country on
-horseback, heavily armed, defying the enforcement of the
-civil law, intimidating the people, both Federal and Confederate
-alike, and committing all manner of crimes, robbing
-and murdering the people and boasting openly that the
-damn Confederacy was whipped, but that they were not
-and intended to live off the damn "Feds." Now the war
-is over and all good citizens, be they Federal or Confederate,
-should be in favor of the enforcement of the civil law. "I
-am ordered by the governor of the state to enroll all able-bodied
-men in the county to form a posse to aid the sheriff
-in enforcing the law in Oregon county; I am to organize
-companies to enforce the civil law. These bushwhackers
-and thieves have terrorized this county long enough. The
-governor has sent Capt. Monks, a man who is not afraid
-of bushwhackers and thieves, into this county to arrest
-these bushwhackers, thieves and murderers and bring them
-to justice. If the people of this county want the civil law
-enforced, they should aid Capt. Monks and his men to
-hunt these fellows down and either arrest them or drive
-them from the county. Our people have been present and
-saw these men commit all manner of crimes, from murder
-down to the smallest crime known to the criminal code.
-They have done this openly and the people were afraid to
-open their mouths or say a word against it, on penalty of
-death. I wrote the governor, stating the condition of affairs
-in this county, that neither person nor property were
-safe, and to send Capt. Monks to this county. And he has
-sent him and we have got the right man in the right
-place."</p>
-
-<p>One of the prominent men of Oregon county went to
-Jefferson City to see the governor to procure the removal
-of the writer and have Col. A. J. Sea appointed in his
-place. He said to the governor that Capt. Monks was
-arresting some of the best men in Oregon county and had
-them prisoners. The governor showed him some of Capt.
-Alley's letters that he had written to the governor. The
-letters stated among other things that persons and property
-were at the mercy of these desperadoes and the county
-was being terrorized by James Jamison and his men; that
-they were robbing whom they pleased openly; that a day<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>
-or two before he, Alley, wrote the letter, that Jamison
-shot a man's brains out in Thomasville, and dared any
-man to say he was in favor of the enforcement of the civil
-law, that he would serve him the same way. The governor
-asked him if those things were true, and he replied that
-they were; the governor said to him: "You are a leading
-man in that county and a citizen of Thomasville and never a
-word have you written to me that such terror and lawlessness
-existed in your county." He replied "Governor, I
-was afraid to." The governor replied to him, "when I
-send a man down there that is not afraid to handle those
-men without gloves, then here you come with a howl. Now
-I expected when I sent Capt. Monks down there, if he did
-his duty, that there would be a howl raised; I am satisfied
-that he is doing his duty. I am responsible for his
-acts and you men want to get rid of him; go home and
-tell your people to organize companies under Captain Alley
-and aid Captain Monks and his men in arresting and
-driving those bushwhackers and bandits out of your country
-and whenever Captain Monks reports to me that the
-person and property of your citizens are secure and that
-the civil law is being enforced, he will be removed, and
-not before."</p>
-
-<p>They then employed Colonel A. J. Sea as an attorney.
-Some time during the night, while we were encamped on
-Fredericks Fork, some of the soldiers took the sheriff out
-and put a rope around his neck to make him tell where
-the bones of two soldiers were, who were murdered by Jamison
-and his men. He admitted that he knew where the
-bones of the two Federal soldiers were; that after they
-shot them Jamison gave him the mule and saddle that
-one man was riding; that he was afraid not to take them
-and promised as soon as the command reached Thomasville
-to go and show the bones. On the next morning after our
-arrival at Thomasville I procured a big box and placed it
-in a wagon and brought the sheriff from the guard house
-and set him on a box under a strong guard. About that
-time Colonel A. J. Sea came up and asked what we
-were going to do with that man. I told him "That
-is my business; when you was in the military service
-did you inform the civilians of your object and aims?
-You are a civilian now and I will give you five minutes
-to get outside of the lines or you will go into the guard
-house." He took me at my word and left at once.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i183.jpg" width="580" height="408" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>COLLECTING BONES OF TWO FEDERAL SOLDIERS SHOT BY COL. JAMISON AND MEN IN OREGON COUNTY.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>The sheriff piloted the scout to the bones of the
-men that had been murdered, and the sheriff, aided by the
-scout, picked up the bones and placed them in the box.
-On examination it was found that three bullets had
-passed through one of the skulls, and the other skull
-appeared to have been shot all to pieces. I brought the
-bones in and caused them to be buried in a cemetery,
-about one mile west of Thomasville.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Alley had completed the organization of two
-companies, one commanded by Captain Lasley and the
-other by Captain Bledsaw. The companies were mostly
-composed of men who had been late Confederates, as
-there were very few Union men in the county. They
-immediately fell in with my soldiers and a vigorous
-search was at once made for Jamison and his men. Being
-aided by men who were thoroughly acquainted with
-the county and knew just where to look for Jamison
-and his cut-throats, they agreed to keep on Jamison's track
-and arrest him and his men if possible, in Oregon county.
-I moved my troops up into Shannon county to prevent
-Jamison and his men from crossing over into Shannon
-and scouted that county to keep them from hiding there.
-The Oregon county companies shot and killed some of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>
-them and arrested others. Jameson and the others left the
-county and never have returned to it since.</p>
-
-<p>But they left some of their sympathizers in the county,
-and the only weapons left them were their tongues; having
-no conscience or principle, and instigated by the wicked
-one, they began lying and preferring all manner of charges
-against the writer and his men who went into the county
-and, by the aid of the law-abiding citizens, drove out and
-arrested one of the worst set of men that ever lived, the
-savage not excepted, and restored the civil law, so that
-every citizen was secure in person and property.</p>
-
-<p>The writer informed the governor that a large majority
-of the citizens, both Confederate and Federal, had nobly
-responded to his call, had organized two companies of militia
-to aid the sheriff in the enforcement of the civil law;
-Jamison and his bushwhackers had either been arrested,
-killed or driven from the county, and the strong arm of the
-military law was not needed any longer.</p>
-
-<p>On December 25, 1867, the writer was ordered by the
-governor to withdraw his forces from the counties that had
-been placed under martial law and declare the civil law to
-be in full force and effect. I accordingly returned to Howell
-county and disbanded my soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>During my march and stay in the counties of Oregon
-and Shannon, it was admitted by all honorable Confederates
-that I had enforced a strict discipline over my men
-and protected all classes of citizens in person and property,
-had paid the people for all forage and commissaries that were
-required for the soldiers, and had driven out the worst set
-of bushwhackers, thieves and murderers that ever lived.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="REMINISCENCES" id="REMINISCENCES">REMINISCENCES.</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>In the spring of 1866 the loyal men had mostly returned
-to their homes; among them, Benjamin Alsup, who
-had been taken prisoner by the rebels in 1861 and confined
-in the penitentiary at Little Rock, Ark. He was released
-in 1865, when peace was made. There was but one house
-left in West Plains, an old school house about one-quarter
-of a mile east of the town spring, which was used for a
-court house. Judge Van Wormer, who resided at Rolla,
-was judge of the circuit court and Mr. Perry was circuit
-attorney. A short time after the return of Mr. Alsup, a
-public meeting of the loyal men was called, signed by several
-loyal men. At the date set the writer was present.
-The meeting was called to order and Mr. Alsup was elected
-chairman. He stated the object of the meeting, and among
-other things said: "The rebels have hung, murdered,
-imprisoned and driven all the Union men from their homes,
-and <em>by the living</em>, they didn't intend that a single rebel
-should live inside the limits of Howell county." He was
-in favor of giving them ten days' notice to leave the county,
-and if they were not gone by that time, to shoot them
-down wherever found. Someone introduced a resolution
-that the rebels be notified to leave with their families inside
-of ten days or they would force them to leave. The resolution
-was seconded, I got the floor and spoke as follows:
-"If that course is pursued, it will ruin the county; peace
-has been made and Gen. Grant has ordered the rebels to
-return home and become good citizens. Admitting that
-everything Mr. Alsup has said is true and we were to turn<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>
-around and do the same that they did, we would be just as
-guilty as they were, and it would be a question of might
-and not of right; and I want to say here now, if any man
-injures a late rebel, except in self-defense or in defense of
-his family or property, I will prosecute him to the bitter
-end of the law." Mr. Alsup called another man to the
-chair and replied to what I had said, saying: "<em>By the living</em>,
-I am surprised at Captain Monks, a man who has been
-treated by the rebels as he has, who now gets up here and
-says he will defend the rebels; <em>by the living</em>, I want Capt.
-Monks to understand right here, now, that if any loyal man
-kills a rebel and has to leave the country, and has no horse
-to ride, I will furnish him a good horse to ride off on; and
-<em>by the living</em>, let him prosecute me; he will have a sweet
-time of it." The next man that took the floor was a Mr.
-Hall, who resided about eight miles south of West Plains.
-He said: "I am just like Uncle Ben; if any loyal man
-kills a rebel and has to leave the country, I will furnish
-him a good horse to ride off on, and let Captain Monks
-prosecute me if he wants to; I don't think it would be
-healthy for him to prosecute me for killing a rebel or helping
-a man who did kill one." The resolution was put to a
-vote and lost by a good majority.</p>
-
-<p>Later in the spring, there was a man by the name of
-Finley living seven or eight miles south of West Plains;
-the family was composed of husband and wife, both of them
-about sixty-five years of age, a daughter of twenty-two
-years and a son of about eleven. They had been rebels,
-but were very quiet and peaceable citizens; they were residing
-on government land, had good improvements and a
-good orchard. There was a man by the name of Frederick
-Baker who had homesteaded the land Mr. Finley was
-living on. Baker notified Finley to leave in ten days; if
-not out in that time, they would be killed. Mr. Finley<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>
-wanted pay for his improvements before giving possession.
-At the expiration of ten days, very early in the morning
-Mrs. Finley went into the lot to milk the cows; Baker
-slipped up to the lot and with a Colt's revolver shot the old
-lady dead. The daughter saw her mother fall, ran to her,
-and he shot her; she fell by the side of her mother. The
-old man ran to the door, reached up to get his gun out of
-the rack, when Baker placed his pistol against his body and
-shot him dead. The pistol was so close to Finley when
-discharged that the powder set his clothes on fire. The
-boy was the only one of the family left; he ran to the nearest
-neighbor for help and when they got back to the house
-they found the old man and his wife dead and the daughter
-shot through the breast, maimed for life. The old man's
-clothes were still on fire when the neighbors arrived.</p>
-
-<p>Hall made his words good for he furnished Baker
-with a first-class horse, saddle and bridle, to leave the
-country on and aided Baker in making his escape. As
-soon as the writer learned of the murder he caused an
-affidavit to be made and procured a warrant for the arrest
-of Baker and had it put into the hands of the sheriff and
-did all in his power to cause Baker's arrest, but by the
-aid given him by Hall and others he made his escape.
-The writer reported the murder to the Governor and the
-Governor offered a reward of three hundred dollars for
-Baker's body, dead or alive. Baker never was arrested.</p>
-
-<p>The writer was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney
-by Mr. Perry, who was Circuit Attorney at that time.
-After I qualified I caused an affidavit to be made
-against Mr. Hall charging him with being an accessory to
-the murder before the fact and caused his arrest. I was
-at once notified that if I attempted to prosecute Hall I
-would meet the same fate as the Finley family. Hall
-was arrested, and the day set for his preliminary trial at<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
-the school-house east of town. On the day set for trial
-there were quite a number of persons present; the writer
-appeared, armed with a good pistol, laid it by his side
-during the progress of the trial; it was proven by the state
-that he, Hall, was guilty as charged. The justice held
-him over to wait the action of the grand jury and ordered
-him to enter into a recognizance of two thousand dollars
-for his appearance at the next term of the Howell county
-circuit court, which he readily filled and was released.
-Soon after his release he took the fever and died. Baker
-never was captured. It was one among the dirtiest murders
-that ever was committed in Howell county.</p>
-
-<p>Gen. McBride, before the war, resided in Texas county,
-on a farm, and was circuit judge of the 18th judicial
-circuit, which included Howell county. He enlisted in the
-Confederate army and was placed in command of the Confederate
-troops at West Plains. The Union men well remember
-his famous order, given in the spring of 1861, that
-all Union men join the Confederate service, and if they
-didn't join the Confederate army he would hang them as
-high as Haman. After his term of service expired, he
-moved his family to near Batesville, Ark., where he resided
-up to near the close of the war. He was taken sick and
-died in the spring of 1866. Some of the friends of the
-widow in Texas county sent after her and her family to
-bring them back to her farm. Reaching West Plains on
-their return, they were out of money and provisions. They
-asked the people to help them and a donation was taken up
-for her in West Plains; I donated five dollars to help her
-back to her home in Texas county.</p>
-
-<p>After the loyal men had returned to their homes and
-the civil law had been fully restored I brought suits by
-attachment against the following persons, to-wit: William
-Nicks, N. Barnett, for aiding the parties in arresting and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
-taking me from my home and abusing me while a prisoner.
-I attached their real estate which was well improved
-and valuable; procured a judgement of $8,000.00 against
-said real estate, procured an execution and ordered the
-sale of said real estate. Before the time for the sale Barnett
-and William Nicks came to me and admitted that
-Barnett was 1st Lieutenant and Nicks 2nd Lieutenant of
-Capt. Forshee's Confederate company, while I was held
-prisoner by said company and that I was shamefully and
-cruelly treated while a prisoner, but they were sorry for
-what they had done and hoped I would forgive them.
-Nicks further said to me, that he had saved my life; that
-while I was a prisoner, he overheard some of the Confederate
-soldiers agree that on the next night while I was
-asleep they would slip up and shoot me in the head,
-and he got his blankets and came and slept with me.
-I knew that Nicks brought his blanket and slept with me
-one night, but did not know why he did it.</p>
-
-<p>Nicks and Barnett further said, "Captain you have
-us completely at your mercy; we believe you are a good
-man and we were friends before the war. You have a
-judgement against our homes and if you sell them you
-will turn us and our families out of doors and leave
-us destitute without any homes for our wives and children."
-I said, "I know it is hard, for my wife and
-children were driven from their homes because they were
-loyal to their government; but children shouldn't be held
-responsible for the acts of their parents and I will say
-to you now that I won't sell your homes, I will give
-them to your wives and children; we are commanded in
-the best book of all books to do good for evil; you men
-can each one pay me a small sum for expenses and I will
-satisfy judgement." Barnett paid me $150. Nicks made
-a deed to some tax lands and I entered satisfaction on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
-judgements. They both said to me that they ever would
-be grateful for what I had done for them.</p>
-
-<p>The country began to settle up and the people, irrespective
-of past associations, formed new ones, especially
-the sons and daughters of those who wore the blue and
-the gray, and seemed to forget that they had ever
-been enemies. As time sped on these attachments ripened
-into love. I had but two daughters living. Nancy E.
-Monks, the oldest, married V. P. Renfrow, the son of a
-Confederate; they have two children, a son, Charles, and
-a daughter, Mattie M., now grown. Mary M. Monks, who
-married H. D. Green, whose father, a Confederate colonel,
-died in the service. They have five children living and
-one dead, one girl and four boys. Their children are Mattie
-E., now Mattie E. Bugg; Will H. D., Frank, Russell
-and Dick. Adeline Turner, whom I had raised, married
-Jacob Schoffler, a Union soldier, and has ten children, four
-boys and six girls. Abraham Roach, a boy who had made
-his home with me since infancy, married Mattie Hunt, a
-daughter of Jesse Hunt, a Union soldier, has three children
-living, two girls and one boy, Maggie, Frank and Bernice.
-I don't believe that there is any person that loves their
-children better than I do, and I don't see any difference
-between my grandchildren and my own children. I love
-my sons-in-law as well as my own children; I love the
-girl and boy that I raised, and their families feel as near to
-me as my own. They are flesh of our flesh and bone of
-our bone, and our highest duty to God and them is to teach
-them patriotism and loyalty to their government and that
-their first duty is to God and their second duty to their
-country.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 372px;">
-<img src="images/i192.jpg" width="372" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>FRANK GREEN AND CHARLES RENFROW.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>God forbid that we ever have any more civil war.
-War is the enemy of good society, degrades the morals of
-the people, causes rapine and murder, destroys thousands
-of lives, brings misery and trouble upon the whole people,
-creates a government debt that our children will not see
-paid, makes friends enemies. God forbid that any more
-sectional strife ever may grow up among the people; may
-there be no North, no South, no East, no West, but let it
-be a government of the whole people, for the people and
-by the people. May the time speedily come when the civilized
-nations of the earth will know war no more; when
-the civilized nations meet in an international congress, pass
-an international law that all differences between nations
-shall be settled by arbitration. May this nation in truth
-and in deed become a Christian nation and every man speak
-the truth to his neighbor and adopt the Golden Rule, "Do
-unto others as you would have them do unto you."</p>
-
-<p>I take pleasure in giving the names of some of the
-loyal men who resided in Howell county in 1861, at the
-commencement of the Civil war, who stood for the Union
-in the dark hour when patriotism and loyalty to country
-were tested: John McDaniel, sr., John McDaniel, jr.,
-Jonathan Youngblood, George Youngblood, David Nicholass,
-Thomas Wallace, Martin Keel, Thomas Nicholass,
-Newton Bond, William Hardcastle, Siras Newberry,
-William Newberry, David Henson, John Black, sr.,
-Daniel Black, Peter Lamons, John Lamons, Solomon
-Lamons, Thomas Lamons, Thomas Brisco, Morton Langston,
-Stephen Woodward, Seth P. Woodward, Dr. D. D.
-Emmons, Alfred Mustion, W. D. Mustion, John Mustion,
-Wesley Cordell, Hugh Cordell, William Maroney, Henry
-Maroney, Collins Coffey, John Coffey, William Coffey,
-John Chapin, Silas Chapin, Benjamin Alsup, Andrew
-Smith, Andrew V. Tabor, Josiah Carrico, Josephus Carrico,
-John Dent, Esau Fox, Thomas O. Brown, Jacob Shoffler,
-Thomas Rice, sr., Thomas Rice, jr., John W. Rice,
-Nathaniel Briggs, Captain Lyle, &mdash;&mdash; Rhodes, Jesse<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
-Hunt, Joseph Spears, James West, Jesse West, Dent
-West, Thomas Kelley.</p>
-
-<p>I will give the names of a few of the men of Douglas
-county who remained loyal to their country in 1861: Joseph
-Wheat, John Wheat, Ervin King, John Coats, Locke
-Alsup, William Alsup, Thomas Alsup, Jack Alsup, Shelt
-Alsup, Aaron Collins, William Collins, Toodie Collins,
-Doc Huffman, Jariah Huffman, Madison Huffman, William
-Huffman.</p>
-
-<p>I will give the names of a few of the men who resided
-in Ozark county, at the commencement of the war, who remained
-loyal to their country in the dark days when it
-tried men's souls to be loyal: James Kellet, sr., Marion
-Kellett, Washington Hawkins. Jesse James, William James, &mdash;&mdash;
-Brown, R. R. Gilliland, Nace Turley, Washington
-Webster, Dick Webster, Macajar Foster, Jacob Foster,
-Henry Saunders, Stephen Saunders, Allan Saunders, Alexander
-Huffman, James Hall, Bennett James.</p>
-
-<p>I would love to have space to tell of the patriotism,
-heroism and devotion to their country, besides their good
-citizenship, of the men of Howell, Douglas and Ozark
-counties, but suffice it to say that there never was the same
-number of men, at any time, who made more sacrifices for
-the preservation of their country than did these men in its
-darkest hour. These patriots are growing old and will
-soon be gone and their lips closed in death, and there will
-not be one left to tell of their sacrifices and the services
-they rendered to their country in its extreme need. History
-only will tell of the hardships, privations and service that
-they rendered to the government. Will there be no history
-left to tell of the heroism and devotion to their country
-in its darkest hour? The answer will come from ten
-thousand tongues that their history shall be written and go
-down to our children's children, that they may learn of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>
-heroism, privation and sacrifice that was made by those
-brave men and women, that their country might live and
-not a star be dropped from its banner. While history is
-being written and monuments being erected to the Confederate
-soldiers for heroism, shall we be so ungrateful to the
-loyal men and women, after they are dead and gone, and
-not tell the rising generation of the heroism and sacrifice
-they have made, that their country might live? The answer
-will come from every loyal heart: No; a thousand
-times no; it shall be written and perpetuated for generations
-not yet born.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Has Known Col. Monks Thirty Years.</h3>
-
-<p>I have known William Monks for thirty years or more.
-I have been in court with him and a more kind and obliging
-man I never knew or had dealings with. He is very
-considerate in regard to the feelings of others, always willing
-to help those who need help. In later life he joined
-the church and preached; since he began the Christian life,
-I have never heard of any conduct that was not in conformity
-to his profession of Christianity. Had he had the
-school advantages that others have had, he would have
-been a power in the community where he lived.</p>
-
-<p>The writer of this was born in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania,
-April first, 1824. His father immigrated west
-and landed in Pittsburg in 1837. Then the writer of this
-migrated southwest and finally landed in Tennessee. At
-Springfield he met Catherine Ebbert, or Abbott, as they
-now call it, and married her March 20, 1856. She was
-born in Reeseville, Kentucky, and is still living, aged 76
-years last January.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. B. WINGER</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="right">West Plains, Mo.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 429px;">
-<img src="images/i197.jpg" width="429" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>MR. AND MRS. J. B. WINGER.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Dr. Dixon's Long Acquaintance.</h3>
-
-<p>I will state that I came to Howell county in the year
-1866 and settled on Hutton Valley near where the town of
-Willow Springs now is. The present townsite was then a
-small field without a fence and one small log cabin. I followed
-the practice of medicine up to the present date. I
-was 83 years old the 20th of August, 1906, and the picture I
-send you was taken when I was 81 years old. I was
-born in McMinn county, East Tennessee, and remained
-there until I was eleven years old when I left there and
-have gone through many changes and experiences since
-then. I served in the Mexican war. I married near
-Louisville, Ky., in 1849. My wife is still living and is
-nearly eighty-five years of age and in pretty fair health.</p>
-
-<p>I will state that I have known Col. Wm. Monks and
-wife for over forty years and know them to be good and
-true people. I will further state that there were said to be
-but seventy-eight families in the entire county of Howell,
-and four families in the town of West Plains in May, 1866
-and Col. Wm. Monks was one of the four. Now I believe
-there is a population in West Plains of over 4,000 and there
-is room for many more. This is an educational town, fine
-colleges and high schools besides quite a number of ward
-schools houses, almost entirely built of brick. Schools
-last about nine months in the year.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="center">Respectfully yours,</p>
-
-<p style="margin-left:50%" class="center"><span class="smcap">Dr. J. C. B. Dixon</span>,</p>
-
-<p class="right">West Plains, Mo.</p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 361px;">
-<img src="images/i199.jpg" width="361" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>DR. J. C. B. DIXON.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Union Woman Leaves Arkansas for Missouri.</h3>
-
-<p>Mrs. Giddens, a widow, before the war resided in Conway
-county, Arkansas. She had two sons, Brad and John,
-who were about grown at the commencement of the war.
-This was a Union family and these two boys, with others,
-kept themselves hid until the Confederates issued a general
-order to hunt down all Union men and either force them
-to join the Confederate army or hang them. The boys at
-once saw that they would be arrested and forced into the
-Confederate service. They held a consultation with their
-mother and decided to try to reach the Federal lines near
-Rolla.</p>
-
-<p>Their mother took a couple of wagons with a large
-yoke of oxen to each wagon, and loaded them with her
-household goods, wearing apparel and provisions to last
-them through. In the spring of 1864 they started for
-Rolla. The boys traveled at night until they reached Missouri,
-and on reaching Taney county they met some Federal
-troops and made their way to Rolla, where they enlisted
-and joined the 16th U. S. Cavalry Volunteers, and were
-attached to company K, commanded by Capt. Monks, and
-served until peace was made and they were honorably discharged
-at Springfield. Both of them are still living and
-are active ministers of the church of Christ.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i201.jpg" width="580" height="455" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>S. B. GIDDENS AND WIFE, MARY DEWETT AND STILLEN STELLMAN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Their mother aimed to reach Rolla by way of West
-Plains, and on reaching Howell county, near what is
-known as the Newt Bond farm, the bushwhackers stopped
-her wagons and robbed her, and ordered her to exchange
-her large cattle for smaller ones and her large wagon for a
-small, light wagon, so that the small cattle could pull it.
-Finally, after being stopped several times by the Confederate
-authorities, she reached Rolla and found that her sons
-had enlisted in the Federal army. She saw the stars and
-stripes unfurled and it appeared like a complete change of
-country. Here she located and remained until her sons
-were discharged from the United States service.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Samuel B. Giddens.</span></p>
-
-<p class="right">Summerville, Mo.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>All Union families were forced to leave Texas county.
-The illustration contains the pictures of S. B. Giddens and
-wife, who were driven out; also Mrs. Mary Dewett, now
-over seventy years of age, who was forced to leave all she
-had and flee for her life; Mrs. Stillen Stellman, whose
-father went to Rolla and got the Federal soldiers to guard
-him while he removed his family.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Union Men Killed in Izard County, Ark.</h3>
-
-<p class="right">Moody, Mo., September 26, 1906.</p>
-
-<p>Prior to and when the war of the rebellion broke out
-the writer of this article was a citizen of Izard county,
-Arkansas; the few loyal people that lived in North Arkansas,
-had a hope that war would be averted and when Ft.
-Sumter was fired upon they realized the awful condition
-and consequences of war at their very doors; those who
-favored a dissolution of the states had given notice in no
-uncertain way. And when the news was flashed over the
-country that there had been a clash of arms, the persecution
-of the loyal people began in the South and Central states
-by those that favored secession. They organized themselves
-into companies and went from house to house notifying
-all those that seemed not to take sides either way,
-that the time had come when the sheep and goats had to
-be separated. The Union element was arrested and many
-were sent to the penitentiary at Little Rock, Arkansas,
-from the counties of Izard, Fulton and Independence.
-Those people were robbed and plundered as long as there
-was anything worth taking and some of them, after they
-had got all the Union people had, commenced arresting
-and hanging the Union men. They arrested a young man
-and placed a halter around his neck to hang him; he
-broke loose from them and he was run one mile before
-he was caught; then he was taken to a stooping ash tree
-and hung. The writer was creditably informed that a man
-who was a prominent member of the Baptist church,
-scratched the dirt from under his toes in order that he<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>
-might hang clear of the ground. I have seen the tree he
-was hanged on many times.</p>
-
-<p>Another brutal murder was perpetrated upon the
-person of Rube Hudson, a Union man who had been run
-from home and returned home in the winter of 1865; from
-an exposure, he took sick with pneumonia; his wife had
-secreted him under the floor near the chimney and fire
-place; the news got out that he was at home, the rebels
-raided his house; every thing in the way of beds and
-what little they had left was turned upside down and
-they gave up the hunt and started away; a spell of
-coughing came on him, for he was very ill and he was
-heard coughing by them and they came back and tore
-up the floor and found him; they dragged him out and
-took him about one hundred yards from the house;
-there he was beaten and hung to make him tell of
-others who might have come with him; finally he was
-hung and shot to death, where the family could hear
-him pleading for his life; he made a special appeal to
-one of his near neighbors calling his name and asking
-him to intercede for him and save him. The only consolation
-he got was "you are a goner, Rube; you are
-a goner, Rube," he was left hanging for the family to
-cut down and bury. He met his death for no other
-cause than that of being a staunch Union man.</p>
-
-<p>Another bloodcurdling murder was perpetrated upon
-the person of Minor White, for no other cause than that of
-being loyal to his country. He was honest and upright in
-his dealings with his fellowmen, but he was arrested, taken
-to the county seat of Izard county, tried and was released.
-Before he started home a friend told him not to go the road
-for they would follow him and kill him, he said: "I have
-always been free to speak my sentiments; I have done
-nothing that I have to slip back home through the woods.<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
-I am going to take the public highway, if I am killed."
-He was overtaken about a mile out by the mob that took
-him there; he was shot and otherwise mutilated and left
-hanging to a tree.</p>
-
-<p>I could mention many things that were done to the
-Union men and women in Northern Arkansas that make
-me shudder to think of, and if I were to undertake to relate
-all that came under my own observation, and many incidents
-that took place in the counties mentioned that were
-related to me by others who are entitled to credit for honor
-and truth. There was not a Union family left at home in
-the counties above referred to.</p>
-
-<p>I am opposed to war on general principles: first, it
-never settles the issue; second, it is always a poor man's
-fight and a rich man's fuss; third, if the poor soldier is
-fortunate enough to get back alive, the debt is his to pay.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">J. M. Dixon.</span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i206.jpg" width="580" height="412" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>ADMINISTERING KUKLUX OATH.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span></p>
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-
-
-
-<h2><a name="THE_KUKLUX" id="THE_KUKLUX">THE KUKLUX</a></h2>
-
-
-<p>The lawless bands that had been roving through the
-counties of Howell, Oregon, Shannon and Dent had been
-captured, killed or driven out of these counties by the
-officers of the law, aided by the militia forces of the state.
-All classes of persons and men of every political faith were
-secure in their person and property. The civil law was
-enforced to the letter and the people generally looked to
-the bright future of Missouri.</p>
-
-<p>In the fall of 1868, in the month of September during
-a political campaign that was being made in Howell
-county, while a political speaking was going on at Black's
-store in Benton township in the southwest part of the
-county, a courier came with a dispatch stating that
-Captain Simpson Mason, registering officer of Fulton
-county, Arkansas, had been shot and killed from ambush,
-near the state line adjoining Howell county, by men
-who styled themselves Kuklux, and had ordered all
-Union men, and especially the officers of the law, to
-keep inside of their doors and to tender their resignations
-as such officers or they would fare the same as Mason
-had. It was stated that the law-abiding citizens were
-without arms and that the Kuklux were raiding the
-whole country; the whole country was being terrorized
-by said men and in God's name asked us to come and
-bring men and arms to aid the civil officers to enforce the
-law. The writer advised the people to be cool; that if
-there was an organization in the state of Arkansas to<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>
-overturn the state government and the loyal people of
-said state were helpless, since the rebels at the commencement
-of the Civil war had had no regard for state lines I
-thought that we would have the same right to go down and
-help our loyal brethern to enforce the civil law.</p>
-
-<p>A committee of twelve men was selected to say what
-action we would take; among the committee were Benjamin
-Alsup, Rev. Adam Wright, Rev. John Collins, David
-Nicholass. Old men were placed on the committee. The
-committee retired to deliberate upon the matter, and in a
-short time returned and made the following report:
-"That we, the loyal people of Howell county, go at once
-with all available men and arms." The writer had in his
-possession at that time one hundred Springfield rifles, with
-one thousand rounds of cartridges for each gun. During
-the night and the next day about seventy-five men were
-organized into a temporary company and were placed under
-the command of Uncle Benjamin Alsup. On the night
-following we made a forced march reaching the Widow
-Pickrum's farm, situated on Bennet's river, in Fulton
-county, Arkansas, the next morning. We found Captain
-Richardson, with one company of state guards, fortified in
-a barn. On our arrival we offered our services to Captain
-Richardson, which were readily accepted. They were looking
-for an attack to be made by the Kuklux at any moment,
-as Colonel Tracy was said to be at Jackson Port with three
-hundred and fifty well armed Kuklux.</p>
-
-<p>While waiting for further orders from Governor Clayton
-a vigorous search was commenced for the murderers of
-Captain Mason. We soon learned that on the day previous
-to the murder of Mason he was registering the voters
-on the Big North Fork, at what was known as the Calhoun
-mill, and on the next day he was to meet the people
-at the Harbor Precinct for registration. And on the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
-previous night the Kuklux, according to a general move
-that was to be made throughout the state, met at Colonel
-Tracy's, at the Widow Pickrum farm. Among them
-were Colonel Tracy, Dow Bryant, U. R. Bush, and
-about forty others; they selected about twenty men to do
-the shooting and divided them into three bunches and
-erected three blinds, as they did not know which road
-Captain Mason might travel. They placed about seven
-well armed men in each blind, who had been sworn by
-the Kuklux and after they had been placed in their
-blinds one of the men who did the shooting said, "Let him
-come; I am sure to get him for I can hit an old gobbler's
-neck that distance." The blind was erected where the
-road made a short curve with very thick brush on the left
-side of the road. When Captain Mason and posse had approached
-within about thirty yards of the blind they fired
-a volley, five of the shots taking effect in Mason's body.
-Captain Mason fell from his horse and expired in a few
-moments. The assassins fled through a thick bottom
-growth. Bryant, Bush, and two or three others were arrested,
-charged with being a part of the men who did
-the shooting. They were arrested by the state guards, as
-the civil officers were afraid to issue a single warrant on
-account of the threats of the Kuklux. On an investigation
-it was proven that Tracy, Bryant, Bush and about forty
-others were present the night before Mason's murder.
-And that Bush was the man who remarked after he had
-gone into the blind "Let him come. I can get him. I
-can hit an old gobbler's neck that far."</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime, the governor had gotten a dispatch
-through to Capt. Richardson that the Kuklux in large numbers
-were organizing and threatening to attack the state
-officers; that he and the state officers were barricaded in
-the state house and that he was organizing the state guards<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span>
-as fast as possible. Capt. Richardson was ordered to recruit
-every available man and protect the civil officers as
-far as possible; that he had made arrangements to send
-arms and ammunition up White river on a boat. I suggested
-to Benjamin Alsup and others who had come down
-from Missouri that the only way we could make our acts
-legal would be to join the state guards and be mustered
-into the state service, to which proposition my old friend
-Alsup objected and remarked: "That's the way with
-Monks; he is afraid he will hurt some rebel, contrary to
-law. Now, by the living, I came down here to hang some
-of these old rebels and murderers to the first limb we come
-to, and if we have to join the state guards and wait on the
-civil and military law to punish them, they never will be
-punished. I am going back to Missouri." About two-thirds
-of the men who came down enlisted in the state service;
-Alsup and others returned to Missouri.</p>
-
-<p>As soon as Governor Clayton learned that the writer
-had come into the state with men and arms, he sent another
-dispatch stating that he and all the law-abiding people of
-the state would ever be grateful to him for furnishing men
-and arms at a time when they were entirely helpless and at
-the mercy of a secret and bloodthirsty enemy, bent on overthrowing
-the state government; that if I would remain in
-the state with my men and arms he would make me lieutenant-colonel
-of the seventh regiment of state guards.</p>
-
-<p>We were watching the movements of the Kuklux, and
-in about eight or ten days after the murder of Capt. Mason,
-late one evening, the deputy sheriff of the county came to
-headquarters and informed Capt. Richardson that there
-were three hundred and fifty Kuklux, well armed, in camp
-at Salem, the county seat of Fulton county, and intended
-to attack Capt. Richardson before day, the next morning;
-they had ordered him, the deputy sheriff, under penalty of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>
-death, to bring Bush and turn him over to them. A brief
-consultation was held by the officers, and being satisfied
-that they were not able to meet the force of Kuklux then
-marching upon them, it was agreed that the writer should
-take the men from Missouri and recruit men for the service
-and get all the arms and ammunition that were left at home
-and return with all possible speed. In the meantime, they
-would retreat to some secluded place and watch the movements
-of the Kuklux. They turned Bush over to the deputy
-sheriff and he started in the direction of Salem, and
-Capt. Richardson broke camp and retreated. The deputy
-sheriff had not traveled more than two miles when a posse
-of armed men met him and demanded Bush, and he, supposing
-that they were a part of the Kuklux command,
-turned him over. They took him about two hundred yards
-and shot him to death. The next morning, before daylight,
-Col. Tracy charged upon the late camp of Capt. Richardson,
-but found it had been vacated.</p>
-
-<p>The Kuklux began a regular, organized system of raiding
-the Union men's houses, especially the officers of the
-civil law, posting written notices, ordering their resignations
-at once, and if they attempted the arrest of any Kuklux,
-death would be the penalty. They posted a picture
-of a coffin with the notice, at the same time ordering all influential
-Union men to leave the state at once, under the
-penalty of death. In about two weeks the governor ordered
-a part of the seventh regiment of state guards to
-Fulton county, to be stationed on Bennett's river, and to
-complete the organization of the regiment with all possible
-speed; Col. Dail was placed in command.</p>
-
-<p>After my return home, I organized three companies,
-commanded by Capt. F. M. Monks, Capt. Nicolas and
-Capt. Rice. About three days after the regiment reached
-Fulton county, the writer rejoined his regiment with three<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
-companies, one hundred Springfield rifles and one thousand
-rounds of cartridges for each gun, and soon completed
-the organization of the regiment; he was commissioned
-lieutenant-colonel of the regiment.</p>
-
-<p>The governor had sent arms and ammunition up White
-river, but the Kuklux captured and sunk the boat with all
-the arms and ammunition. The governor said that my arrival
-saved the north part of the state from the control
-of the Kuklux, as he would not have been able to procure
-arms for months. The regiment began an active campaign
-at once, by which they came into possession of the
-intentions, aims, secrets and oaths of the order; found that
-the order extended up into Missouri, along the state line.
-It was a complete military organization. The intention
-was to overturn the state government by intimidating the
-civil officers of the state, and with this purpose in view
-they procured a human skull and two thigh bones, and
-while the member was looking on these bones the following
-oath was administered by the grand cyclops:</p>
-
-<p>"We (or I, as the case might be) do solemnly swear
-before Almighty God and these witnesses, and looking upon
-these human bones, that I will obey and carry into effect
-every order made by any cyclops or assistant cyclops,
-and if I fail to strictly conform and execute every order
-made as above required of me, unless I am prevented from
-some cause which shall be no fault of mine, or if I shall
-give any information to any person or persons except members
-of this order, that the doom of all traitors shall be
-meted out to me, and that my bones may become as naked
-and dry as the bones I am looking upon. And I take this
-oath voluntarily, without any mental reservation or evasion
-whatever, for the causes set out in said order, so help me
-God."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>After the oath had been taken the persons taking said
-oath were ready for duty. The intentions and aims of
-this organization were to intimidate the civil officers and,
-if necessary to the accomplishment of their aims, to kill
-and murder all officers of the state by assassination or drive
-them from the state. All civil officers of the state were
-at once notified to tender their resignations and to cease to
-discharge their official duties as peace officers, and if they
-failed to comply with said order, death would be the penalty
-The governor and all the state officers received the
-same order; all Union men that were influential in the
-state were ordered to keep themselves in doors or be driven
-from the state, or be murdered by assassination. The
-following words, with pictures of coffins, were attached to
-said notices:</p>
-
-<p>"If you fail to comply with this notice, this coffin will
-be your final resting place."</p>
-
-<p>The Kuklux organization, having but one object and
-aim, to turn the state government over to the control of
-the late rebels or Democratic party of the state, was a
-complete secret military organization with the most desperate
-means to-wit: Murder, by assassination whenever
-ordered by a cyclops or assistant cyclops.</p>
-
-<p>A grand cyclops took the place of a colonel. An assistant
-cyclops lieutenant-colonel. An order from one
-of these officers to shoot any man was final, from which
-there was no appeal; and men were selected to execute
-said order by the most desperate oath known to man
-or history. This kind of warfare, being inaugurated
-throughout the whole state, with a thorough understanding
-that their organization would revolt against the civil
-authorities of the state government, and had the day set
-throughout the whole state.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the same day that Captain Simson Mason was assassinated
-in Fulton county, Kuklux attempted to assassinate
-Governor Clayton in Little Rock. They were seen
-in considerable numbers near the state capitol, after night,
-all wearing masks. They notified the governor, that they
-intended to capture and take possession of the state capitol
-by a force, if he did not resign his office as governor;
-the danger became so great that he barricaded the state
-house, as he had but few state troops. The whole
-state was invaded by the Kuklux at the same time and
-they commenced raiding the state in bands of from
-twenty-five to two hundred and fifty men; all wore
-masks and large rubber pouches concealed by a cover.
-They visited the Union men and colored men's
-houses and raided the whole country generally, proclaiming
-that they were dead rebels who had been shot on
-the different battlefields during the civil war and that
-they had come back to rid the state of black republicans
-and carpet-baggers.</p>
-
-<p>They would claim that they were very thirsty, that
-they never had a drink of water since they had
-been killed at the battles of Gettysburg, Corinth, Vicksburg,
-and other big battles. They would call on the
-colored people to bring them a bucketful and one of
-their number would pour the whole bucketful into his
-pouch and called for more water, making the colored
-people believe that they drank the water; then they
-would give the colored people orders not to be caught
-off their plantations, and if so caught, the penalty of
-death would be inflicted; many of the influential colored
-people were shot down. The author saw a number of
-fresh graves of the colored people that had been shot
-by the Kuklux; saw holes in windows in houses in
-towns and villages that had been shot through after night,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
-while men were reading, who had been notified to resign
-their offices or stop using their influence in favor
-of the enforcement of the civil law.</p>
-
-<p>The author remembers passing some colored people
-on the side of the road; one old colored woman cried out
-at the top of her voice "Lawd, massa, massa are you
-men hunting dem dar Kuklux? Wi, da told us dat bullets
-wouldn't kill them. I fought we could fight live
-men but when it come to fightin dead men, don't know
-what to tink about it. Wi dey come to our house, rode
-up to de fence called for water; said they hadn't any
-water since the battle of Shiloh. Wi, one man drank a
-bucketful, and den call for mo. I thought to my soul
-that they would never get enuf water." The author replied,
-"Auntie, when these rebels are killed, they never
-get back here; the bad man keeps them to build fires for
-him. These Kuklux are the men that ran away from the
-battle of Shiloh and have just crawled out of their dens.
-That's why they are masked." The old woman said,
-"Dat what I thought bout it." While the Kuklux
-were raiding the country they visited an old darkie's house
-and gave him three day's notice to leave the country;
-and if he failed to leave they would visit him again and
-death would be his penalty. In about three or four day,
-twenty-five or thirty Kuklux rode up to his cabin in the
-night and called for him; he was armed with an old U. S.
-musket; he fired into the crowd and killed one of the band
-and then ran and made his escape.</p>
-
-<p>Part of the regiment received orders to report to General
-Upham, who was stationed at Cottonplant, on White
-river, leaving Captain Richardson in charge of the forces
-in Fulton county and Captain Toney in charge of the
-troops in Izard and Sharp counties. The regiment broke
-camp and marched by way of Jacksonport and on their<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
-arrival went into camp on the Wadel farm, two miles below
-Jacksonport. The Kuklux had declared that we should
-not march through Jacksonport. A brother-in-law of Mr.
-Wadel from North Missouri invited the writer to supper;
-the writer believing that a trap had been fixed to decoy
-him outside of the lines took one lieutenant and a posse
-of men and went to his house; on our arrival, we found a
-bountiful supper; had every thing that a hungry man
-could wish; had eggnog served in silver cups with silver
-spoons. The residence was about forty-two by twenty
-feet; two large rooms with a ten-foot hall between,
-with kitchen on west side, fine portico, with about ten
-or twelve negro cabins, about sixty to one hundred
-feet from the dwelling-house. Just before supper I
-noticed eight or ten men come in on foot dressed in gray
-clothing. I at once ordered my men to be ready at any
-moment and to not let them get the drop on them. Just
-about the time that most of my men were through eating
-supper, I noticed that some of the men that came in
-to the supper table had arms on their persons and noticed
-that the negroes were excited. I stepped out at a back
-door and just as I entered the hall door I saw the landlord
-approaching the room where my men were seated at
-the table with a navy pistol cocked in his right hand,
-holding it behind his back. Just as he attempted to
-open the door where my men were seated at the supper
-table, I sprang forward and grabbed his pistol and
-wrenched it out of his hand, and said to him, "Don't
-you dare to attempt to shoot one of my men." He turned
-around facing me and said "I went all through the
-Civil war and you are the first men that ever disarmed
-me." In a moment my men had pistols in hand ready for
-action, and I noticed some of the men that came dressed
-in gray had pistols in their pockets. I remarked to them,<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>
-"I came here on an invitation; I am here as a guest, I wish
-to treat all persons as gentlemen, especially the landlord
-and his family; but this hostile move made upon the
-part of the landlord and the presence of these armed men
-shows me that there is something wrong." I ordered
-my men to fall in line and return to the camp. His wife
-appeared to be a perfect lady and her husband appeared
-to be under the influence of whiskey. He agreed that if
-I would release him, he would go into his room and stay
-there until my men had all returned to the camp.
-After he had gone into his room, I gave his revolver to
-his wife on her promising not to give it to him until the
-next morning.</p>
-
-<p>I learned from Mr. Wadel's brother-in-law that he
-came from northern Missouri at the commencement of the
-war and at about the close of the war he married his sister;
-that he was a cyclops and came to Fulton county in the
-Kuklux raid, and that the men who came that evening were
-all Kuklux, that if I had gone alone to his supper, I
-would have been killed.</p>
-
-<p>The next morning we broke camp and resumed our
-march. On the regiment arriving at Cottonplant, Col. Dail
-reported to Gen. Upham and we were ordered into camp.
-As soon as the citizens of the city learned of my arrival,
-they requested Gen. Upham that I be invited to deliver a
-speech in the city hall; that they had heard and read of
-Col. Monks and they wanted him to deliver an address to
-the people at early candle-light on the present condition of
-the state. There were about seven or eight hundred men
-stationed at the post. After supper, the adjutant sent an
-order by an orderly to detail about fifty men for a patrol
-guard; that the soldiers had broken into the warehouse and
-were taking out whiskey and other articles. I ordered the
-detail to be made and report at headquarters for further or<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>ders.
-Our headquarters were not more than forty yards
-from the warehouse. I spoke in an audible voice, "Now,
-we claim that our mission as soldiers is to protect persons
-and property. I want you to see that your guns and pistols
-are well loaded, and go direct to the warehouse first
-and arrest all soldiers that you find in or about the warehouse
-and take them to the guardhouse and there keep
-them safe until further orders, and patrol the city closely.
-Order all soldiers and officers who have not passes to be
-inside of their quarters in thirty minutes, and if you find
-any soldiers on the street after thirty minutes, arrest them
-and take them to the guardhouse; if they resist you, shoot
-them; and if you have to shoot, shoot to kill." About
-that time some man near the warehouse called out: "Who
-in hell are you? This whiskey is Kuklux whiskey, and
-we will take what we please." I replied, "If we cannot
-enforce discipline over the soldiers, we will go back home
-and send others; you will find out who I am if you wait
-until the patrol gets there."</p>
-
-<p>I ordered the officer to sound the reveille. Inside of
-thirty minutes every soldier was inside of his quarters.
-The citizens said that such a thing had not occurred since
-the post had been established. Capt. Sharp was reckless
-when drinking; he had mutinied and the men that were
-disposed to be wild had terrorized the people of the city.
-Gen. Upham had failed to enforce discipline over Capt.
-Sharp and his company. Capt. Sharp had ridden up
-and down the streets before the regiment had arrived and
-proclaimed, "when Colonel Monks arrives we will clean
-all the Kuklux up." The citizens were considerably
-frightened on my arrival in August, but after they saw how
-completely I enforced discipline everything became quiet,
-they appeared to be perfectly secure in person and property.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the next night, at early candle light, the large
-hall was filled. After being introduced by Gen. Upham, I
-spoke in part as follows:</p>
-
-<p>"Gentlemen and fellow citizens of Arkansas: I am
-from your sister state, Missouri, and I am very sorry to
-find you people in the state of war. War is not very
-pleasant; it has its effects upon society; demoralizes the
-morals of the people, besides the great sacrifice of life and
-property. Besides this, it alienates those who should be
-brethern and makes them bitter enemies. Your people may
-ask the question, what right have you Missourians to come
-down into our state? My first answer will be, Captain
-Simpson Mason was but recently assassinated in Fulton
-county, near the state line, while in the discharge of his
-official duty. At the commencement of the civil war he
-was a citizen of Fulton county, Arkansas, and I was a
-citizen of Howell county, Missouri. Both of us were unconditional
-Union men. Both of us were driven from our
-homes and posses of men from your state, regardless of
-the state lines, scouted our county, murdering and driving
-out Union men, women and children and hung
-and shot down loyal men. Captain Mason and I met in
-the early part of the war of the rebellion and soon become
-fast friends. Served together during the war. When
-peace was made we determined to go back home. Men
-would meet us and say "If you men go back among the
-old rebels who hate you so badly they will kill you."
-Our reply would be, "Damn a man that is afraid to go
-back and enjoy the fruits of his victory." We met
-and pledged our sacred honor to each other that if, after
-our return to our old homes, either one of us was killed
-by the late rebels, the other would do all in his power to
-bring the guilty parties to justice. A better and truer
-man never lived than Captain Simpson Mason. Each of
-us came back with the olive leaf in his mouth. Now I
-don't say that all rebels are Kuklux, but I will say all
-Kuklux have been late rebels and have organized
-a secret organization, the objects and aims of which are
-to overturn the civil government of your state by murder
-and intimidations, through the most vile and desperate
-means known to man, the savage not excepted.
-Besides your organization extends into the border counties
-of Missouri and as the rebels thought right to cross
-the state line during the Civil war, we think it right to
-cross it now to help our loyal brethern, and these are the
-causes that brought us to your state. We don't want
-booty. We want to see the civil law enforced, and we
-ask your cooperation, and promise you, that all law abiding
-citizens, be they Union or rebel, shall be protected in person
-and property during our stay in your state and we intend
-to enforce the very strictest discipline among our
-troops. I hope by the cooperation of the people of your
-state this unholy war will soon cease." At the conclusion
-of the speech they gave three cheers for Missouri troops.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 407px;">
-<img src="images/i220.jpg" width="407" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>MAKING A PLEDGE&mdash;Col. Wm. Monks and Capt. Simpson Mason.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On the third day after our arrival at Cottonplant,
-Captain J. B. Nicholas' and Captain Sharp's companies
-were ordered to be detached from the regiment and placed
-under the command of the author and ordered to march at
-once and report at Marion, the county seat of Crittenden
-county for further orders. On our arrival at Marion we were
-ordered to proceed directly to Osceola, the county seat of
-Mississippi county, Arkansas and to erect a military post and
-issue an order ordering all the persons that were armed to
-come in and take the oath. On our arrival at that place to
-report the same to the Governor of the state. I issued
-the following general order:</p>
-
-<p>"To the people of the state of Arkansas, especially
-the citizens of Mississippi county; greeting; whereas a part<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
-of the people, disregarding their duties as good law-abiding
-citizens, have by and through a secret organization
-known as Kuklux revolted against the civil government of
-the state of Arkansas and are now armed and attempting
-by murder and intimidations to overthrow the civil government
-of the state, now therefore, by the authority in me
-vested and as commander of said post, do order all persons
-who may be in armed hostility to the present government
-and those who may be by act or deed aiding or encouraging
-those who are in arms against the legal constituted
-laws of the state to return to their allegiance and aid in
-enforcing the civil law. And any person who may be
-found from and after this date armed or aiding or abetting
-those who are in arms against the civil law of the state
-will be promptly arrested and punished to the extent of the
-law.</p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Monks</span>, commanding the post."</p>
-
-<p>When I arrived there was not a single civil officer in
-this county. They had either resigned or had kept themselves
-indoors. I at once commenced a vigorous campaign
-and soon learned that there were two men charged with
-being cyclops; one of them resided about thirty miles
-down the river on an island; he was charged with killing
-eight or ten colored people. I made a detail of about fifty
-men and placed them in charge of Captain Sharp and ordered
-him to go down and arrest both and bring them up to
-headquarters. The second day after the scouts started
-they returned by steamboat with both men, as well as
-several other prisoners. After the boat arrived Captain
-Sharp came to headquarters and suggested the release of one
-of the men as he didn't think he was guilty. I ordered the
-prisoners brought to headquarters at once. There was a
-man by the name of Edington who resided in Osceola, one
-of the wealthiest men in the county; he was well acquainted
-with one of the men, as he had been sheriff of the coun<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>ty
-in which he resided and a colonel in the Confederate
-army. He asked me to parole him to the limits of the
-city and he would go on his bond for one thousand dollars
-until said charges could be investigated. In a few days
-after he was paroled Mr. Edington came into the office and
-informed me that after his arrest and while on the boat
-coming up the river Cap. Sharp came to him in the presence
-of the captain of the steamboat and remarked. "Well,
-colonel, you have got a hard man holt of you now; if
-you will pay me one hundred and fifty dollars I can use
-my influence with Col. Monks and have you released."
-The colonel said to Captain Sharp that he didn't have
-the money with him. The captain of the steamboat
-said to the colonel, "I have the money, I will loan it to
-you." The colonel paid Captain Sharp one hundred
-and fifty dollars. Captain Sharp agreed to have him
-released and let him go back on the boat. Mr. Edington
-said he had watched all my proceedings since I took command
-of the post and had become satisfied that my
-highest aim was to protect every person in his person and
-property.</p>
-
-<p>I ordered the orderly to arrest the colonel and bring
-him to headquarters. I told him that I had been informed
-that after his arrest and while in custody of
-Captain Sharp on the steamboat he paid Captain Sharp
-one hundred and fifty dollars and Captain Sharp was to
-release him and let him return home on the boat. He
-admitted that he paid the money and made a full statement
-of all the facts that caused him to pay the money.
-I notified Captain Sharp to appear at headquarters at
-once. Informed him of what I had just learned, that
-while he had the colonel prisoner, coming up on the
-steamboat, that he, the prisoner, paid him one hundred
-and fifty dollars to procure his release. Captain Sharp<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>
-admitted that it was true; I asked the captain if he had
-the money. He said he had. I asked the colonel if he
-had a friend that he could pay the money to; that I could
-not pay the money to him, that he might bribe another
-one of my officers. He said that I could pay the money
-to Mr. Edington. Captain Sharp paid the money to Mr.
-Edington by the order of the colonel. I ordered the colonel
-to the guardhouse for bribing my officers. I ordered
-Captain Sharp to report at headquarters the next day
-at ten o'clock. The Captain promptly appeared at the
-hour set. We went into the back room of my office
-alone. The captain and myself took seats. I said to the
-captain, "I am very sorry that this thing occurred; that
-you have allowed one of your prisoners to bribe you and
-you have betrayed that confidence imposed in you by the
-state. It become my painful duty to place you under
-arrest and of all crimes known to the criminal calender
-the worst is that one of treason. We claim that
-we are hunting violaters of the law and if we become
-violaters of the law then it will devolve on the state to
-place a new set of men in the service so that all violaters
-of the law can be arrested and brought to justice. Now
-I have been informed that while you composed a part of
-the command stationed at Cottonplant under General
-Upham you was arrested for disorderly conduct and you
-caused your company to mutinize. Now I want to say
-to you that I am going to put you under arrest and disarm
-you and I will parole you to the limits of the city
-and your first lieutenant will be placed in command of
-the company and if you cause your men to mutinize I will
-arrest the whole company and send them to Little
-Rock."</p>
-
-<p>I ordered the whole company to appear at headquarters
-and informed them of what I had done. I then<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>
-sent the orderly and brought out the colonel and
-paroled him to the limits of the city under one thousand
-dollar bond. I never had a more obedient set of
-soldiers in all my service than Captain Sharp's company
-and they were as true and as brave men as ever lived.
-Captain Sharp said he was sorry for what he had done
-and I had done my duty and in about one week I returned
-his arms and placed him in command of his company.
-And during the remainder of service Captain
-Sharp discharged every duty with honor to himself and
-his state. While I was in command of the post I made a
-vigorous campaign. Arrested or drove out all the armed
-Kuklux and had the civil law fully put in force and
-the ministers of the gospel reorganized their churches
-and business of all kinds was resumed. Intimidations of
-the people, of the civil officers, and of the county by the
-Kuklux was a thing of the past. I received orders from
-the adjutant general at Little Rock to declare the civil
-law enforced in Mississippi county and to report with
-my command to the commander of the post at Marion,
-Crittendon county, Arkansas, for further orders. My command
-was conveyed by steamboat to Hopefield and from
-Hopefield we marched to Marion.</p>
-
-<p>And in obedience to said orders I issued the following
-order: "To all whom it may concern, especially
-to the citizens of Mississippi county, Arkansas, I send
-greeting. It affords me great pleasure to say to the people
-of Mississippi county that the Kuklux organization is
-completely broken up and there is no armed opposition to
-the enforcement of the civil law. Therefore, by the power
-in me vested I declare the civil law from this date in full
-force and effect in said county. And I invite all good
-citizens to aid in the enforcement of the civil law.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span></p>
-
-<p class="right"><span class="smcap">Wm. Monks</span>, Commander of the post."</p>
-
-<p>And when the people of the city learned that my command
-had been ordered to leave the city they at once
-presented the writer with a new suit of clothes. And on
-the arrival of the boat and while we were loading our
-camp equipage, arms and amunition, about three or four
-hundred persons composed of men, women, and children
-assembled on the bank of the river to bid us good-bye.
-And as the boat moved out they waved their handkerchiefs
-and hats and gave three cheers for the soldier boys
-and their commanders.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival at Marion we turned over our guns, amunition
-and camp equipage and were ordered by the adjutant
-general to proceed to Jacksonport for further orders
-and on our arrival at Jacksonport the writer was
-ordered to leave his command at Jacksonport and to report
-in person to the governor at Little Rock. On my arrival
-at Little Rock I was informed by the adjutant general
-that the governor was dangerously sick and confined to
-his room. The legislature of the state being in session I
-was invited by both houses to deliver an address to the
-legislature. Both bodies met in the lower house. The
-writer was introduced by the speaker. Spoke as follows:</p>
-
-<p>"Mr. President of the General Assembly of the State
-of Arkansas, it affords me great pleasure to have the
-honor of addressing this august body of men assembled in
-this hall. Men who have been elected by the people of
-the whole state. Men who have the interest of the people
-at heart. Men who have the confidence of the people.
-Men who are intelligent and know what kind of laws the
-people need. Men who are determined to do your whole
-duty; men who have the courage, patriotism and love of
-country at heart, who have stood by your post while one
-of the most secret organizations, known as Kuklux, bound
-by one of the most desperate oaths to overturn your state<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
-government by intimidation and murder of all the civil officers
-of the state and to kill and murder the loyal citizens
-of your state. The intention of said organization was to
-overturn the legally constituted laws of the state, but
-through the untiring effort of your governor and his subordinate
-officers and the loyal people of your state and
-the valor and patriotism of your soldiers, this organization
-has been completely routed and broken up and the civil law
-is again declared to be enforced in your state. Now may
-your wisdom as legislators guide you and your successors
-in all duties that you may be called upon to perform in the
-legislative capacity. And may you always have the interest
-of the whole people at heart. And may all the
-laws that may be enacted by this legislature or your successors
-be in the interest of the whole people. And may
-patriotism and the love of both state and nation grow in the
-hearts of your people and may they become so united that
-nothing can sever that cord of love for their state and
-nation. May God's blessing guide and direct every one
-of your public acts, and go with you to your homes and
-families and now that your state is once more at peace and
-the civil law is being enforced, and your people are secure
-both in person and property, I therefore will return
-to Missouri to the bosom of my family. I bid you all
-good bye."</p>
-
-<p>The whole house rose to its feet and gave three cheers
-and pressed forward to give the writer a good, parting
-handshake.</p>
-
-<p>The governor continued to grow worse. The doctors
-would not admit any person to his sick room. The
-adjutant general informed me that the governor wanted to
-see me in person. That I had come to the rescue of
-the people with men and arms, when the loyal people
-were completely overpowered and saved the northern<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
-part of the state from the control of the Kuklux. He said
-the governor was well pleased with my services while
-in the State; that even the rebels spoke in the highest
-terms in regard to the discipline that I enforced over
-my men; that I had protected the person and property of
-both Union and rebel, and that I had given general
-satisfaction to all classes of persons that were favorable to
-the enforcement of the civil law and that it was the desire
-of the governor to promote me to a brigadier-general for
-the valuable services that I had rendered in the state,
-and place me in command of the northern district. I
-said "You can tell the governor when he gets well that I
-was very sorry to find him sick, that it would have been
-a pleasure to me to have met him in person. And the
-offer that he has made to me to promote me to brigadier-general
-for the meritorious services that I have
-rendered to the state places me under many obligations to
-his honor for the high esteem and confidence he imposes
-in me, as touching my military service, and as a
-private citizen while in this state. And while I thank
-him for his offer to promote me to the rank of brigadier-general
-and place me in command of the northern district
-of Arkansas, I must decline the offer and return to Missouri
-for I love the people of my state, I love my home and
-my desire is to become a private citizen. The only thing
-that impelled me to come into your state was to aid the
-state in enforcing the civil law and protect your people
-from assassination and murder and to do all in my power
-to aid in bringing violaters of law to justice. This being
-accomplished and civil law again being enforced in
-every part of the state, my services as a soldier and an
-officer not being needed any longer I will ask you
-again to give my respects to the governor and will ever
-hold his memory sacred, and may God's blessing rest<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
-upon the people of your state and your chief executive.
-So I will bid you good-bye."</p>
-
-<p>I returned to Jacksonport and rejoined my command
-and marched directly to West Plains. There my
-men bid each other good-bye and returned to their
-homes, hoping that this thing of war would be over
-forever.</p>
-
-<p>On my arrival home I found, to my great surprise, a
-new political organization, composed of men who styled
-themselves Liberal Republicans, and democrats and rebels;
-and through some of the most vicious and unprincipled
-rebels, they charged me with being a thief and a murderer.
-My friends came to me and requested that I at
-once institute suits of slander against them, for they
-knew that it was false from beginning to end. During
-the intervening time they had called an indignation
-meeting and publicly denounced me as a thief and murderer.
-I instituted a civil suit for slander against all
-persons who took part in said indignation meeting. I
-also instituted suit against one other man on the same
-charge. The county of Howell at that time, especially
-the judicial circuit, was presided over by a judge, who
-was an extreme democrat. The defence made application
-to the judge for a change of venue from this judicial
-circuit; he ordered the change sent to Laclede county,
-to the city of Lebanon, before Judge Fian. The defence
-then set about taking depositions. I was notified to meet
-them in Sharp county at Evening Shade for the purpose of
-taking depositions. When we met at Evening Shade
-they commenced hunting around for witnesses to prove
-their charges, but failed to find a single one. But every
-person they interviewed touching the charges declared
-that they were false and that Colonel Monks enforced
-discipline over his men while he was in their state and<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
-protected every one in person and property and that
-all classes of persons regarded him as being perfectly
-honest and a good military officer; they failed to procure a
-single witness at that place. I next was notified to meet
-them in Oregon county, at the court house, for the purpose
-of taking depositions. I accordingly armed myself
-with two good navy revolvers and went to Alton, the
-county seat of Oregon county; the circuit court being in
-session at that time, on my arrival I put up at a boarding
-house conducted by Alfred Harris, who still resides in that
-county. Circuit court being in session I went into the
-court room and remained until recess. Just after recess
-the judge came and told me that he had been informed
-that a mob then had the court house surrounded and was
-going to mob me whenever I entered the square, and to
-remain in the court room for a few minutes and he would
-try and have the mob removed; in eight or ten minutes
-the deputy sheriff returned and informed me that the mob
-had been removed, and that I could go down and go to
-my hotel. As I passed down I saw about fifty or sixty men
-in front of the saloons, swearing at the top of their voices
-"He fought us during the civil war and he shall not be
-allowed to come into this county and live." After reaching
-the hotel, Mr. Harris with several other friends urged
-me not to meet the parties, who were going to take depositions
-in one of the rooms of the court house, for they
-believed the mob would kill me. I laughed and told
-them that I reckoned not and that I thought the war was
-over and that they couldn't play that game on me, to notify
-me to meet them to take the depositions and then prepare
-a mob to prevent me from appearing, so that they
-would be able to manufacture evidence in the case. And
-I would either be present at one o'clock, the time I was
-notified to meet them, or I would die in the attempt. So<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
-I appeared promptly at one o'clock, the time set, but not
-one of the opposite party, either attorney or client put in
-an appearance. I remained there until four o'clock and
-still no appearance had been entered by the defendants or
-their attorneys, and I again returned to my hotel, after
-circuit court had adjourned for the day.</p>
-
-<p>While we were seated at the table eating supper, a
-man rapped at the hotel door and called to Mr. Harris, the
-landlord, that he wanted to see him privately for a few
-moments. Mr. Harris soon returned and remarked to the
-writer that he had been ordered to deliver a message; that
-he had just been informed that a mob of about one hundred
-men then had the hotel surrounded and they
-would give me ten minutes to get out of town or I would
-be shot to death. I replied to Mr. Harris, "In the first
-place, I am too old to run; and in the second place, if these
-bushwhackers have not shed enough innocent blood, they
-will have the best opportunity now that they will ever get;
-tell them that I don't intend to leave or run." Mr. Harris
-said that he would deliver the message to the bearer.</p>
-
-<p>There were two Confederates seated at the table,
-eating. They said, "What does this mean? We thought
-the war was over." They got up and left the table. After
-the writer finished his supper, he retired to the sitting
-room, which adjoined Mr. Harris' library. Mr. Harris
-immediately came in and offered to barricade the doors
-and windows. I objected. He then remarked that the
-mob would shoot in through the windows, that he would
-blind the windows. I consented to his putting blinds on
-the windows, but that the doors shouldn't be interfered
-with. There was but one door entering the sitting room
-except the door that came through the library. I took
-my seat on a bench where I could reach the knob of the
-door with my left hand and hold my revolver in my right<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
-hand. Mr. Harris proposed to blow out the lights, to
-which I objected. I told him that if the mob came I
-wanted the light so that I could see how to shoot. He
-then took his seat and entered into conversation. In a
-few moments some person took hold of the knob of the
-door. I rose to my feet with my revolver cocked, in my
-right hand and let the door open just so that one man could
-enter at a time. Mr. Maxey, of Howell county, an attorney-at-law,
-had come in to get a book out of the library,
-not knowing that there was any trouble up. As
-he came inside of the room I had my pistol cocked and
-presented on his left breast. When I recognized Mr.
-Maxey I lowered my pistol and remarked to him, "Your
-face has saved your life." Mr. Maxey became very much
-excited, walked across the floor once or twice, and inquired
-what was up. I informed him of the notice of the
-mob and the time that I had been given to leave the
-hotel and that the time had then expired, and that when
-I heard him take hold of the door, I supposed the mob
-was coming. Mr. Maxey remarked that "This thing
-will never do, I'm going to see if it can't be stopped."
-I requested him to say to every person that might be disposed
-to come into the house to make themselves known
-outside of the door before entering the house.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time the circuit judge and deputy sheriff,
-with two or three others, came to the door and made themselves
-known and came in. The circuit judge said:
-"Colonel, I have been informed that you have been notified
-by a mob to leave the town in ten minutes or you
-would be shot to death, and I have come to see if you
-wanted a guard." I replied that I didn't. "If these God
-damn bushwhackers haven't shed enough innocent blood
-and are still bloodthirsty, they will never have a better
-opportunity; so just let them come." The judge and
-sheriff and those who came with them left the room. I remained
-in the room until the usual bedtime. I heard them
-cursing outside and declare that they would take me out
-before daylight. I thought of my horse that was in the
-stable, a few yards away. I remarked to Mr. Harris that I
-was going to the stable to look at my horse. He begged
-me not to go out, that I would be shot down. I said to
-him that it was a game that two or more could work at.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 580px;">
-<img src="images/i233.jpg" width="580" height="419" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>LOYAL WOMEN OF HOWELL COUNTY.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>On reaching the stable, I heard the men quarreling on
-the public square. A man by the name of Jones, who had
-been a Confederate and then was prosecuting attorney of
-the county, and another citizen, who appeared to be leading
-the mob, were having an altercation. Jones remarked
-to the other man that he had never met Col. Monks
-until to-day and that he appeared to be a perfect
-gentleman, that the war was over, and that he had the
-same right to come here and transact business as any other
-man; to which the other declared, with an oath, that a man
-who had fought them through the war shouldn't come
-there, and they intended to take him out and shoot him
-before daylight; and further charged that Jones was not a
-good Confederate. Jones then gave him the lie. The
-two appeared to be about to come together, but others interfered
-to keep them separated. I returned to the hotel
-and said to Mr. Harris that the seat of war had moved up
-onto the square.</p>
-
-<p>Mr. Maxey informed me that just outside of the door
-of the hotel he met the mob, and they declared that they
-intended to take Monks out and shoot him before daylight.
-He replied to them that they might do it, but they had better
-take their stretchers along, for some other persons would
-have to bring some of them out; that he had just been in
-the house and in a moment he was confronted by Col.
-Monks with a revolver presented at his left breast and the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
-very devil was in his eye, and if they entered the room he
-would shoot as long as he could move a finger.</p>
-
-<p>When bedtime came, I was placed in an upper room
-and locked the door, expecting that if they located my room
-they would shoot through the windows. I could still hear
-them cursing and threatening to take me out until late in
-the night. The next morning everything was quiet. I
-went to the stable and took my horse down to the spring to
-water; a number of men were standing at the side of the
-street, and one said: "Where do you suppose the captain
-and his men are?" I remarked to them that they were
-just like a pack of wolves; they were in the brush this
-morning, waiting for night to again renew their howling.
-There was one, Capt. Wagoner, who resided in town, who
-remarked to me the next morning that he never was as
-proud of anything in his life; that if they could have scared
-me and I had attempted to leave town in the night, they
-intended to murder me.</p>
-
-<p>After circuit court convened, I went into court, and at
-noon of that day the court adjourned. And I, with a number
-of others, went to Thomasville, put up at the hotel, had
-my horse fed and took supper. While on the road, the
-man that led the mob passed me on his way to Thomasville,
-where he resided. The defendants and their attorneys
-failed to produce a single witness to testify in the
-case. I returned home to West Plains.</p>
-
-<p>I was notified to meet them at other places in the country,
-to take depositions in said cause. The political feeling
-was strong then between the parties, and they sent the
-suits to a county over a hundred miles distant from where
-the suits were instituted; this county, at that time, was
-completely controlled by the democratic party.</p>
-
-<p>When the suits came up to be tried, over half of the
-jury had been late rebels, yet they failed to introduce a<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
-single witness to support their charges, and I recovered a
-verdict in each case. Judge Fian, who tried the case, said
-that he was never so surprised in his life; that he opened
-up the floodgates and let them bring in all their evidence
-from the beginning of the war up to the time of the trial.
-Judge Fian had been a colonel on the Federal side in the
-Civil war.</p>
-
-<p>On the account of failure to get any proof the juries
-were compelled to give a verdict in both cases for Col.
-Monks, although it was against the will and feeling of
-them. It cost the defendants between five and seven
-hundred dollars. After the trials, all parties returned to
-Howell county. The defendants, after they had procured
-a change of venue to Laclede county, boasted openly before
-trials, that they were going to beat both cases, that they
-had got them into a democratic county. The defendants
-being beaten at all points, returned, but not being satisfied,
-and being backed by the late bushwhackers and
-Kuklux (the most desperate set of men that ever lived,)
-at the next term of the Howell county circuit court they
-procured the appointment of a special prosecution attorney,
-who had been a late rebel and selected a jury of
-men composed of liberal Republicans and so-called
-democrats, with the express purpose of indicting the
-writer for killing one of the most desperate bushwhackers
-and rebel desperadoes that ever was in South Missouri. The
-men who composed the jury knew well that he was killed
-in an open hand to hand fight during the Civil war. The
-writer soon found out that they were trying to get a bill
-of indictment against the writer, so the writer watched the
-proceedings of the grand jury. On Saturday the grand
-jury came into court and turned in their indictments and
-reported to the court that they had no more business.
-The court discharged them.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>At the same moment the writer asked the court if
-there was any bill of indictment preferred against him.
-He ran over the indictments and informed the writer that
-there was an indictment against him, for murder in the
-first degree. The Judge said that he was sorry that I
-had called it out for he wanted to go home until Monday.
-I told him "Just adjourn your court and go home. The
-sheriff is here." I remarked to the jury that they needn't
-have put the county to any cost hunting witnesses; if they
-had come to me, I could have told them that I killed him
-and the only thing that I was sorry for, was that I
-hadn't killed a lot more of the bushwhackers. I would
-love to ask this jury if they have indicted any of the
-bushwhackers and rebels who have hung and murdered
-Union men all over Howell county, irrespective of age;
-the most of those men were killed at their homes or taken
-from their homes and afterwards killed. A part of the
-men who did these things are still living in Howell county
-and that jury knows it.</p>
-
-<p>The sheriff and the judge stepped out of the court
-house and in a few minutes returned, and the judge remarked
-"I will turn you over to the sheriff." He then ordered
-the sheriff to adjourn the court until the next Monday.
-The sheriff remarked to the writer "You can go
-where you please and report to the court at ten o'clock
-next Monday." The writer remarked, in the presence of
-the judge and sheriff, "I did not know that a man indicted
-for murder in the first degree could be paroled."
-The sheriff adjourned the court and he and the judge left
-the court house together. When I met a number of my
-friends (as there was a political meeting going on that
-day) and informed them that I had been indicted and
-paroled until next Monday, I couldn't make some of them
-believe it.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 391px;">
-<img src="images/i238.jpg" width="391" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>CAPT. WILL H. D. GREEN, GRANDSON.</p>
-
-<p class="right">LIEUT. MARK SPRINGER, CO. K.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>I appeared at ten o'clock the next Monday morning
-and before court was convened, Edward Seay, an attorney-at-law,
-one among the ablest lawyers at the bar, a strong
-rebel sympathizer, came to the writer and said, "It is a
-shame that you have been indicted. It has been done for
-political purpose and I want your consent to file a motion
-to quash the indictment." I remarked to him that I
-would rather have it tried before a jury of my country so
-that I could show the intention and aims of those who
-caused said indictments to be procured. He still plead
-with me to let him file a motion to quash it, that it would
-not cost me one cent. I at last told him to use his own
-pleasure in regard to it, so he filed a motion to quash it,
-and submitted the motion to the court without any argument,
-and the court sustained the motion and quashed the
-indictment. So ended that charge of murder against the
-writer. They saw they were beaten again and their
-schemes were again exposed to the whole people and they
-fell back sullen and became desperate.</p>
-
-<p>In a short time the writer was informed that they were
-threatening to assassinate him and to be continually on the
-watch. I put men on their trails. Several attempts were
-made to decoy the writer into their nets, but they failed.
-They then employed one Dr. Beldon, who made an attempt
-to shoot the author in his own dooryard, but the writer saw
-him in time to prevent his shooting, and he left the county
-at once. Shortly after, the author was again warned to be
-on the watch, that they were still making threats.</p>
-
-<p>There was a man by the name of W. H. McCowen,
-who had been a Confederate colonel, living in West Plains.
-He was known to be a very dangerous man when drinking
-and was an uncompromising rebel. The writer then resided
-in the house south of the town spring, known as the West
-Plains House, and the street ran within a few feet of the<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
-gate, which opened into a hall between the house and
-kitchen. There was a saloon about forty yards west of the
-house, on the same street, run by a man by the name of
-Jackson, another uncompromising rebel. This saloon appeared
-to be headquarters for these would-be assassins.
-I had just brought my horse from the stable and tied him
-by the gate, with the intention of going to my farm. Mrs.
-Lasater, who still resides in West Plains, had just come
-over to my house and was there at the time of the shooting.
-Mrs. McCowen, the wife of Col. McCowen, came
-to my house that morning, came in the back way, and appeared
-to be very much excited, and informed me that certain
-men were going to assassinate me that morning; that
-to her knowledge they had been plotting for three days.
-They had been using every inducement, making her husband
-drunk and trying to work him into it. She had shut
-him up and locked the doors to keep them away from her
-husband, but they would raise the windows and come in.
-She had done all she could to keep her husband out of it,
-and she thought it was her duty to come and let me know
-that they had agreed to shoot me that morning. I thanked
-her for the information and said to her that I would ever be
-grateful to her. I further said to her that I did not want
-to hurt the colonel or any other person, but they must not
-come to my house on that kind of business if they didn't
-want to get hurt. In a few moments she returned home,
-going around the back way.</p>
-
-<p>I at once sent to S. P. Woodworth, a merchant who
-resided in West Plains and a strong Union man, for his
-double-barrelled shotgun. I had two good navy pistols.
-He sent me his gun and said it was well loaded with buckshot
-and was sure to fire. I advised the women, if they
-came, to keep cool and go into the back room so they
-would be out of danger. I raised the two front windows of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
-the sitting-room about two or three inches, so I could
-shoot under them, keeping a close watch on the saloon.
-In about thirty minutes after Mrs. McCowen left, I saw two
-of the men leave the saloon and come in the direction of my
-house. They came to the gate, opened it and stepped onto
-the porch. My wife went to the door and begged them to
-leave. One of the men said that he wanted to see the
-colonel. He was armed with two first-class pistols, one of
-the pistols belonging to Col. McCowen. I cocked both
-barrels of my shotgun and stepped out on the porch with
-my gun presented and ordered him to turn around and
-leave my premises in one minute. Just at that moment
-my youngest daughter, now the wife of Mr. Green, sprang
-forward and caught my gun. I said to her; "For God's
-sake keep away from me." But she stood by my side.
-During this time he had passed outside of the gate and had
-gotten behind a tree; had his pistol cocked and presented
-at me and in a moment I had him covered with my shotgun.
-He would attempt to get sight on me and would dodge his
-head back behind the tree. Not knowing where the other
-man was, I watched his head and when he attempted to take
-sight I fired at his head; at the crack of the gun he fell. Then
-six or seven men commenced jumping out at the door of
-the saloon. The first thing I thought of was, "They will
-pretend to arrest me and give the mob a chance to shoot
-me after I am disarmed." I sprang on my horse and rode
-east and in a few moments five or six men came to my
-door and asked my wife who shot first. She ordered them to
-leave the house. They soon found that one of the would-be
-assassins was shot. On an examination it was found that
-one of the shot had struck him in the right side of the
-forehead, the right side of the brim of his hat was torn
-into fragments and the tree had caught a part of the
-load. The tree is still standing in the yard. Immediate<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>ly
-afterward I sent them word that they had again opened
-the ball and I was ready to fight it out. I never saw men
-begin to plead for peace as hard in my life. The sheriff
-and others would come to me and say: "Colonel, why
-didn't you shoot some of those fellows long ago? That is
-just what they needed." I asked them why they hadn't
-arrested some of the assassins long ago.</p>
-
-<p>When the Union men learned that an attempt had
-been made by these would-be assassins to assassinate me
-about two hundred and fifty of them headed by such men
-as J. F. Reiley, Esau Fox, Andrew V. Tabor, David B.
-Nicholass, John B. Nicholass, Josiah Carico, Chas. Long,
-J. Youngblood, and Geo. Youngblood rode into town
-well armed and publicly notified these assassins and those
-who were aiding and abetting them, that if another attempt
-was made to assassinate Colonel Monks, or if they did
-assassinate him it would take ten of their leaders to pay
-the debt and they knew just who they were. On an
-investigation, it was proven that on the night before they
-attempted the assassination about ten or twelve of these
-would-be assassins met together in the town of West
-Plains, and one of their leaders set out among other causes
-why Colonel Monks would have to be killed; that they had
-tried to scare him away from the country but found they
-couldn't scare him and the only way to keep the republican
-party from going into power again in this county was
-to kill Colonel Monks. Some of the men that were present
-were hired to do the shooting next morning and paid
-the money. They drank a health to each other on the
-death of Colonel Monks next morning. The man who
-advised and instructed them and paid them a part of the
-money is still living in Howell county. This failure
-in their attempt to assassinate me and the action taken by
-the loyal men appeared to put a quietus on their idea of<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
-assassination; if they ever made any further effort the
-writer never learned about it. They had been defeated in
-every attempt made either to slander or murder me.</p>
-
-<p>I want to say here that I shall ever hold sacred the
-memory of Mrs. McCowen, for I owe to her the preservation
-of my life, and may God's blessing ever follow her
-and rest upon her.</p>
-
-<p>The bushwhackers and the Kuklux element were not
-yet satisfied and had but one way to vent their spleen
-against me. That was to get right down to hard lying.
-Having failed to prove a single one of their charges against
-me in the courts they were bent on injuring me and
-damaging my character. With no regard for the truth
-they would go around secretly and tell strangers who
-knew nothing about me that I was a murderer
-and a thief. The better element among those who had
-been Confederates declared openly that these statements
-were false from beginning to end. Many of them have said
-that I was an honest man, and that if any one wished to
-employ an honest lawyer Monks was the man to go to,
-for no one could buy him.</p>
-
-<p>Sometimes I would be informed that a late Confederate
-would say: "I believe Col. Monks was a good man
-and an honest one. But I dislike him because he fought
-us so hard during the war." I would reply: "Tell him
-that I couldn't please them in any way at the commencement
-of the war; I didn't want to take up
-arms. I was an unconditional Union man, and they,
-the rebels, came to my home and arrested me, took
-me into their command and swore that I should fight; that
-they would make me fight and attempted to force me into
-the Confederate lines, and when I found that nothing
-else would do them but to fight, and I went to fighting,
-then they turn about and curse me for fighting."</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Again I would be informed that some of those persons,
-who had no regard for the truth, would secretly
-charge me with being a murderer. In reply I would inform
-them that every part of the country where I had performed
-military service was now in the control of the
-Democratic party and there was no limitation to the crime
-of murder.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span></p>
-
-
-<h3>Henry Dixon Green.</h3>
-
-<p>Henry Dixon Green was born in Henderson county
-Ky., in the year 1851. His father, H. D. Green, was a
-colonel in the Confederate army, and died while in the
-service. In 1876, the younger Green left his native state,
-taking Horace Greeley's advice, and went west to grow
-up with the country. He located at West Plains, Mo.,
-and soon began reading law in the office of Hon. A. H.
-Livingston. He was admitted to the bar, and formed a
-co-partnership with Mr. Livingston in the practice of law,
-which continued for several years. Afterwards he formed
-a partnership with Judge B. F. Olden. This firm was for
-years the local legal representative for the Kansas City, Fort
-Scott and Memphis Railroad Company, now part of the
-Frisco System. Mr. Green acted as claim agent for this
-railroad, and afterwards had charge of the claim department
-of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company for the
-territory of Kansas, Nebraska, Colorado and Indian Territory,
-but resigned to resume the general practice of law
-at West Plains, Mo. He has served as Probate Judge of
-Howell county.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span></p>
-
-<div class="figcenter" style="width: 342px;">
-<img src="images/i246.jpg" width="342" height="580" alt="" />
-<div class="caption"><p>RUSSELL GREEN AND DIXON GREEN.</p></div>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span></p>
-
-<p>Mr. Green was married in 1878 at West Plains to Miss
-Mary M. Monks, daughter of Col. Wm. Monks. Mrs.
-Green is a strong republican while Mr. Green is a strong
-supporter of the principles of the democratic party; but
-their home life is perfectly peaceful and happy. Five
-children have brightened this home, a daughter, now
-Mrs. Arch Bugg, and four sons, Will H. D., Frank, Russell
-and Dixon. The children all take their politics from
-their mother. The oldest son, Will, has been admitted to
-the Howell county bar and is now practicing law with his
-father. He is also Captain of Company K, the local military
-company of West Plains. The second and third sons
-are also members of the company. Frank works and
-studies at present in his father's law office, and the other
-boys are in school.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div id="transnote">
-
-<div class="chapter"></div>
-
-<h2><a name="TRANSCRIBERS_NOTES" id="TRANSCRIBERS_NOTES">TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE</a></h2>
-
-<p>Added table of contents.</p>
-
-<p>Changed a few instances of Ku-Klux (excepting the title page) to Kuklux as the author clearly preferred the latter spelling.</p>
-
-<p>Changed lop-eard, lopeard, and lop-eared to lopeared as that spelling was somewhat dominant.</p>
-
-<p>Silently corrected simple spelling, grammar, and typographical errors.</p>
-
-<p>Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="full" />
-<p>***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND NORTHERN ARKANSAS***</p>
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@@ -1,7132 +0,0 @@
-The Project Gutenberg eBook, A History of Southern Missouri and Northern
-Arkansas, by William Monks
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: A History of Southern Missouri and Northern Arkansas
- Being an Account of the Early Settlements, the Civil War, the Ku-Klux, and Times of Peace
-
-
-Author: William Monks
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 3, 2016 [eBook #51118]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND
-NORTHERN ARKANSAS***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Richard Tonsing and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 51118-h.htm or 28711-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28711/28711-h/28711-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/28711/28711-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/monksmissouri00willrich
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: COLONEL MONKS AND WIFE.]
-
-
-A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND NORTHERN ARKANSAS
-
-Being an Account of the Early Settlements,
-the Civil War, the Ku-Klux, and
-Times of Peace.
-
-by
-
-WILLIAM MONKS
-
-West Plains, Mo.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-West Plains Journal Co.
-West Plains, Mo.
-1907
-
-Copyright 1907
-by
-William Monks
-
-
-
-
-Introduction.
-
-
-Now the author was born in the state of Alabama, in Jackson county, on
-the north side of the Tennessee River, near Huntsville. He was the son
-of James Monks and Nancy Monks. The father of James Monks came over
-from Ireland during the Revolutionary War and served in that war until
-the independence of the United States was acknowledged. Afterwards he
-married a lady of English descent and settled down in the State of
-South Carolina. His father died when he was but an infant. His mother
-removed to the state of Tennessee, being left with five children, James
-being the youngest. Growing up to manhood in that state, he removed to
-the north part of the state of Alabama and there married Nancy Graham,
-who was a daughter of Jesse Graham. They were originally from the state
-of Virginia.
-
-James Monks enlisted in the United States Army and served in the Indian
-war that was known as the Seminole war, in the state of Florida. After
-his term of service had expired he returned home and sold his farm and
-had a flatboat built and placed in the Tennessee River near Gunters
-Landing, with the intention of moving to the state of Florida. Taking
-his brother-in-law, a Mr. Phillips, on the boat with him, they went
-down the river by Decatur, were piloted through the Mussell Shoals, and
-at the foot of the shoals at what is known as Tuscumbia, the writer
-remembers seeing a part of the Cherokee Indians that were being removed
-from the state of Alabama to their present location. The writer can
-remember seeing the Cherokee Indians before they were removed from the
-state of Alabama.
-
-On reaching Southern Illinois, eight miles from Paducah, my father
-landed his boat and looked over the country and came to the conclusion
-that that country was good enough, and located in what was then Pope
-County. Afterwards they cropped a piece off of Pope and a piece off
-of Johnson, and created a new county and named it Massack, after the
-old government fort, and located the county seat, named Metropolis. My
-father resided nine years in that state, then sold out and started to
-move to the state of Texas. On arriving in Fulton county, Arkansas, he
-concluded to locate in that county.
-
-Soon after his arrival, in the latter part of June or July, 1844, the
-writer was employed to carry the United States mail from Salem, the
-county seat of Fulton County, to Rockbridge, then the county seat of
-Ozark county, Missouri. My father and mother taught me to be loyal to
-my government from my earliest remembrance, and I don't think that
-two persons more honest than they ever lived. They taught me from my
-earliest recollection to be honest and upright, and I have tried, and
-believe I have lived up to their teaching to the very letter; and no
-man or woman before the war, during the war, nor since the war, can say
-anything else and tell the truth. Religiously, my father and mother
-were Baptists, and I believe that they were Christians.
-
-
-
-
-EARLY SETTLEMENTS.
-
-
-In the year 1844 father sold out and in May started to move to the
-state of Texas; crossed the Mississippi river at Green's old ferry,
-came by the way of Jackson, Missouri, and traveled the old military
-road made by the government troops in removing the Cherokee Indians
-from the state of Alabama to their present location--only road leading
-west--and in July of the same year (learning that it was very dangerous
-for a man to take his family into the state of Texas on account of the
-Indians), he concluded to locate in Fulton county, Arkansas, purchased
-an improvement and located on what is known as Bennett's river, about
-25 miles from where West Plains is now located. The family at that
-time consisted of six persons, to-wit: father, mother and four sons,
-the author then being in his fifteenth year; father, being a farmer
-by occupation, went to work on the farm. The country at that time was
-very sparsely settled. The settlements were confined to the creeks
-and rivers, where were found plenty of water and springs. No place at
-that time was thought worth settling unless it had a spring upon it.
-The vegetation was luxuriant, the broom sedge and blue stem growing as
-high as a man's head--and he upon an ordinary horse. The table lands,
-which were thought at that time to be worthless, had very little timber
-growing on them, but were not prairie. There were what were known as
-post oak runners and other brush growing on the table lands, but the
-grass turf was very heavy and in the spring of the year the grass would
-soon cover the sprouts and the stranger would have taken all of the
-table lands, except where it was interspersed with groves, to have
-been prairie. The country settled up--some of the settlements being
-15 miles apart--yet the early settlers thought nothing of neighboring
-and assisting each other as neighbors for the distance of 15 miles. At
-that time Fulton county contained all of the present territory that now
-includes Baxter, Fulton and a part of Sharp counties; and but a short
-time previous to the organization of Fulton, all of the territory that
-now embraces Fulton, Baxter and Sharp; Izard belonged to Independence
-county and Batesville was the county seat. My father located about five
-miles from the state line.
-
-Ozark county, in Missouri, joined Fulton county on the state line and
-all of the territory that now comprises Ozark, Douglas and the west
-half of Howell, belonged to Ozark county and Rockbridge, its county
-seat, being located on Bryan's Fork of the North Fork, about 50 miles
-from the state line. Oregon county contained all the territory that now
-comprises Oregon, Shannon, and the east end of Howell; and a short time
-previous all of the territory that now comprises Ripley, Oregon, Carter
-and Shannon belonged to Ripley county; and all of the territory that
-now comprises Texas, Dent, Wright and Crawford counties belonged to
-Crawford county. The country at that time abounded in millions of deer,
-turkeys, bears, wolves and small animals. I remember as my father was
-moving west and after he had crossed White Water near what was known
-as Bullinger's old mill, that we could see the deer feeding on the
-hills in great herds like cattle, and wild turkeys were in abundance.
-Wild meat was so plentiful that the settlers chiefly subsisted upon
-the flesh of wild animals until they could grow some tame stock, such
-as hogs and cattle. This country then was almost a "land of honey."
-Bees abounded in great number and men hunted them for the profit they
-derived from the beeswax. There was no such thing known as a bee moth.
-
-Honeydew fell in such quantities as to completely kill the tops of
-the grass where it was open. I have known young turkeys, after they
-were large enough for use, to have their wings so gummed with honeydew
-that they could not fly out of the way of a dog--have known lots of
-them to be caught with dogs when they wanted to use them. There was no
-question in regard to there being honey when you cut a bee tree, if
-the hollow and space in the tree were sufficient and the bees had had
-time to fill it. I have known bee trees being cut that had 8 and 10
-feet of solid comb that was candied and grained. When my father first
-located, beeswax, peltry and fur skins almost constituted the currency
-of the country. I remember that a short time after my father located,
-a gentleman came to my father's house and wanted to buy a horse and
-offered to pay him in beeswax and peltry, and as I had been accustomed
-to paper currency in the state of Illinois, I asked my father what
-kind of money peltry was. He laughed and remarked, "Well son, it is
-not money at all; it is deer skins." A man thought nothing of buying
-a horse or a yoke of oxen, or to make any other common debt on the
-promise of discharging the same in beeswax and peltry in one month's
-time.
-
-The immigration consisted mostly of farmers and mechanics. Among the
-mechanics were coopers who would make large hogsheads for the purpose
-of holding the honey after it was separated from the beeswax, and a
-man then had his choice to use either candied honey or fresh honey. I
-knew whole hogsheads that were full of candied honey. When men would
-make a contract to deliver any amount or number of pounds of beeswax,
-and within a given time, especially in the fall of the year, they would
-either take a yoke of cattle or two horses and a wagon and with their
-guns and camp equipage go out from the settlements into what was then
-termed the "wilderness," and burn bee comb. In a short time the bees
-would be working so strong to the bait that they could scarcely course
-them. In the morning they would hunt deer, take off pelts until the
-deer would lie down, then they would hunt bees and mark the trees until
-the deer would get up to feed in the afternoon, when they would again
-resume their hunt for deer. After they had found a sufficient number of
-bee trees and marked them, the morning following they would go out and
-kill nothing but large deer; case-skin them until they had a sufficient
-number of hides to contain the honey that they expected to take from
-the trees, take the hides to the camp, tie a knot in the fore legs of
-the hide, take dressed buckskin and a big awl, roll the hide of the
-neck in about three folds, run two rows of stitches, draw it tight,
-then go to their wagons with ridgepole and hooks already prepared, knot
-the hind legs of the skins, hang them over the hooks, take their tub,
-a knife and spoon, proceed to the trees, stop their team a sufficient
-distance from the tree to prevent the bees from stinging the animals,
-cut the tree, take out the honey, place it in the tub, and when the
-tub was filled carry it to the wagon where the hides were prepared,
-empty their tubs into the deer skins, return again to another tree
-and continue cutting until the hides were all filled with honey; then
-they would return home, take the hides from the hooks on the ridge
-pole on the wagon, hang them on hooks prepared for the purpose in the
-smokehouse and then the men's work was done.
-
-The labor of the women then commenced. They would proceed to separate
-the honey from the beeswax, pouring the honey into hogsheads, kegs or
-barrels prepared for it, and running the beeswax into cakes ready for
-the market, while the men were stretching and drying the deerskins.
-As soon as the deerskins were dried and the honey was separated from
-the beeswax, they were ready for the market and took their place as
-currency, while the flesh of the deer, sometimes, when bread was
-scarce, took the place of both bread and meat, with a change, whenever
-the appetite called for it, to turkey and other wild game.
-
-At night they would hunt for fur animals, such as raccoon, fox and
-mink, and stretch their hides; a first-class raccoon hide would sell
-for 40 to 50 cents; fox, 25 and 30 cents; mink, from 65 to 75c. I have
-often known the people to pay their taxes, when the collector came
-around, with fur skins, such as raccoon and fox. The collector would
-take the hides right at the house and give them a clear receipt for
-their taxes, both state and county. I have seen collectors leading a
-horse for the purpose of carrying his fur skins. I have seen the horse
-completely covered with fur skins, so you could see no part of him but
-his head and his hoofs and tail--one could not have told there was a
-horse beneath the load unless he had known it.
-
-The people then had many advantages that they are deprived of now, in
-the way of wild meat, abundance of honey and fine range. A man could
-raise all the stock in the way of horses and cattle that he could
-possibly look after; the only expense was salting and caring for
-them--didn't have to feed, winter nor summer, except the horses in use
-and the cows used for milking purposes. While, on the other-hand, they
-labored under a great many disadvantages, in the way of schools and
-churches. During the residence of my father in the state of Illinois,
-we had a very good common school system, and we had three months of
-school every fall. My father being a farmer, sent me only the three
-months' term in the fall. I had acquired a limited education before his
-removal to Arkansas, yet he was interested in giving his children an
-education. At that time there were no free schools, only subscription
-schools; teachers generally were incompetent and employed through
-favoritism, and not upon their qualifications to teach. In a year or
-two after my father located, the settlement got together and located
-a school-house site, took their teams, hauled round logs, built them
-into walls, made a dirt floor, cut out a large window in the side,
-split a tree and made a writing desk, split small trees, hewed them and
-made benches for seats, cut a hole in one end of the house, erected
-a wooden chimney, what was then known as a stick and clay chimney,
-chinked and daubed the cracks, made a clapboard roof, hung the door
-with wooden hinges, then the house was considered ready for the school
-and had the name of teaching a three-months' subscription school; and
-very often half of the pupils were better scholars than the teachers.
-All they gained in their education was by attention to study. As the
-country improved in population, the people improved in the erection of
-school-houses and church-houses and constructed, in place of the round
-log school-house and dirt floor, hewed log school-houses with puncheon
-floors, stick and clay chimneys.
-
-Those pioneer settlers took a great interest in each other's welfare,
-and the different settlements met together from a distance of 15 to
-40 miles and adopted rules and customs binding each other to aid and
-assist in helping any person who met with any misfortune in the way
-of sickness, death or other causes that might occur, and I must say
-that there was more charity and real religion practiced among those
-pioneer settlers, although many of them were looked upon as being
-crude and unlettered. There was a great deal of sickness along the
-streams, especially chills and fever. Immigrants came in, generally
-in sufficient numbers to form a settlement; and I have known them,
-very often, after they had located and opened out 10 to 15 acres and
-put it in cultivation and broke the ground and planted their corn, for
-the whole family to be taken down at one time with chills and fever,
-not able even to help each other or administer to their wants. As soon
-as the information reached the other settlements for a distance of 15
-miles or more, the different settlements would set a day to meet at the
-place with their horses, plows, hoes, wagons, etc.; also provisions,
-such as bread-stuff and salt. On meeting, they would ascertain the
-condition of the family or families and learn what they needed in the
-way of provision, medicine, nursing, etc.; they would then and there
-agree that the different settlements should divide up the time, set
-the day for each one to furnish waiters to wait upon them in their
-sickness, such medicine as they needed, provisions and everything that
-was necessary to render comfort, and in the morning before breakfast
-they would go out and kill a deer and as many turkeys as they needed,
-dress them, prepare them for the cook, who had been brought with them,
-go into the field after breakfast, plow and hoe the corn, clean out
-the garden, leave the families in charge of nurses and return again
-to their respective settlements. Those families, as soon as they were
-well, not being acquainted with the customs and rules, would meet them
-and inquire as to what amount they owed them for what they had done for
-them during their sickness. They would be readily informed, "_Nothing._
-You are not acquainted with our rules and customs. Now, we have
-obligated and pledged ourselves together not to let any sick or other
-disabled person suffer for the want of necessary attention, and the
-only thing we require of you is, if any other person should move into
-the country and locate, and should be taken down and confined through
-sickness or any other cause, that you help in furnishing such aid and
-necessaries as they may need until they are able to again take care of
-themselves." Now, I have just remarked that there was more real charity
-and religion practiced among pioneers than there is in the present
-day. The people then all appeared to be interested in bettering the
-condition of society.
-
-As soon as it was possible, the different settlements erected
-church-houses built of hewed timber, floored with puncheons, hewed
-seats, size of house generally from 18 by 20 to 22 by 25 feet, chinked
-and daubed. The churches or denominations then were Baptists and
-Methodists. There didn't appear to be any antagonism or hatred existing
-between the denominations; the doors were thrown wide open for any
-minister that might travel through and they all turned out, and you
-heard nothing said then in regard to "my church" or "your church."
-They appeared to recognize the fact that it was the Lord's church and
-that they were the Lord's people. In going to church, sometimes from
-1 to 10 miles, they would see flocks of turkeys and herds of wild
-deer, both going and coming. As soon as the crops were laid by, they
-would agree among the different settlements as to where a camp-meeting
-should be held; they would then erect camps or huts, make boards to
-cover them, erect an arbor, fill the center of it with straw, and to
-the distance of 25 to 35 miles they would all turn out, irrespective
-of denomination, and all appeared to enjoy themselves, and the love of
-Christ appeared to dwell in each heart, and they appeared to be proud
-of the privilege of meeting each other and worshiping together. If
-any member belonging to either of the denominations defrauded, or in
-any way wronged his brother, he was at once waited upon and requested
-to make reparation to his brother and acknowledge to his brother and
-to the church, or he was withdrawn from or turned out of the church.
-The immigration was chiefly from the Middle States, some from the
-Southern States and very few from the Northeastern States. They were
-frugal, energetic, honest, intelligent and industrious. As the country
-increased in population, the facilities of both schools and churches
-improved.
-
-The customs and habits were entirely different from those existing now;
-the wearing apparel was entirely home-made; they would raise their
-cotton, pick it out with their fingers or a hand gin, women would
-spin their warp, spin their filling, get their different colors from
-different barks for men's wear; the women used indigo and copperas for
-the main colors in manufacturing the cloth for dresses, wound their
-stripes on a stick and then wove it into cloth; you could scarcely
-visit a house but what you would see a loom, big spinning-wheel and
-little wheel; sometimes you would see three or four wheels at one
-house. They made both their every day and Sunday wear; the women
-appeared to take great pride in seeing who could weave the nicest piece
-of cloth, make it into a dress, make cloth and make it into what was
-known as Virginia bonnets, and the men tanned their own leather, made
-shoes for the whole family. When the women were dressed completely in
-their homespun they appeared to enjoy themselves, in church, in company
-or any other gathering, and felt just as independent and proud as the
-king upon his throne; they appeared to meet each other and greet each
-other and all appeared to realize the fact that they were human and
-they had but one superior and that was God. The women spun the warp,
-spun the wool, wove it into cloth, procured the different barks from
-the woods and dyed it, the general color being brown, made it with
-their own hands into coats, pants, undershirts; made overshirts out
-of homespun cotton and the whole suit was home-made, and very often a
-cap, made either of the raccoon or a fox, was worn on the head. When
-men met each other at any public gathering they appeared to be proud
-of meeting each other; appeared to realize the fact that they were all
-American citizens and human, bound together by the ties of love and
-affection, and the highest ambition appeared to be to make each other
-happy and help one another in time of need.
-
-I don't believe there was as much dissipation by partaking of
-intoxicants, or other wickedness, as exists to-day among the same
-number of persons. It is true that then any man who was able to
-purchase a little still and had a spring could erect his own still
-house and make his own whiskey without paying any tax or duty upon the
-same, and anyone of his neighbors who wanted a gallon of whiskey could
-carry a bushel of corn to the still-house and get a gallon of whiskey
-in exchange for it. And if men became drunk on the whiskey it did not
-appear to make them wild and crazy as the whiskey of to-day does.
-
-Men then, as well as now, would have disagreements and fall out
-and fight, but the custom that prevailed among that class would
-not tolerate nor allow a man to use weapons, and if two men had a
-disagreement, one of them being a large, stout man physically, the
-other being a small man, not equal in strength--if they were together
-in a public place and the large one would challenge the weaker to
-fight him, before he could hardly open his mouth, some man present who
-considered himself to be his equal in physical strength, would just say
-to him "now then, if you want to fight, that man is not your equal,
-but I am; get your second and walk out and I will do the fighting for
-this other man." I have, on different occasions, seen the large man who
-was challenging the weaker for a fight reply to the challenge and say,
-"My friend, I have nothing against you; this other man hasn't treated
-me right," or set out some other reason that he ought to whip him; the
-man in reply would say, "I don't want to hear another word from you
-in regard to wanting to fight this other man, and if I do you have got
-me to fight." Very often I have seen the man shut his mouth and turn
-away and say nothing more. On the other hand, I have heard a man say to
-another, "If you want to fight, I am your man; the other man is unable
-to fight you," and in an instant the other would reply. "Well, sir,
-I am your man; just as leave fight you as anybody else." They would
-select their seconds, take a drink of whiskey together, enter into
-an agreement that whenever the seconds said either one was whipped,
-that they were to abide by it, unless they found out before their
-seconds did that they were whipped, and if so, they would manifest it
-by holloing "enough," when the other person was to stop at once and
-inflict no more injury. I have often seen them fight until they were
-both as bloody as butchers and in the end the seconds would have to
-hollo for one or the other. As soon as they were separated they would
-go to the same pool or place where there was water and wash themselves,
-and walk arm-in-arm, laughing and talking and drinking together and
-remark, "We are now fast friends and we have settled the matter as to
-which was the best man." And if a man would produce a weapon on either
-side his own friends would turn against him and he would be forced to
-put it up at once. Men then appeared to be governed by that higher
-inspiration, that a man should not use anything that would permanently
-disable or take the life of his fellow-man; but if one man became
-pregnant with fight or desire to maim his fellow-man, in order that
-he should not be disappointed, some man would readily volunteer, who
-believed that he was his equal physically, and deliver him of all his
-fighting propensities.
-
-
-Dow Bryant and a Gallon of Whisky
-
-I will here relate an instance that I well remember. A man by the name
-of Bridges lived just above where Bakersfield is now located, owned a
-little mill at the same place where they still continue the work of the
-mill just above Bakersfield. The mill ground from twelve to fifteen
-bushels per day; most of us carried our sacks on horseback, and ground
-by turns. Bridges had employed a man by the name of Math Shipman to
-run the mill. He was a small man weighing only about 135 pounds, and
-there was a man by the name of Dow Bryant, lately from the state of
-Tennessee, quite a large man, weighing 225 pounds, who delighted in
-fighting under the old style, and claimed that he had whipped two of
-the best men in Tennessee at the same time. Shipman had made some
-statement that reflected upon Bryant; so Bryant procured a gallon of
-whiskey, and, taking two men with him, went from Bennett's river over
-to the mill and informed Shipman of what he had heard he had said in
-regard to him, and said to Shipman that if he had said it and didn't
-take it back, he would have to whip him, and the only thing he hated
-about it would be the whipping of as little a man as he was. Shipman
-replied that he need not take that matter into consideration, and that
-his father had always taught him that if he told anything and it was
-the truth, not to take it back under any consideration, and that what
-he had said was true; and as to his whipping him, his father had always
-taught him never to admit anything until he knew it was true; and "I
-have my doubts about you being able to whip me; but if you will get
-your second ready, as soon as the corn that is in the hopper is ground
-out and I refill the hopper I will get my second and we will go out
-into the mill yard so you can test it." They accordingly got their
-seconds, went into the mill yard, formed a ring, and when the word
-was given by the seconds, they went together. Shipman bit every finger
-on the right hand and three fingers on the left hand to the bone; and
-Bryant's friends, seeing he was going to be whipped, proposed parting
-them. Bryant returned home, and when his neighbors would meet him with
-his fingers all bound up, they would say, "Hello there! What's the
-matter?" His reply would be, "I went over into the wilderness and got
-hold of a wildcat, and it like to have eaten me up before I could get
-loose from it." He would further say that Shipman was all mouth, and
-that he could not put his hands anywhere about his head unless he got
-them in his mouth.
-
-I will give another instance touching the same man (Bryant). He went
-over to Salem during circuit court. The sheriff of the county was a man
-by the name of Dick Benton, quite a small man, and the constable of
-the township was named Moore and a very small man. Bryant was drinking
-some, and wanted to fight as usual, and became noisy. The judge ordered
-the constable to arrest him; but when Bryant saw the constable coming,
-he backed behind an old building, and ordered the constable not to rush
-upon him. When the constable came in reach, he knocked him down, came
-walking around, and remarked that no tickey officer could arrest him.
-The judge then ordered the sheriff to arrest him. When the sheriff came
-within reach, he knocked him down, came walking back, and remarked,
-"I thought they understood me when I told them that a tickey set of
-officers could not arrest me." During the time the father-in-law of
-the sheriff had come out. Bryant walked up to him, and with a d----
-said: "I want to know what you are doing here." Without any more words
-being passed, the sheriff's father-in-law knocked Bryant down, jumped
-onto him, but he holloed, and they took him off. Bryant straightened
-himself up right into his face again and remarked, "I have told a lie,
-I am not whipped." Without any more words he knocked him down again
-and gave him a considerable pelting. Bryant holloed again, and after
-they had taken him off, he straightened up and walked off about ten
-steps distant, turned around, and remarked, "I have told a lie, I am
-not whipped; but I am not going to say it within reach of that old man
-any more." On the same day some men knocked him down, taking a common
-clapboard, hit him three licks while he was running on all fours, then
-got a piece of chalk and wrote on it, "Dow's board," and nailed it up
-on the corner of the square.
-
-The drinking class for years used all manner of language and obscenity
-in the streets, and even in the hearing of the court. There was a man
-by the name of Neeley who became a candidate for circuit judge, and one
-of the main reasons he urged for his election was that, if elected, he
-would punish all offenders of the public peace, and force all persons
-to respect the court, and he would discharge the duties with some
-dignity and respect for himself and the people. Shortly after he was
-elected and during his first court, a man by the name of Smith, who
-lived just north of Salem on the South Fork, and who had worked for
-his election, came into the court room after the court was in session,
-walked around to the judge, took him by the hand and remarked, "Judge,
-I want to congratulate you on your success, and I hope things will
-change." The judge turned to the clerk and remarked, "Mr. Clerk, assess
-a fine of five dollars against Mr. Smith." Smith soon retired from the
-court room and declared that Neeley was a tyrant, and that if he had
-his vote back he would not support him. In the afternoon the judge
-ordered the sheriff to bring Mr. Smith into the court room and said
-to him, "Mr. Smith, you were a warm friend of mine in my canvass,
-worked for my election, and no doubt contributed much to my success.
-Now I don't want to disappoint you in any promises that I made during
-the canvass, but after court is convened and the judge on the bench,
-it is contempt in any gentleman to come up and take him by the hand
-and congratulate him on his success; and now I hope that you, with all
-others of my friends, and those who are not, will support and protect
-me in enforcing the dignity of the court." Mr. Smith at once became
-pacified, and said that the judge was right.
-
-We remember another instance that occurred during the same court. There
-was a young lawyer, who came into court, wearing a very fine pair of
-boots, and, standing on his feet, he would occasionally raise onto his
-toes, and you could hear his boots creak all over the court room. The
-judge turned to him and remarked, "Mr., what did those boots cost you?"
-The lawyer quickly replied, "Ten dollars, sir." The judge remarked to
-him, "I think you got the boots too cheap. I think they ought to be
-worth twenty dollars. Mr. Clerk, assess a fine of ten dollars against
-this man."
-
-On the next day a man by the name of Cage Hogan, a man who was widely
-known, in company with others, got on the public square, near the
-saloon, and began to curse and swear, and use all manner of obscenity.
-The judge ordered the sheriff to go down and see who was making the
-disturbance. The sheriff went out to the place and stated to the
-crowd that the judge had ordered him to see who was creating that
-disturbance, and to arrest the party. Hogan remarked, with an oath,
-"You go back and tell the old judge that it is Cage Hogan, and that I
-suppose he has heard of me before, and I don't allow sheriffs to arrest
-me until I get ready." The sheriff came back and reported to the court,
-and the judge made an order for him to proceed at once and arrest
-Mr. Hogan and all others that he might find acting in a boisterous
-manner, and if necessary to take the power of the county, and if he
-didn't immediately bring him into the court room he would assess a
-fine against him of $100. The sheriff returned and informed Mr. Hogan
-of what the court had said, and that he would be bound to arrest him
-and take him by force if he didn't go without it. Hogan remarked that
-if it would be any pleasure and consolation to the old tyrant he was
-the man who could go into the court room. When he came into the court
-room, the sheriff said, "Here is Mr. Hogan." Mr. Hogan remarked, with
-an oath, "I am here, judge, and I would like to know what you want."
-The judge replied that there were some parties creating a disturbance
-in the hearing of the court and that he had ordered them arrested and
-brought in. "Do you know who the parties are?" Hogan, with an oath,
-replied, "I am the man; and, judge, I want you to understand that I am
-a horse, and if you hain't become acquainted with old Cage Hogan, you
-will." The judge remarked to him that they had a stable and that was
-the place for horses, and that he would assess a fine of $50 against
-him, and ordered the sheriff to take him to jail until it was paid.
-Hogan, remarking, "I always carry the money to pay my way, and you need
-not put yourself to any trouble to have the sheriff carry me to jail,"
-pulled out his pocket book, took out $50, and said, with an oath,
-"Here is the money, and I want you to understand that I am no jail
-bird, and you can't stick me in your old jail." The judge then said,
-"Mr. Hogan seems to have plenty of money; Mr. Clerk assess another $50
-fine against him." At that Hogan appeared to hesitate and reflect,
-and, pulling out a quart bottle of whiskey from his pocket, started to
-approach the judge, who was on the bench, saying with an oath, "Here,
-judge, let's drink together and be friends and stop this foolishness."
-The judge turned to the clerk and said: "Mr. Clerk, assess another fine
-of $50 against him," and ordered the sheriff to take him forthwith to
-jail and keep him there until further orders, for he considered him an
-unlawful horse, and he did not think it safe for society for him to
-run at large. The sheriff, with a considerable posse, carried him to
-the jail, and with considerable trouble put him in and shut him up. He
-remained in jail two days, and at the evening session of the second day
-the sheriff came into court and said that Mr. Hogan was very desirous
-of seeing the court. The court then ordered him brought in. On his
-being brought in, the court asked him if he still thought he was a
-horse. Hogan replied, "No, sir; I am not anything now but Cage Hogan."
-The judge said: "As you have now arrived at the conclusion that you are
-human and not animal, are you willing to respect the laws of your land
-and the dignity of this court?" Hogan replied: "I am, judge, with all
-my heart." The judge then said to him, "What about that money of yours;
-are you able to pay the $150 fine?" Hogan said, "No, judge, I don't
-feel like I could pay $150 this evening; I don't feel as rich and as
-brave as I did when you first brought me into court, and I want you to
-be as lenient with me as possible." The court said, "Mr. Hogan, if you
-will promise me that you will neither disturb the dignity of this court
-nor incite others to do so, I will remit all of your fine except $50."
-Mr. Hogan then and there paid the $50 fine and was released. From that
-time up to the end of his term there never was any disturbance of any
-nature in the hearing of the court, and if you went into the court room
-everything was so quiet that you could almost hear a pin drop.
-
-
-The Tutt and Evert War.
-
-My memory is that it was in the year 1846 that an incident occurred
-in Marion county that I will now relate. It was known as the Tutt
-and Evert war. They were once fast friends. They met in Yellville,
-the county seat, and while there one of the Everts purchased a set
-of silver spoons at the store of one of the Tutts. Afterwards a
-misunderstanding grew up between them as to the payment for the spoons,
-which led them into a fight. Afterwards, which was often, when they
-would meet in Yellville, they would hardly ever get away without some
-fighting taking place between the parties. There was a large gathering
-and a public demonstration to take place within a few weeks. The Tutts
-declared, backed by the Kings, that if the Everts came into town that
-day they would kill them outright. Both parties came in early in the
-day, heavily armed. After coming under the influence of intoxicants
-to some extent, Evert went into the public square and stated what he
-had heard from the Tutts, and said that if they, the Tutts and Kings,
-were ready for the conflict, there never was a better time than then,
-and that they, the Everts, were fully ready. Both parties, in short
-range, opened fire. One of the Kings shot Simm Evert during the fight,
-supposed to be through the heart. One of the Kings, just previous to
-the shooting of Evert, had been shot through the hips and so disabled
-that he could not stand upon his feet. After Simm Evert had received
-the wound, he turned around, and, within a few steps of the wounded
-King, picked up a large stone, raised it in both hands, and, stepping
-up to King, came down on King's head with the stone with all the force
-possible, completely crushing King's head. Then, turning around and
-walking about three steps, he remarked, "I am a dead man," and fell to
-the ground and expired within a few minutes. When the smoke cleared
-away and the fighting ceased, an examination showed that there were
-eight or ten left dead on the ground. The stoutest men afterwards went
-to the stone, but there wasn't one of them that could raise it from the
-ground. The surviving Kings made arrangements and attempted to leave
-the country. At that time the sheriff of the county was a man by the
-name of Mooney. A writ was placed in his hands and he arrested them.
-Shortly after the arrest, the Everts and their friends came upon the
-sheriff and his posse and demanded the prisoners. The sheriff gave them
-up, and they were all shot. The sheriff then appealed to the governor
-for aid; he sent the militia, who aided the sheriff in the arrest of
-the Everts, a man by the name of Stratton, and some others of their
-friends. The governor ordered them to be taken to Lawrence county and
-placed in the Lawrence county jail at Smithville, the county seat of
-that county. I saw the militia in charge of the prisoners pass my
-father's house on their way to Smithville.
-
-In about ten days after they were put in prison, late one evening,
-strange men commenced dropping into the town, who were unknown to
-the citizens, until they reached to about the number of sixty-five.
-Somewhere near midnight they paraded the streets, and the jail being a
-log jail, they prepared levers and pried it up and let the prisoners
-all out, and they all left together, Evert, Stratton, and their friends
-proceeding directly to Texas. After their families had reached them
-and everything had quieted down, they sent in and notified Hamp Tutt,
-whom they charged with being the inciter and leader in bringing on the
-original trouble, that if he would "hull out" and leave the state they
-would not kill him. Tutt was a man of considerable wealth and declared
-he would not leave the state. He at once hired a young doctor, who
-claimed to be a very brave man, to act as his body guard, and kept
-himself very close to the town for about the space of two years. One
-day, however, he declared that he was going to take a ride out on the
-main public road for his health. He, in company with the young doctor,
-then rode out about one mile. On returning, not more than a quarter of
-a mile from the town, after they had passed the place where they were
-concealed, they, (the Everts) discharged a volley. Two balls entered
-the back of Tutt, and his horse made but a few leaps when he fell to
-the ground. The young doctor ran for dear life, reached the town, and
-gave the alarm. Parties immediately went out to the place, but found
-that Tutt was dead. On examining the place where the parties had lain
-in ambush, they found that they had lain there for months watching for
-the opportunity. So ended the Tutt and Evert war.
-
-
-Indians Chase a Sheriff Ten Miles.
-
-Now the author will relate another incident that occurred in Marion
-county, Arkansas, in the early settling of this country. There was a
-large relation of the Coker family who lived in that county. One of
-the Cokers raised two families, one by a white woman and the other by
-an Indian woman. The Indian family, after they had grown up and become
-men, resided a part of the time in the Nation, where the mother lived,
-and a part of the time they remained in Marion county where their
-father and other relatives lived. They were very dangerous men when
-drinking, and the whole country feared them. They had been in different
-troubles, and had killed three or four men, and if the authorities
-attempted to arrest them, they defied them, and would go to the Nation
-and remain awhile. There was a deputy sheriff in the county by the name
-of Stinnett, who claimed to be very brave, who said he would arrest
-them if he found their whereabouts. The Cokers learned what Stinnett
-had said, and that the warrant for their arrest was in his possession,
-so they got some good tow strings and vowed that whenever they met
-him they would arrest him and take him to Yellville and put him in
-jail. A short time afterwards they met him in the public road. As soon
-as Stinnett recognized them, and having heard of the threats they
-had made, he wheeled his horse and put spurs to him. They drew their
-revolvers and put spurs to their horses in pursuit, commanding him
-to halt. But Stinnett spurred his horse the harder. They pursued him
-a distance of about ten miles; but Stinnett's horse proved to be the
-best, and he made his escape. They again returned to the Nation.
-
-The good people, generally, of the county were terrorized and afraid
-to raise their voices against them, and it became a question as to
-whether they had a man in the county who had the courage to attempt
-their arrest. They made it a question in the next election, to elect
-a man that would make the arrest, if such a man could be found in the
-county. There was a man living in the county by the name of Brown, who
-was a cousin of the Cokers, and he told the people that if they would
-elect him, he would arrest them or they would kill him. He was elected
-by a large majority, and, after he had qualified, took charge of the
-office. The first time the Cokers came into the settlement, he summoned
-two men, thought to be brave, who pledged themselves that if it became
-necessary they would die for him. He then went to the house of one of
-the Coker family where the Cokers were staying, and on his arrival
-found the two Coker brothers sitting in chairs in the yard. He was
-within some thirty feet of them before they saw him. Their guns were
-sitting near them, and they seized them; but before they could present
-them Brown had his revolver cocked and leveled at one of their heads,
-and told him not to attempt to raise his gun or he would kill him.
-Coker turned his back to him with his gun on his shoulder, secretly
-cocked it, and leveled it upon Brown as near as possible without
-taking it from his shoulder and fired, missing his aim. About the same
-time Brown discharged his revolver at Coker and made a slight scalp
-wound. The other Coker threw his gun upon Brown and fired, killing
-him instantly. The two men who were acting as a posse for the sheriff
-turned and fled, leaving Brown lying dead on the ground. After the
-shooting the Cokers fled to the Nation and remained there.
-
-The author will now relate another incident that occurred in the same
-county. For years the Cokers and Hogans had been intimate friends, and
-drank, gambled, and horseraced together a great deal. There came up a
-trouble between Coker and one of his brothers-in-law, and one evening
-Coker, in company with Hogan, went to the house of this brother-in-law.
-Both had been drinking. Coker swore that he would ride onto the porch
-of his brother-in-law, and made the attempt. His brother-in-law caught
-the horse by the bridle and warned him not to ride onto porch, and
-that if he did he would kill him. Coker drew his revolver, spurred his
-horse, but as he entered the porch his brother-in-law shot him dead.
-Coker being a cousin of the Indian Cokers, they charged Hogan with
-inducing him, while drinking, to go to his brother-in-law's house, so
-as to give him a chance to kill him, and that Hogan's life should pay
-the penalty. Shortly afterwards Hogan was traveling on an old trail
-that led along the bluff of White river. The river here made a bend in
-horseshoe shape, following the bluff all around. The Cokers learned
-that Hogan was going to pass through this gap, and they lay in wait for
-him, cutting off all avenues of escape possible so he would be forced
-into the horseshoe for his escape. When he came in sight they raised
-the Indian war-whoop, and drew their revolvers. Hogan looked around
-and saw that his pursuers were in about a hundred yards of him. He saw
-his predicament, as for a quarter of a mile he confronted the bluff,
-and that there was only one avenue of escape. He went to the edge of
-the precipice and looked over. There, under the bluff, lay the deep,
-blue waters of White river, 150 feet below. Again he turned his eyes
-toward his pursuers. He knew it meant death if they caught him; so he
-made the fearful leap over the bluff, striking the water where it was
-about twenty-five feet deep. Hogan was a wicked man and cursed a great
-deal. He swore it didn't take him long to reach the water, but that he
-thought considerable time intervened from the time he struck the water
-until he reached the top again. He swam to the bank which was but a
-few feet distant. His pursuers came to the precipice, looked over, and
-said that they had made Hogan do something they had intended to do, and
-that was, to take his own life, as they supposed no human being could
-make the leap and live. After cutting his saddle and bridle to pieces,
-they turned his horse loose, and reported that Hogan was killed. Hogan
-traveled around under the bluff for about two miles, made his way home,
-wound up his business, sold his farm, and moved into Fulton county,
-Arkansas, which ended the trouble between them.
-
-The author will relate another incident that occurred in Marion county,
-Arkansas. There was a widow residing in that county, who was left with
-a family of children, among them a boy about twelve years of age. Her
-horse ran away, and she sent her boy in pursuit of it. After he had
-found it and was returning home, leading the horse, Hogan and one of
-his friends met him in the road. They had both been drinking, and
-seeing the boy, concluded to have some fun out of him. Hogan, with an
-oath, said, "What are you doing with my horse?" The boy replied, "It is
-not your horse, it is mother's horse." Hogan sprang off his horse, and,
-thinking to scare the boy and have some fun with him, said: "Here, you
-know it's my horse; give him up." The boy pulled a barlow knife out of
-his pocket, and, opening it, said, "You attempt to come near me, and
-I will stick this knife into you." Hogan stepped up to him and said,
-"You little rascal, would you attempt to cut me with a knife?" The
-boy, without any further words, made a stroke at him with the knife,
-and the blade entered his body near the left breast. Hogan declared
-afterward that he jumped about ten feet high. He turned to his friend
-and remarked: "I believe our fun with the little bugger has caused my
-death, or at least a serious wound." He went to a physician, had the
-wound probed, and found the knife had penetrated a rib and reached the
-inside. The physician informed him that had it passed between the ribs
-it would have killed him instantly. Hogan remarked to the boy, after he
-stabbed him, "My son, you are made out of the right kind of stuff. I
-had no intention of hurting you or taking your mother's horse from you,
-I merely wanted to have some fun; but I see I have struck the wrong boy
-this time. Go on and take your horse to your mother."
-
-The author will refer to another incident that occurred in Howell
-county, Missouri. In the year 1860 there was a man who resided in West
-Plains by the name of Jack McDaniel, who was a blacksmith by trade.
-This same Hogan came to town, soon became under the influence of
-whiskey, went down to McDaniel's shop with a horse, and ordered him to
-shoe him. McDaniel had two other horses in the shop at the time to be
-shod, and said to Hogan that as soon as he had shod those two horses,
-he would shoe his. Hogan said, "I am in a hurry, and I want you to shoe
-mine now." McDaniel told him that he could not shoe his horse until he
-had shod the other two horses. Hogan said, "If you don't shoe him at
-once, I will whip you." McDaniel then pulled a barlow knife out of his
-pocket, and, opening it, said: "Yes; and if you fool with me, I will
-cut your throat from ear to ear." At this remark, Hogan moved right up
-to him and said, "Just smell of my neck." McDaniel struck at him with
-the knife, and the blade entered just under the ear, cutting to the
-bone all the way around into the mouth. Hogan went to a physician in
-West Plains and had the wound dressed. He then went to a glass, looked
-in, and said that he had lived a long time, been in many tight places,
-but he had never had such a mouth as he had now, and remarked, "My
-mouth looks as if it was spread from ear to ear."
-
-The people then generally gave their time to growing stock, especially
-horses and cattle, as hogs and sheep had to be kept close around the
-farms and penned of a night, especially the pigs, on account of wolves
-and other wild animals. I have known the wolves to kill 2 and 3 year
-old cattle. Farmers fed their corn chiefly to cattle, horses and mules.
-They always commanded fair prices. Cattle, at the age of four years and
-upwards were driven to Jacksonport, Arkansas and from there shipped to
-New Orleans. Horses and mules were driven to Louisiana, Mississippi and
-some to the Southern part of Arkansas and there put upon the market.
-Prices generally ranging from $75 to $150. All of our groceries were
-purchased in New Orleans, shipped to Jacksonport, from there they were
-conveyed by wagons. Our dry goods were mostly purchased at Lynn Creek,
-Missouri and brought through by wagon, but in the early settling of
-the country they hauled dry goods all the way from St. Louis except
-what were brought into the country by peddlers. The peddlers would go
-to St. Louis on horse back with one and sometimes two led horses, buy
-the goods, pack them, place them on their horses and peddle all the way
-from St. Louis and still further west and take in exchange all kinds of
-fur skins.
-
-I have seen peddlers with one horse still loaded with goods and the
-other covered with fur skins, and I have seen them again after they had
-disposed of all their goods with all three horses completely covered
-with fur skins and sometimes so heavily loaded that the peddler would
-either be walking and leading or driving.
-
-Money was scarce but the people spent very little money, were not in
-debt and lived much better and easier than they do now. Their counties
-were out debt and the county warrants were always at par.
-
-When my father first located here, there were about four or five
-settlers in all of the territory that now belongs to Howell County;
-there were but three men that resided upon what is known as the middle
-bayou, William McCarty and his sons, Green and Willis.
-
-In about three years after my father settled here, McCarties sold out
-and located on the bayou above Bakersfield. In 1844 there was a man by
-the name of Thomas Hall who resided about 10 miles southwest of West
-Plains, a man by the name of Cyrus Newberry resided about 10 miles from
-where West Plains now is, and a man by the name of Braudwaters resided
-near where Moody is now located.
-
-There was not a settlement in all the territory that now includes
-Howell valley. There had been a settlement, by a man who was a hunter,
-made at what is now termed the town spring at West Plains who had
-cleared five or six acres, but had left it. All the valleys in Howell
-county were considered worthless on account of there being no water.
-
-When the country commenced settling, there was no attention paid to
-congressional lines. As they settled on the streams, they would make
-conditional lines--blaze across the bottom until they would strike the
-table-lands; and the next men who might come in and settle would blaze
-his conditional line across, and for years there was but little land
-entered. Men only sold their improvements, and there was a fixed law,
-or custom, that prevailed among them--that no man should enter the land
-and take another man's improvements without paying him for them. A few
-such instances occurred to my knowledge. The man was at once waited
-upon, and informed of the rules and customs of the country; and besides
-the rules and customs, it was not right nor honest to take a man's
-labor without paying him for it; and that it was the intention and
-purpose of the people to see that justice was done every man; and he
-was therefore notified to proceed to the late owner of the improvements
-and pay him the value of the improvements; and if they couldn't agree
-upon the value, submit it to two disinterested neighbors; and if they
-couldn't agree let the third man be brought in, which finding would
-be final. In every instance if the man who had made the entry failed
-to comply with the terms, he was at once notified that his absence
-from the settlement and a speedy departure from the country would be
-satisfactory to the settlement; and that if he failed to comply, he
-would have to submit to the punishments that would be inflicted upon
-him. If the improvements, which were always reasonable, were paid for,
-the party would move off, blaze out another claim, and go to work to
-improve it; but if he didn't receive pay for his improvements, he
-remained on the land and the other fellow's whereabouts would soon be
-unknown; and when the land was sold for taxes, the man owning the
-improvements would buy it in by paying the amount of taxes and costs
-without an opposing bid.
-
-When my father first located in this country, a large portion of the
-territory had never been sectionized. What was known as the old survey,
-including range seven and a part of range eight (now in this county)
-formed a part of the old survey. Congress passed a law graduating the
-price of land according to the length of time it had been upon the
-market. The government price was $1.25 per acre. The first reduction
-was twenty-five cents upon the acre; then they reduced the purchase
-price every few years until all the land included in the old survey
-went down to a bit an acre. The graduation law allowed each man to take
-up 320 acres by making actual settlement and cultivating it. But the
-land speculators took advantage of the law and hired men to go upon the
-land and make a few brush-heaps, and in the name of some man apply for
-the entry, until all of the graduated lands were taken up, and there
-was not a bona fide settler who had complied with the law in one out of
-every hundred.
-
-Most of the land in Howell, Gunters, Peace, and Hutton valleys, and
-the land where West Plains is now situated, were entered at a bit per
-acre. After the entries, the valley lands commenced settling rapidly.
-When the time came to procure a patent to the land, speculators went to
-Washington and engineered a bill through Congress to allow the parties
-to prove up without making proof of actual settlement, and in that
-way fraudulently obtained patents to two-thirds of all the land above
-referred to. The next thing, the speculators went East, sold their
-lands (or mortgaged them) by representing that all of the table lands
-were bottom lands and covered with walnut, hackberry, box elder, and
-other bottom growths. They let the mortgages all be foreclosed.
-
-The merchants, who procured title to the lands, sent out agents to
-examine the land, who went back and reported that the lands were
-valueless and were not worth the taxes and refused to pay taxes on
-them. With some few exceptions the lands were offered time and again
-for taxes, would not sell for the amount of the taxes and thousands
-of acres remained in that condition until a short time before the
-building of the Kansas City & Memphis railroad. All of the table lands
-were looked upon by the people as being entirely worthless and fit for
-nothing but range.
-
-My father in the year 1849 sold out and removed from Bennett's river,
-Fulton county, to the North Fork of White river, in Fulton County but
-two miles from the State line, dividing Missouri and Arkansas. In the
-year 1852 father took the winter fever, died and was buried in the
-cemetery, three miles above the State line, known as the Teverbauch
-cemetery.
-
-In the year 1854 my mother and one brother died with the bloody flux,
-leaving three sons of the family, William, the oldest one living,
-F. M. and James I. Monks. The author was married on the 10th day of
-April 1853 to Martha A. Rice, a daughter of Thomas and Nancy Rice.
-He continued to reside upon the old homestead and was a farmer by
-occupation. The country commenced settling up rapidly. All the land on
-the streams was settled, with very few exceptions, with a frugal and
-intelligent class of people, mostly from the middle states. In the year
-1856 Howell county was created by taking a part of the territory of
-Ozark and a part of the territory of Oregon, to-wit: Ranges 7 and 8 and
-a small part of 9 were taken from Oregon county and the remainder of 9
-and 10 was taken from Ozark county. Andrew V. Taber, ---- Johnson (and
-the name of the other commissioner we have forgotten at the present
-time) proceeded to locate the county seat and purchased 40 acres near
-the West Plains spring and laid it out into lots, got the county seat
-near the center, as a sufficient amount of water was necessary, taking
-into consideration the town spring and then what was known as the
-Bingiman spring. The lots sold rapidly and the town grew beyond any
-expectation and the country was improving and settling up with the town.
-
-In 1858 the author sold out on the North Fork of White river and
-moved into Howell county and located 11 miles southwest of West
-Plains upon sections 2 and 11, range 9, was appointed constable of
-Benton township and in the year 1860 was elected constable of Benton
-township, commenced reading law in the year 1858. In the year 1860
-West Plains was said to be the best, neatest, prettiest town in South
-Missouri and contained about 200 inhabitants; had a neat frame court
-house in the center of the square, a first-class hewed log jail, had
-four first-class stores (for the country at that time) which kept
-continually on hand a general assortment of merchandise, had two
-saloons, tan yard and the county was out of debt, with money in the
-treasury; a county warrant then was good for its face value in gold,
-and the country was prosperous in every respect. The people generally
-were fast friends and their chief interest was to develop the resources
-of the country and aid and help each other.
-
-
-How a Mob Was Prevented
-
-In 1860, a man resided about three miles below West Plains by the
-name of Collins Coffey on the farm recently owned by Thomas Bolin and
-some men by the name of Griffiths and Boles--(some of them resided in
-West Plains and some of them resided in Thomasville, Oregon county)
-and they and Coffey had a falling out with each other and the enmity
-between them became very great. So the Griffiths, who lived at West
-Plains went down to Thomasville and they and the Boles with a few other
-friends declared that they would come up to Coffey's and mob him.
-
-They went to work and made for themselves a uniform, procured a bugle,
-fife and snare drum, procured a hack, made them a place for a candle
-and aimed to come up in the night.
-
-Coffey owned considerable stock among which was a bull about four
-years old. The range then was luxuriant and there was a pond near the
-side of the road that led from Thomasville and West Plains and the
-bull with other cattle had lain down on the edge of the road about one
-mile from Coffey's residence. They armed themselves, procured their
-musicians, got into their hack, drawn by two horses and started off to
-the scene of action with a bright light, with a flag flying and the
-music playing. When they reached the place near where the male was
-laying, he rose to his feet, squared himself and fetched a keen bellow
-as though (although he was animal) he might have some information as to
-their mission. They paid no attention to the action of the bull and on
-their driving within about ten feet of him he made a desperate lunge
-forward; they supposed that he intended to gore the horses, but missed
-his aim, struck the hack near the coupling, broke the coupling pole and
-turned head over heels, and fell right between the horses. The horses
-became frightened, made a desperate lunge to extricate themselves, and
-the bull at the same time was scuffling to extricate himself. Both
-horses fell, the bull and horses were all piled into a heap, grunting
-and scuffling. The occupants of the hack were all piled out in a heap,
-almost in an instant, and before they could extricate themselves and
-get onto their feet the bull had gotten up and was moving in the
-direction of his master's house bellowing every step as if to say, "I
-dare you to come any further." As soon as the posse got to their feet,
-having prepared, before they started, with plenty of whiskey, and being
-pretty well filled at the time of the occurrence, Boles got to his
-feet, drew his pistol, cocked it and swore he could whip any bull he
-ever saw, especially a one horned Coffey bull.
-
-The hack was almost demolished and the occupants considerably bruised,
-both horses crippled, and after consultation, they concluded that as
-the Coffey bull had proved so successful they had better abandon their
-trip and retreat "in good order" to Thomasville, leaving their horses
-hitched by the roadside and the shattered hack piled up at one side of
-the road.
-
-The next morning they sent out a team and brought the horses and hack
-back to Thomasville, and they were wiser and perhaps better men, as
-they never again attempted to mob Coffey.
-
-The strange feature about this matter is that the bull was never known
-to be cross before this occasion, when his master was to be mobbed.
-
-The society of the country had increased with the population, and
-school houses and churches were erected all over the country, nice
-farms were opened up, the dwellings changed from round log to hewed
-log and frame, the people all manifested a great deal of interest in
-schools and churches and the general development of the country.
-
-
-Religion and Politics.
-
-The prominent religious denominations from 1849 to 1860 consisted
-chiefly of Methodists, Baptists and the Christian order; but all
-appeared to recognize each other as Christians and would very often
-work together, as they had in the early pioneer days.
-
-Everything had the appearance of pointing to the day when Howell county
-would become the garden spot of South Missouri.
-
-Politically, the country was largely Democratic. In political
-campaigns the Whig and Democratic candidates would canvass the country
-together, and while on the stump speaking they would assail each
-other's platforms in most bitter terms. After the speaking was over
-they would go to the same hotel or boarding place and laugh and talk
-together as though they belonged to the same political party, and
-after the election was over the successful party would be recognized
-by the people as the officers of the whole people. You would see no
-partisan line drawn by the different courts between political parties,
-but the appointments of all local officers were made according to
-the qualifications of the man and not as to what party he belonged.
-The author, having been born and raised by Democratic parents, was
-a Democrat and acted with the Democratic party, his first vote for
-president having been cast for James Buchanan. In 1860 a great
-political question of the nation began to be agitated and a very bitter
-feeling was manifested from the stump between the Republican and
-Democratic parties.
-
-After the Democratic party divided and the bolters nominated
-Breckenridge for president, the author took part in the canvas and was
-a strong advocate of Stephen A. Douglas, the regular nominee of the
-Democratic party, and at the election cast his vote for Stephen A.
-Douglas for president.
-
-
-
-
-MISSOURI AND THE CIVIL WAR.
-
-
-Abraham Lincoln was elected President of the United States. Soon after
-the election they began to discuss the question of seceding from the
-Government. The author again took the field in opposition to secession,
-and delivered a number of speeches.
-
-In a short time the people that had been the closest of friends and
-trusted a neighbor with the most sacred thing they possessed became
-bitter enemies and arrayed themselves against one another and as the
-discussion of the great question of war continued to grow more bitter
-the people appeared to align themselves for and against secession. The
-people soon grew so bitter that they often talked of fighting each
-other.
-
-Before the firing on Ft. Sumpter and after several of the states had
-actually seceded the Union sentiment prevailed so strongly in the
-state of Missouri that Clabourn Jackson, the then acting Governor, was
-compelled to order an election in the state of Missouri to settle the
-matter by a vote, of the people as to whether Missouri should secede
-or remain in the Union. The author then took the stump and advocated
-that the state remain in the Union and manifest her loyalty to the
-preservation of the Union. In this campaign the feeling of the war grew
-more bitter. The result, however, of the election was that the state
-remained in the Union. In the mean time, Ft. Sumpter had been fired
-upon by the rebels.
-
-Clabe Jackson, the Governor, appeared to be determined upon the state
-seceding either by fair or foul means. Without regarding a majority
-vote of the people of the state, Clabe Jackson, the then acting
-Governor, issued his proclamation convening the Legislature in extra
-session for the purpose of passing ordinances of secession.
-
-At that time Gen. Frost was in the command of the militia and some
-state troops stationed in St. Louis Barracks but he was in heart and
-sympathy a rebel. Everything appeared to have been greased and prepared
-for the occasion.
-
-As the Governor had the whole machinery of the state completely under
-his control he believed that it would be an easy matter for the
-legislature to pass ordinances of secession and carry the state out of
-the Union, but the Government authorities at Washington learned of the
-critical condition and deep laid scheme of the Governor to carry the
-state out of the Union and at once ordered Capt. Lyons of the Regular
-Army, (who afterward became General of the volunteer forces and fought
-the battle at Wilson Creek, Missouri) to come to St. Louis; he, being
-a captain in the Regular Army, outranked Gen. Frost, took possession
-of the troops, arms and amunitions, etc., reorganized and rapidly
-increased the army by volunteers.
-
-On information reaching Gen. Lyons that the legislature had been
-convened in extra session he at once took his available troops and left
-St. Louis with the intention of surrounding the Capitol and taking the
-members of both houses, the Governor, with all his state officers,
-prisoners; when the Governor learned that the Government troops were en
-route for Jefferson City and their purpose, he ordered the bridge to
-be burned across the Gasconade river near its mouth, on what was then
-known as the North Pacific R. R. This delayed the troops for several
-hours. On their approach to Jefferson City the Governor and state
-officers and the members of both houses of the legislature and all the
-troops that had been ordered to the Capital by the Governor retreated
-to Boonville, Missouri.
-
-I heard our representative in a speech delivered a short time
-afterwards, say they came so near getting him while he was getting out
-of Jefferson City that he lost his umbrella. Lyons pursued them and at
-Boonville they made a stand and on Lyon's arrival with his troops he
-attacked them and they fought for a short time. They again retreated,
-went into the extreme west part of the state to a place known as Lone
-Jack. There they made a stand again, Lyons still pursuing. He again
-attacked then at Lone Jack and after a short fight they retreated again
-into the State of Arkansas, and there Governor Jackson convened the
-legislature and they passed ordinances of secession declaring the State
-of Missouri out of the Union and that she was attached to the compact
-forming the Confederate States.
-
-General Lyon returned to St. Louis, increasing his force considerably,
-several regiments being attached to his command from other states.
-The government ordered him to prepare his troops and move west to
-Springfield. The terminus of the South Missouri Pacific R. R., at that
-time was at Rolla, Missouri. While Lyon was massing his troops and
-preparing to march to Springfield the most intense excitement prevailed
-in the entire State of Missouri.
-
-
-A Big Confederate Meeting at West Plains.
-
-The Confederate authorities at once commenced recruiting for the
-Confederate service and the Confederate recruiting officers published
-a public meeting at West Plains about the first or tenth of July and
-while the Confederate authorities were moving, the union or loyal
-element of the country was not idle, but was watching every move,
-openly and secretly preparing for the conflict.
-
-A few days before the meeting was to be held at West Plains the
-Confederates sent to the pinery and procured a long pine pole, hoisted
-it at the corner of Durham's store at the northwest corner of the
-public square and swung to the breeze the stars and bars. At the
-same time, or near the same time, the Union men sent to the pinery
-and procured a pole. They hoisted it on the northeast corner of East
-Main street by the corner of McGinty's store where the S. J. Langston
-Mercantile Co., building now stands and swung to the breeze the stars
-and stripes.
-
-It was freely published throughout the county by the Rebels that if
-any Union man attempted to open his mouth on that day he would be
-shot as full of holes as a sifter bottom. There was a beautiful grove
-then growing just east of the branch on East Main street running from
-the town spring. Large preparations were made by the Rebels for the
-occasion. It was published that there would be leading Confederates
-from all over the state and different other states to speak on that
-day and one of the main features of the day would be recruiting for
-Confederate service. A big speaker's stand was erected with hundreds of
-seats. When the day arrived the town was crowded with people and the
-friends of both parties were armed and appeared to be ready for the
-conflict. The stars and bars attracted a great deal of attention, being
-the first flag that had ever been seen by the people that antagonized
-the stars and stripes and threatened to destroy the United States
-Government.
-
-There was soon a number of determined men gathered under each flag.
-A number of their prominent speakers were on hand, among them Judge
-Price, of Springfield, known as "Wild Bill" Price. They readily took in
-the situation and saw that a conflict was imminent, and as they were
-not ready for it they met together in council and agreed that their
-men should not bring on the conflict on that day. Quite a number of
-the parties prepared themselves at the speaker's stand. When different
-speakers were introduced to address the people, many of the men would
-sit, either with their guns in their hands or with their guns near to
-them, and the most fiery and extreme speeches were made that I ever
-heard.
-
-The author well remembers the speech of Judge William Price. He told
-them that the lopeared Dutch had reached Rolla, Missouri, the terminus
-of the railroad, and that they were complete heathens; that Abraham
-Lincoln had given the state of Missouri to them, if they would send
-enough lopeared Dutch to conquer the state, and that to his knowledge
-they had gone out into the country and taken men's wives and daughters
-and brought them into the camps, and that he saw them, in the presence
-of the mothers, run bayonets through their infant children and hoist
-them up and carry them around on their bayonets; that Abraham Lincoln
-had offered a reward for all of the preachers that were in favor of
-the South. He bursted into tears and asked the question, "I want to
-know who the man is, and the color of his hair, that won't enlist in
-the interest of his home, his wife, his children and everything that
-is sacred and good, to drive out lopeared Dutch, a certain class of
-Hessians, from our land." He urged them to come forward and place their
-names upon the rolls. Nearly all the preachers present placed their
-names on the recruiting list first.
-
-The excitement grew still more bitter. In the afternoon they began to
-threaten openly that the stars and stripes should be hauled down; that
-no flag should be allowed to float in West Plains that countenances and
-tolerates heathen in our land. The Union men declared that the stars
-and stripes should not be lowered unless it was done over their dead
-bodies. Quite a number of Union men had assembled under the flag. The
-Union men were led by a man named Captain Lyle. He had been warned and
-cautioned by his friends not to open his mouth, for the reason that he
-would be shot full of holes. Late in the evening there was a lull in
-the speaking. The author walked up into the speaker's stand, called the
-attention of the people, saw a number of rifles grasped in their hands,
-and announced to them that they had been sitting all day listening to
-Confederate speeches, but on the next Saturday, if they would meet him
-at Black's store, about ten miles west of West Plains, they could hear
-Union speeches and the constitution of the United States would be read;
-thanked the crowd and stepped down. Quite a number of guns were raised
-in the hands of parties and a shower of groans and hisses, and remarks
-openly from a number that "We ought to shoot his black heart out now."
-
-It appeared for a while that it would be impossible to evade a conflict
-of arms. A number of orders being sent to the Union men to draw down
-their flag or they would fire on it and the men who supported it, an
-answer was returned that the rebels were requested to draw down their
-flag as it was a stranger in the land and unless they lowered their
-flag the stars and stripes wouldn't be lowered an inch, unless it was
-done over their dead bodies. At last a proposition came that they would
-agree for the sake of averting bloodshed to commence lowering both
-flags at the same time which proposition was accepted; so wound up that
-day's proceedings.
-
-On the Saturday following, the author, with several other Union
-speakers, met at Black's store where there were several rebel captains
-and lieutenants. The author made a speech in favor of remaining in the
-Union and stated that the attempt to secede by some of the states would
-eventually result in sad disaster, besides bringing untold suffering
-upon the people. Several other Union speeches were made after which the
-author read the constitution of the United States and urged that all
-lovers of republican form of government would comply with the demand of
-the supreme law of the land and, if necessary, sacrifice property and
-life in defence of the same; so ended that day's proceedings.
-
-
-McBride Establishes Military Law.
-
-As the organization of the confederates proceeded they still grew more
-bitter against the Union men and declared, by meeting and passing
-resolutions, that every Union man should show his colors in favor of
-the South or be hung as high as Hamen. In the meantime the Union men
-had secretly organized and met together, to take into consideration as
-to the time when they should act.
-
-The prevailing sentiment was, that they should remain dormant and let
-the rebels shed the first blood, while the minority thought the time
-had come for action, and that they ought to act before the rebels
-crippled them and tied them up in such a manner that, when the time did
-come, they would be entirely helpless and at their mercy.
-
-McBride, who had been elected judge of the 18th Judicial circuit,
-which included Howell county, whose home was in Texas county, was made
-Brigadier General of the Confederate forces and commenced organizing
-and massing his troops. On the arrival of the federal troops at Rolla,
-Missouri, he became fearful that they would attack him, rout him and
-destroy his forces, so he concluded to march south to West Plains
-and make his headquarters at that place until he could organize his
-forces and prepare for marching west, where he intended to join the
-forces of Gen. Sterling Price and Gen. McCullough who then were massing
-their forces to march on Springfield, Missouri, to attack the federal
-forces who were then stationed at Springfield under the command of
-Gen. Lyon and Gen. Seigle. On his arrival at West Plains he opened
-up headquarters, issued his proclamation that all Union men or any
-men that were unfriendly to the Confederate cause should come in and
-take the oath and the civil law was declared to be suspended and the
-military law completely in force.
-
-Then was when the dark day and trouble began to hang over the Union
-people. As soon as it was known that the civil law was suspended
-little bunches of rebels organized all over the country and also in
-the state of Arkansas. In a short time after Gen. McBride's arrival in
-West Plains a man who was a door neighbor to the author came into his
-field where he was cutting wheat, asked him if he had seen the order
-of McBride. My answer was "No." He remarked, "Well, he has made a
-general order, requiring all Union men, especially those who have been
-open and active in behalf of the Union, to come in and take the oath,
-and unless they do they are going to hang them as high as Hamen." The
-author replied to him that he was a Union man and he knew it; he had
-been open and outspoken for the Union and had voted for McBride when he
-was elected Judge, but now he thought he was acting outside of the law
-and humanity.
-
-I had neither violated the law of my land nor harmed any man and I
-didn't consider that McBride had any right to order me to take an oath
-to take up arms against my country or support those who had taken up
-arms. If this did become a general war, I thought they were making a
-blunder, for the Government, or the lopeared Dutch, as they termed
-them, would have the advantage in the way of transporting forage
-and commissaries and amunitions of war, while the Confederates would
-have to rely mostly for their resources upon the county; that I was
-a peace officer and while I was a strong Union man wasn't taking up
-arms and I thought that those who wanted to fight, if there had to
-be a fight, should go out into the open fields, and not force the
-war onto non-combatants, and that the country would suffer enough at
-best. Now you know I am a Union man, and I know that you are in favor
-of the Confederate cause, and I think this is the course that ought
-to be pursued at the present time. The Confederates are in control of
-the country, and they will come around and say they must have forage
-for the support of the army, and ask you if you know of any Union men;
-you could tell them, "My neighbor right here is a Union man, but he
-is not disposed to take up arms and go into the fight; take as little
-from him as you can possibly do with, and as little from myself;
-in return, if this war goes on, and the Federal authorities extend
-their jurisdiction, they would be out hunting rebels for the purpose
-of getting forage and commissaries, and I could say to them that my
-neighbor here is a rebel but take just as little as possible from him,
-and as little as possible from me, as we are going to have a hard time
-to get through the war any way. But if you pursue the policy you say
-has been adopted by the Confederates, you will force all non-combatants
-into arms or drive them from the country and completely depopulate
-it." He burst into a big laugh and remarked, "Your promises are like a
-broken stick, you will never see the lopeared Dutch in this country." I
-said to him, "My friend, if this war goes on, before the end of it you
-will see what you call lopeared Dutch as thick as blackbirds;" and we
-separated.
-
-
-General Lyons Drives Rebels from Rolla.
-
-About June 10, 1851, the rebels were having a big meeting at Rolla,
-Phelps county, Missouri, for the purpose of recruiting. General Lyons
-at St. Louis, learned of the meeting, and at once placed quite a
-force in the cars, well armed and closed them up so they would not be
-detected and started for Rolla with the intention of capturing the
-whole outfit.
-
-On the day set for the rebel meeting, quite a number of them had
-assembled and a certain young lawyer was delivering an address, telling
-them that one southern man could whip five lopeared Dutch and all
-they wanted was just an opportunity; in the meantime Lyon's forces
-had reached Dillon, the next station east of Rolla about five miles
-distant. There the forces were taken from the cars and divided, some
-marching southwest and the others northwest, making a flank movement
-for the purpose of surrounding the whole place. While they were
-marching some person, who was a rebel, went with all the speed possible
-and informed the meeting that the Dutch were right upon them; that the
-woods were full of them and to get out of there as quick as possible,
-if they wanted to save their lives.
-
-The lawyer who was addressing them sprang from the speakers stand and
-holloing at the top of his voice as he went, "Get away from here, the
-Dutch are upon us." It was said that the lawyer ran so fast that if
-a glass of water had been sat upon his coat tail it would not have
-spilled. They scattered to the woods in all directions. The Federal
-force came in; but their birds had all flown and left the citizens who
-had remained to tell the sad tale.
-
-The rebel forces at once retreated to Salem, Missouri, where they again
-concentrated their force. The Federal scout, in a few days followed
-them to Salem, and there again routed them and they retreated directly
-to West Plains, joining the command of McBride at that place. The
-rebels, hurriedly, concentrated their forces from all the south and
-southeastern counties of Missouri and from the northern counties of
-Arkansas.
-
-General McBride made an order to gather all the arms, amunitions, and
-horses that were fit for the service, as speedily as possible and the
-report was put in circulation that he had given the county over to the
-leading rebels, who resided in it, whose action, whatever they did
-touching the Union men, would be indorsed and carried out by General
-McBride. The leading rebels of the county at once sent out word that
-they were going to take all the arms, amunition and available horses
-from the Union men and that McBride required each and every one of them
-to report and take the oath at once, and if they failed to comply with
-said order, speedy action would be taken against them.
-
-They would either be arrested, imprisoned or forced into the
-Confederate army to fight and their leaders would be hung.
-
-On the issuing of the said order the wildest excitement prevailed among
-the Union men. They immediately met for the purpose of consultation as
-to what their final action would be. There were divers opinions among
-them; some of them were for acting at once; others (and a majority of
-them) were in favor of waiting until the rebels shed the first blood.
-Those who refused to report and take the oath had to place themselves
-in hiding at once. The rebels made a general move to raid, harass and
-capture the Union men. Then real danger confronted a man who claimed
-to be a Union man. The rebels had made a general amnesty, upon the
-condition that they would join the Confederate army and become loyal to
-the Confederate States. About two-thirds of the men who had been open
-and avowed Union men saw the danger that confronted them, and joined
-the Confederate army and claimed that they would be loyal to its cause.
-The remainder of the Union men were disarmed at once, except those who
-kept themselves concealed in the mountains and hills.
-
-After they had completely disarmed them and forced many of them to join
-the Confederate service, had taken most of their horses, cattle and
-hogs for the use of the army, the leading rebels in the county claimed
-that they had organized for the purpose of ridding the country of all
-Union men who had refused to join the Confederate forces; that when
-McBride moved west he was going to leave the whole matter in their
-hands, and they intended to string up the Union men to limbs and shoot
-them, so they would soon be rid of the class of men who were friends of
-the lopeared Dutch and were nigger lovers.
-
-
-The Testing of Loyal Hearts.
-
-Small bunches of rebel troops came in from Arkansas and joined the
-bands that were raiding the country, and the Union men were hunted
-like wild beasts. Then set in the darkest day that ever any class of
-patriots, true to their government, had to confront.
-
-The author remembers well when the Union men would meet together, that
-they took the proposition made by McBride into consideration, and it
-was discussed pro and con. Some men would say, "While I am a Union
-man and for the government, all that I have in the world is here in
-Howell county; my little home, my property and, above all, my wife
-and children. They have promised us protection provided we will join
-the rebel army. Had we not better accept the proposition and wait for
-results?" Others would arise, with tears dripping from their eyes,
-and remark that this state of affairs is hard indeed. "Can I afford
-to abandon my wife and children that I love so well and leave them
-unprotected in the midst of an open state of war, at the mercy of a
-mad and distracted people, who are thirsting for the loyal blood of
-the nation, and be alienated from them, perhaps, never more to see
-them?" Others would arise and remark that "We have seen this danger
-coming for months and we are satisfied that the worst has not come,
-and I know that I love my wife, my family, my little children, as I
-love my own heart; I love to meet them around my fireside and enjoy
-their sweet company, and I have delighted in laboring to furnish them
-food and raiment and shelter while they were growing into manhood and
-womanhood, but I have read and heard read that my highest duty was
-to God and my second duty was to my country; and the organic law of
-the nation requires at my hands that whenever it becomes necessary to
-preserve my government, that I owe to it my life, my honor and the
-welfare of my family; and the trying ordeal is now at hand and I don't
-know what the final result will be--if I am forced away from my family,
-I know they will be left at the mercy of an intolerant and unrelenting
-enemy, but I now and here lay my life, my family, my property and my
-future happiness upon the altar of my country, and let come what will,
-weal or woe, I intend, with all my feeble effort, to defend the stars
-and stripes, and stand up openly and courageously in defense of and
-for the preservation of the Union." That proposition prevailed and was
-unanimously adopted by the Union men.
-
-At this time there was no government aid in reach of these loyal
-hearts, that were controlled by nothing but love of country. Uncle
-Sam could do nothing for them. They were completely surrounded in
-an enemy's country, and while they (the men), with what arms they
-had preserved, could by strategy evade the arrest and slaughter of
-themselves, their families were completely at the mercy of a mad and
-howling mob, thirsting for the blood of Union men.
-
-While the loyal men in the North were enlisting in the interest of
-their country, Uncle Sam paid them $13.00 per month, clothed them, and
-their families were left in the care of friends; they knew nothing
-about the war, except what they read; but not so with the Union men
-who were surrounded in an enemy's country. They, without a single word
-of protection or comfort from the government for themselves or their
-families, but their love and devotion to their country led them to
-furnish themselves, to leave their families as best they could, at the
-mercy of a howling mob, for the defense of their country.
-
-
-Rebels Defeated in Douglas County.
-
-The loyal men in Douglas county and the north part of the county of
-Ozark were in the ascendency. A rebel force organized from the county
-of Howell, Missouri, and Fulton county, Arkansas, wanting to have some
-fun hunting Union men, learned that on Bryant's Fork on the north fork
-of White river in Ozark county there was a bunch of Union men. So they
-armed and equipped themselves, furnished themselves ropes, and marched
-to hunt the place these men were said to be. The Union men hearing of
-their intention hurriedly prepared a temporary barricade around the
-house, and about sixty of them gathered together with their squirrel
-rifles in readiness to repel the attack in case it was made. The rebel
-scout consisted of two hundred and fifty men.
-
-Early in the morning reliable information reached the Union men that
-the rebel forces were well under way and would reach them some time
-in the afternoon. One of the Union men, who had always borne the
-reputation of being a brave man and would fight anything, became
-impatient as the time drew near that they were to be attacked. He had
-been a great hunter and was considered a first-class shot, and he
-remarked to the Union men, "I can't wait for the rebels to attack us,
-I want to get a shot at one so bad with Old Betsy (his gun). I know
-of a bald knob, about a quarter of a mile from here, where the rebel
-force is bound to pass. I am going there; place yourselves in waiting,
-and when you hear 'Old Betsey' belch, you may know there is one dead
-rebel, and be certain that they are coming." In about an hour after
-the man referred to had left, the rebel advance came in sight, but
-they never heard "Old Betsy" belch. They vigorously attacked the Union
-men inside their fortifications, and after fighting for about an hour,
-they retreated, leaving one man dead upon the field and one wounded.
-The Union men received no injury whatever. They became very uneasy in
-regard to their friend and "Old Betsy," supposing he had fallen into
-the hands of the enemy and they had used the rope on him. Search was
-made all along the line of march of the rebels for the missing man, but
-no information could be learned of his whereabouts. However, in about
-one week, news came from Douglas county that their friend and "Old
-Betsy" arrived safely at another rendezvous of Union men in Douglas
-county, about forty miles distant, and reported that the Union men had
-had a fight with the rebels, and they were all captured or killed, with
-the exception of himself, and he had made his escape after the fight.
-
-Just before McBride broke camps to march west to join Gen. Price and
-Gen. McCullough, he made a general order that they arrest and seize
-every Union man possible, and after he left the country, that the
-committee who had been organized to take charge of the county, would
-at once exterminate every Union man who had failed to take the oath
-or to join the Confederate army, giving them full power as to what
-disposition they would make of them.
-
-
-Rebels Capture Col. Monks.
-
-On the 7th of July, 1861, one of my neighbors came to me and informed
-me that the time had come that every Union man had to show his colors
-and unless they reported and took the oath or joined the Confederate
-army, they would hang as high as Haman. While the Union men were on
-their guard and watching their movements, once in a while they would
-slip in home to see how the family was getting along. My family at that
-time consisted of a wife and four children, three girls and one boy. My
-wife had never been accustomed to staying alone and I came in home late
-on the evening of the 7th, thinking that I would leave the next morning
-before daylight. Sometime after the family had retired, not far from 11
-o'clock in the night, I was awakened by a rapping on the door. My wife,
-suspecting who the parties were, answered them, and demanded to know
-what was wanted; one of them, who claimed to be an orderly sergeant,
-remarked that he wanted to know if Monks was at home. She replied that
-he was not. A man by the name of William Biffle, whom the author had
-been acquainted with for years, replied, "He is here, I know, for I
-coursed him into this house late yesterday evening." The author at once
-arose to his feet and remarked, "I am here, what is wanted?" A man by
-the name of Garrett Weaver, who claimed to be an orderly sergeant and
-in charge of the squad, also a neighbor to the author said, "I have
-been ordered by Gen. McBride to arrest you, bring you in and make you
-take the oath." I owned at that time a first-class rifle and there was
-also another rifle gun in the house. I took my gun into my hands and
-my wife took hold of the other gun. I told them that a general order
-had gone forth, so I was informed, that they wanted to hang all the
-leading Union men and "if that is your intention I will die before I
-surrender." Weaver replied they were not going to hang me, but they
-were just going to take me to McBride to take the oath and I should be
-protected. Upon those terms I agreed to surrender, made a light in the
-house and found that the house was surrounded by a posse of twenty-five
-rebels. As soon as the light was made, a part of them rushed into the
-house, took my gun and jerked the one my wife had in her hand out of
-her possession, almost throwing her to the floor, began a general
-search of the house for other arms and such things as they said the
-army needed.
-
-As soon as I dressed, they ordered me to move. They didn't even give me
-time to say good-bye to my wife, nor to imprint a kiss upon the cheeks
-of my loving children. Closely surrounding me, they marched me about
-250 yards, came to their horses, where two more of their posse guarded
-the horses, they having dismounted, to approach the house on foot so
-they might not be heard.
-
-[Illustration: COL. MONKS ARRESTED AND TAKEN FROM HOME]
-
-
-"Billy, You Ought Not to be So Saucy."
-
-When within a few feet of the horses the author was halted. It was
-just starlight. I noticed a man by the name of Wilburn Baker, a man
-with whom the author had been acquainted from a boy, go to the horn of
-one of the saddles, lift therefrom a coiled rope and move toward the
-author. The author quickly arrived at the conclusion that the time had
-come to enforce the order of hanging. Baker ordered the author seized
-by the arms, drew them behind him and securely tied him. The author
-asked, just as they had completed the tying, "What do you mean? Are you
-going to cage me?" Baker replied, "Billy, you ought not to be so saucy,
-for you don't know the danger you are in." I was at once ordered placed
-on a horse. One of the posse rode up to my side and placed the other
-end of the rope around his body and the posse moved west. A short time
-before daylight they arrived at the house of William Nicks, who was a
-rebel lieutenant. They dismounted and took the author into the house.
-There appeared to be a general rejoicing among them. Nicks said, "You
-have got him, have you? We had become uneasy about you, and thought
-it might have been possible that he had his Union forces around him
-and that you had met with disaster; but I feel satisfied that we have
-now captured the leader and the counselor of the Union forces and the
-remainder will be easily extinguished." Gen. McBride in the meantime,
-being uneasy for fear the Federal troops would attack him, had removed
-his forces from West Plains to the south part of Howell county, camping
-at what was known as the Flag pond.
-
-I was closely guarded until daylight. McBride's forces had broken camp
-at the Flag pond on the morning of July 8th and were marching west with
-the intention of joining the forces of Gen. Price and Gen. McCullough,
-who were then moving in the direction of Springfield, Missouri, with
-the intention of attacking the Federal forces at that place, commanded
-by Gen. Lyon and Gen. Siegel. Very early on the morning of the 8th
-the party started in a southwest direction, with the author closely
-guarded. On coming near the head of Bennett's river, Fulton county,
-Arkansas, the posse commenced cheering and remarked: "Listen! Do you
-hear the drums and the fife? That is Gen. McBride's command moving west
-to kill them lopeared Dutch that you Union men have brought into the
-state of Missouri. Do you know what we are going to do with such men as
-you are? Those of you that we don't hang, the first fight that we get
-into with the lopeared Dutch, we will make breastworks out of to keep
-the bullets off of good men."
-
-About one mile further we came in sight of the moving column. We rode
-along the line, when there was general cheering until we reached a
-company that was organized in Oregon county and commanded by Capt.
-Simpson. Simpson said, "Why have you brought a Union man in here alive!
-If my company had possession of him, he could not live ten minutes."
-
-We soon reached a company commanded by Capt. Forshee which was
-organized in this county to whom the whole posse that made the arrest,
-belonged. The author was well acquainted with all of them and over
-half of them resided in the same settlement and were his neighbors.
-On reaching the company Captain Forshee walked out of the line and
-remarked to them "Why have you brought him in here alive?" Some of
-the posse remarked, that he had been a neighbor and they had all been
-friends up to the war and they hated to kill him. Forshee said "When
-I saw him at West Plains at the speaking when he got up and contended
-that there was a union and the government ought to be preserved, I
-wanted to shoot his black heart out of him and I feel the same way yet."
-
-The author was kept in close confinement and on the night of the 8th
-the command went into camp near what is known as the old Steve Thompson
-farm. The author, with several other prisoners, was placed in the guard
-house and orders were given that he be closely guarded.
-
-After they had taken their suppers, men that the author had been
-acquainted with from his boyhood, and men who had been acquainted with
-his relatives, came to the guard house in considerable numbers and
-remarked, "Hello, Monks?" "I never expected to see you under arrest."
-"What have you been doing that they have arrested you? I thought you
-was a good Democrat." "Have you left your party." "The Democratic party
-is in favor of the South." The author replied to them that when they
-thought he was a good Democrat they were right. But that he was not
-a slave to party and that he held country higher than party and if
-Democracy meant secession and nullification, that was one part of the
-principals of Democracy that he had never learned; that true Democracy,
-as understood by the author, taught every man that in case his country
-was invaded either externally or internally that he owed his honor
-and property in the support of it and for those reasons he was for
-the preservation of the Union at all hazards. Some remarked that "We
-ought to hang him right now without waiting any longer" Others remarked
-that "We have been acquainted with his people both on his mother's and
-father's side and they were all southern people and Democrats and they
-are all of them, almost, in favor of the South. It is strange indeed to
-see the course that he has taken." The author remarked that "There were
-always some shabby sheep in a flock and I suppose from your reasoning
-that I am one of them." They all retired, the officers giving orders
-that the most vigilant watch be kept over the prisoner. After he had
-retired a gentleman by the name of Joseph Teverbaugh who resided in
-Ozark county, a merchant and the owner of about twenty negroes, who had
-been well acquainted with the author from his boyhood, brought up the
-conversation as to what disposition they thought ought to be made of
-the author. The author could easily hear all the conversation inside
-of the guard line. Many opinions were expressed. Quite a number said,
-"Hang him outright." That was the only way to get shut of the Union
-men, to make short work of it, and forever rid the country of that
-element.
-
-Others said that appeared to be too harsh, that they were in favor
-of taking him to Little Rock and confining him in the penitentiary
-until the war was over, for it wouldn't take but a short time to rid
-the country of the lopeared Dutch and those who were friends to them.
-Others remarked that "that would be too easy for a man who was in
-favor of the lopeared Dutch; that we are in favor of taking all like
-him right into the army and making them fight and if they won't fight,
-the first engagement we get into, pile them up and make breastworks
-out of them, so that they will catch bullets off of good men." At this
-juncture Teverbaugh remarked, "I have been acquainted with Billy from
-a boy and you never can force him to fight against what he believes to
-be right, that he was a good boy and since he has grown up to be a man
-he has been an honorable and straightforward man and quite an active
-man politically and my advice would be to confine him in the State
-Penitentiary until the war is over, for I tell you now if he ever gains
-his liberty you are going to have him to fight."
-
-
-Sold as a Beef Cow.
-
-On the morning of the 9th they broke camp and marched near the mouth
-of Bennett's river and went into camp at what was then known as
-Talbert's mill. A short time after we had been in camp Capt. Forshee,
-who had charge of the prisoners, came to the guard house and the author
-requested him that he be allowed to take the oath and return home, as
-his wife and children were almost scared to death owing to the reports
-that were currently circulated all through the country, his wife would
-believe they had hung him. The captain replied that they were not going
-to allow him to take the oath. They had plenty of proof against him,
-that he had been communicating to the lopeared Dutch and as soon as
-they had formed a junction with Price and McCullough he would be tried
-as a spy. He gave orders to the guard to see that he was kept in close
-confinement, and about 11 o'clock in the night as near as the author
-can guess, it being starlight, the Captain came down to the guard house
-in company with one of his men, Frank Morrison.
-
-The author was lying on the ground pretending to be asleep. The Captain
-came inside of the guard, called out, "Monks, are you asleep?" The
-author raised up in a sitting position and said, "Captain what is
-wanted"? The Captain remarked, "I want you to go up to my camp fire,"
-which was about 75 yards distance from the guard house. The author
-said, "Captain, this is a strange time of night to come down and order
-me to your camp fire." He said; "Not another word out of you, rise
-to your feet." He ordered Morrison to step behind him with the same
-gun that he had recently taken from the author and cock it and "if he
-makes a crooked step from here up to the camp fire shoot him through."
-The author heard Morrison cock the gun and about half way between the
-guard house and the camp fire the Captain remarked to the author,
-"Do you know Kasinger?" The author, suspecting that he was going to
-be delivered to a mob, said "I know him very well; we have grown up
-together from boys." The Captain said, "I thought he was a mighty nice
-man. I have sold you to him for a beef cow." The author remarked there
-was but one thing he was sorry for; that if he had known he was going
-to be delivered to a mob he never would have surrendered and had some
-satisfaction for his life. The Captain said, "I thought I was doing
-mighty well to sell a black Republican or a Union man for a beef cow
-where we have as many good men to feed, as we have here."
-
-His camp fire was under a gum tree with a large top. The fires had
-all died down, it being in July and nothing but the stars were giving
-the light. On coming within two or three feet of the tree the Captain
-ordered the author to halt. He and Morrison walked about ten paces and
-said, "I have brought you up here to liberate you. We have got plenty
-of good men here to feed without feeding men who are friends to the
-lopeared Dutch." The author replied to the Captain, "you may think you
-are dealing with a fool. I have neither violated the civil nor military
-law; have demanded a trial and you refuse to give it to me. You can't
-bring me up here at this time of night and pretend to turn me loose for
-the purpose of escaping the responsibility of an officer and deliver me
-into the hands of a mob."
-
-
-The Confederate Army or Hell.
-
-The author was satisfied that he could then see a bunch of men standing
-in readiness. The Captain replied, "Sit down or you will be shot in
-half a minute." The author sat down and leaned against the tree. He
-had on strong summer clothing, wearing an alpaca vest and coat. In an
-instant, about twenty-five men, led by Kasinger, and a man by the name
-of William Sap, approached the author; Kasinger, holding a rope in his
-hand with a noose in it, walked up to the author, held the noose of the
-rope above his head and said, "Monks, you have half a minute to say you
-will join the army and fight, or go to hell, just which you please."
-The author replied that it was said that "hell was a hot place," but he
-had never been there, and that he had always been counted a truthful
-man until he had been arrested, and since his arrest he had been asked
-divers questions of the whereabouts of the lopeared Dutch, and that
-he had told them in every instance he knew nothing of them and had
-been cursed for a liar. "If I was to say that I would join the army
-and fight, I might have a cowardly set of legs and they might carry me
-away; and in the next place, I am a Union man, first, last and all the
-time. I suppose your intention is to hang me, and there is only one
-thing I am sorry for, and that is that I ever surrendered; but there is
-one consolation left, when you kill me you won't kill them all, and you
-will meet plenty of them that won't be disarmed as I am now."
-
-Kasinger replied, "No damn foolishness, we mean business," and made an
-attempt to drop the noose over my head, which was warded off with my
-arms.
-
-At this juncture the author appealed to the Captain for protection from
-the mob, saying that he was a prisoner, unarmed and helpless, and if
-he suffered him to be murdered by a mob his blood would be upon the
-Captain's head. No reply being made by the Captain, all of the parties
-being considerably under the influence of whiskey, Sap raised his
-left hand, pushed Kasinger back and remarked, "I have been shooting
-and wounding some of these black Republicans who are friends of the
-lopeared Dutch, but I intend to shoot the balance of them dead." At
-the same time he drew a pistol from his right-hand pocket, cocked it,
-stooped over, ran his fingers under the author's clothing, gave them
-a twist and commenced punching him around the chest with the muzzle
-of the revolver, and after, as the author thought, he had punched him
-some fifty or sixty times with the revolver, the author said to him,
-"William Sap, there is no question but that your intentions are to
-kill me, and you want to torture me to death. You know that if I was
-armed and on equal footing with you, you would not do this." He made a
-quick jerk with his left hand, intending to jerk the author upon his
-face, remarking to the Captain at the same time, "Captain, you promised
-him to us and we are going to take him." The author, with all force
-possible, leant against the tree, Sap's hold broke loose, tearing off
-all the buttons that were on the vest and coat.
-
-[Illustration: A NARROW ESCAPE FOR COL. MONKS.]
-
-The author again appealed to the Captain for protection from the mob.
-The Captain then remarked to Sap, "Hold on for a moment, I will take a
-vote of my company as to whether we will hang him or not." The company
-at that time was lying on the ground, most of them apparently asleep.
-The Captain called out aloud to his company, "Gentlemen, I am going
-now to take a vote of my company as to whether we will hang Monks or
-not. All in favor of it vote, aye; all opposed, no." He then took the
-affirmative vote and the negative vote. They appeared, to the author,
-to be almost evenly divided. Sap again remarked to the Captain "You
-promised him to us, we have bought him and paid for him and he is ours."
-
-The author again appealed to the Captain for protection. The Captain
-replied to Sap, "He claims protection and as I am an officer and he
-a prisoner I reckon we had better keep him until we reach McCullough
-and Price and then we will try him for a spy and there is plenty of
-evidence against him to prove that he has been writing to the lopeared
-Dutch and after he is convicted will turn him over and you men can take
-charge of him." At this juncture a brother in-law of the Captain said,
-"Captain, I have one request to make of you. I want you to take Monks
-in the morning and tie him hard and fast, with his face to a tree,
-and let me shoot with a rest sixty yards and show you how I can spoil
-a black Republican's pate." The Captain replied, "As soon as he is
-convicted you can have the gratification of shooting him just as often
-as you please."
-
-The Captain and Morrison again took charge of the author, carried him
-back and delivered him to the guard with instructions to the guard to
-be diligent in keeping him closely confined so that he would have no
-possible chance of escape. On the morning of the 10th we broke camp
-and went into camp that night just beyond where Mountain Home now
-stands. Dr. Emmons, of West Plains, who was a strong Union man and who
-afterwards became captain in the 6th Missouri Cavalry, attempted to go
-through to the Federal forces but was pursued by the rebels, captured
-somewhere in Texas county and brought back to the camp. He was also a
-prisoner at the same time; but being a master mason, was paroled to the
-limits of the camp and on the night of the 10th made his escape and got
-through to the Federal lines, enlisted and was made captain. Of him we
-will speak later.
-
-
-In Camp at Yellville.
-
-On July 11th they broke camp and reached Yellville, Marion county, and
-on the 13th reached Carrolton, a small town in Arkansas, and went into
-camp. The author well remembers the spring. It ran out of the steep,
-rocky gulch and the branch ran a little south of west and a beautiful
-grove of timber surrounded the spring. The prisoners were marched down
-within a few feet of the spring and there placed under guard. As usual,
-the abuse that had been continually heaped upon the prisoners during
-the march was renewed and in a short time a man who was said to be from
-one of the counties north of Rolla, Mo., commenced making a speech and
-inciting and encouraging the soldiers to mob the prisoners at once;
-that he had disguised himself and entered the camps of the lopeared
-Dutch at Rolla, and that to his own personal knowledge they had men's
-wives and daughters inside of their camps, committing all manner
-of offenses possible, and that they were heathens; didn't resemble
-American people at all and that he would not guard nor feed any man who
-was a friend to them; that they ought to be killed outright.
-
-The men who enlisted in the Confederate army from Howell and adjoining
-counties, before starting, went to the blacksmith shops and had them
-large butcher knives made; made a belt and scabbard and buckled them
-around them, and said that they were going to scalp lopeared Dutch. In
-a short time the tenor of the above mentioned speech had incited over
-400 men and it had become necessary to double the guard. The grove of
-timber was filled with men and boys looking over, expecting to see the
-prisoners mobbed every minute. There was a man who drew his pistol,
-others drew knives and made different attempts to break lines and mob
-the prisoners. The man in possession of the pistol declared that he
-intended to shoot them. He was on an elevated place and they called
-him "Red," and there were three or four men holding him to prevent
-his firing. The author remarked to him that: "The time will soon come
-when you will meet men who are not disarmed. You had better save your
-bravery until you meet them, and my opinion is that you won't need
-any man to hold you then." Just about this time on the north side of
-the spring--the land dropped toward the spring, on a descent of about
-45 degrees--the author heard the voice of a man ordering the guard to
-"open the lines and let these ladies come in." The author at once arose
-to his feet and spoke out in an audible voice to the guard to give away
-and let the ladies come in and see a Northern monkey exhibited, that
-the monkeys grew a great deal larger in the north than they did in the
-south. At this juncture it appeared to take one more man to hold Red
-who said that "he would kill the saucy scoundrel if it took him a week
-to do it."
-
-When the posse came in we saw that the ladies were accompanied by eight
-or ten Confederate officers with about fifteen ladies. All the ladies
-carried small Confederate flags, the first ones that the author had
-ever seen. On coming very close to the prisoners they halted and one
-of the officers remarked, "These are the Union men that are friends to
-the lopeared Dutch. Couldn't you tie the knot upon them to hang them?"
-I think almost everyone spoke out and said "we could." After heaping
-other epithets and abuse upon the prisoners they and the officers
-retired outside of the line. The speaker was still talking, urging and
-insisting that the prisoners should be mobbed at once, that they should
-not be permitted to live.
-
-At about this stage of the proceedings a man's voice was heard on top
-of the bank saying, "Men, I believe your intentions are to kill these
-prisoners. You have all started out to fight and you don't know how
-soon you might be taken prisoner and you would not like to be treated
-in any such manner; I know Billy, (referring to the author) and all you
-have against him is the political side that he has taken and I order
-the orderly sergeant to double the guard around the prisoners so there
-will be no possible chance for the mob to get through, and move with
-the prisoners south to a large hewed log house and place the prisoners
-therein, and place a guard around the walls and suffer no man to
-approach the house without an order from the officers."
-
-As the prisoner began to move, the excited soldiers, who were wanting
-to mob them, brought out an Indian yell, and it appeared to the author
-he could almost feel the ground shake. After they were put into the
-houses, among the prisoners were some who were deserters, the author
-whispered to the Union men and told them to lie down close to them so
-that they could not distinguish from the outside one from another. The
-author was informed by Maj. William Kelley, of the Confederate army,
-who resides at Rolla, Phelps county, Missouri, at the present time,
-that he was the officer who made the order to remove the prisoners into
-the house and place a heavy guard around them to prevent their being
-mobbed. This ended the excitement for the evening.
-
-The author had always been a believer in the realities of religion.
-About one-tenth of the officers appeared to be Baptist and Methodist
-preachers, and frequently when they would go into camp would call a
-large number of the men together and very often take the prisoners and
-place them near by under a heavy guard, and then convene religious
-services. They always took for a text some subject in the Bible and
-the author remembers well of the taking of the subjects in the book of
-Joshua, where Joshua was commanded to pass around the fortifications
-of the enemy and blow the ram's horn and the fortifications fell, and,
-the God of Joshua was the same God that existed to-day and there was no
-question but that God was on the side of the South and all they had to
-do was to have faith and move on, attack the lopeared Dutch and God was
-sure to deliver them into their hands.
-
-The author could not help but add, in his own mind, that when the
-attack is made that God set the earth to shaking and all around where
-the lopeared Dutch are standing that the earth will open and swallow
-them up just leave their heads above the surface; so that those
-Confederates who were so furious could take their big knives and scalp
-the Dutch as they had said on divers occasions they intended to do.
-
-
-Makes His Escape.
-
-The author was determined to make his escape whenever the opportunity
-offered; and he could learn all about the whereabouts of the Federal
-soldiers from the excited Confederate scouts who would ride along
-the lines and say that the lopeared Dutch were as thick as rats at
-Springfield, Missouri, moving around in every direction and they might
-be attacked at any time and General McBride was looking every day to be
-attacked by the Federal forces to cut off his forming a junction with
-Generals Price and McCullough.
-
-In about four or five days they reached Berryville, near where the
-Eureka Springs are, and went into camp just west of Berryville right
-at the spurs of the Boston mountain. The prisoners were placed in the
-guard house near a little creek that was then dry. Captain Forshee's
-company went into camp next to the company commanded by Captain
-Galloway of Howell county. As the weather was very hot and dry and
-the author had been marched barefooted (one of his shoes having worn
-out) until his feet were badly blistered, he was lying down, feigning
-sickness. The guard has become a little careless. Just about sundown
-heavy thunder set in the west. The clouds continued to increase, the
-elements grew very dark. In the mean time they had put out a chain
-guard all around the encampment and said guard was about thirty steps
-from guard house. The low lands were all bottom, covered with heavy
-timber and a large oak had fallen across the creek and reached from
-bank to bank and the bark had all slipped off. About thirty feet from
-the top of the tree the foot of a steep mountain set in. The guard fire
-was about sixty yards south of the guardhouse. The clouds soon came up
-and a heavy rain set in, with terrific thunder and lightning, and as
-the army had temporary tents the guards all crawled in under the tents
-and left the author by the fire. The rain soon quenched the fire.
-
-The chain guard were walking up and down the dry creek and they met at
-the log referred to. The author thought now was his time to make his
-escape, if ever; knowing that he would have to have a shoe, slipped to
-one of the tents, got hold of a shoe, and then the thought struck him
-that he would like to have a revolver, but on further examination found
-their revolvers to be placed in such a position that it was impossible
-to get one without waking the men. He then slipped to the butt of the
-log and heard the guard meet at the log and turn again on their beat.
-He at once crossed on the log on the other side, walked into the brush,
-reached the foot of the mountain about twenty steps distant and halted.
-Everything appeared to be quiet, the release around the guard fire were
-singing, whooping and holloing.
-
-The author then took the mountain which was about one quarter of a mile
-high, and it always has appeared to the author that he crossed the log
-and went up the mountain as light as a cat. On reaching the top, still
-raining heavily, the thought came into his mind that "I am once more
-a free man, but I am in an enemy's country, without friends," and at
-once determined in my mind to reach Springfield, Missouri, if possible.
-I sat down, pulled on the shoe that I had taken and it just fitted
-without a sock; I then procured a dead stick for the purpose of holding
-before me as I traveled for fear I would walk off of some steep cliff
-or bluff, as it was very mountainous.
-
-Having the guard fire for a criterion I moved northwest, soon struck
-the leading road west that the army was marching on, traveled the road
-for about one mile, came onto the pickets, surrounded the pickets,
-struck the road again, traveled all night until just gray day,
-directly west or nearly so. A slow rain continued all night. As soon as
-it became light enough to see I found myself in a country completely
-covered with pine timber. I turned square from the road, went about
-350 yards up to the top of a high knob, found about one quarter of an
-acre level bench. A large pine had turned out by the roots and the
-hole was partially filled with old leaves. The author always had been
-afraid of a snake but the time had come when he had more fear of a man
-than a snake, so he rolled himself down into the hole in the leaves
-and at the time had become chilled with the steady rain. About 9 or 10
-o'clock, as well as the author could guess, he heard the beat of the
-drum which told that the army was marching on the same road that he
-had traveled in the night. In a short time the army passed where the
-author was lying in the sink. The author could have raised himself up
-and have seen the procession pass but he had seen them just as often
-as he wanted to and he remained still. Late in the evening a company
-of about 65 men passed. The author was informed afterwards that they
-had been detailed to make search for the prisoner, with orders if they
-found him, to shoot him at once. The author was further informed by
-Confederates who belonged to the command that as soon next morning as
-it was reported that the author had made his escape that the chain
-guard declared that no man could have passed between them and they were
-satisfied that the author was still inside of the lines.
-
-They at once made a large detail and commenced searching. There were
-quite a large number of box elders with very heavy, bushy tops. They
-said every single tree, every drift and possible place of hiding, was
-examined. Orders were at once issued by the commander, who sent word
-back to the home of the author, that he had made his escape and to
-watch for him and as soon as he came in home to arrest him and either
-shoot him or hang him at once.
-
-In the afternoon of the same day it cleared off and just as soon as
-dark came, the author was determined to try to reach Springfield, being
-in a strange country and knowing that if he was re-captured it would
-be certain death. He knew somewhere about the distance he had traveled
-west. He located the north star which he used as his pilot or guide
-and set out for Springfield, having no arms of any kind, not even a
-pocket knife and had become very hungry. He came to a slippery-elm
-tree, took a rock, knocked off some of the bark, ate it and proceeded
-on his journey, traveling all night. When gray day appeared again, he
-went to a hickory grub, broke the grub off with a rock, cut the top
-off with a sharp edged rock, to be used for a weapon, placed himself
-in hiding, remained all day. As soon as night came, again he proceeded
-on his journey, traveled no roads except when they run in direction
-of the north star. On the second morning he went into a small cave
-surrounded by a thicket, about 10 o'clock in the day he found that he
-was near enough to some rebel command to hear the drilling. As soon as
-dark came on he proceeded on his journey. The nights were dark and only
-star light until the after part of the night. He went near a spring
-house, but when he got to it, there wasn't a drop of milk in it. He
-passed through an Irish potato patch, grabbed two or three small Irish
-potatoes and ate them; passed through a wheat field, rubbed out some
-dry wheat in his hand, ate that; ate a few leaves off of a cabbage. On
-the third morning, went into hiding, remained until the darkness came
-again and resumed the journey.
-
-On the morning of the 4th at daylight I had reached an old trace,
-pulled off my clothes and wrung them and put them on again as the dew
-was very heavy and every morning my clothes would be wet. I went about
-30 or 40 yards from the old trace and thought to myself, if I saw any
-person passing that was not armed, that I would approach and learn
-where I was. Hadn't been there more than a half hour when I heard a
-wagon coming. As soon as the wagon came in sight I saw that there was a
-lady driving, accompanied by a small girl and boy, I got up and moved
-into the road, walked on, and met the wagon, spoke to the lady. She
-stopped the wagon and I asked her if she would be kind enough to tell
-me where I was, that I had got lost, traveled all night and didn't
-know where I was. She told the author that he was in Stone county,
-Missouri, and asked him where he was from. I told her that I was from
-the state of Arkansas. She wanted to know if there was much excitement
-there. I told her that there was; that men were enlisting and going
-into the Confederate service and the people were generally excited over
-the prospect of war. I asked her if there was any excitement in this
-country. She replied that there was--that the rebels a day or two ago
-had run in, on White River, and killed four Union men and drove out
-about 40 head of cattle and "that's why I am going out here in this
-wagon. My husband belongs to the home guards and has come in home on a
-furlough and is afraid to knock around the place for fear he will be
-waylaid and shot by the rebels."
-
-I then asked her if she would allow me to ask her a civil question.
-She replied that she would. I asked her what her politics were, and
-she told me that she was a Union woman. I told her, then, that I would
-tell her the truth; that the rebels had had me prisoner and that I
-had made my escape from them and had been traveling only in the night
-time; that this was the fourth morning since I had made my escape, and
-I asked her how far it was to the house; that she was the first person
-I had spoken to since I had made my escape. She said it was about 350
-yards around the point, to go on down to the house, and as soon as she
-got some light wood she would be back. I went to the house, halloed
-at the fence, a man came to the door and invited me in. I walked in,
-and at once I began to look for arms, and to my great delight I saw a
-Springfield musket lying in the gun rack, with a cartridge box with
-the letters U. S. on it. O! the thrill of joy that passed through my
-mind. I had often heard the old adage quoted, that "a friend in need is
-a friend indeed," but had never before realized its full meaning. In
-a short time the lady returned. She went to work cooking, soon had me
-something to eat, but I had almost lost my appetite, having fasted so
-long.
-
-After I ate something and while she was preparing provisions to carry
-with me the man told me there was but one place that we could cross
-White river without being placed in great danger of being captured by
-the rebels, for they were patrolling up and down the river every day.
-I told him I never had attempted to travel a foot in daylight since I
-had made my escape. He told me he thought if we could get safely across
-the river, he knew of an old trace that led across the mountains and
-intersected Taney county and as soon as we reached that settlement they
-all belonged to home guards and a man would be in no danger in making
-himself known.
-
-The woman baked enough biscuit and tied up bacon and red onions with
-them, the author thought, to have lasted a hungry man three days, for
-him to carry with him and we at once, after taking leave of the good
-woman followed by her best wishes that I would get through to the
-Federal lines safely, started for White river, about two miles distant.
-Just before reaching the river he left the author standing in the road,
-went into the house near by and soon came out with two other men in
-company with him. On reaching the river where there was a canoe tied to
-the bank they stepped aside by themselves, held a short consultation;
-then all got into the canoe, carried me across the river, piloted me
-across the river bottom to where the old trace left the bottom; there
-we separated, they hoping that I would get through to the Federal
-lines safely. They didn't think there was any danger in traveling in
-daylight, because there wasn't a single settlement for the entire
-distance of 25 miles.
-
-The author traveled on until dark had overtaken him. The moon gave no
-light until the after part of the night. The author laid down by the
-side of the road, took a nap, after the moon came up proceeded on his
-journey and in about two miles came to a house. Hallooing at the gate,
-a lady came to the door and said: "Come in." They appeared to have a
-very savage dog. I remarked to the lady that I believed the dog would
-bite me and noticed at the same time that she stood off to one side
-of the door. She remarked: "Go in; that dog will not bite you." As I
-stepped into the door I was confronted by a man standing in the middle
-of the floor in his night clothes with his old Springfield musket
-cocked and presented and he called out, "Halt!" The author halted, of
-course, and the next remark was, "Who are you and where is the balance
-of your crowd?" The author replied: "There is no balance of them and
-there is not much of myself left. The Confederates have had me prisoner
-and I have made my escape from them and I am now trying to reach
-Springfield, Missouri."
-
-The man ordered his wife to strike a light, and after viewing the
-author critically, placed his Springfield musket near the bed and
-invited the author to take a seat, while he dressed himself. Being not
-more than two hours until daylight, his wife asked me to go to bed and
-rest. I told her that I wasn't fit to lie in bed; that I had lain on
-the ground like a hog ever since I had been arrested. She said that it
-didn't matter how dirty a Union man was, he was welcome to sleep in her
-bed, and to lie down and she would proceed at once to get breakfast;
-that there were some refugee wagons, about two miles distant, making
-their way to Springfield, and that she would have me up in time to
-reach them. Accordingly, after eating breakfast before daylight, and
-starting with the purpose to reach the wagons before they broke camp,
-the man remarked to the author, "My captain lives just this side of
-where the wagons are camped and I know he would love to see you and
-learn about the movements of the rebels."
-
-When we got to the house, he hallooed and the captain came out, asked
-the author his name, where he lived and when he was taken prisoner. The
-author gave him his name and place of residence, and on learning that
-he was from Howell county, asked him if he was acquainted with a man by
-the name of Washington Galloway. The author informed him that he was
-well acquainted with him. He inquired as to which side he was on, the
-Confederate or Union. The author informed him that he was on the rebel
-side and was a captain commanding one of the rebel companies; that I
-saw him and had had a conversation with him on the evening before I
-made my escape. He said, "He is an own brother of mine. My name is
-Jesse Galloway;" and the tears ran from his eyes like a whipped child.
-He said, "Get down; you are not in a condition to travel any further
-at the present time." He gave me a change of clothing and had my
-clothes washed and sent me through to Springfield by one of his men on
-horseback.
-
-About three weeks after I left him the rebels slipped up near his
-house, lay in ambush, and when he came out into the yard they shot him
-to death while he was holding an innocent child in his arms.
-
-
-Arrives at Springfield.
-
-On reaching Springfield, I was conducted directly to the head quarters
-of Gen. Lyon, gave him all the information in my possession and told
-him I had been entirely stripped, had no means with me for support and
-I would like to join the army. He remarked to me, "I don't want you to
-join the army; we intend to move south next spring and you are one of
-the men that will be in great demand. We have a position for you and
-the Government will pay you good wages."
-
-A short time after I arrived I met a man by the name of Percy, a
-lawyer, who resided at West Plains, a bitter rebel, who was in there
-as a spy. I was alone and there were very few persons that I was
-acquainted with living in Springfield. Percy had been posing as a
-Union man and offered that if I would go with him, he would carry me
-safely through home; tried to get me to agree to go outside the lines
-with him after dark, but knowing that he was a bitter rebel and had
-been taking an active part in the rebel movement I discarded him as
-quick as possible. In a day or two Benjamin Alsup, who resided on
-Hutton Valley, Howell county, happened to meet him in town, and he
-being acquainted in and about Springfield, had him arrested at once. A
-man by the name of Moore, who was a strong Union man, lived about two
-miles from Springfield on the Wilson creek road took me home with him
-for the purpose of resting up. He was the owner of a fine dapple gray
-gelding four years old. He made Gen. Lyon a present of him. About five
-days before the Wilson Creek battle it was reported that the Rebels
-were on Cane creek, west of Springfield, in considerable force. Gen.
-Lyon moved out with a considerable force, riding the same horse, but on
-seeing the federal forces approaching they retreated. On the 8th day
-of August the rebels appeared in large force, being commanded by Gen.
-Price and Gen. McCullough.
-
-
-General Lyon Killed at Wilson Creek.
-
-Gen. Lyon sent out scouts with glasses for the purpose, if possible,
-of ascertaining their number. The rebels had gone into camp about ten
-miles from Springfield, with the avowed purpose of attacking Gen. Lyon
-the next day at Springfield, and as the scouts were not able with their
-glasses to see the largest force of rebels, which was encamped around
-a point out of sight, reported as to what they thought the number was.
-Lyon and Siegel came to the conclusion that by strategy they could
-easily whip them, so on the morning of the 10th, about midnight, they
-broke camp at Springfield, taking all of their available men. The
-morning being very foggy and misty, they easily surrounded the pickets
-and took them prisoners without the firing of a gun, then drew up and
-fired the artillery into them before they knew they were there.
-
-So the memorable fight known as the battle of Wilson Creek was begun.
-Gen. Lyon rode the horse above referred to at the time he fell on the
-battlefield. Both the Confederate and Union side were founding all
-their future hopes upon the result of that battle, as to settling the
-question in Missouri. The author heard the artillery all day. Late in
-the evening word came to the Union men that Gen. Lyon had been killed
-and that the Federal army was retreating in the direction of Rolla,
-Missouri, and that all the Union men and the home guard would fall in
-and meet them at once. O! the scene that followed. Men would hurriedly
-ride around, meet their wives and children, tell them that the battle
-was lost and they were then retreating and they had only time to come
-around and bid them good-bye, and to do the best they could; that they
-didn't know that they would ever be permitted to see them again. We
-could hear the wife and children crying and sending up the most pitiful
-petitions to God to have mercy.
-
-Everything on the Union side appeared to be dark, although it was a
-drawn battle and the rebels commenced retreating at the same time,
-and retreated about twenty-five miles west, but on learning that the
-Federal troops were retreating, they faced about, taking possession
-of the battle-ground and all of the southern and western portion of
-the state; and then the rebels, being encouraged by the late victory,
-determined to rid the country of all Union men at once.
-
-About that time about 350 men mostly from Oregon county commanded by
-two very prominent men, made a scout into Ozark county, Missouri. On
-reaching the North fork of White river they went into camp at what was
-known as Jesse James' mill. The owner, a man of about 55 or 60 years
-of age, as good a man as resided in Ozark county, was charged with
-grinding grain for Union men and their families; at the time he, and
-a man by the name of Brown, were cutting sawlogs about two miles from
-home in the pinery. They went out and arrested them, arrested an old
-man by the name of Russell and several others, carried them to a man's
-house, who was a Union man, and had fled to prevent arrest. They took
-Brown and James about 300 yards from the house, procured a rope, hunted
-a long limb of a tree, rolled a big rock up to the first rope where it
-was tied to the limb, placed the noose around James' neck, stood him on
-the rock, rolled the rock from under him and left him swinging, rolled
-the rock to the next rope, stood Brown on it, placed the noose around
-his neck, rolled the rock out and left Brown swinging in the air, went
-to the third rope, placed Russell on the rock, and just as they aimed
-to adjust the noose, word came that the home guards and Federals were
-right upon them in considerable force. They fled, leaving Russell
-standing upon the rock and both Brown and James dangling in the air.
-
-[Illustration: HANGING JESSE JAMES AND MR. BROWN.]
-
-
-Their Wives and Other Women Bury Them.
-
-Every Union man now having fled in fear of his life, the next day the
-wives of Brown and James, with the help of a few other women, buried
-them as best they could. They dug graves underneath the swinging
-bodies, laid bed clothing in the graves and cut them loose. The bodies
-fell into the coffinless graves and the earth was replaced. So the
-author is satisfied that the bones of these men still remain in the
-lonely earth underneath where they met their untimely death with no
-charge against them except that they had been feeding Union men, with
-no one to bury them but their wives and a few other women who aided.
-
-Some of the men who were in the scout and present when the hanging was
-done are still living in the counties of Howell and Oregon.
-
-
-A General Jackson Soldier Shot Down.
-
-A short time after this hanging there was a man by the name of Rhodes,
-who resided on the head of Bennett's Bayou in Howell county. He was
-about eighty years of age and had been a soldier under General Jackson.
-His head was perfectly white and he was very feeble. When he heard of
-the hanging of Brown and James he said openly that there was no civil
-war in that, and that the men who did it were guilty of murder.
-
-Some two weeks from the date of the hanging of Brown and James, about
-twenty-five men, hearing of what he had said, organized themselves and
-commanded by Dr. Nunly and William Sapp, proceeded to the house of
-Rhodes, where he and his aged wife resided alone, called him out and
-told him they wanted him to go with them. His aged wife came out, and
-being acquainted with a part of the men, and knowing that they had
-participated in the hanging and shooting of a number of Union men,
-talked with them and asked: "You are not going to hurt my old man?"
-They said: "We just want him to go a piece with us over here." Ordering
-the old man to come along, they went over to a point about one quarter
-from the house and informed him of what he had said. There they shot
-him, cut his ears off and his heart out. Dr. Nunly remarked that he was
-going to take the heart home with him, pickle it and keep it so people
-could see how a black republican's heart looked.
-
-They left him lying on the ground, proceeded directly to Joseph
-Spears', who resided about six miles west of town on the Yellville
-road, declaring that they were going to treat him the same way. They
-reached his house about two hours in the night, all full of whiskey.
-When they arrived there Spears was sick in bed. They dismounted, came
-in, ordered their suppers and their horses fed. Spears at that time
-owned a negro man, and he ordered him to put up the horses and feed
-them, and his wife to get them supper. After supper, they concluded
-to remain until morning. During the night they became sober, and
-concluded, since Spears owned a "nigger," that it could not be possible
-that he was a Union man, and the reports that they had heard that he
-was a Union man might be untrue, and they would let him alone until
-they could investigate further.
-
-[Illustration: CUTTING OUT RHODES' HEART.]
-
-In the meantime, Rhodes not having returned home, and not a single
-Union man left in the country that Mrs. Rhodes could get to look after
-him, and having heard when they reached Joseph Spears' that the old
-man was not with them, although very feeble, she still continued the
-search; on the second day, about fifty yards from the road and about a
-quarter of a mile from home, while she was looking for him, she heard
-hogs squealing and grunting as though they were eating something. She
-proceeded to the place and found the hogs were just about to commence
-eating the remains of her husband. The Union men having fled, she
-notified some of the neighbors, and the women came in and helped dress
-the body and buried him the best they could; and neither at the taking
-down or burial of Brown and James and the burial of the old man Rhodes
-did a single rebel put in an appearance.
-
-There never was a man arrested by the Confederate authorities, or a
-single word of condemnation uttered, but as far as could be heard there
-was general approval. It was said that the means used were desperate,
-but that was the only way to get rid of the men and strike terror to
-them so they could neither give aid nor countenance to the lopeared
-Dutch.
-
-
-Benjamin Alsup Taken to Little Rock.
-
-In a few days following they proceeded to arrest Benjamin Alsup,
-residing in Hutton Valley, who was a strong Union man, took him to
-Little Rock, placed him in the state penitentiary, and kept him there
-until after Little Rock fell into the hands of the Federals, when they
-exchanged him with other prisoners. While they had him in prison they
-worked him in a bark mill by the side of an old mule, with a strap
-around his breast and two leather hand holds. He pulled so much in the
-mill that his little finger was calloused and he almost entirely lost
-the use of it.
-
-After they had hung, shot, captured and driven from the country all of
-the Union men, they called a public meeting for the purpose of taking
-into consideration what should be done with the families of the Union
-men, which meeting had a number of preachers in it. After discussing
-the premises, they arrived at the conclusion that if they let the
-families of the Union men, who had escaped and gone into the Federal
-lines, remain, they would return and bring in the lopeared Dutch. They
-didn't believe that both parties could ever live together, and as they
-now had the country completely rid of the Union men, they would force
-their families to leave. They at once appointed men, among whom were
-several preachers, to go to each one of the Union families and notify
-them that they would not be allowed to remain; because if they let them
-stay, their men would be trying to come back, and they didn't believe
-both parties could live together. They stated at the same time that
-they were really sorry for the women and children, but nobody was to
-blame but their husbands and sons, who had cast their lot with the
-lopeared Dutch. Also, as they had taken up arms against the Confederate
-states, all the property they had, both real and personal, was subject
-to confiscation and belonged to the Confederate authorities; but they
-would allow them to take enough of the property to carry them inside of
-the lines of the lopeared Dutch, where they supposed their men were and
-where they then could care for them.
-
-
-Loyal Women Driven From Their Homes.
-
-They said they might have a reasonable time to make preparations to
-leave the country, and if they didn't leave, they would be forced to do
-so, if they had to arrest them and carry them out.
-
-The wildest excitement then prevailed among the women and children.
-They had no men to transact their business and make preparations to
-leave. Little had they thought, while they were chasing, arresting,
-hanging and shooting their men, that they, too, would become victims
-of the rebel hatred and be forced to leave house and home, not knowing
-where their men were or whether they were dead or alive. All they knew
-of their whereabouts was, that those who escaped arrest had left their
-homes, aiming to reach the nearest Federal lines.
-
-Women were at once dispatched to reach the nearest Federal lines, if
-possible, and inform them of the Confederate order, and procure help
-to take them out. Their homes and houses were being continually raided
-by small bands of Confederates roaming over the country, claiming that
-they were hunting Union men, taking all classes of property that they
-might see proper to take, without any restraint whatever.
-
-When the Union men heard that an order had been made requiring their
-families to leave, not thinking that a thing of that kind would ever
-occur, having left them with comfortable homes and plenty to eat, the
-wildest consternation reigned amongst them.
-
-The Federal authorities were willing to give them aid, but were placed
-in such a condition that they needed every man in the field, and for
-that reason couldn't give them any help in getting out. The women had
-to speedily fit up as best they could, close their doors and start for
-the Federal lines, leaving the most of their property in the hands of
-the rebels. The rebels proceeded at once to take possession of and
-occupy most of the homes.
-
-The suffering that followed the women and children is indescribable.
-They had to drive their own teams, take care of the little ones, travel
-through the storms, exposed to it all without a man to help them, nor
-could they hear a single word of comfort spoken by husband, son or
-friend. On reaching the Federal lines, all vacant houses and places of
-shelter were soon filled, and they were known and styled as refugees.
-Many of them went into soldier huts, where the soldiers had wintered
-and covered the tops of their huts with earth. They had to leave home
-with a small amount of rations, and on the road the rebels would stop
-them and make them divide up the little they had started with, and
-reaching the Federal lines they would be almost destitute of food and
-many of them very scantily clothed.
-
-[Illustration: MRS. MONKS AND CHILDREN BEING DRIVEN FROM HOME.]
-
-They would at once commence inquiring for their husbands and sons.
-Numbers of them never found them, as they had been captured, killed and
-imprisoned while attempting to reach the Federal lines. O! The untold
-misery that then confronted them! After they had traveled and half
-starved and suffered from cold and exposure, promising themselves that
-when they reached the Federal lines they would again meet their loved
-ones who could again care for them, they were doomed to disappointment,
-in a large number of instances.
-
-Those who did meet their husbands and sons were also disappointed;
-they had either joined the service or been employed by the government
-as guides and scouts, and the small amount of pay they received from
-the government, wouldn't provide food and raiment for their families.
-They were compelled to still be absent from their families, although
-they were suffering greatly for all of the necessaries of life and for
-clothing and shelter. The women's task of caring for and looking after
-the family and the little ones was just as great after they had reached
-the Federal lines as before. The government ordered that wherever aid
-could be given, rations should be issued to the families, and while the
-government did all it could in this way, it was not able to furnish
-shelter and houses for their comfort. Winter came on and they underwent
-untold suffering; disease set in from exposure, besides the contagious
-diseases of smallpox and measles, and hundreds of them died for want
-of proper attention, while their men were in the lines of the service
-of the government.
-
-Here let the author speak a word in behalf of the devotion and
-patriotism manifested by those loyal women who had given their
-husbands and their sons to be placed upon the altar of the country,
-and sacrificed their homes and their firesides, had become exiles and
-wanderers, without home or shelter, had undergone untold suffering,
-had faced disease and death, had seen the little ones die, calling for
-papa, shivering with cold, suffering with hunger--all for the love of
-their country. Yet when they would see the Federal troops move by, with
-the stars and stripes unfurled, they would cheer the boys in blue as
-they would pass, and urge them to save the country they loved so well
-and had made so many sacrifices for and were still willing to suffer
-and wrestle with all the ills that a desperate war had brought upon
-the country, and wanted to live to once more be returned to their own
-hearthstones and be permitted to live under their own vine and fig
-tree, where no man dare molest them or make them afraid, to again enjoy
-all the sweet comforts of life.
-
-We revere and honor every Federal soldier who enlisted in the interest
-of his country from the Northern States, where they knew nothing about
-war except what they read, their families being left in comfortable
-circumstances, with plenty to eat and wear and friends to speak works
-of comfort to them, while their husbands and sons had gone to the front
-and were willing to sacrifice themselves on the altar of their country,
-if it became necessary. But O! the comparison between the sacrifices
-made by the loyal element in those portions of the country where they
-were completely surrounded by the enemy.
-
-Those who were willing to lay upon the altar of their country, their
-fathers and sons, their wives and children, their property and their
-sacred honor in support of the government they loved so well, with no
-protection from the government; no arms, amunitions, rations, clothing
-or pay from the government, was thought of for a moment. The only
-question that prompted, ruled and controlled them was their patriotism
-to their God and their country. When we come to compare the sacrifices,
-privations, suffering and services between the two classes of loyalists
-the first referred to, sink into insignificance.
-
-O! never let us forget to honor and revere patriotism and sacrifices
-that were made by the loyal men and women that were surrounded in
-the enemy's country and continual fighting without and within. Their
-husbands and sons were shot and hung and imprisoned all over this
-country, whose bodies never were even honored with a burial. Orders
-being made by the rebels that they should not be buried; but yet they
-live and speak in thunder tones to the living. Let us plead with the
-living to revere and honor the stars and stripes that were maintained
-and supported by the blood and lives and sacrifices of the loyal men
-and women of the South.
-
-After the rebels had completely driven all the loyal element out of the
-country and had but one political party left they exclaimed, "Now the
-means that we have been forced to use are very harsh but the line has
-been drawn and all of the parties who are giving aid and comfort to
-the lopeared Dutch are all outside of the Confederate line and we will
-never be troubled with them and the lopeared Dutch any more."
-
-The author went back in retreat with General Siegel, after the Wilson
-Creek battle. On reaching Rolla, Missouri, Siegel went into quarters
-for the winter. The author was almost worn out with exposure and
-traveling, and as General Siegel informed him that there would be no
-advance made south until the spring of 1862, and as his family had
-been left in comfortable circumstances, with plenty to eat and wear,
-and he, being acquainted with some men by the name of Cope, who lived
-near Jerseyville in Jersey county, Illinois, went to that place,
-remained a month, and being taken sick with lung fever, came very near
-dying. He told his friends where he was staying that if he died, he
-would die dissatisfied; that he wanted to live and be able to move with
-the Federal command in the spring of 1862 when it moved south. After
-he had partially recovered he learned that a Mr. Cope, who was living
-neighbor to him at the time of his arrest and capture, had moved into
-Randolph county, Illinois. He visited the family at once, hoping to
-hear from his family at home, and remained there about a month. His
-wife, among many others, being notified to leave, had been informed
-that the author had made his escape, reached Springfield, and had gone
-back with Siegel in his retreat to Rolla. She was permitted to dispose
-of just enough of the property, at the rebels' own prices, to enable
-her to move, the family consisting of herself and five small children.
-She was followed on the road and her wagons searched for arms, and the
-rebels threatened to take her to Little Rock, Arkansas, but to enable
-her to reach Rolla, Missouri, she posed as the wife of a rebel who had
-gone into the Confederate service, and said she was trying to reach her
-father, who resided near Rolla. By making that impression, her wagons
-were not disturbed any more. On reaching Rolla, she went to Colonel
-Phelps, who was afterwards governor of the state, and inquired if he
-knew anything of the whereabouts of the author. He informed her that he
-had no knowledge of his whereabouts at that time, but he would take her
-name, place an advertisement of her arrival at Rolla, in the paper,
-and if he was alive it might reach him.
-
-Every house and cabin was full, it being in the dead of winter, and a
-deep snow upon the ground, but through the aid and assistance of one
-Cyrus Newberry, who had escaped through the lines in Howell county,
-she procured a shelter about three miles north of Rolla, which was
-very uncomfortable; her clothes were partially frozen on her at that
-time. In a short time the advertisement reached the author in Randolph
-county, Illinois. He at once set out for Rolla, Missouri, to meet his
-family. The house that she had first got into was used by her but a
-short time, and she had been forced to go into one of the huts that had
-lately been occupied by the soldiers and had been made vacant by their
-moving west to Springfield.
-
-On the arrival of the author, O! the horror and the joy that were
-intermingled! I was proud to once more meet my wife and children, but
-in a moment the thought would pass through my mind, "I left you in a
-comfortable home, with plenty to eat, and now to see you here in this
-'dug-out,' suffering for food and shelter! O! the war, the horrible
-war! What is it that men won't do?" I set out at once to procure a
-comfortable shelter for my family and to get in readiness to move south
-with the army. Gen. Curtis, then in command of the western department,
-was preparing to make a general move south. I was employed by the
-government as a guide, receiving $1.50 per day, with rations and
-clothing.
-
-
-Establishing a Federal Post at West Plains.
-
-The army soon broke camp and moved southward. On arriving at West
-Plains, the Federal army located a post there. Capt. McNulty, of the
-First Illinois cavalry, who had been wounded in a battle with Gen.
-Mulligan, was made Provost Marshal. The author was at once detailed
-and placed in the Provost Marshal's office as assistant, as he was
-well acquainted with all of the people in the surrounding country. The
-Provost Marshal would order the author to be seated in a conspicuous
-place in the office, and as a general order had gone forth from Curtis
-requiring all rebels and rebel sympathizers to come in and take the
-oath, and as hundreds of them were daily coming into the office for
-that purpose, the Provost Marshal ordered the author to watch every
-person who entered the office and whenever any person entered who had
-been taking an active part in committing depredations, just to put his
-hand upon his forehead and move it down over his face, and he would
-order them to the guard house for further examination, without any
-further words being said at the time.
-
-Many of the rebels who were taking the oath couldn't see how he could
-draw a line between the different persons; let some take the oath and
-be released at once, and others ordered to the guard house without a
-word being spoken. Among the persons who came in and took the oath and
-were released, was the man who was present at the time Capt. Forshee
-attempted to deliver the author to the mob, who asked the Captain at
-the time to tie the author with his face to a tree, and let him shoot
-him in the back of the head, to show him how he could spoil a black
-Republican's pate.
-
-The author remembers one incident that occurred during the stay at
-West Plains. A man named Lusk, who was constable of Howell township,
-and resided in West Plains, was a strong Union man at the beginning of
-the war; when the general order was made that every man who had been a
-Union man had to join the Confederate service and show his colors or be
-hung, Lusk enlisted in the Confederate army and went out with McBride's
-command.
-
-Three or four days after the capture of the author by the rebels, Lusk
-came up to him in a braggadocio manner and says, "You ought to have
-your black heart shot out of you." Lusk had taken the oath and been
-released before the author reached West Plains. The author met him in
-West Plains and remarked to him: "Hallo, Lusk! How are you getting
-along? And what are you doing here?" He replied that he had taken the
-oath; that he was tired of fighting. The author asked him if he felt
-like he did when he wanted to shoot his black heart out. Lusk replied:
-"Captain, I am sorry for what I did, and Captain Emmons so maltreated
-me the other day that I could scarcely sit in my saddle." The author
-remarked to him: "I will just give your face three good slaps with my
-hand." After giving him three raps, the author let him pass.
-
-
-Lusk Sees Some Lop-eared Dutch.
-
-Soon meeting Captain Emmons, who belonged to the 6th Missouri Cavalry,
-had asked him what the trouble was between him and Lusk. He said that
-while he was prisoner Lusk came to him with his big knife belted around
-him, and said that he was just equal to ten lopeared Dutch and he
-had that knife for the purpose of taking ten Dutch scalps before he
-returned home, and otherwise abused him for being a Union man and a
-friend to the Dutch.
-
-On the arrival of the troops in West Plains he inquired of the citizens
-if Lusk had returned home. They informed him that he had and was
-residing on Spring Creek, about six miles from town. About half of
-Emmons' company were Germans. He went immediately to his company,
-ordered the Orderly Sergeant to make detail of ten men and he wanted
-them all to be Germans. He ordered them to be mounted and ready for a
-scout at once. Taking charge of them in person he proceeded to the
-house of Lusk, about six miles west of West Plains at the head of
-Spring Creek, rode up to the house and holloed. Lusk immediately came
-out into the yard and recognized Dr. Emmons and said "O! Doctor! Is
-that you? I am proud to see you." The Doctor said to him, "I am proud
-to see you, too." The Doctor at once informed him of what he had said
-to him when he was a prisoner in regard to being equal to ten lopeared
-Dutchmen and how he had his knife prepared to take that number of
-scalps before he came back home, and wanted to know if he got the
-scalps before he came home. Lusk replied that if he killed a single
-Dutchmen he didn't know it and that he got all of the fighting that he
-wanted, didn't want to fight any more.
-
-The Doctor wanted to know if he ever saw any lopeared Dutch and Lusk
-replied that he "didn't know that he had." The Doctor replied, "I have
-selected ten of the smallest sized of the full stock and I want you
-to step over the fence and view them." He then ordered the scouts to
-dismount and form in line. Lusk told the Doctor he didn't want anything
-to do with them whatever. After they had formed a line the Doctor made
-him step in front and view them; asked him what he thought of them.
-He said "They are good looking men." The Doctor said to him, "If you
-didn't get the chance when you were out in the service to fight ten
-of them, and you say you didn't get any scalps, I have brought these
-ten down and intend that you shall fight them." Lusk pleaded with the
-Doctor that he didn't want to fight them and for God's sake not to let
-them hurt him. Emmons said to him "Why Lusk! you said you were equal to
-ten of them and intended to bring back ten of their scalps and there
-will be nothing now unfair about this fight. I intend to give you a
-fair show." He ordered Lusk to get his horse and get onto it and get
-ready to march.
-
-There were some four-foot clapboards stacked up near Lusk's house, and
-Emmons ordered six of the Germans to get a board apiece. They were all
-soon mounted and moving toward West Plains, soon coming to a "horsen"
-log. Emmons ordered them to dismount and form a line, placing the men
-about ten paces from Lusk, then said to Lusk, "Now, prepare yourself,
-and if you can whip these ten lopeared Dutch I will let you go back
-home and give you a chromo." Lusk pleaded pitifully to not let the
-Dutch abuse him. Emmons ordered the six who had the clapboards to
-move one pace in the rear, leaving four of the number to attack Lusk;
-he then ordered the four men to seize Lusk, take him to the "horsen"
-log and take down his clothes. Two of them were to take him by the
-hands and two by the legs and buck him tight against the log; if they
-succeeded, the six would proceed, one at a time, and strike him three
-licks across that part of the body that he generally used for sitting
-on.
-
-He then turned to Lusk, saying, "Prepare to meet them; if you are a
-better man than they are, down them and pile them up." At the command
-of Capt. Emmons, the four men advanced on Lusk, who did not attempt to
-move, seized him by the arms, led him to the log, bucked him over it,
-two holding him by the arms and two by the legs, ordered the six men to
-advance, one at a time, strike three licks with the flat side of the
-board, march on a few paces and give room for the next.
-
-After the performance had been completely carried out as commanded, the
-Captain declared that he could have heard Lusk holloing a mile distant
-every time the clapboard hit him.
-
-After he had received the boarding, Emmons said that Lusk's setter
-was blistered where the boards had hit him, and that he never saw ten
-Germans enjoy themselves as much in his life. He then asked Lusk, in
-their presence, how he felt now in regard to fighting lopeared Dutch.
-Lusk declared that he had nothing against the Dutch and that he never
-would want to fight another one as long as he lived, and he hoped that
-Dr. Emmons would not let them do him any more harm. He dressed himself,
-they were all mounted, formed a line, and Lusk was brought into West
-Plains and took the oath, under the promise that he never would fight
-another lopeared Dutchman.
-
-
-Goes to Washington City.
-
-After the post was discontinued at West Plains, the author was again
-ordered back to Rolla. The state had made a proposition to the Federal
-authorities that if the government would arm, feed and clothe the
-troops, it could place a number of regiments of state troops in the
-service, and they would be able to send some of their regular troops to
-the front. A delegation was appointed by the state to visit Washington
-City, wait upon the President and see what the government could do for
-the state. The author was appointed as one of the delegates, and on the
-night following the departure of the delegation for Washington City, a
-rebel scout appeared at the house where the author's family was living
-and demanded the author. His wife replied that he was not at home, that
-he was one of the delegation that had left that morning for Washington
-City. She distinctly heard one man remark: "I expect that is so, for
-there was a delegation left this morning for Washington City." The
-house wasn't more than a quarter of a mile from the picket posts.
-
-After parleying for some little time, they left the house, marched west
-about a mile, where some refugees were located in a house, and demanded
-their surrender. The house was full of women and children, there
-being also one boy and two men, to-wit: Peter Shriver and a man named
-Johnson. They ordered the doors opened; the inmates refused; then the
-rebels knocked down the door, and fired a volley right into the house.
-Shriver and Johnson being armed, returned the fire, killed one of the
-rebels on the spot, and fleeing through the rear part of the house,
-made their escape. The rebels killed one boy and severely wounded a
-girl and young Johnson, and retreated south, leaving their comrade dead.
-
-It was learned afterwards that most of the scout were men from Howell
-county who had learned that the author had placed his family just
-outside of the Federal lines and had marched all the way there, with
-the avowed purpose of capturing the author and either shooting or
-hanging him.
-
-On arrival of the delegation at Washington City they organized the
-delegation and made Chas. D. Drake their spokesman. He was afterwards
-elected to the United States Senate. Soon after the arrival President
-Lincoln informed us that he would be prepared to meet the delegation in
-a large hall, near the mansion, at which time and place he desired to
-be introduced to the whole delegation. When the delegation entered the
-hall the President and his secretary were seated together.
-
-
-The Delegation Meets the President.
-
-The delegation entered the hall in a single file. Chas. D. Drake
-approached the President and when within a few feet of the President
-and secretary, they arose to their feet and as the delegation marched
-by each one was introduced to them. Afterwards they were seated, and
-the petition and address of the people of the State of Missouri was
-delivered in an audible voice by Chas. D. Drake. In the opening of the
-address we addressed the President and called ourselves his friends.
-
-As soon as the address was read the President rose to his feet and
-proceeded to deliver an address to the delegation and the author never
-will forget the impression that was made upon his mind in a part of
-that address. He said: "You should not address me as your friend; I am
-the President of the whole people and nation and while I am President,
-I expect to try to enforce the law against all violators of law and
-in the interest of the whole people of the nation; but if I have
-any friends in Missouri I suspect you men compose a part of them. I
-listened to your petition and offers, which make me proud for the
-patriotism that you manifest, in offering your services to your country
-in the darkest hour of her peril and I would be glad if the government
-was able to grant every request that you have made. The government
-at the present time is not in a condition to furnish clothing and
-commissaries for the number of men that you propose to put in the
-field, but the government will furnish all the arms that they can
-possibly spare, amunitions and commissaries and authorize the state to
-organize and put in the field any number of state troops, not to exceed
-sixty regiments." He said he would do all in his power to feed them but
-in the present condition of the government the state would have to pay
-them.
-
-The delegation returned and informed the state of what promises the
-government had made and at once went to organizing and putting state
-troops into the field. The author was commissioned as lieutenant of
-Company H. and the regiment was ordered into active service for the
-period of sixty days. At the expiration of the term of service, the
-government ordered that a company of scouts be organized and that the
-author be made Captain of the company, to receive first lieutenant's
-pay and be clothed and fed by the government, be ordered on duty at
-once and placed under the direct command of Captain Murphy, who was
-then commanding the post at Houston.
-
-The company scarcely saw an idle day, it was kept continuously scouting
-and fighting. The counties of Texas, Dent, Wright, Crawford, LaClede
-and Phelps, outside of the post, being completely under the control of
-the rebels. Not a single Union man nor his family could remain at home
-outside of the post.
-
-
-Incidents of 1863.
-
-In the fall of 1863, Colonel Livingston, who was acting in the capacity
-of Brigadier General, was ordered to proceed to Batesville, Arkansas,
-and there erect a post. The author was transferred, by order of the
-government, and made chief of scouts receiving Captain's pay and
-ordered to move with the command of Colonel Livingston and be under
-his command and control until further orders. On or about December 15,
-1863, Colonel Livingston, who was Colonel of the 1st Nebraska regiment
-and the 11th Missouri Cavalry regiment, broke camp at Rolla, and
-marched in the direction of Batesville, Arkansas. Colonel Livingston,
-on leaving Rolla, issued a general order and sent the same in all
-directions, that all rebels, or "bushwhackers," who were captured
-wearing Federal uniform, would be court-martialed and shot; or all
-persons who were captured in robbing or plundering houses would be
-court-martialed and shot.
-
-On our arrival at West Plains the advance of the command captured three
-Confederates dressed in Federal uniforms, near what was known as the
-Johnson farm. One of them broke from custody and escaped; the other two
-were court-martialed and shot, while the command was camped at West
-Plains. After those men were shot, some of the Confederates, dressed in
-Federal uniforms, came inside the Federal lines, while in camp at West
-Plains, just after dark, and took nine black cavalry horses from the
-line and made their escape. The soldiers saw them take the horses, but
-thought it was their own men taking them to water.
-
-The command, breaking camp at West Plains, marched in the direction
-of Batesville, passed through Salem, Ark., and on Big Strawberry
-encountered the rebels and had quite an engagement. The weather was
-quite cold. I remember that after the fighting ceased, some of the
-soldiers had been fighting with their revolvers, and their hands had
-become so benumbed that they had lost the use of their fingers, and
-couldn't return their revolvers to their scabbards, and the revolvers
-had to be taken from their hands; the hands of some of them were badly
-frostbitten.
-
-The command again renewed its march for Batesville. Small bands of
-bushwhackers and rebels kept up a continuous fire every day on the
-advance, and committed depredations by pillaging; claiming they were
-Federal forces, most of them being dressed in Federal uniforms. The
-pillaging grew so annoying that Col. Livingston, just before breaking
-camp, divided the advance into two columns, marching from a mile to
-two and a half miles apart. Late in the afternoon, one wing came onto
-a number of those irregular Confederates, or bushwhackers, robbing the
-house of a Union woman whose husband was in the Federal army. Nearly
-all of them were dressed in Federal uniforms, claiming to the woman to
-be Federal soldiers. They had all dismounted and gone into the house to
-plunder it, except their captain, Elliott, whom they had left on guard.
-The road came around in a short bend and concealed the approach of the
-Federals until they were within a hundred yards of the house. There was
-a large gate in front of the house. The woman was standing in the yard
-about ten steps from the gate. She saw the troops coming before they
-were discovered by the captain, and supposed them to be of the same
-command. They were all cavalry. As soon as they saw the captain, they
-put spurs to their horses, and with revolvers in hand, charged upon
-them. The captain gave the alarm, and fled as rapidly as possible on
-horseback, a part of the Federals in hot pursuit after him.
-
-Every avenue of escape was cut off from those who were in the house,
-and they were forced to retreat through a ten-acre open field, before
-they could reach the timber. The woman of the house, seeing them flee,
-knew at once that they didn't belong to the same command. While the
-Federals were approaching the gate at full speed, she ran to it and
-threw it open, so that they would not be checked in their pursuit.
-They overtook them about two-thirds of the way across the field, as
-the rebels were cut off from their horses and were on foot. Three of
-the rebels were killed, and three taken prisoners. They had everything
-in their possession--bed clothing, domestic, knives and forks, and
-even axes, that they had been taking from Confederates as well as from
-Unionists; also a number of women's dresses. All of the dresses were
-given to the woman whose house they were robbing at the time of their
-capture. The soldiers had a fine time after they reached camp, by
-turning the domestic into new towels.
-
-Just after supper, the author was notified to appear at the provost
-marshal's office, to see whether or not he could identify the
-prisoners. On his appearing and entering into conversation with the
-prisoners and inquiring their names, one claimed to be named Smith,
-another Taylor and the other Johnson. One of them lisped a little when
-talking. The author soon recognized one of them and said to him: "Your
-name is not Smith. You had just as well give your proper name, for I
-know you." The Provost Marshal asked him if he knew the author. He
-hesitated to answer. On the Provost Marshal urging him to answer, he
-said: "I ought to know him, as he was one of my near neighbors when
-the war commenced. My name is Calvin Hawkins." The author replied,
-"That is correct," and turning to the other prisoner for a second
-look, recognized him. He remarked, "Taylor is not your proper name."
-The Provost Marshal asked him if he knew the author. He hesitatingly
-replied that he did. His proper name was then demanded, which he gave
-as Jacob Bridges. The other was a boy named Hankins, 13 years of age.
-
-
-Court-Martialed and Shot.
-
-The Provost Marshal asked them if they had ever read or heard of the
-general order that had been issued by Col. Livingston. They replied
-that they had. He said to them: "You have violated the order in every
-particular; you are wearing Federal uniforms, and have been caught
-robbing and pillaging citizens' houses. Tonight your cases will be
-submitted to a court martial, except the boy's." He then ordered the
-author to take them to a room and inform them that they would certainly
-be convicted by the court martial, and the only way they could escape
-death would be to give the rendezvous and names of all irregular troops
-in their knowledge, and agree to pilot a scout to the different places
-of resort.
-
-The author informed them of what the Provost Marshal had said, and
-further informed them that Col. Livingston, then acting in the
-capacity of Brigadier General, would have the only power to commute
-their sentences, after they were convicted. They refused to give any
-information that would aid the authorities in capturing the different
-irregular roving bands. The author bade them good-bye, told them he
-was sorry for them, that they were in a bad condition, but had brought
-it upon themselves and each of them had better prepare for death, for
-they were certain to be court-martialed that night. He then left the
-prisoners, the guard taking charge of them. The court-martial convened
-that night; charges and specifications were preferred before the Judge
-Advocate of violating both orders. They were accordingly convicted, and
-the next morning, before we broke camp, the author saw the detail that
-had been selected to execute them; saw the prisoners under guard moving
-out to the place selected for the execution, heard the discharge of the
-guns, and soon learned that they both had been shot. Somewhere on the
-head of Big Strawberry, in Izard county, the boy's mother came to us,
-and he was turned over to her.
-
-The command broke camp and proceeded on the way towards Batesville,
-with more or less skirmishing with the rebels every day; and on the
-25th of December, 1863, we had come to within about three miles of
-Batesville, Independence county, the rebels in considerable force
-then being in possession of the city. They had a strong picket about
-a quarter of a mile from the main city, leading right down Poke
-bayou. Another road turned to the right and entered the lower part
-of the city. The commander halted and threw out a considerable force
-in advance. The author was placed right in the front of the advance,
-with orders to charge the pickets, and on their retreat, to charge the
-enemy, and if they found them in too strong a force to fall back on the
-main command.
-
-The rebel ladies had procured a large hall in the city, situated upon
-High street, leading west through the city. They were all dressed in
-gray, and had any amount of egg nog and other delicious drinks in the
-hall and all through the public parts of the city. A large number of
-the Confederate soldiers were in the hall dancing, a number of them
-belonging to Col. Freeman's command. On reaching the rebel pickets,
-they fired, and the commander ordered a charge with revolver and
-saber, and we followed close upon their heels. On reaching the city,
-the firing became promiscuous. The rebels retreated south, a number of
-them retreating in the direction of White river, and swam the river
-with their horses, while many of them abandoned their horses and swam
-the river. One part of the rebel command filed to the right, thinking
-that it was a Federal scout, and attempted to retreat upon the lower
-road. The Federals saw them coming, and knew from their actions that
-they were retreating. They at once deployed two lines in front of the
-command, one on each side of the road. Before the rebels found out
-their real condition they were completely into the trap, and they
-surrendered without the firing of a gun.
-
-
-How Received by the Batesville Ladies.
-
-After the fighting had subsided, the author, with a part of the
-command, rode up High street to the hall where they had just been
-dancing. There must have been as many as two hundred and fifty or
-three hundred ladies in the hall and on the roof. Some of the boys
-dismounted, went up into the hall and drank some of their eggnog,
-although there were strict orders against it.
-
-The main command reached the east end of High street, marching in a
-solid column of two, with a brass band and drums and fifes playing,
-and striking up the tune of "Yankee Doodle," they came marching down
-High street, in the direction of the hall. The women began to use the
-strongest epithets possible in their vocabulary against the Union
-soldiers, calling them "nigger lovers," "lopeared Dutch," "thieves" and
-"murderers." The author spoke to them saying, "You are mistaken. These
-men are gentlemen, sent here by the government to establish a military
-post, and if you treat them nicely you will receive the same kind of
-treatment."
-
-About this time the front of the command had moved up to the hall. At
-once a number of the ladies began to make mouths at them and spit over
-the banisters toward them, calling them vile names. The soldiers then
-began to hallo at the top of their voices: "O, yonder is my Dixie girl,
-the one that I marched away from the north to greet." "God bless their
-little souls, ain't they sweet; sugar wouldn't melt in their mouths."
-"I am going to get my bandbox and cage up one of the sweet little
-morsels and take her home for a pet."
-
-The voices of the soldiers completely drowned the hearing of anything
-the women were saying. In a little while the women hushed. As the
-column was passing by, one of the women remarked, "I believe that
-gentleman gave us good advice; I think we had better stop our abuse and
-we will be treated better." We marched down to the west end of High
-street, marched across to the next main street, then the head of the
-column turned east again up Main street, and striking up the tune of
-"Hail, Columbia, My Happy Land," marched up to the east end of Main
-street, and ordered a guard placed around the whole town, to prevent
-the escape of the rebel soldiers that were concealed in the town. The
-author never saw as much confusion as there was there, for a short
-time, among the citizens, especially the women. Some were laughing,
-some were abusing the soldiers, some crying, and some cursing.
-
-After things had quieted down the soldiers went into camp. Colonel
-Livingston began to hunt suitable buildings for his head quarters and
-for an office for the Provost Marshall and Judge Advocate. It became a
-fixed fact with the citizens of the city that the Federals were going
-to locate a permanent post at that place.
-
-While they were in pursuit of the rebels the author remembered an
-incident that attracted his attention. There were four or five negro
-men standing upon the street corner and one of the officers holloed out
-to the negroes; "Which way did the rebels go?" On one corner of the
-street there was a bunch of rebel citizens standing and as soon as the
-corner was turned and they were out of sight of the rebel citizens they
-answered the officer, "Massa, we don't know which way the rebels went;"
-one of them dodged around the corner in an instant, and in a low tone
-of voice, and with a motion of his hand, said, "Massa dey went right
-dat way," almost in an instant came back around the corner and said in
-hearing of the rebel citizens "Massa, I declare I don't know the way
-dem rebels went."
-
-The next morning Livingston issued a general order for all persons who
-claimed protection from the Federal army to come in and report and take
-the oath. The author remembers an incident that occurred on the evening
-of the fight. There had been two or three men killed just across the
-bridge and they placed a guard there with orders to let no person cross
-it without a pass. Shortly after dark a young lady who had secreted
-around her waist under her clothes, two pistols, a belt and scabbard
-which belonged to a Confederate soldier, just after dark came to the
-bridge and wanted to cross. The sergeant of the guard ask her if she
-had a pass, to which she replied that she had not. He informed her that
-he could not let her go over. Among the guards was an Irishman and the
-young lady remarked to the sergeant that "it was very hard" that she
-"had a relative that was killed just across the bridge and she wanted
-to go over and see him and that a woman couldn't do any harm and they
-might let her go over without a pass."
-
-The Irishman sprang to his feet and remarked "Be Jasus, women can do
-a divil of a sight of harm, can convey more information, can carry
-more intelligence through the lines to the rebels than twenty men and
-there are so many of our officers, if she happens to be good looking,
-would let her pass through." The sergeant believing that she was a near
-relative of one of the men that was killed a short distance from the
-bridge, let her pass over, and that night she delivered the pistols to
-the Confederate soldiers. She afterwards admitted this when she was
-arrested for refusing to take the oath.
-
-
-If You Will Grease and Butter Him.
-
-She declared that she "wouldn't swallow old Lincoln," and the commander
-ordered all persons who refused to take the oath, either men or women,
-arrested and sent to Little Rock. When she found that she had to take
-the oath or go to Little Rock, she said to them that "if they would
-grease and butter the oath she would try to swallow it." Afterwards she
-became very intimate with one of the young Federals, married him and
-when the command broke up left the post, left the country and went with
-him.
-
-The author remained there all that winter, being in active service
-almost every day, capturing some of the worst men that there were in
-the country. In a short time after the post was located the west side
-of the river was all in the control of the rebels. The rebels began to
-boast and brag that those Northern Yankees could stay around the open
-field and around cities but whenever they crossed the river they would
-show them just how rebel bullets would fly. Colonel Freeman's head
-quarters were near the head of Silamore creek, they would get on the
-mountains, on each side (as the Yankees knew nothing about mountains)
-and roll rocks down on them and what they didn't kill with rocks and
-bullets would be glad to get back across the river to Batesville.
-
-There were no ferry boats on the river, they had all been sunk or run
-out by the rebels.
-
-The weather was very cold. White river froze over solid. The old
-residents there said it was the first time they ever knew of the river
-freezing over solid. The ice was so thick that it would hold the
-weight of horses and wagons. Col. Livingston ordered lumber hauled and
-laid the planks flat on the ice. He then sent some men who resided in
-Nebraska when at home, to make a test. They reported that the ice was
-safe for a command to pass over. The commander at once organized a
-force, crossed the river on the ice, and took up the line of march for
-the purpose of attacking Freeman's forces, which were distant about
-ten or twelve miles. As soon as the rebel forces found that they were
-moving up Silamore creek in the direction of Freeman's headquarters,
-they placed men on the hills on each side of the creek, and as soon as
-the Federal forces came within reach, they opened fire, and commenced
-rolling stones. The commander halted, deployed skirmishers, ordered
-them to fall back, march on foot and flank the rebels, while they would
-continue the march up the creek and attract their attention until they
-would have them completely flanked, and then close in on them. While
-the main force moved up the creek slowly, under almost continuous fire,
-all at once a general fire opened up on both sides of the hills. I
-never before saw rebels running and dodging in all directions, trying
-to make their escape, as they did then. A number of them were killed
-and wounded, and the others taken prisoners. The remainder got down
-from the hills, wiser men, and made a hasty retreat up the creek. Upon
-the Federal column reaching the headquarters of Freeman, it was so
-unexpected that he had to retreat, leaving all his camp equipage, his
-trunk and clothing, and about $5,000 in Confederate money.
-
-They retreated in an almost northerly direction. Our force returned
-to Batesville. The scouts, with a small force of troops, were sent up
-White river to find where the line of march of the rebels was. They
-found that they had crossed White river near the mouth of the north
-fork and were moving in the direction of Pocahontas. There had been
-two Federal companies detailed and sent out northeast in the direction
-of Spring river. Freeman's command surrounded them and made prisoners
-of one of the companies. The other company, commanded by Capt. Majors,
-made a charge on the lines and cut their way through.
-
-Reinforcements were at once dispatched in the direction of the moving
-columns of rebels. In the meantime, the rebels had reached Pocahontas,
-on Black river, and had effected a crossing onto the east side of Black
-river, except the rear guard, which were in their boat about midway of
-the river, when the Federal forces reached the west side of the river.
-They fired on the parties in the boat, wounding some of them, but they
-succeeded in reaching the bank, and turned their boat loose. A strong
-line of rebels was drawn up on the east bank of Black river, and opened
-fire on the Federal forces on the west side. After considerable firing,
-both sides ceased. The rebels appeared to move east; the Federal forces
-again countermarched and returned to Batesville.
-
-The country on the west side of White river was still under the control
-of a strong force of rebels commanded by Col. Weatherford and three
-or four other Confederate commanders. About three weeks after their
-return, an order was issued for two wagon trains with six mule teams
-and a detail of two companies, to escort it. The train moved out, for
-the purpose of getting corn and other forage, about fifteen miles
-distant on White river. After they had arrived at their destination and
-were loading their wagons, a large force of rebels surrounded them,
-charged on them, and made prisoners of about half of the escort. The
-Federal captain, who belonged to one of the 11th Missouri companies,
-surrendered, handed his pistol, about half shot out, to a rebel
-soldier, who turned his own pistol on him and shot him dead. The scouts
-who escaped capture, retreated with all possible haste to Batesville.
-
-In the meantime, the rebel forces cut the wagons down, piled them in
-heaps and set them on fire; while the mules, with all their gear and
-breeching on were put into White river and swam across to the other
-side. As soon as the news reached headquarters, a force was speedily
-organized, and started on a forced march. Upon reaching the scene of
-action the rebels were all safely across on the other side of the
-river, harness and wagons were just about completely burned up. No
-chance of any boats to cross the river and the river being full, they
-countermarched and returned to Batesville again.
-
-The whole winter was taken up in scouting and fighting small bands of
-rebels. Sometime in the latter part of the winter the commissaries and
-forage were becoming scarce and the nearest Federal post down White
-river was at Duvall's bluff. The commander called on the author, who
-was Captain of scouts, for a detail of two men who could procure a
-canoe and try, if possible, to reach Duvall's Bluff and inform the
-Federal authorities there of the conditions of the post. The author
-detailed a man by the name of Johardy Ware and a man by the name of
-Simon Mason. They were to procure a canoe and travel in the night,
-drawing it, when daylight came, into thick brush, and in that way, if
-possible, reach the Federal post. They succeeded in reaching the post
-and in a short time commissaries and provisions, with forage, were
-forwarded up the river on two small transports, with a number of troops
-to force its passage up the river. Sometime in the latter part of the
-winter the boats reached Batesville and supplied all of the wants and
-short rations of the soldiers and again made everything merry and happy.
-
-
-Give an Oyster Supper
-
-In April, 1864, the author had promised to return to Rolla for the
-purpose of aiding and recruiting a regiment, known as the 16th Missouri
-Cavalry Volunteer. He informed the commander and asked for his
-recommendation which was granted. He wanted to know when I wanted to
-start so that he could make preparations to send me around by water.
-The author informed him that he intended to march through by land. The
-commander thought it was a thing impossible, that scouting bands of
-rebels had possession of the country, from a short distance outside
-of Batesville almost to Rolla, Missouri. The commander and Provost
-Marshall gave the author an innovation, made an oyster supper for him
-and his company of scouts, said they were loath to give them up, that
-they had performed so much valuable service, and he didn't know where
-he could get any other men to take their places.
-
-After taking leave of the officers and soldiers, the author took a
-small flag, fastened upon a staff, fastened it to the browband of the
-bridle and remarked to the officers as he bid them good bye, that the
-stars and stripes should float from Batesville to Rolla or the author
-would die in the attempt. The company then set out for Rolla, Missouri.
-Colonel Woods of the 11th Missouri cavalry had been on detached service
-and Lieutenant Colonel Stevens had been commanding the regiment. He had
-received orders to join his regiment at Batesville, Arkansas, and, with
-a considerable force of men, reached the state line about 12 o'clock,
-and came in sight of the command.
-
-They saw our company approaching, at once drew up in line of battle,
-and as many of the rebels had procured Federal uniforms, both parties
-sent out couriers to ascertain who the forces were. On learning that
-both sides were Federals, we marched up and went into camp with them.
-The author was immediately taken to Col. Wood's headquarters. He
-informed him that he had camped near West Plains the night before,
-and that the bushwhackers had kept up a continuous fire until after
-they got a considerable distance down South Fork; and he believed it
-impossible for as small a force as I had to reach Rolla without great
-disaster and perhaps annihilation. He said that the author and his
-company of scouts were the very men he wanted, and offered to increase
-his salary to $7.00 per day if he would go back with him and remain
-with his command. The author told him that he was honor bound to return
-to Missouri and assist in organizing a regiment of cavalry for the
-United States service, and if the bushwhackers didn't keep clear, he
-would give some of them a furlough before he reached Rolla.
-
-After dinner Woods broke camp and moved in the direction of Batesville,
-and we in the direction of Rolla. Near where the last firing was done
-they had arrested a man named Craws, who really was a Union man, and
-the author had been well acquainted with him before the war commenced,
-but Woods' soldiers could with difficulty be restrained from shooting
-him. On my informing the Colonel that I was well acquainted with the
-man and that there was no harm in him, he agreed to turn him over to
-the author and let him bring him back home with him. After we had
-started, Craws informed the author that he knew the parties who had
-been firing on the Federal troops; that their headquarters were about
-two miles from where he then resided; and that he was satisfied from
-the last firing he had heard, that they had turned off from the main
-road and gone up what was called the Newberry hollow. After passing the
-old Newberry farm, they had a plain trail that turned to the right and
-led directly to the camp. They were commanded by two men named Hawkins
-and Yates.
-
-On reaching his house he agreed to continue with us to the road he
-thought they had gone, and then return home. I think he was the
-happiest man I ever saw when he found he had been turned over to my
-care, believing that Woods' command intended to shoot him.
-
-On reaching the road, we found a fresh rebel trail leading right up the
-creek; we moved on until near the Newberry residence, which we had been
-informed by Craws was occupied by Hawkins' wife. We turned from the
-road and halted, and the author, with two or three of his men, being
-familiar with the country, reached a high point from which we could
-distinctly see one horse standing at the door. Supposing the rebel
-scouts were all there, we went back to the company, moved cautiously
-toward the house, and gave orders to charge upon them as soon as our
-approach was discovered. On coming within fifty yards of the house,
-which was unenclosed, a woman stepped outside the door, looked toward
-us, and then wheeled for the house, and we charged. Hawkins' horse was
-hitched to a half of a horse shoe driven in at the side of the door,
-the bridle rein looped over it, his halter rein being already tied over
-the saddle horn. The author had ordered all to charge with pistols
-in hand. As Hawkins reached the door and made an attempt to take his
-bridle rein, he saw that it was impossible. The author demanding his
-surrender, he attempted to draw his pistol and had it half way out of
-its holster and cocked, when the author fired upon him. He fell back,
-still holding his pistol. The author, supposing more of the enemy were
-inside the house, dismounted, and rushing to the door, demanded the
-surrender of every person that might be in the house. As the author
-entered the door, he heard Hawkins, still holding his pistol, remark:
-"Monks, you have killed me." The author replied that that was what
-he intended to do, and he must let go of that pistol or he would be
-shot again. He took his hand loose from the pistol and in a short time
-was dead. His wife asked the author to lay him out, which request was
-complied with.
-
-We mounted and again took the rebel trail and by this time it had grown
-so dark that we lost it and went on to the residence of Captain Howard,
-dismounted, fed our horses and got our supper.
-
-Captain Howard afterwards informed the author that he had just been
-home and started back to the rebel camp and heard the horses feet,
-stepped behind a tree and that we passed within fifteen feet of him;
-said if it hadn't been dark we would have been certain to have found
-the rebel camp; that that day some one of the rebel soldiers had
-killed a deer, stretched the skin and had it hanging up and the camp
-wasn't more than two hundred yards from the main road. After we ate
-our suppers and fed our horses we again resumed our march and reached
-Rolla, Missouri, on the second day afterwards.
-
-
-Another Meeting With Captain Forshee
-
-In the spring of 1863 General Davidson was ordered to move from Rolla,
-Missouri, directly south to Little Rock. On breaking camp and marching
-in the direction of West Plains the author, with his company of scouts,
-was ordered to report to him for service. On reaching West Plains he
-went into camp. West Plains and vicinity were completely covered with
-tents and troops. All of the hills adjoining West Plains were literally
-covered with tents, Davidson's headquarters being inside of the town.
-The author being sent out on a scout, came to the home of a man named
-Barnett residing in Gunter's Valley and not being able to reach town,
-went into camp near Barnett's. In a short time Barnett came in home.
-He had been a lieutenant in the company where the author was prisoner.
-He informed the author that he had been to Thomasville Mill and that
-Captain Forshee, who lived about one mile below, had also returned with
-him.
-
-The author at once placed a guard around Barnett's house (Barnett
-being the father-in-law of the Captain) detailed two men to accompany
-him, prepared, mounted, and started to the residence of Forshee fully
-determined to kill him. The author instructed his men that if Forshee
-remained in the house and didn't attempt to run, to play off and tell
-him that they belonged to Colonel Woods, a Confederate officer on White
-river. The author then being clothed in Federal uniform and having but
-a limited acquaintance with Forshee before the war did not think that
-he would recognize him. On reaching the house we repaired to the door,
-hallooed, and his wife invited us in. The author had his pistol under
-the cape of his coat still determined upon killing him. On entering
-the house, found him in bed with one of his children, his wife did not
-have the supper on the table. The author asked him if he had ever
-been in the Confederate service; he answered that he had, went out in
-the six months provisional Confederate service; didn't stay his time
-out, resigned and came home. The author asked him if they had taken
-any prisoners while they were in service; he hesitated a moment and
-replied that they did. The author asked him if he remembered the names
-of any of them; he said he remembered the names of two of them well.
-The author asked him if he knew what became of them; he said that
-Black enlisted in the Confederate service, served his time out and
-then substituted himself and was now in the eastern Confederate army;
-he again hesitated. The author asked him if he knew what became of the
-other man; he said that he didn't; that he made his escape from the
-Confederate army and he had heard that he was a captain in the Northern
-army. The author said with an oath "How would you like to see him;" he
-replied "I would not like to see him very well." The author then said,
-with an oath, "I am here, look at me and see whether you think I am
-worth a beef cow or not." At this his wife sprang between him and the
-author and he said to the author, "Captain, there ain't one man out of
-ninety-nine but what would kill me for the treatment you received while
-a prisoner but I have always thought that if I ever met you and you
-would give me the time to explain the cause of it, you wouldn't kill
-me, and I want to live to raise my children."
-
-The thought passed through the mind of the author that he could not
-kill him in the lap of his family; but he would take him to Barnett's
-house where he had some more prisoners and on the next day he would
-kill him on the way; ordered him to get out of that bed; Forshee again
-appealed and said that he would like to know whether the author was
-going to kill him or not; that he wanted to live to raise his children.
-The author replied to him with an oath that "you ought to have thought
-of these things when you was pulling me away from the bosom of my
-family, never gave me time to bid them good-bye; get out of that bed."
-There was about a six months old child in the cradle. He slid out of
-the bed, kneeled down by the cradle, and was in the act of praying, his
-wife still standing close by. The author ordered him to get up; that it
-was too late to pray after the devil came; that I had been appointed by
-the devil to send him up at once and lie had the coals hot and ready to
-receive him and that I didn't want to disappoint the devil. He arose
-to his feet and again asked the author if he was going to kill him;
-said he wanted time to give me the whole truth of the matter; went
-on to say Hawkins, Sapp, Kaiser and others were the cause of all the
-mistreatment, but would admit that he done wrong in agreeing to deliver
-the author to them for the purpose of having him mobbed and for abusing
-him, himself.
-
-His wife had hot coffee on the table and she asked that he be allowed
-to sit down, saying that she wanted to see him sup coffee once more.
-The author told her that they never gave him time to bid his wife
-good-bye, let alone to sup coffee with her. After taking a few sups
-of coffee, the author said that he couldn't fool any longer with him;
-that he must strike a line and move out. His wife said that she was
-going with him, but her husband told her she had no business going, as
-it was then snowing and the ground was considerably frozen. The author
-told her that if she was determined to go, the boys could take her and
-the children behind them, but the Captain would have to walk right in
-front of the author, and if he made a crooked step from there until
-he reached Barnett's, he would shoot him through. The boys took his
-wife and children on the horses, and the author started the Captain in
-front of him. He had thought that he would be compelled to shoot him
-on the way, but he could not shoot him in the presence of his family;
-so he thought he would take him to the guard house and keep him until
-morning, and then on the way to West Plains he would make a pretext to
-kill him, for he thought he must kill him.
-
-In the morning, after breakfast, we broke camp and moved in the
-direction of West Plains. The author had now become cool, and while he
-believed he ought to kill him for what he had done, he could not afford
-to shoot, or cause a prisoner to be shot, while he was in his charge;
-so on reaching West Plains, the prisoner was turned over to the guard
-house.
-
-The morning following was very cool, and the ground was covered with
-snow. Gen. Davidson had ordered out a large scout for the purpose of
-marching towards Batesville and White river, to feel the strength of
-the enemy, and the author's company composed a part of the detail.
-After the command was mounted and waiting for orders to move, the
-sergeant of the guard came out and inquired if there was a Captain
-Monks in that command. The Colonel informed him that there was. He
-said there was a prisoner in the guard house who wanted to see him.
-The author got permission to ride to the guard house, and on reaching
-the door, who should meet him but Capt. Forshee, who told the author
-that he had almost frozen the night before, and wanted to know if
-the author couldn't loan him a blanket. He was told that he was the
-last man who should ask the author for the use of a blanket. Forshee
-replied: "That's so, Captain; but I believe that you are a good man,
-and don't want to see a man, while he is a prisoner, suffer from cold."
-The author asked him if they had any gray backs in the guard house.
-He said he had none on himself, but didn't know in what condition the
-others were.
-
-The author had two new government blankets that he had paid $5 apiece
-for a short time previous, on the back of his saddle. He told Forshee
-that he didn't know as he would need them both until he had gotten back
-from the scout, and would loan him a blanket until he returned. Forshee
-replied: "I will never forget the favor." The author handed him one of
-the blankets, and immediately started on the scout. While the scout was
-south reconnoitering with the enemy, Gen. Davidson received orders from
-headquarters countermanding the order to march to Little Rock by land,
-and that he would march his forces to Ironton, Missouri, and there
-await further orders. He at once broke camp and resumed his march in
-the direction of Ironton, carrying the prisoners with him, with orders
-for the scout on its return to move up and overtake him, as they were
-all cavalry. So the author never saw Capt. Forshee nor his blanket any
-more, but was informed that he was paroled at Ironton, took the oath,
-returned to Oregon county, and died shortly after the close of the war.
-
-Upon the return of the scout to West Plains, a part of the command that
-belonged to Gen. Davidson's forces moved on after the army, while the
-author, with two companies, remained in West Plains about half a day
-for the purpose of resting up. While in West Plains a rebel that the
-author was well acquainted with, came to him and told him he had better
-be getting out of West Plains, for a force of five hundred rebels was
-liable to come into West Plains at any moment. The author pretended
-to become considerably alarmed, and reported that he was going to
-march directly to Rolla with the two companies then under his command.
-After marching about fifteen miles in the direction of Rolla, he made
-a flank movement, marched into the corner of Douglass county, was
-there reinforced, and the next day marched directly to the west end of
-Howell county. The rebels, believing that the Federal troops had all
-left the county, came in small bunches from all over the county. The
-author made a forced march and reached the west end of the county about
-dark, turned directly toward West Plains, took the rebels completely by
-surprise, had a number of skirmishes with them, reaching West Plains
-with more rebel prisoners than he had men of his own. On the next day
-we turned in the direction of Rolla, and by forced march reached Texas
-county. On the next morning we reached the Federal post at Houston, in
-Texas county, and turned over the prisoners, among whom were several
-prominent officers. Capt. Nicks was one of them. On the night of his
-capture the author said to him: "It appears to me that it is about the
-same time of night that they brought me prisoner to your house." He
-answered: "I declare I believe it is." After the rebels found the small
-number of the force that had made the scout, they declared that it was
-a shame to let Monks run right into the very heart of the rebels and
-carry out more prisoners than he had men.
-
-
-Murdering Federal Soldiers.
-
-Some time in June, 1863, a rebel scout and a Federal scout had a
-fight about twenty miles northwest of Rolla. The rebels were forced
-to abandon a number of wagons and mules, and the Federals, owing to
-the emergency that confronted them at the time, did not wish to be
-encumbered with them, so they employed a farmer to keep the mules in
-his pasture until the government should send for them. The Federal
-scouts from Rolla and Jefferson City would meet occasionally while
-scouting. On the scout's arrival at Rolla, another scout composed of
-about one company of Federals was sent out to bring in the wagons
-and teams. Just before reaching the place where the wagons and teams
-had been left, they saw a command of about two hundred and fifty men,
-all dressed in Federal uniforms, and they at once took them to be a
-Federal scout from Jefferson City. On approaching each other, they
-passed the army salute, and marched right down the Federal line; they,
-being unsuspecting, believed them to be Federal troops. As soon as
-they were in position each man had his man covered with a pistol. The
-rebel scout outnumbering the Federal scout more than two to one, they
-demanded their surrender. The Federals, seeing their condition, at once
-surrendered. They were marched about a quarter of a mile, near where
-the wagons and teams were left, dismounted and went into camp, as the
-rebels claimed, for dinner. Several citizens were present. They marched
-the Federal company together, surrounded them in a hollow square,
-brought some old ragged clothing, and ordered them to strip. After they
-were all stripped completely naked, and while some were attempting
-to put on the old clothing, all their uniforms having been removed a
-short distance from them, at a certain signal the rebels fired a deadly
-volley into them. Then followed one of the most desperate scenes ever
-witnessed by the eye of man. The men saw their doom, and those who were
-not killed by the first volley rushed at the rebels, caught them, tried
-to wrest their arms from them, and a desperate struggle took place; men
-wrestling, as it were, for their very lives.
-
-A number of the Federals had their throats cut with knives. After the
-rebels had completed the slaughter and hadn't left a man alive to tell
-the tale, they ate their dinner, and taking the mules and wagons, moved
-southwest with them. The citizens at once reported the affair to the
-commander of the post at Rolla.
-
-The men who were killed belonged to an Iowa regiment, and the author
-believes it was the 3rd Iowa, but will not be positive. A strong detail
-was made and sent at once to the scene of the late tragedy, with wagons
-and teams to bring the dead back to Rolla. On their arrival with them,
-it was the most horrible scene that the author ever looked upon. After
-they were buried, the regiment to which they belonged declared and
-avowed that they intended to take the same number of rebel lives. The
-commander, knowing their determination, and being satisfied that they
-would carry it into effect if the opportunity offered, transferred them
-to another part of the country.
-
-
-A Rebel Raid.
-
-Some time in the fall of 1863 the Federal authorities at Rolla learned
-that the rebels were organizing a strong force in Arkansas, for the
-purpose of making a raid into Missouri. The rebels were under the
-command of Gen. Burbrage. The author, being still the commander of the
-scouts, was ordered to take one man and go south, for the purpose of
-learning, if possible, the movements of the rebels. The author left
-Rolla, came by way of Houston, where there was a post, thence to Hutton
-Valley, where there was living a man named Andy Smith, who was a Union
-man, but had made the rebels believe he was in favor of the south.
-The author approached Smith's house after dark, got something to eat
-and to feed his horses, and learned from Smith that the rebels were
-about prepared to make the raid into Missouri. On the next day the
-author was informed by Smith that Burbrage was then moving with his
-full force in the direction of Missouri. The author at once started,
-intending to reach the nearest Federal force, which was in Douglas
-county. In the meantime, Gen. Burbrage, with his whole force, reached
-the Missouri line, leaving West Plains a little to the right, taking
-an old trace that ran on the divide between the waters of the North
-fork of White river and of Eleven Points river, this being afterwards
-known as "the old Burbrage trail." The author, expecting they would
-march by way of West Plains and on through Hutton Valley, thought he
-would be able to keep ahead of them and make his report; but owing to
-their marching an entirely different route, the author crossed their
-trail. He found that a large force of men had just passed and he, in
-company with a man named Long, examined the horse tracks, found that
-the shoes contained three nails in each side, and knew at once that it
-must be Burbrage's command. They had passed not more than three hours
-before this time. Making a forced march, the author and Long followed
-on the same trail, and soon came to a house, holloed, and a lady coming
-out, we inquired how far the command was ahead. The lady informed us
-that they hadn't been gone more than three hours, and she exclaimed:
-"Hurrah for Gen. Burbrage and his brave men! The Yankees and lopeared
-Dutch are goin' to ketch it now, and they intend to clean them out of
-the country!" We then became satisfied as to whose command it was, and
-their destination. We rode on about two hundred yards from the house,
-turned to the left, and started with all possible speed, intending,
-if possible, to go around them and get the word in ahead of them. On
-striking the road at the head of the North Fork of White river, we
-looked ahead of us about a hundred yards and saw twenty-five men, about
-fifty yards from the road, all in citizen's dress, wearing white hat
-bands. The state had ordered all the state militia to wear white hat
-bands, so that they might be designated from the rebels. The author
-remarked to Long: "I guess the men are militia, but we will ride slowly
-along the road and pass them, for fear they are rebels." They remained
-still on their horses until after we had passed them, then they moved
-forward and came riding up and halted us, and wanted to know who we
-were. The author told them his name was Williams and Long told them his
-name was Tucker. They asked us if we had ever heard of the Alsups, and
-we told them we had. Then they wanted to know where we were going. We
-told them we were going into Arkansas, near Yellville; that a general
-order had been made in the state of Missouri that all able-bodied men
-must come and enroll their names and those who were not in the state
-service would have to be taxed; that we didn't want to fight nor pay a
-tax to support those who were fighting. They ordered us to dismount,
-surrounded us, with cocked pistols, and ordered us to crawl out of our
-clothes and give up our arms. We commenced to strip. Long had on a
-very fine pair of boots, for which he had just paid $5.00, and while
-the author didn't know at what moment they would be shot, he could
-not help but be tickled at the conduct of Long when they ordered him
-to take off his boots. He crossed his legs and commenced pulling,
-with the remark: "My boots are tight." The pistols were cocked and
-presented right on him, not more than six feet away, and they told him
-to hurry up or they would shoot his brains out. While he was pulling
-at his boots he appeared to be looking right down the muzzles of the
-revolvers. As soon as he had pulled off his boots and pitched them
-over, they remarked: "Hell, a right brand new pair of socks on. Pull
-them off quick and throw them over." A part of these men were dressed
-in the dirtiest, most ragged clothes the author had ever seen--old wool
-hats, with strings tied under their chins, old shoes with the toes worn
-out, and old socks that were mostly legs; but claiming all the time to
-be militia. They ordered us to get into their old clothes and shoes,
-and placed their old hats upon us. Our clothing and hats all being new,
-the author thought that was one of the hardest things they had ordered
-him to do; that he was just as apt to get out of the garments as to get
-into them. After we were dressed in their old clothing, one of them
-asked: "What did you say your name was?" Long replied, "Tucker." One
-that was standing a little back came running up with his pistol cocked,
-and remarked that if he was a certain Tucker (naming the Tucker): "I
-am going to kill him right here." Another of the number said: "Hold
-on, this man is not the Tucker that you are thinking of." Then their
-leader said, with an oath: "We belong to Gen. Burbrage's command. He
-is just ahead. Do you want us to take you up to headquarters?" We told
-him we had heard of Gen. Burbrage, and expected that he was a good
-man, so if they wanted to take us to his headquarters all right: but
-we did not want to fall into the hands of the militia, as we wanted to
-get through to Yellville while Gen. Burbrage was in the country. One
-of the men looked at the horses we were riding and remarked: "Let's
-take the horses. We have orders to take all horses that are fit for the
-service." Another said the horses were rather small for the service,
-and as we would have a great deal of water to cross between there and
-Yellville, it would be a pity to make us wade it. Then their leader
-remarked: "We are Confederate soldiers, out fighting for our country,
-and you men are too damned cowardly to fight. We have got to have
-clothing, and as we suppose you are good southern men, when you get to
-Yellville you can work for more clothes." They then ordered us to take
-the road and move on, and tell the Alsups that the country was full of
-rebels.
-
-We mounted our horses and rode away, feeling happy on account of our
-escape. They remained in the road and watched us until we were out of
-their sight. The author looked over at Long's feet and saw his toes
-sticking out of his old shoes; could see his naked skin in several
-places through his raiment. He hardly looked natural--didn't look like
-the same man. We hadn't gone more than a mile until we struck a farm
-and a road leading between the farm on one side and the bluff and river
-on the other, and looking in front, saw about fifteen men coming. The
-author said to Long: "What shall we do? Shall we attempt to run, or
-had we better pass them?" We concluded that it was impossible to get
-away by running; the only chance left being to try to pass through them
-without being recognized.
-
-We rode up to meet them, and they halted us and wanted to know where
-we were going. We told them we were going to Marion county, Arkansas,
-near Yellville. They asked us our names and we again gave the names
-of Williams and Tucker. A man named Charley Durham who had resided at
-West Plains and had met me several times, rode up near us and asked
-me; "What did you say your name was?" I replied, "Williams." He asked:
-"Did you ever live down here about the state line?" I told him I never
-did, but I might have had relatives who lived on the state line. He
-said: "I am satisfied that I have seen you somewhere." One of the crowd
-asked us if we had met about twenty-five soldiers just ahead, and when
-we informed them that we had, they remarked: "Bully for the boys; we
-had better be moving on or we will be late." They moved on, and we
-continued down the road. As soon as we were out of sight I said to
-Long; "We will not risk our chances in passing any more of them; there
-are too many men down here that are acquainted with us. If it hadn't
-been for my old clothes, Charley Durham would have recognized me beyond
-a doubt." We then left the road and took to the woods, reaching the
-Federal forces about midnight. They had not heard a thing regarding
-the approach of the rebels. They hurriedly began to gather in all the
-forces, and at once set out to find, if possible, the destination of
-Gen. Burbrage. It was learned that he had completely cut us off from
-reaching either Houston or Rolla. On the next day the Federal forces
-met Gen. Burbrage at Hearstville, Wright county, Missouri, and there
-fought a battle with him. The commander of the post at Houston, who
-was in command of the Federals, was killed on the first fire from the
-artillery of Gen. Burbrage. Col McDonald, during the engagement, was
-shot dead at the head of the town spring. Burbrage retreated on the
-same route that he had come up on. His command was separated into
-several divisions, to get food.
-
-Long and I had been furnished clothes and arms. Capt. Alsup being in
-command, moved near the road that leads down Fox Creek, saw a rebel
-scout moving down Fox Creek, composed of a part of the same men we
-had met the day before. Capt. Alsup said he thought that by striking
-the road and taking the rebels by surprise we could rout them. On
-marching about a mile we came in sight of them, dismounted for dinner
-at the house of a man named Ferris. I proposed to Capt. Alsup that we
-charge them. He thought it might be too dangerous; that they would
-have the benefit of the house, and might outnumber us, and we would be
-compelled to retreat and might be cut off from our horses. He ordered
-us to dismount, formed a line, left men to hold the horses, and on
-moving about ten steps, the rebel picket, who was placed just outside
-of the line, discovered us. They opened fire from each side of the
-house, and along a picket fence which enclosed the house. We returned
-the fire. The first volley that was fired, a ball passed near my ear,
-and wounded the horse that I was riding. The firing continued for some
-time. We had them cut off from their horses, unless they came outside
-and faced the continual firing. One man attempted to leave the house
-and reach his horse, but about ten feet from the door he received a
-wound in the face and fell to the ground. In a moment he arose to
-his feet, and he and several others again retreated into the house.
-The firing continued for fifteen or twenty minutes, when the rebels
-retreated on foot, by taking advantage of the house, except one man,
-who reached his horse, cut the halter, sprang into the saddle, turned
-his horse down the lane, leaning close to the horn of the saddle, put
-spurs and made his escape. In the meantime the wounded man attempted to
-make his escape by taking advantage of the house and retreating. Capt.
-Alsup, when he saw the rebels were retreating, ordered a charge. The
-wounded man was again wounded, and fell to the ground, helpless. All
-the other rebels reached the woods, and made their escape.
-
-Farris, the man who owned the house where the rebels were stopping,
-received a serious wound in the breast. They left sixteen horses with
-their rigs, saddle-riders filled with new clothing, in our possession.
-Gen. Burbrage retreated from the state, and the author reported to his
-command at Rolla.
-
-
-Rescuing Union Families.
-
-In the fall of 1862 some of the Union men whose families were still
-residing in Ozark and Howell counties went to the Federal post and were
-promised arms and ammunition in order to return and try to get their
-families out, as it had become almost impossible for their families
-to get through alone, on account of being robbed. About fifty of them
-procured arms and started for Howell county, from the outpost of the
-Federal authorities. They marched at night and lay by in the day,
-and on reaching the western part of Howell county, informed their
-families to get ready to move, still keeping themselves in hiding.
-About twenty families prepared for moving, and had assembled on the
-bayou, near where Friend's old mill was located. Just about the time
-they were ready to start, a bunch of rebels came up and opened fire
-on them. They returned the fire and held the rebels at a distance
-while they moved all their wagons up close together, and started in
-the direction of Ozark county. One of the men who had come to assist
-in the escort became excited upon the first fire from the rebels and
-ran, never stopping until he reached the Federal lines. The remainder
-of the men bravely repelled the rebels, while their families kept
-their teams steadily moving. On reaching the big North Fork of White
-River, and while the families in their wagons were in mid-stream,
-the rebels reached the bluff and opened fire on them. The Union men
-vigorously returned the fire. They all reached the opposite side of the
-river without one of their number being killed; some of the women and
-children had received slight wounds, but nothing serious. The rebels
-still continued to fire upon them until they reached the northern part
-of Ozark county, when further pursuit was abandoned, and about twenty
-families were enabled to reach the Federal lines. In a short time the
-Union men attempted to again reach their homes, for the purpose of
-helping destitute families to get out. They traveled only at night,
-keeping themselves concealed in day time. In this way they reached
-Fulton county, Arkansas, when the rebels found out that some of the
-Union men were in the country. The rebel forces at once became so
-strong that the Federals had to retreat without getting any of their
-families, passing back through the western part of Howell county, over
-into Ozark, and went into camp on the head of Lick Creek. Shortly
-after they got into camp the rebels slipped up on them and opened fire,
-mortally wounding a man named Fox and slightly wounding several others.
-They had to scatter at once to avoid being captured, and when they
-reached the Federal lines they were almost worn out. At this time all
-of the Federal posts had numbers of refugee families stationed near
-them, entirely destitute of food and raiment, and relying entirely for
-their preservation upon the small amount of help they received from the
-government.
-
-
-General Price's Raid.
-
-Upon my return from Batesville, Arkansas, in the spring of 1864, I
-commenced recruiting for the 16th Missouri Cavalry Volunteers, the
-most of the regiment being composed of men who had been in the state
-service. The required number to form the regiment was soon procured,
-and the regiment was organized, electing for their Colonel, John Mahan.
-The author was elected Captain of Co. K. The regiment was at once
-placed in active service, being quartered at Springfield, Missouri, up
-to the time of Gen. Price's raid. Then the regiment was divided, one
-half of it being sent in pursuit of Price. The other half, which was
-known as the second battalion, was placed under my command and held at
-Springfield, it being expected that Gen. Price would change his line
-of march and attack the city. As soon as the fact was ascertained that
-Price was marching north and west of Springfield, orders were made to
-send every available man that could be spared from the post. Among
-the troops sent out was the author's battalion. We were ordered on a
-forced march in the direction of Utony, for the purpose of cutting off
-Price's retreat. We reached Utony about 10 o'clock at night, where they
-had a strong Federal garrison. Two thousand rebels of Price's command
-had just marched across the road before we reached the garrison,
-and gone into camp in sight of the town. Strong pickets were thrown
-out on each side. About daylight the Federal forces broke camp and
-moved on the rebel camp, soon coming in sight of the rebel forces,
-and fire was opened on both sides. The rebels commenced retreating,
-the Federals pursuing, and continuous firing and fighting was kept
-up until we came near the Arkansas line. A number of rebel prisoners
-were taken, besides some of their commissary wagons falling into
-the possession of the Federals. The Federal commander then ordered
-a retreat back to Springfield. Price's forces had torn up all the
-railroads as they passed over them, cutting off all supplies, and
-the soldiers and prisoners had been placed on quarter rations. The
-prisoners, numbering about three hundred and fifty, were ordered to be
-taken to Rolla, Missouri. After the first day's march from Springfield
-they met a Federal train carrying commissaries to Springfield and
-other western points. The men being then on quarter rations, the
-Colonel took possession of some of the commissaries and issued them to
-the soldiers and prisoners, for which he was afterward arrested and
-court-martialed. On reaching Lebanon, Missouri, I saw the quartermaster
-haul in about five or six loads of shucked corn, which was distributed
-to the soldiers and prisoners. I well remember that while they were
-distributing the corn to the prisoners, a general rush, which appeared
-to be almost uncontrollable, was made around the wagon. The corn was
-thrown out on the ground among them, they picked it up in their arms,
-and at once retired to their camp fires, so that they might parch and
-eat it. After leaving Lebanon, the prisoners were all placed in charge
-of the author. He remembers one rebel prisoner who had on a fine dress
-coat, with a bullet hole right in the center of the back, and the
-soldiers had to be watched closely to prevent them from shooting him,
-as they believed it to be a coat that had been taken from the body of
-some Union man, after he had been shot.
-
-On reaching Rolla, the author turned over all the prisoners to the
-commander of the post, and they were sent directly to Rock Island,
-there to be held as prisoners until such time as they might be
-exchanged. I again returned to Springfield and reported to my regiment.
-A short time thereafter, the loyal men of the counties of Howell,
-Dent, Texas, Phelps, Ozark and Douglas, in Missouri, and of Fulton,
-Izard and Independence counties, in Arkansas, with a number of the
-officers and soldiers, including the commander at Rolla, petitioned
-Gen. Schofield, who was then in command of the western district, to
-have the author detached from his regiment, then at Springfield, and
-sent south of Rolla to some convenient place, and given command of a
-post, as it was almost impossible to send commissaries through from
-Rolla to Springfield, on what was known as the wire road, on account of
-the roving bands of rebels, who had complete control of the country, a
-short distance from the military post.
-
-
-Capt. Monks Establishes a Post at Licking.
-
-Gen. Schofield at once made an order that Capt. Monks be detached from
-his regiment and report at Rolla, with his company, for further orders.
-Gen. Sanborn, then in command at Springfield, informed the author of
-his final destination; that on reaching Rolla, he would be ordered by
-Gen. Schofield to Licking, Missouri, to establish a post.
-
-It soon leaked out, and the rebels swore openly that if he established
-a post at Licking or at any other southern point, they would soon drive
-the post into the ground and annihilate him and his men. I went to Gen.
-Sanborn and requested that he send a telegram to Gen. Schofield, and
-ask him to countermand that part of the order that required Capt. Monks
-to report at Rolla for further orders, and order him to move directly
-from Springfield to Licking. The General hesitated for sometime, as to
-whether it would be good policy, owing to the large numbers of rebels
-in the country through which I had to pass. He didn't believe that I
-would be able to reach Licking with the one company, but he finally
-decided that if I was willing to risk it, he would ask Gen. Schofield
-to change his order. On Gen. Schofield's receiving the telegram, he
-made an order that I be detached from my regiment, be furnished two
-company wagons, be well supplied with arms, and proceed directly to
-Licking. On reaching Licking I was to report by courier to headquarters
-for further orders; and in obedience to said order, two company wagons,
-with tents, commissaries, arms and ammunition were at once furnished,
-and I set out for Licking, Texas county; passed Hartville, the county
-seat of Wright county, and struck the waters of Big Piney. There was
-considerable snow on the ground at the time. I took the rebels by
-complete surprise. While they were expecting me from Rolla to Licking,
-I struck them from the direction they least expected. On reaching
-Piney, I encountered a rebel force of about sixty men. We had a fight,
-two or three rebels were killed, and the rest retreated south. From
-that time until we reached Licking, we had more or less fighting every
-day. We would strike trails of rebels in the snow, where there appeared
-to be over one hundred men, but they were so sure that it was a large
-scout from Springfield that they did not take time to ascertain, but
-retreated south at once. On reaching Licking, I sent a dispatch to
-Gen. Schofield, telling of my arrival, and immediately received orders
-to establish a post and erect a stockade fort, and to issue such
-orders as I believed would rid the country of those irregular bands of
-rebels and bushwhackers and protect all in their person and property,
-especially the loyal men. I immediately selected a frame building for
-my headquarters, with an office near by for the man acting as provost
-marshal; issued my order requiring all persons who claimed protection
-from the Federal authorities to come in and take the oath, and bring
-with them axes, shovels, picks and spades, with their teams, for the
-purpose of erecting a stockade fort. And further setting out in said
-order, requiring all persons who knew of any irregular bands of rebels
-or bushwhackers roaming or passing through the country, to report
-them at once; and if they failed to report them, they would be taken
-as bushwhackers and treated as such. In a short time I had erected
-a complete stockade fort with port-holes, and room enough inside to
-place all the cavalry horses in case of an attack by the rebels. I had
-these orders printed and sent out all over the country. In a short
-time, a man who had been known to be a rebel, but had stayed at home
-unmolested, but who had been giving aid and comfort to the rebels,
-came into the office and said: "Captain, I want to see you in your
-private room." On entering the room he said: "I have read that order
-of yours. You don't intend to enforce it, do you, Captain?" I said to
-him that I did or I wouldn't have made it; that the rebels and I could
-not both stay in that country. He said to me, "Captain, of all the post
-commanders we have had here, there never was one of them issued such
-an order as that. You know if I were to report those rebel bands they
-would kill me." I replied, "Very well; you have read my order, and I
-have said to you and all others that if you fail to report them I will
-kill you; and you say if you do report them, they will kill you; now,
-if you are more afraid of them than you are of me, you will have to
-risk the consequences; for, by the eternal God! if you fail to report
-them, I have said to you that I would treat you as a bushwhacker, and
-you well know how I treat them." He dropped his head for a few minutes,
-then raised it and said: "Well, it is mighty hard, Captain." I replied
-that there were a great many hard things now; asked him where all of
-his Union neighbors were. He said that they had been forced to leave
-their homes and were around the Federal posts for the reason that they
-claimed to be Union men. I told him that "a lot of you rebels have
-lain here in the country and made more money than you ever made before
-in your lives, and at the same time you have been giving aid, comfort
-and encouragement to all of these irregular bands--giving them all the
-information that they wanted, so that they might know just when to
-make their raids, and now I propose to break it up and stop it, unless
-they are able to rout me and drive me away. The government proposes to
-protect all of you who will come in and take the oath and comply with
-every requirement set out in the order. All I ask of you men is to give
-me information of these irregular rebel bands and their whereabouts,
-and you can again return home and your information will be kept a
-secret; but this much you are required to do." In a short time a large
-number of them had come in and enrolled their names, took the oath and
-went to work on the fort like heroes.
-
-Occasionally one would come in and say "Captain, I want to procure a
-pass for me and my family through the Federal lines; I want to leave."
-I would ask him; "What's the matter now? You have stayed here all
-through the war, up to the present time, and now I have come among you,
-and offered to protect every one of you who will take the oath and
-comply with orders." He would reply with a long sigh, "Yes, Captain
-but that order that you have made." I would ask him "what order."
-"You require all citizens, especially we people who have been rebels,
-and stayed at home, to report all of the roving bands of rebels and
-bushwhackers; if we don't do it, you will treat us like bushwhackers;
-if we were to report them, they would kill us." I said, "Now, you must
-chose between the two powers; and if you are more afraid of the rebels
-than you are of me, you will have to risk your chances. You say if you
-report them, they will kill you. Now, by the Eternal, I am determined
-to enforce everything that I have set out in that order. This day you
-must settle in your own mind whom you will obey. As soon as the first
-roving bands of rebels and guerrillas reached the country for the
-purpose of raiding the wire road between Rolla and Springfield, the
-night never was too dark but that this same class of men would come in
-and report them. I would at once make a detail, send these men right
-out with them. As soon as they would get near to the rebels, they would
-dismiss these men and let them go home."
-
-The rebels, for several years, had been sending out a large scout
-from North Arkansas and the border counties of Missouri and when they
-would reach Texas and Pulaski counties they would divide into small
-squads and travel the byways and ridges; on reaching the wire road
-they would then concentrate and lay in wait until the wagon trains
-and non-combatants who were merchants, were moving through from Rolla
-to Springfield under the protection of an escort; and all at once
-they would make a charge upon them from their hiding places, rout the
-escort, capture the train and all others that might be in company with
-it, cut the mules loose from the wagon, take all the goods that was not
-cumbersome, especially coffee, sugar, salt and dry goods, place them on
-the backs of the mules, travel a short distance, divide up again into
-small parties, take byways and mountains, travel fifteen or twenty
-miles, go into camp; on reaching the counties of Oregon and Shannon,
-Fulton and Lawrence, of Arkansas, they would concentrate their forces,
-go into camp, eat, drink, and be merry. As soon as their supplies
-would run short, they would make another scout of a similar nature.
-The commanders of the post, as soon as they would attack the trains,
-would order out a scout to pursue them. They would strike their trail
-and follow them a short distance to where they would separate and take
-to the mountains. They would abandon the pursuit, return and swear
-that the country wasn't worth protecting. In that way they completely
-outgeneraled the Federal forces and held complete possession of the
-country almost in sight of the post.
-
-On one occasion, when the weather was very cold and bleak, I knew of
-their capturing some of the Federal soldiers within one mile of the
-fort, kept them until the coldest part of the night, just before day,
-stripped them naked, turned them loose, and they were compelled to
-travel a mile before they could reach a fire, and they were almost
-frostbitten. Every Union man was driven away from his home and moved
-his family to different posts.
-
-The author had declared that he and the rebels could not both remain
-in the country together; that he would either rout them or they would
-have to rout him, and for that reason every man that remained in the
-country would have to aid him in the work. So, in every instance, when
-he would send a force in pursuit of those raiding bands, he would order
-the scout to follow them, and when they divided to still continue
-pursuit of the most visible trail, and when they came in sight to not
-take time to count noses, but charge them and pursue them until they
-were completely annihilated. They would go into camp and move at
-their leisure, but not so when my scouts got in pursuit of them. In a
-number of instances they would overtake them from twenty to twenty-five
-miles from the wire road, in camp, having a jolly good time, and the
-first intimation they would have would be the boys in blue charging in
-amongst them, shooting right and left, and they would scatter in all
-directions.
-
-It was but a short time until they remarked to some of the rebel
-sympathizers that they had never seen such a change in the movements of
-the Federal scouts; that they used to consider themselves safe from a
-Federal scout as soon as they left the main road and divided into small
-squads; but now they were in as much danger in the most secluded spot
-in the mountains as they were in the traveled roads; therefore, their
-commanders would have to change their tactics in regard to the scouts,
-and abandon that part of the country, as almost every scout that they
-had made to the wire road had proved disastrous since "Old Monks" had
-been placed in command of the post. In a short time, the Union men, who
-had been driven from the country, began to return and go onto their
-farms, and about five months after I had been placed in command of the
-post, the civil authorities came and held circuit court, Judge Waddle,
-of Springfield, then being circuit judge.
-
-
-Skirmishes with the Rebels.
-
-Some time in the summer, Col. Freeman, who was commanding the rebels
-in northeastern Arkansas, whose headquarters were near the Spring
-River mill, made a raid and threatened to capture the Federal forces
-that were then at the Licking post. I soon gained information of his
-intention, made every preparation to repel the attack, also informed
-the commander at Rolla of the intended raid. Col. Freeman, accompanied
-by other rebel commanders, concentrated all of the available rebel
-force then at his command, raided the country, came within about five
-miles of the post, learned that reinforcements had been sent to the
-post, countermarched and retreated to his headquarters near the head of
-Spring river.
-
-A regiment of Federal troops, known as the Fifteenth Veterans, was sent
-as a reinforcement, with a part of the Fifth Missouri State Militia
-that was then stationed at Salem, with orders to remain at the post.
-I received orders to organize all of the available troops and pursue
-the rebel forces, and, if possible, to reach the Spring River mill,
-in Fulton county, Arkansas, and destroy the mill, which Freeman was
-using at that time for grinding meal. The Federal force composing the
-scout, aggregating about three hundred and fifty men, moved from the
-post at Licking. The author divided his forces, ordering one wing of
-them to move through Spring Valley, in Texas county; the other wing to
-move directly in the direction of Thomasville, with orders to form a
-junction about seven miles from Thomasville, where there was a rebel
-force stationed. On reaching the Wallace farm, in Oregon county, we
-came onto a force of rebels, commanded by James Jamison, who had
-met for the purpose of receiving ammunition which had been smuggled
-through from Ironton. After an engagement, the rebels fled, leaving
-one man dead; James Jamison received a flesh wound in the thigh. The
-Federal force which had been ordered through Spring Valley had had an
-engagement near the head of the valley, which had delayed them. The
-plans of the author had been frustrated by coming in contact with the
-rebels sooner than he expected. As they had retreated in the direction
-of Thomasville, where the main force was said to be stationed, I
-continued my march, and in about one mile came onto a rebel camp, where
-the rebels had cabins erected for quarters; here another spirited
-engagement took place, the rebels retreating in the direction of
-Thomasville, the Federal forces still pursuing.
-
-Just above Thomasville the command encountered a strong picket force,
-fired upon the command, intending to halt it, but being satisfied that
-there was a trap laid I ordered a charge. The picket force retreated
-to the left, up a steep hill, and at once the whole rebel force opened
-fire from the side of the mountain; the bullets flew just above our
-heads like hail, one ball passing through my hat. We still continued
-the charge and on reaching the top of the hill, routed the whole rebel
-force and they again retreated. The author marched into Thomasville,
-selected his camping ground inside of Captain Olds' barn lot, giving us
-the advantage of the barn, in case we were attacked by a superior rebel
-force. I at once dispatched a forage train with strong escort to gather
-in all the forage possible, as it was very scarce in the country. After
-we had been in camp about an hour I inquired of Captain Olds if he knew
-of any corn. He said he did not. In about a half hour my attention was
-called by one of the captains pointing to a large smokehouse, and on
-looking, saw the soldiers taking down any amount of first-class corn. I
-informed the captain that Captain Olds had claimed that he had no corn;
-to take the quartermaster and let him place a guard over the corn, to
-see that it was not wasted, and that it was properly apportioned. In a
-short time the author saw Captain Olds coming. He went to one of the
-other captains and inquired who the commander was. He was informed that
-it was Capt. Monks. He came to the author laughing and remarked: "You
-found my corn, did you? I told you that I had none; I had to secrete it
-in that building to keep it so that the rebels could not find it." I
-just remarked to Captain Olds: "You needn't try to hide anything from
-these lopeared Dutch, for I don't care where you put it they will find
-it." The men who discovered the corn were all Germans and belonged to a
-German company. He asked us to feed just as sparingly as possible and
-leave him a part of the corn, which we did. He then attempted to warn
-the author of his danger and asked him if he intended to camp there for
-the night; said that Colonel Freeman had over one thousand men which
-he could concentrate within five or six hours and that he would cut
-the author's command all to pieces. The author replied to the captain
-that that was his business, that Freeman had come up on the scout and
-claimed that he was wanting a fight; the author prepared for him and
-expected to accommodate him but he changed his notion and retreated,
-devastating the country as he went, and now the author was hunting
-him and his forces and wanted to fight. If he came up that night and
-attacked the author's command that it would save any more trouble
-hunting him.
-
-Just about that time the author saw the other part of the command
-approaching and called the attention of Captain Olds and asked him if
-he thought that was a part of Freeman's command. After looking a few
-minutes he said to the author: "They are Federal troops." I asked him
-if he thought we would be able to remain there until morning? He said
-that he thought we would and invited me to come into his house and
-eat supper. While at supper asked if we intended to march any further
-south. The author informed him that if his information was correct
-in regard to Freeman's forces we were about as far away from home as
-we ought to get and that we had better move back in the direction
-of the post. The author ordered the command to be ready to march by
-early daylight, next morning broke camp and moved in the direction of
-Spring river. On reaching the head of Warm fork of Spring river, we
-encountered another rebel force; had a short engagement, and they again
-retreated. On reaching the head of Spring river about the middle of the
-afternoon, we again met a rebel force; after considerable firing they
-retreated.
-
-The author moved up near the mill and went into camp. The mill was
-grinding corn with quite a lot of corn on hand, but the miller left and
-retreated with the rebels. The author soon placed a substitute in his
-place and the boys had a fine time baking corn cakes.
-
-After supper, some of the men had just retired to rest, when the rebels
-again made a fierce attack; after fighting for twenty or twenty-five
-minutes they retreated a short distance and went into camp, the river
-dividing the two forces. During the night the two pickets would dare
-each other to cross the river. During the night there came a heavy rain
-and made the Warm fork of Spring river swimming; there was no way to
-cross except on the mill dam.
-
-The next morning about daylight the author ordered them to take the
-millstones and break them up and destroy the machinery so it would be
-impossible to grind; dismounted about one hundred men, placed them in
-hiding and marched away a short distance, thinking the rebels would
-cross over and we would surprise and capture them. But on seeing the
-Federals break camp and marching up on the west side of the river, they
-broke camp and marched up on the east side of the river. The author
-then mounted his men and marched up the Warm fork to where he effected
-a crossing, marched about ten miles, went into camp for the purpose of
-getting breakfast. Just after breakfast, the author noticed the advance
-of a rebel force march out on another road; as soon as they discovered
-that the Federals were in camp, they fell back and the author at
-once mounted his men. On the other road, as there was a considerable
-hill that hid them from sight, he formed his men in two lines in a V;
-detailed a strong advance force, ordered them to move onto the rebels
-and charge them, and in case they found that they were too strong, to
-retreat back between the lines for the purpose of drawing the rebel
-forces in between the lines. After a fierce conflict, lasting but a few
-minutes, the rebels again retreated, leaving a rebel Major dead upon
-the ground. We then marched into Thomasville and had another running
-fight with the rebels, went into camp and the next morning marched back
-in the direction of the post at Licking, reaching the post about 10
-o'clock that night. The author again took command at the post and the
-Fifteenth Veterans returned to Rolla.
-
-
-Ridding the Country of Bushwhackers.
-
-It soon became very rare to hear of a rebel scout north of the
-mountain. Both rebel and Union men who claimed protection by the
-Federal authorities began to repair and improve their farms again.
-During the time that the author was in command of the post, which
-continued up to the time that peace was made, his command had routed
-and completely driven from the country all irregular and roving bands
-of rebels and bushwhackers and had had numbers of small engagements
-in which there had been from eighty to ninety of the most desperate
-class of men that ever lived, killed, which was shown in the adjutant
-general's report. After they had been driven out of the county, they
-located in the counties of Oregon, Shannon and Dent, and at once
-commenced pillaging and robbing all classes of citizens, irrespective
-of their political adherence. Col. Freeman sent a courier through the
-lines with a dispatch, stating the condition of affairs, and asking
-that an armistice be entered into between Col, Freeman's scouts and
-the scouts which might be sent out from the post, with an understanding
-that they were going to aid each other in routing and driving out these
-irregular bands.
-
-While engaged in that work they were not to fire on each other, but to
-co-operate. The author was to enter into the agreement if it could be
-effected. Col. Freeman sent Capt. Cook into Oregon and Shannon counties
-to locate those roving guerrilla bands, and in some way, unknown to
-either Col. Freeman or myself, they gained the information, and while
-Capt. Cook was in Oregon county locating them, they waylaid him and
-killed him. Col. Freeman, realizing the fact that they had come into
-possession of the whole scheme, came to the conclusion that we had
-better abandon the agreement. He organized scouts and captured and shot
-some of the most desperate characters that were leaders, while the
-author kept a vigilant watch to keep them from crossing over into Texas
-or adjoining counties. At the time peace was made, it was admitted by
-the law-abiding people, irrespective of party, that the command of Col.
-Monks had completely rid the country of all irregular bands of rebels
-and had made it safe, in a short time after he had taken command of the
-post, for forage trains and all other classes of citizens to pass on
-the wire road from Rolla to Springfield unmolested, and that very often
-they passed through without an escort.
-
-
-Battle at Mammoth Spring.
-
-Col. Wood, commanding the Sixth Missouri cavalry, left Rolla on the
-7th day of March, 1862, with about two hundred and fifty men, for the
-purpose of making a scout south into the counties of Oregon and Howell
-and Fulton county, Arkansas, to ascertain the strength of the rebel
-forces in that portion of the country; reached Licking and went into
-camp. The next morning he broke camp and marched to Jack's fork, in
-Shannon county, and on the morning of the 9th marched to Thomasville;
-on the 10th he marched to Mammoth Spring, Arkansas. On reaching
-Mammoth Spring they learned that there was a rebel force in camp on
-the south fork of Spring river, just below Salem, and on the morning
-of the 11th they broke camp and marched upon the rebels. On reaching
-the rebel encampment they found they had cut timber and blockaded the
-road, so that it was impossible to reach the forces, except on foot.
-In coming within a few hundred yards of the rebels, lying concealed
-behind the timbers, they opened fire upon the advance of the Federal
-forces. The Federal forces had two small pieces of artillery that
-they unlimbered and brought into use. The rebels having no artillery,
-were soon dislodged from the first line of works, and they stubbornly
-fell back about one quarter of a mile, and went in behind the second
-fortifications that had been hurriedly erected. After fighting for
-an hour and a half or two hours the Federal force being greatly
-outnumbered, and the rebels having themselves so obstructed, Col. Woods
-saw that it was useless to further continue the fight and retreated. On
-the next night he reached Howell Valley just below West Plains and went
-into camp and on the morning of the 13th they broke camp and marched
-in the direction of Houston, Missouri, reaching Houston sometime after
-night. The Federal loss in the battle referred to was seven killed and
-wounded. The Confederate loss was said to be twenty-five or thirty
-killed and wounded. Colonels Coleman and Woodside were commanding the
-Confederates.
-
-Col. Woods being in command of the post at Houston, learning that there
-was considerable of a rebel force, standing at West Plains, Missouri,
-under the command of Coleman and others, organized a scout and on the
-24th day of February, 1862, broke camp and marched in the direction of
-West Plains, for the purpose of attacking the rebel forces stationed at
-that place, taking two small mounted howitzers strapped on mules, made
-a forced march, and in the early part of the day on the 25th reached
-West Plains. West Plains had a frame court house in the center of the
-square where the present court house is located. The road at that time
-led due north where Washington avenue is located until it struck the
-hill; also there was a road which led east where East main street is
-now located and on passing what was known as the Thomas Howell farm,
-turned directly north in the direction of Gunters Valley. The rebels
-had a strong picket thrown out on both roads; a part of the rebel
-command was quartered in the court house. Woods being advised of the
-condition of the rebels and where they were all quartered, supposing
-that they would take advantage of the court house when the attack was
-made, selected a high position where the road first struck the hill,
-planted his artillery, divided his forces and made a flank movement,
-ordered them to strike the lower road and advance on the pickets and
-as soon as they were fired upon, to charge them, while he would remain
-with the other part of the force in readiness to dislodge them with his
-artillery in case they used the court house as a fortification. On the
-advance coming in sight of the rebel pickets, they fired and retreated
-with the Federal forces pursuing. The rebel forces at once rallied
-their forces and took possession of the courthouse. As soon as Col.
-Woods saw them file into the house he leveled his cannon and fired a
-shell which struck the house near its center and passed clear through;
-that was the first artillery that the rebel command ever had heard.
-They filed out of the house faster than they went into it; then Col.
-Woods moved with his forces directly upon the forces near the court
-house when a general engagement ensued. The rebels retreated west on
-the road near where West Main street is now located and a running fight
-was continued for about one mile, when Woods abandoned the pursuit,
-marched back into West Plains, and again returned to Houston. The
-losses on both sides were light, several, however, being killed or
-wounded.
-
-
-"Uncle Tommy" and His Crutches.
-
-I will relate an incident which occurred during the fight. Old "Uncle
-Tommy" Howell as he was familiarly known, resided just below the town
-spring a short distance from the road; he had a sister living with him
-who was an old maid, and was known as "Aunt Polly". Howell being one
-among the early settlers of Howell Valley, had taken an active part
-in organizing Howell county, which took its name from him and he had
-been once representative of the county. The author heard him relate
-the circumstance in a speech delivered in West Plains after the war
-was over. He said when the fight came up that he was sitting on his
-front porch: all at once he heard firing commence, and heard horses
-feet and saw the rebel pickets coming on full gallop horseback, with
-the Federals close onto them with pistols in hand firing on them; he
-had been afflicted with rheumatism for years and one of his legs was
-drawn crooked and he hadn't attempted to walk without a crutch for
-several years; when he saw the men coming and the others shooting at
-them, he supposed that every shot was killing a man; he said they came
-right by his door and he never became excited while they were passing;
-as soon as they got near the court house they then made a stand, where
-it appeared to him that there were thousands of shots being exchanged
-every minute. They had all passed his house and he was sitting there
-unmolested, when his sister, who was known as "Aunt Polly" ran out on
-the porch and cried out at the top of her voice "Lord a massy, Uncle
-Tommy, run for your life; you have been a public man and they will kill
-you, sure." He said it so excited him that he sprang to his feet. All
-below his house the valley was covered with hazel brush and snow was
-lying on the ground. He first looked toward where the firing was going
-on and said "My God! they certainly have got them very near all killed
-in this time" for he was under the impression that every shot killed
-a man. He started southwest from his house, ran about a quarter of a
-mile, jumped over behind a log; he had hardly gotten still when he
-imagined he heard the horses feet of the Federals in pursuit of him; he
-raised up and looked, could not see any person, so ran about another
-quarter, jumped over behind another log and as soon as he got still,
-the first thought came into his mind that they were still in pursuit,
-for he could hear the horses' feet, but on reflecting a moment he found
-that it was his heart beating; he said he could still hear the firing
-and he thought they intended to kill them all before they quit. He had
-a son-in-law by the name of Hardin Brown living on the Warm fork of
-Spring river, about twenty miles distant, and he started on foot and
-never stopped traveling until he reached his house. On reaching the
-house, his daughter asked him how, in the name of God, he ever got
-there without his crutches. He said that was the first time that he had
-thought of his crutches. He began to notice his legs and the crooked
-leg was just as straight as the well leg. He said that it completely
-cured him of his rheumatism and he had the use of that leg just the
-same as he ever did the other leg, and never used a crutch afterwards.
-After the war he removed to Oregon county and was elected to the
-legislature, and died a member of the legislature.
-
-
-Disposing of Union Men.
-
-In the spring of 1862 there was a man by the name of Mawhinney, living
-about six miles below West Plains, in Howell valley, a Union man, but
-who had taken no part either way, except to express an opinion. About
-fifteen men belonging to a rebel scout went to his house, called for
-their dinners, some of them had him shoe their horses, and after they
-had their horses shod and got their dinner, they told him that they
-wanted him to go with them. His wife said to them "It ain't possible
-that after you have been treated as kindly as you have been you are
-going to take Mr. Mawhinney prisoner; you men certainly will not hurt
-him." They made no reply, carried him about one half mile from his
-home, shot him off of his horse, took the horse and went on, leaving
-the body on the side of the road. His wife with what other help she
-could get brought him in and had him buried.
-
-About two weeks afterwards, in the spring of 1862, there was a man by
-the name of Bacon who lived near West Plains, who has some relatives
-living in this county at the present time. He was a Union man but had
-taken no part either way, except to express himself openly in favor of
-the Union. There came a scout of about twenty men and arrested him,
-started west with him in the direction of South Fork, and on reaching
-the vicinity where Homeland is located, left the road a short distance,
-shot him off of his horse. Went on to a house about one mile distant,
-called for their dinner. The woman in preparing dinner fried some
-bacon; after they were seated at the table she passed the bacon to
-them; several of them remarked that they didn't want any, that they had
-had some bacon, but had just disposed of it a short time before they
-reached the house. After Bacon had laid where he fell dead for two or
-three days he was found and being considerably decomposed a hole was
-dug and the body placed into it and covered up, where his dust remains
-until the present day.
-
-
-Union Supplies Captured by Rebels.
-
-In the spring of 1862, the department commander reestablished the
-military post at Springfield. All of the commissaries and forage had to
-be conveyed from Rolla to Springfield, as the terminus of the railroad
-was at Rolla, by wagon trains, a distance of one hundred and twenty
-miles. It required a large escort of soldiers to guard the trains to
-prevent the rebels from capturing them. All of the country south of the
-wire road was in possession of the rebels. There was scarcely a wagon
-train that passed on the road without being attacked by the rebels.
-They made their attacks generally on the front and rear of the trains,
-and before the wagon masters could corral the trains, they would
-capture some of the wagons, make the teamsters drive into the woods,
-cut the mules loose from the wagons, take sacks of coffee, salt, sugar
-and other commissaries, tie them on the backs of the mules, divide
-into small bunches and retreat into the hills. Very often the escort
-would have to send back to Rolla for reinforcements. The train would
-be tied up from twelve to fifteen hours before it could move on. It
-became a mystery to the Federal commanders how the Confederates could
-concentrate a force of men numbering from fifty to three hundred, and
-the first intimation the escort would have, they, the rebels, would
-come out of the brush at some secluded spot, yelling, whooping and
-shooting, and charge upon the wagon train. They would generally capture
-more or less of the loaded wagons with the above results, and it became
-a question with the military authorities at Rolla and Springfield how
-to capture or rout these bands, and as to how they managed to keep that
-number of men near to the wire road and yet the Federals were unable
-to discover their hiding places.
-
-About the 15th day of August, the department commander ordered Capt.
-Murphy to take five hundred men and two pieces of artillery and move
-south from Rolla; to go as far south as he thought it would be safe,
-without placing his men so far inside of the Confederate lines that
-they might be captured; and, if possible, to learn the rebel movements
-and location of their troops. Capt. Murphy broke camp at Rolla and
-moved south about fifteen miles, was fired on by the rebels from the
-brush, marched about twenty-five miles, went into camp; on the next
-morning resumed the march, hadn't marched more than five miles until
-they were fired on from the brush; they were fired on four or five
-times that day, and went into camp near Thomasville. The next day he
-threw out skirmish lines on each side of his command, and resumed
-the march down the Warm fork of Spring river. There was more or less
-skirmishing all day. He camped on the Warm fork and the next morning
-marched over to the Myatt, where we had quite a skirmish. The rebels
-again retreated in the direction of the Spring River mill, where they
-were said to have a thousand men.
-
-Here the command countermarched back to Rolla, having captured fifty or
-sixty prisoners; the Federals had a few men wounded.
-
-In the spring of 1862, the Federal troops advanced on Springfield from
-Rolla. The rebels retreated west and the Federals again established
-a military post at Springfield. The rebels continued to retreat west
-until they reached Prairie Grove, where they concentrated their forces
-and the memorable battle of that name was fought, the Federal troops
-being victorious. The Confederates retreated from the state.
-
-The military post at Springfield being over one hundred miles west of
-Rolla, the terminus of the South Pacific railroad, three-fourths of
-the distance being in possession of the rebels, all the forage and
-commissaries had to be conveyed by wagon train. The main rebel forces
-having been driven from the state, and all of the country south of the
-wire road, with few exceptions, being in possession of the rebels, the
-Union men with their families having been driven from their homes. The
-leading Confederate officers met and held a council of war and decided
-to change their tactics. The first thing was to place two or three
-hundred well-armed Confederate soldiers south of and near the wire
-road leading from Rolla to Springfield, and so harass the wagon trains
-that the government wouldn't be able to get forage and commissaries
-through to Springfield, and thus force the Federals to abandon the
-post. In furtherance of this move, they ordered their soldiers to be
-taken near to the line of the road and divided into squads of from
-five to twenty-five men, conceal their arms and claim to be private
-citizens, live off the country and be so arranged that when a wagon
-train was about to leave Rolla, they could be called together on short
-notice; and when they wanted to make a more extensive raid, Confederate
-soldiers from as far south as the head of Spring river would march up
-and meet them and make a general raid.
-
-The government had considerable trouble to learn the hiding places of
-these men, but they finally got officers who were acquainted with the
-country and men who were bona fide citizens, and knew who were citizens
-and who were not, and broke up their hiding places and drove them
-further south. It was learned that a part of this Confederate force was
-composed of men who claimed to be citizens when they were not making
-their raids.
-
-
-Bravery of Captain Alsup.
-
-In the summer of 1863, the Federal authorities established a military
-post at Clark's mill, in Douglas county, Missouri, on Bryant's fork
-of White river, erected a post and stationed some Illinois troops
-under the command of a Colonel, with Capt. Alsup's company, which was
-composed entirely of Douglas county citizens, in all about two hundred
-and fifty or three hundred men. Gen. Joe Shelby, a Confederate, with
-about five hundred troops, made a forced march from Arkansas and during
-the night time surrounded the fort, and the next morning had his
-artillery in readiness to open fire. He ordered a complete surrender
-of the garrison. The captain of the fort asked for a few minutes to
-consider the matter; at the expiration of the time, the Colonel in
-command agreed to surrender, stack up the guns and side arms in the
-fort, march his men outside and make an unconditional surrender.
-When the commander of the fort ordered his men and officers to stack
-their arms and march out, Capt. Lock Alsup and his company refused,
-and being cavalry, ordered his men to arm themselves and be ready to
-move whenever he ordered. While the commander of the fort was having
-the remainder of the garrison stack their arms, Capt. Alsup and his
-company made a bold dash for liberty, came out of the fort shooting
-right and left, took the rebels by surprise, broke the rebel line,
-went through, being mounted on good horses, retreated up Bryant's fork
-with the rebels in pursuit. While going through an old field that had
-grown up to burrs about as high as a man's head, Fritz Krause, father
-of the assistant postmaster at West Plains, was thrown from his horse,
-rolled under the burrs, the rebels passed by and never saw him. He
-laid in the burrs until dark, then made his escape and rejoined his
-company at Springfield. The rebels pursued them for about two miles,
-then returned to their command. Gen. Shelby paroled the prisoners, and
-such things as he could not carry with him he destroyed, the fort being
-burned. He resumed his march in the direction of Springfield and was
-reinforced by about five hundred troops. During this time, Capt. Alsup
-and his men had reached Springfield and, strange to say, hadn't lost a
-man; had a few slightly wounded. Gen. Brown, who was in command of the
-post at Springfield, was said to be a brother-in-law of Gen. Shelby,
-and on Shelby's arrival at Springfield he demanded the surrender of
-the garrison. The Federal troops held a consultation and concluded to
-fight. After a brief engagement, Gen. Shelby drew his troops off and
-moved north; there were several killed and wounded on both sides. Gen.
-Brown's arm was broken by a piece from a shell. Gen. Shelby continued
-his raid towards the Missouri river, had several small engagements and
-then retreated from the state. Capt. Alsup and his brave men should
-be held in memory by all comrades, especially by the loyal people of
-Douglas and Ozark counties, for their heroic action in charging through
-the rebel lines and making their escape after the post commander had
-attempted to deliver them into the hands of the rebels.
-
-The fort at Clark's mill was never rebuilt. Capt. Alsup and the loyal
-men of Douglas and Ozark counties and part of Wright county built a
-temporary fort near the center of Douglas county, and old and young
-organized themselves into companies and armed themselves. With the
-help of Capt. Alsup's company, they appointed a few of their men as
-scouts, while the others worked in their fields. The scouts were out
-night and day along the state line and if a rebel scout attempted to
-raid the counties, notice was given all along the line and the men
-were all up in arms and ready to meet the raiders. It reminds one of
-reading the history of the early settlements along the Indian border.
-The settlers would build forts and put out sentinels; if the Indians
-were seen advancing, word was given and the families would hurry to the
-fort and the men arm themselves to drive the invaders back. So this
-organization, with some assistance from the post at Springfield, held
-Douglas and a part of Ozark and Wright counties during the remainder of
-the Civil War, and after the war was over, Douglas county gained the
-title of "Old Loyal Douglas County." These old soldiers and comrades
-are fast falling and very soon there will be none left to tell of the
-heroisms and sacrifices they made for the country they loved. Will
-these comrades and their sons and daughters be so ungrateful that they
-will let their heroism and sacrifices die with them and be forgotten,
-never to be written in history? The answer will be no, a thousand times
-no. The history of their heroism and sacrifices shall be written and
-go down to their children and their children's children, and may "Old
-Glory" ever wave over the country that they love so well and for which
-they made so many sacrifices.
-
-
-Bushwhacking in Howell County.
-
-The writer wants to say that there was not a Union man nor a single
-Union family left at home, from Batesville, Ark. to Rolla, Mo., a
-distance of two-hundred miles. The writer especially wants to speak for
-Howell County, Mo. The rebels took quite a number of Union men from
-their homes and shot them, some of them being old men. I will name
-a few of them that were shot: Morton R. Langston, the father of T.
-J. and S. J. Langston, while he was hauling wood; Jeff Langston, one
-of the firm of Langston Bros, was riding on the wood at the time his
-father was shot. I asked a leading rebel after the war, why they shot
-Langston. His reply was: "He talked too much." Shot Mawhinney, Bacon
-and a number of others. Now I want to say right here, notwithstanding
-the treatment the Union men received from the rebels, not a single
-Confederate was ever taken from his home and shot or otherwise injured
-during the whole Civil War and no truthful Confederate will say to the
-contrary. There never was but one Confederate hurt after being taken
-prisoner in Howell County and he wasn't a citizen of Howell County;
-was said to be a north Missouri bushwhacker, charged with being one
-of the parties that shot old Mr. Langston, Mawhinney and Bacon. A
-Federal scout in the year 1864 captured him below West Plains and the
-next morning they hung him to a smokehouse rafter. Notwithstanding a
-few of the friends of the bushwackers will tell to strangers that the
-writer shot a man in this county, by the name of Hawkins, in the lap
-of his family, which is a positive lie; the facts are these; Hawkins
-was one of the worst bushwhackers and murderers that ever lived in
-Howell County and was commanding a company of bushwackers at the time
-he was shot. A short time before he was shot he had captured one of
-his cousins, by the name of Washington Hawkins, a Federal soldier, and
-taken from him a fine mare with his saddle and rig complete.
-
-In the spring of 1864, a battalion of the 11th Missouri Cavalry,
-commanded by Col. Woods, had been ordered to report to Col. Livingston
-at Batesville, Ark. The writer had been ordered to report at Rolla,
-Mo., with his command. Col. Woods had camped near West Plains the
-previous night, the next morning resumed his march towards Batesville;
-after he had passed West Plains a few miles, Hawkins and his
-bushwhackers fired on them from the brush and they continued to fire
-on them every few miles for sixteen miles. Our force met the force of
-Col. Woods at the state line where Col. Woods informed me how they had
-been firing upon his men all morning. He had taken a man prisoner by
-the name of William Krause, whom he turned over to me. Both forces
-resumed the march, he in the direction of Batesville, Ark., and I in
-the direction of Rolla, Mo. The prisoner told the writer that he knew
-the parties who had been firing on Col. Woods' command; that they had
-a camp by a pond in a secluded place, and were commanded by Hawkins
-and Yates; that it was about four miles almost west. I told Krause if
-he would place me on trail he could then go home. He did so and I then
-released him. Krause said there were about fifty rebels in the command.
-
-We trailed them about two miles and came in sight of a house that
-belonged to old Mr. Newberry, a Union man. He and his family had been
-run off from home. I saw a horse hitched to the side of the door, and
-supposed there were more inside of the house; there was a skirt of
-timber that enabled us to get within about sixty yards of the house.
-I ordered my men, when we reached a given point, to charge upon
-the house, dismount and reach the wall of the house and demand the
-surrender of all persons that might be within. We were about fifteen
-feet from the door when Hawkins came out and attempted to mount his
-horse. The author demanded his surrender, but he drew his pistol to
-fire, the author having his pistol already in hand and presented, fired
-on him; the author was sitting in his saddle when he fired on him.
-
-The men examined the house and found he was the only man in it.
-The horse he was riding was the one he had taken from his cousin,
-Washington Hawkins, a short time previous, with a government rig
-complete. Washington Hawkins resided at Bakersfield, Mo., and got his
-horse and rig again. We took the trail again, but dark came on us and
-we lost it. These are the facts surrounding the whole case, the killing
-of Hawkins, one of the worst bandits and guerrillas that ever roamed
-through South Missouri and led the worst band of men in the state. I
-had previously taken him prisoner and he took the oath of allegiance,
-went right back and joined his command and, if possible, he was worse
-than before. I must say that there are few men in Howell county that
-claim to be Confederates, who tell strangers that Monks shot Hawkins
-down in the lap of his family and that he, Hawkins, was a good man.
-The writer wants to say that no truthful Confederate will tell any
-such a thing; they will tell you that Hawkins was a bad man. Ask such
-Confederates as Capt. Howard, Mark Cooper, Judge Dryer, John Ledsinger,
-Harvey Kelow, Daniel Galloway, P. N. Gulley and a number of others, if
-Hawkins was a good man.
-
-The writer wants to say that he don't believe all the Confederates
-were in favor of killing and driving out the families of Union men,
-but the most bitter element got in power and being backed by the order
-of Gen. McBride, to force all the Union men to join the Confederate
-service, or hang them, those Confederates who were opposed to such
-treatment were afraid to open their mouths for fear they would receive
-the same treatment. You don't hear these same men, that talked about
-Monks shooting Hawkins, say a word about Hawkins and his bushwhackers
-shooting Union men all over Howell county. There never were but two
-houses burned in Howell county by the Union men during the Civil
-war, and houses owned by these men had been previously burned by the
-Confederates. The town of West Plains was burned by the Confederates to
-keep the Federals from holding a post at West Plains.
-
-The writer wants to say that on his return after the war, in the
-spring of 1866, he met the rebels, both those that had been officers
-and soldiers, and never spoke a harsh word to them, asked them if
-they thought both parties could now live together; their answer was,
-that they thought they could. All that they asked was that they be
-protected. The writer assured them that both Federal and Confederates
-would be protected by the civil laws and all they would be asked to
-do would be to aid in a strict enforcement of civil laws, which they
-readily promised to do. The Union men who had returned to their homes
-and the late Confederates joined together and went to building and
-repairing old church houses and school-houses and soon were found
-worshiping together in the same church and sending their children to
-the same school-houses and the old ties that had existed before the war
-were being re-united. The country appeared to be prosperous and the old
-war spirit appeared to be fast dying out among the people.
-
-I suppose the writer holds more commissions than any other man in the
-state, both military and civil and there never was a charge preferred
-against the writer of any failure to discharge his duties by the
-government or state. While in the military service thousands of dollars
-passed through the hands of the writer for forage and commissaries
-and ordinance stores and clothing, every dollar was accounted for and
-all contraband property was turned over to the government. I never
-converted, to my own private use, five cents of any man's property or
-money, before or after the war, in the war, nor since the war.
-
-The writer is now residing within about twenty-five miles of where
-his father located in the year 1844 and there are several persons yet
-living that have been intimately acquainted with the writer since his
-boyhood up to the present time, namely James Kellett, Sr., Marion
-Kellett, present county treasury of Howell county, Washington Hawkins
-of Bakersfield, Mo., and quite a number of others that have been
-acquainted with the writer from forty to fifty years. The writer wants
-to say right here that he is not ashamed of anything he did before the
-war, in the war, nor since the war, and on his return home to Howell
-county on meeting the late rebels; he never spoke a harsh word to one
-of them, but received them kindly and said to them that the civil laws
-should be strictly enforced against all alike, Confederate and Federal.
-
-In the year 1861, sometime in the month of September, after the
-Federals retreated from Springfield, Mo. and the Confederates had taken
-possession of Springfield, there was one Capt. Brixey who was captain
-of a company of home guards residing in the edge of Webster County,
-Mo.; soon after the Confederates took possession of the post, they
-ordered a captain belonging to a Texas regiment to detail one company
-and proceed to the residence of Capt. Brixey and arrest him. Capt.
-Brixey having no notice of the approach of the scouts, he and one of
-his men were sitting in the house; the first they knew they had a line
-within thirty yards of his door, hailed them and presented their guns
-and demanded their surrender. Capt. Brixey said, "The ---- you say."
-Both parties fired on each other about the same time, the man with
-Brixey fell dead, Brixey shot and killed the Confederate captain and
-wounded one or two other Confederates; he retreated through his house
-and into his orchard and made his escape; one of his arms was broken
-by the shot from the rebels from which he entirely recovered and lived
-many years afterwards, and has a son residing in this county at the
-present time.
-
-
-Colonel Freeman's Second Raid.
-
-Sometime in the Spring of 1862 Col. Freeman, not being satisfied with
-his first raid on the Federal troops at Salem, planned the second raid
-to attack the troops then stationed at Salem, Missouri; he organized
-his scout and compelled one Robert Bolin, who now resides in Howell
-County, to pilot him through the lines, as he, Bolin, had lived near
-Salem before the war. On reaching Salem, Col. Freeman halted his troops
-and planned his attack.
-
-The Federal troops had no knowledge of the approach of any rebel
-forces; they were in squads around Salem. Freeman divided his forces
-and gave them a countersign and selected a spot near a deep ditch in
-the road and instructed them, if they were defeated and got scattered
-to concentrate at that ditch which was beyond the Federal lines a
-distance of some miles; on reaching the ditch they were to remain
-until they all were collected. After the first ones reached the place,
-it being dark, if they saw others approaching they would halt them
-and demand the countersign, and if they couldn't give it they were to
-fire on them without any further delay, knowing they were enemies. On
-reaching the public square they encountered a bunch of the Federal
-troops in a building; fired on them, wounded a few, a man by the name
-of Jacob Shoffler now residing in Howell County was in the house at
-the time, and they cut his clothes in about twenty different places
-with bullets and never drew blood; Maj. Santee was commanding, with
-one other officer. After they had rallied, all being in disorder, Maj.
-Santee ordered a charge on the rebels. Armed with an old pistol he met
-Col. Freeman of the Confederate side. Freeman had just shot out; Maj.
-Santee ordered his surrender. Col. Freeman started to run, Maj. Santee
-in close pursuit, snapped his old pistol, which failed to fire. He then
-threw the pistol at Col. Freeman, struck him somewhere between the
-shoulders, drew his sabre, and still continued the pursuit. There was
-a creek near by and a stone fence had been built along the side of it;
-the creek had been frozen over and a skiff of snow on it at the time.
-Just as Freeman reached the stone fence Maj. Santee made a thrust at
-him with his sabre, inflicting a slight wound; about that time, for
-the purpose of escaping, Col. Freeman sprang over the stone fence and
-lit into the creek. Maj. Santee, being on horseback, could not pursue
-any further. The rebels by this time were scattered in all directions,
-started to retreat. It being very dark, the first ones fifty or sixty
-in number reached the ditch, halted to wait for the remainder of them
-to collect. In a short time about thirty or forty more of them appeared
-in sight, retreating with considerable speed; they were halted, the
-countersign demanded. They had become so excited in the fight they had
-forgotten the countersign and failed to give it. So those who arrived
-first opened fire and wounded several of them, scattering them to the
-woods. They failed to concentrate until they had retreated south about
-30 miles where they learned of the mistake they had made and that
-they had fired upon their own men. Maj. Santee being of the opinion
-that he had seriously wounded Freeman with his sabre, concluded to
-investigate. On reaching the stone fence where he made his leap they
-looked over into the creek on the ice and (Col. Freeman being a large
-man) it looked like a large ox had been thrown over from the hole that
-he made in the ice. They saw that he had crossed the creek and reached
-the other side and saw no signs of blood. In the engagement there were
-about five or six wounded and killed.
-
-In the summer of 1863 there was a Federal scout organized at
-Springfield, commanded by Col. Holland. It was ordered to move by way
-of Douglas county, get reinforcements then stationed at the fort,
-and from there march through the county of Ozark. They entered the
-county of Fulton, Ark., where they had several small engagements.
-After considerable fighting and capturing a number of prisoners, they
-returned to Springfield; loss, killed and wounded, very small.
-
-In the fall of 1863, Col. Tracy, with a force of rebels, made a raid
-from Fulton county, marched up through Ozark county, and on reaching
-the Union settlement in Douglas county, he shot and killed nearly
-every man he captured, robbed houses, took everything in the house
-and out of doors, and burned the houses as he went. After raiding and
-pillaging a number of houses, he came to a house where a Union man by
-the name of Mahan and one by the name of McCarty were working in the
-blacksmith shop, with their arms near them. They were members of the
-home guard. The rebels demanded the surrender of the two men, and as
-it was generally believed that if a man surrendered to those irregular
-forces that it was sure death, they refused to surrender. When the
-forces of Col. Tracy commenced firing through the cracks of the shop,
-the men returned the fire. Mahan killed one rebel, and they wounded two
-or three others. The rebels shot McCarty down, shooting him eight or
-ten times after he fell, knocked the door down and rushed upon Mahan,
-disarmed him, took him prisoner and then continued their retreat. After
-reaching Fulton county, near the bayou, they took Mahan into the woods,
-stripped him naked and shot him, leaving his body lying on the ground
-unburied. Strange to say, in regard to McCarty, after he had been shot
-eight or ten times and left for dead, he recovered from the wounds and
-became hearty and stout.
-
-Some time in the early part of the spring of 1864, a man by the name
-of Mahan deserted from the 11th Missouri cavalry, stationed at
-Batesville, and on reaching Howell county, about two miles from where
-Valley Star school house is now located, a bunch of bushwhackers
-commanded by B. F. Hawkins and Thomas Yates captured him, took him into
-the woods a short distance, stripped him naked and shot him, leaving
-his body lying on the ground, unburied. After he had lain there nearly
-a week, a man now residing in Howell county took a hoe and shovel and
-raked up some rocks and pitched them upon the decomposed body and threw
-a few shovels of dirt on him. As it was but a short distance from the
-road, the stench from the decomposing body was offensive to persons who
-traveled by.
-
-
-Col. Monks Enforces the Civil Law.
-
-In the month of July, 1865, the author was ordered to declare the civil
-law in force in the counties of Texas, Dent, Shannon, Oregon, Howell,
-Ozark and Douglas and report to his regiment again at Springfield for
-the purpose of being discharged. The long-looked-for and final result
-of the war had come with victory couched upon every man who had borne
-his flag to the breeze of his country, and to those who had lain
-themselves on the altar of their country and died that it might live.
-
-There was general rejoicing among the loyal people, that there was
-not a foot of territory on American soil but where the stars and
-stripes once more floated unmolested, either by foreign or domestic
-enemies, and while the Confederates had fought manfully for what they
-conceived to be right, and had laid many of their sons on the altar and
-sacrificed them to a cause that they believed to be right, yet a large
-majority of them rejoiced when they learned that the cruel war was
-over. Although their cause was forever lost, yet the country that they
-had loved so well and the flag still floated and invited them back as
-erring sons.
-
-The 16th regiment, with a large number of other regiments, was
-discharged at Springfield. Then a scene ensued that Americans had never
-witnessed before; the blue and the grey began to meet and greet each
-other as friends and seemed to forget that just a few months previous
-they had been meeting each other armed, for the purpose of slaying one
-another. A general amnesty proclamation had been granted by Gen. Grant
-to all the rebels who had surrendered. Their officers and commanders
-should discharge them and they should be allowed to retain their side
-arms for their own protection and return home for the purpose of again
-building up and establishing their homes; again meet their wives, their
-children, fathers and mothers, neighbors and friends, and once more
-be united in all the ties of love; to again reinstate churches, and
-instead of studying and practicing the art of war, they should beat
-their swords into pruning hooks and aid in establishing and building up
-society and good government.
-
-But, lo! one of the most sad and heartrending scenes confronted many
-Confederates and Federals on returning to the places where they had
-once had happy homes and sweet families, they were not found. During
-the terrible war, many of the loved ones that they had left behind
-had been called from time to eternity. The home had disappeared and
-nothing was left but the soil; all of the improvements being entirely
-destroyed. But they, with the courage of heroes, gathered the fragments
-of their families, went to work improving and building houses,
-refencing their farms, reerecting church houses and school houses, and
-in a short time the men who had lately been enemies and borne arms
-against each other, were again neighbors and friends, associating
-together, sending their children to the same school, becoming members
-of the same church; all experienced the difference between a civil war
-and peace and fraternity. Many of them expressed themselves that they
-had read of civil wars, but never realized the effect of civil war
-until after they had passed through the present one: but they could not
-understand why they called it "civil" war, for if there was anything
-civil about the war they never experienced that part of it.
-
-The author's family had been residing at Rolla during most of the
-time of the war. He commenced making preparations to return to his
-home in Howell county in the fall of 1865. He began to organize an
-immigration party of men who wanted to locate in Howell county and a
-number of men who had left their homes in that county. Just a short
-time before the parties were ready to leave Rolla for Howell county,
-he was met by several men who asked: "Why, Monks, ain't you afraid to
-go back to Howell county? You have fought the rebels so bitterly and
-contested every inch of ground during the whole war, and some of them
-hate you so badly, that I would be afraid that they would kill me."
-The author replied that he felt like Gen. Putnam, when the British
-attempted to bribe him and said that the colonies never could succeed
-in gaining their independence, and that he had better return and renew
-his allegiance to the Crown. The General's reply was, "D--n a man that
-is not for his country." Now, my reply to you is, that I have forfeited
-almost all of my means and shattered the happiness of my family in
-contending and fighting for the preservation of the government;
-besides, myself and family have been exiled and banished from our home,
-and if the rebels had succeeded, all would have been gone. But now the
-government has been victorious in crushing the rebellion, liberty and
-protection have been once more guaranteed to every citizen, high or
-low, rich or poor, and, in the language of Gen. Putnam, I say, "D--n a
-man that is afraid to go back and enjoy the fruits of his victory."
-
-Within a few days about twenty-five families left Rolla for West
-Plains, and on arriving at West Plains, went into camp. There was
-not a single building left in West Plains, as the Confederates had
-burned the whole town in time of the war, with the exception of
-one store building, which was burned by the Federal troops. The
-Confederates' object in burning the town was to prevent the Federals
-from establishing a post. The author procured some clapboards, built an
-addition to an old stable about two hundred yards south of where James'
-livery stable is now located.
-
-Soon after we had reached West Plains and gone into camp, Capt. Howard,
-Capt. Nicks and a number of other rebels who were residing in the
-county, came in, met the author and said to him: "Captain. I am proud
-to meet you." The author replied, "I am proud to meet you. What do
-think now in regard to the two parties living together?" They said that
-they were satisfied that both parties could live together, that all
-they wanted was protection. The author remarked that the rebels had
-been in control of the country for several years, but the loyal men
-were going to take charge of it and run it now, and as the loyal men
-had been contending for the enforcement of the law and claimed that
-every American citizen was entitled to the protection of the law, the
-author could promise them that, if they would fall into line and help
-enforce the law, they should receive equal protection with any other
-class of citizens; to which they replied that they were willing to do
-so, but there were roving bands of rebels and guerrillas which had not
-been subject to the control of the Confederate authorities, and still
-refused to lay down their arms, and might yet cause some trouble.
-
-The author was appointed sheriff of Howell county, W. Z. Buck circuit
-and county clerk and Peter Lemons, Judge Alsup and ---- were appointed
-county judges. There had been an old school house about a quarter of
-a mile east of West Plains that was still standing. They met at that
-school house, organized and set the civil government of the county
-in working order. Soon after, Governor Fletcher ordered an election
-and the author was elected to the state legislature, tendered his
-resignation as sheriff, which was accepted and W. D. Mustion was
-appointed to the vacancy. In a few weeks the author went to Jefferson
-City, tendered his credentials and was sworn in and became a member of
-the legislature.
-
-Everything, so far as Howell county was concerned, appeared to move off
-quietly, while the counties of Oregon and Shannon, with a few of the
-border counties, were entirely controlled by irregular bands of late
-rebels, who openly declared that the civil law should not be enforced
-in those counties; that the Confederacy was whipped, but they were not
-and they intended to live off the government; they were armed to the
-teeth.
-
-During the winter of 1865 and the year 1866, Howell county settled up
-faster than ever it had at any period before the war; the men who had
-homes in it and had been forced away on account of the war, mostly
-returned and commenced to improve their farms. Their houses, outhouses
-and improvements, generally, having been destroyed, the soil was the
-only thing left. The town also built up rapidly and in the year 1866
-the inhabitants had increased to six or eight hundred.
-
-In the fall of 1866 at the general election the author was re-elected
-to the legislature and Capt. Alley, who had been a Confederate all
-through the war, was elected to the legislature from Oregon county.
-The author again qualified and was present in the legislature during
-the whole time, when the great question was brought up before the
-legislature, as to what disposition the State would make of the first
-liens held by the state on the different railroads for aid that had
-been given to the railroad corporations in the way of state bonds
-in 1850. In 1855 the state issued her bonds, delivered them to the
-companies and they went east and put them upon the market in New York
-and Boston to procure money to construct roads, and the bonds with all
-the accruing interest, were due the state.
-
-Then for the first time the author learned that many of the men who
-had been selected to represent the people's interest in the State
-Legislature, failed to discharge the duties that their constituents
-had imposed upon them, betrayed their trust, and, through money, were
-entirely controlled in the interest of the railroad corporations. The
-author believing that it was one among the greatest duties that were
-imposed upon men of a representative government, to strictly contend
-and do all in his power to enact legislation in the interest of the
-people, therefore took a strong stand in favor of closing out all
-of the state liens against the different roads, held by the state.
-During the session of the winter of 1866 what was then known as the
-South Missouri Pacific, which terminated at Rolla, Missouri, was
-ordered to be closed out and the road declared forfeited. A resolution
-passed through both houses of the legislature ordering the Governor
-to seize it, and that said road be run by the state. In the meantime
-the Governor was to advertise and sell it. The Governor by authority
-of law advertised it and sold it for $550,000. Sometime in April the
-legislature adjourned, to meet in an adjourned session in December,
-1867. The author returned home.
-
-The immigration into the country rapidly increasing, prosperity
-appeared to be on every side; people had plenty of money, good crops,
-wheat was worth $1 to $1.50 per bushel, stock of all kinds brought
-first-class prices, peace so far as Howell county was concerned,
-prosperity and the bettering of the condition of society were moving
-hand in hand, and the author felt thankful that the war was over.
-
-
-Outlaw Rule in Oregon and Shannon.
-
-In the fall of 1867, the counties of Oregon and Shannon, were still
-controlled by those roving bands of outlaws who ruled the counties with
-an iron hand. A despotism, unequalled at any stage of the war, existed
-there. There was a public gathering in the fall of 1867 in Thomasville.
-Col. Jamison, one of the leaders of these outlawed bands rode into town
-at the head of about fifty men, well armed, shot two men's brains out,
-paraded the streets and swore that any man that attempted to enforce
-the civil law against them, would fare the same; rode out unmolested
-and there was not a single attempt made by the civil authorities to
-arrest one of them. In a few days Jamison with some of his men rode
-into town and a man by the name of Philip Arbogast, the father-in-law
-of Mr. Hill, one of the firm of Hill-Whitmire Mercantile Co., now
-doing business in West Plains, who had been a Confederate all through
-the war, remarked in the hearing of Jamison, that the war was over,
-and he believed that the civil law ought to be enforced. Jamison at
-once dismounted, cocked his pistol, approached Arbogast and commenced
-punching him with the muzzle of it until he inflicted some wounds
-remarking to him that if he ever heard of him uttering a word again in
-favor of the civil law being enforced that he would hunt him up and
-shoot his brains out.
-
-Some time previous to that occurrence, two men who had been discharged
-from the Federal army and had once resided in Oregon county, came into
-the county to look at their old homes. Col. Jamison, with about forty
-men, arrested them, took them to the house of the sheriff, informed
-the sheriff that no "Feds" could ever reside in Oregon county, and no
-damn Black Republicans could ever cast a vote at any election that was
-held in the county; that they were going to make an example of the men,
-that others might take warning; that they were going to take them out
-far enough away that their stench would not annoy good Confederates.
-Accordingly, they started from the house, took them about one-half
-mile, stripped them naked, shot them to pieces, returned to the
-sheriff's house with the clothing, which was the uniform they had worn
-in the service, horse and mule and saddles which they had been riding;
-gave the mule to the sheriff, took the horse with them, published what
-they had done, and said that those men shouldn't be buried and that if
-any Confederate buried them, they would share the same fate.
-
-Capt. Alley, who had been a Confederate all through the war, but was
-an honest man and wanted to see the law enforced, informed Governor
-Fletcher of the condition of the county. Governor Fletcher at once
-appointed him an enrolling officer, ordering him to enroll and organize
-the county into militia companies, to form a posse-comitatus to aid the
-sheriff in enforcing the law. As soon as he received his commission, he
-rode into the different townships, put up his notices requesting the
-people to meet him for the purpose of enrolling. Jamison, with about
-forty men, rode into the township where his first meeting was to be,
-posted another written notice on the same tree, the purport of which
-was that if Capt. Alley, the old, white-headed scoundrel, appeared
-on the day to carry out the orders of the Governor, he would meet
-him and shoot his old head off his shoulders. Alley, being satisfied
-that he would carry out his threat, went to the place before daylight
-and concealed himself nearby. About 10 o'clock on the day appointed,
-Jamison and about forty followers came charging in on their horses,
-revolvers in hand, cursing and declaring that they would like to see
-the old white-headed scoundrel put in an appearance so they could make
-an example of him; that they didn't intend to let any man enforce the
-law against them. As soon as they retired Alley returned home and wrote
-to the Governor again, stating the acts, conduct and threats that
-Jamison had openly made, and that troops would have to be sent into the
-counties to aid him and others in organizing, so the civil law could be
-enforced. He asked the Governor to appoint Capt. Monks to command the
-troops which he might send.
-
-The author received a letter from the Governor informing him of the
-condition; also stated in the letter that while Howell county was
-peaceable and law abiding, that her citizens were not safe, by any
-means, while such a desperate band of outlaws were right at their very
-door, bidding defiance to the civil law, committing all manner of
-crimes from murder down and begging the author to consent to his being
-appointed Major of State troops; that he would make an order for the
-author to organize the men in the county of Howell and include Howell
-county in his order, declaring them to be under martial law especially
-when it had been requested by Capt. Alley, who had been a life-long
-Confederate. The author took the matter under advisement, and as
-Jamison, with his band of men, had threatened time and again to raid
-Howell county and kill the author with other Union men, he decided to
-give his consent to the Governor, wrote him while he reluctantly would
-consent to accept the appointment he had thought that he had discharged
-his duty in the late war and would not be required to take part in any
-further military operation.
-
-
-Colonel Monks Commissioned by the Governor.
-
-The governor at once appointed and commissioned the author Major of
-state troops and ordered him to at once proceed and organize a company
-of militia, and at the same time sent one hundred Springfield rifles
-and one hundred rounds of amunition for each gun. And soon as it was
-organized, he was to proceed to Oregon county, for the purpose of
-aiding and supporting Captain Alley who had been appointed enrolling
-officer of Oregon county, to enroll and form companies for the purpose
-of aiding the sheriff in enforcing the civil law. He was to pursue,
-arrest and drive out those roving bands of murderers from the counties
-of Oregon, Shannon and Dent. The author at once organized a company
-in Howell county, composed of men who had been in the Confederate and
-Federal service. On Jamison and others in Oregon county learning that
-the author had been appointed Major and that he was organizing, and the
-state was arming the men with orders to enter the counties of Oregon,
-Shannon and Dent to drive out the murdering bands and aid Captain Alley
-in organizing a posse comitatus to aid the sheriff in enforcing the
-civil law, they publicly declared that "old Monks might get into Oregon
-county but that he would never get out alive."
-
-At that time there was a secret order in the counties of Oregon and
-Shannon known as the Sons of Liberty. The author was informed that on a
-certain night they would hold a meeting on Warm fork of Spring river.
-The author made a forced march and, on reaching the place where they
-had assembled, surrounded the house and took all the inmates prisoners,
-among them being the sheriff of the county and a few other prominent
-men. The next morning Capt. Alley met the author, put up his notices
-ordering every man to come in and enroll his name. The author remained
-over the next day near the place, got in possession of their papers,
-with a secret oath placed upon them, and the aims and objects, binding
-themselves together to prevent the enforcement of the civil law, and
-further binding themselves to capture or take property from any man who
-had been in the Federal army, and, when it became necessary to enforce
-it, to shoot men down. They claimed to have lawyers connected with it,
-so that if they should be arrested they were to make a pretense of a
-trial and allow no man to go onto the jury except those who belonged to
-the order.
-
-Capt. Greer, who had been a Captain in the Confederate service all
-through the war, and afterwards was elected to the state legislature,
-remarked that, "I can soon tell whether those grips, obligations and
-oaths were in the organization known as the Sons of Liberty;" said
-that "Old Uncle Dickey" Boles, a short time previous, came to him and
-informed him that the Sons of Liberty were going to hold a meeting in a
-big sink on the mountain and they wanted him to come and join it; that
-he was looked upon as a business man and he didn't know anything about
-what was going on right at his door; that if he would come and join it,
-in a few years he would be a rich man. Capt. Greer said he replied to
-him, "Uncle Dickey, I have always been an honest man and have worked
-hard, and if a man can get rich in two or three years by joining that
-order, there must be something dishonest in it." Old Uncle Dickey
-replied: "You won't be in a bit of danger in joining it, for we are so
-organized that the civil law can't reach us." Capt. Greer said he had
-a son-in-law who was requested, at the same time he was, to attend the
-meeting, and that after the meeting he saw him and asked him what kind
-of an organization it was. He said his brother-in-law told him, "I dare
-not tell you; I took the bitterest oath that I have ever taken in my
-life not to reveal the workings of the order on penalty of death. But
-I will tell you enough; Captain, I know that you are an honest man and
-that that organization is a damn jay-hawking institution, and you want
-nothing to do with it." Captain Greer at once sent for his brother-in
-law; he came, and the signs, grips and by-laws that were captured at
-the place of the meeting were submitted to him and he said he believed
-they were word for word the same, and contained the very same oath that
-they swore him to on the night that he went to their meeting.
-
-The author was informed that Jamison was then lying in wait on the road
-that led from Warm Fork to Frederick Fork township, the next place
-where Alley had notified them to meet, waiting for the author to pass
-with his men, so that he might fire on them from the brush. Then the
-hardest task confronted the author that he ever had had to meet, to
-study out a plan to prevent Jamison firing on his men from the brush
-as he marched by. He held four men as prisoners, whom he knew were
-Jamison's right-hand bowers; he had just been informed that Jamison
-had a spy then on the ground to learn the time the author would break
-camp and move in the direction of Fredericks Fork. He ordered a wagon
-brought up with three spring seats, took the four prisoners and set
-them in the two front seats, tied a small rope around their bodies
-and around each seat, with two guards in the back seat; then arrested
-Jamison's spy, informed him what his business was, which he admitted
-and said that Jamison was lying in wait to learn what time I would move
-out, and that he intended to fire on me as soon as I came within reach.
-I took him to the wagon and asked him if he was acquainted with the
-prisoners. He said that he was. "Well," said I, "I am going to release
-you and I want you to go and tell Jamison that, just as certain as
-he fires from the brush and kills one of my men, I will retaliate by
-killing these four men, whom I know are his right-hand bowers." The
-author also wrote a letter containing the same statement, and sent
-another man, who was a Confederate, with Jamison's spy, to see that the
-message was delivered.
-
-On reaching Jamison, they delivered the message and informed him of
-what I had said, and told him that there was no possible chance for
-these men to escape, for there was a rope tied around each man's body
-and fastened to the spring seat, and they were also under a strong
-guard. The man who went to carry the dispatch said that after Jamison
-read it, he appeared to be in trouble and remarked: "Well, we will have
-to desist and not fire, for just as certain as we fire on him and kill
-some of his men, he is sure to kill our men." One of the prisoners,
-after he was placed in the wagon and heard the message sent to Jamison,
-remarked to the other prisoners: "We are dead men, for Jamison is sure
-to fire on them." We soon broke camp, and on reaching the place where
-Jamison had been waiting, saw the camp fire and where their horses had
-been tied and fed, but there was not a man to be seen, neither was
-there a gun fired.
-
-[Illustration: COL. AND MRS. MONKS AT CLOSE OF WAR.]
-
-On reaching Fredericks Fork township, Capt. Alley made a speech to the
-people and said, among other things, that the counties of Oregon and
-Shannon had been controlled by one of the most desperate class of men
-that ever lived. That they had ridden through the country on horseback,
-heavily armed, defying the enforcement of the civil law, intimidating
-the people, both Federal and Confederate alike, and committing all
-manner of crimes, robbing and murdering the people and boasting openly
-that the damn Confederacy was whipped, but that they were not and
-intended to live off the damn "Feds." Now the war is over and all good
-citizens, be they Federal or Confederate, should be in favor of the
-enforcement of the civil law. "I am ordered by the governor of the
-state to enroll all able-bodied men in the county to form a posse to
-aid the sheriff in enforcing the law in Oregon county; I am to organize
-companies to enforce the civil law. These bushwhackers and thieves have
-terrorized this county long enough. The governor has sent Capt. Monks,
-a man who is not afraid of bushwhackers and thieves, into this county
-to arrest these bushwhackers, thieves and murderers and bring them to
-justice. If the people of this county want the civil law enforced,
-they should aid Capt. Monks and his men to hunt these fellows down and
-either arrest them or drive them from the county. Our people have been
-present and saw these men commit all manner of crimes, from murder down
-to the smallest crime known to the criminal code. They have done this
-openly and the people were afraid to open their mouths or say a word
-against it, on penalty of death. I wrote the governor, stating the
-condition of affairs in this county, that neither person nor property
-were safe, and to send Capt. Monks to this county. And he has sent him
-and we have got the right man in the right place."
-
-One of the prominent men of Oregon county went to Jefferson City to
-see the governor to procure the removal of the writer and have Col.
-A. J. Sea appointed in his place. He said to the governor that Capt.
-Monks was arresting some of the best men in Oregon county and had
-them prisoners. The governor showed him some of Capt. Alley's letters
-that he had written to the governor. The letters stated among other
-things that persons and property were at the mercy of these desperadoes
-and the county was being terrorized by James Jamison and his men;
-that they were robbing whom they pleased openly; that a day or two
-before he, Alley, wrote the letter, that Jamison shot a man's brains
-out in Thomasville, and dared any man to say he was in favor of the
-enforcement of the civil law, that he would serve him the same way. The
-governor asked him if those things were true, and he replied that they
-were; the governor said to him: "You are a leading man in that county
-and a citizen of Thomasville and never a word have you written to me
-that such terror and lawlessness existed in your county." He replied
-"Governor, I was afraid to." The governor replied to him, "when I send
-a man down there that is not afraid to handle those men without gloves,
-then here you come with a howl. Now I expected when I sent Capt. Monks
-down there, if he did his duty, that there would be a howl raised; I
-am satisfied that he is doing his duty. I am responsible for his acts
-and you men want to get rid of him; go home and tell your people to
-organize companies under Captain Alley and aid Captain Monks and his
-men in arresting and driving those bushwhackers and bandits out of your
-country and whenever Captain Monks reports to me that the person and
-property of your citizens are secure and that the civil law is being
-enforced, he will be removed, and not before."
-
-They then employed Colonel A. J. Sea as an attorney. Some time during
-the night, while we were encamped on Fredericks Fork, some of the
-soldiers took the sheriff out and put a rope around his neck to make
-him tell where the bones of two soldiers were, who were murdered by
-Jamison and his men. He admitted that he knew where the bones of the
-two Federal soldiers were; that after they shot them Jamison gave him
-the mule and saddle that one man was riding; that he was afraid not
-to take them and promised as soon as the command reached Thomasville
-to go and show the bones. On the next morning after our arrival at
-Thomasville I procured a big box and placed it in a wagon and brought
-the sheriff from the guard house and set him on a box under a strong
-guard. About that time Colonel A. J. Sea came up and asked what we were
-going to do with that man. I told him "That is my business; when you
-was in the military service did you inform the civilians of your object
-and aims? You are a civilian now and I will give you five minutes to
-get outside of the lines or you will go into the guard house." He took
-me at my word and left at once.
-
-[Illustration: COLLECTING BONES OF TWO FEDERAL SOLDIERS SHOT BY COL.
-JAMISON AND MEN IN OREGON COUNTY.]
-
-The sheriff piloted the scout to the bones of the men that had been
-murdered, and the sheriff, aided by the scout, picked up the bones and
-placed them in the box. On examination it was found that three bullets
-had passed through one of the skulls, and the other skull appeared to
-have been shot all to pieces. I brought the bones in and caused them to
-be buried in a cemetery, about one mile west of Thomasville.
-
-Captain Alley had completed the organization of two companies, one
-commanded by Captain Lasley and the other by Captain Bledsaw. The
-companies were mostly composed of men who had been late Confederates,
-as there were very few Union men in the county. They immediately fell
-in with my soldiers and a vigorous search was at once made for Jamison
-and his men. Being aided by men who were thoroughly acquainted with the
-county and knew just where to look for Jamison and his cut-throats,
-they agreed to keep on Jamison's track and arrest him and his men if
-possible, in Oregon county. I moved my troops up into Shannon county to
-prevent Jamison and his men from crossing over into Shannon and scouted
-that county to keep them from hiding there. The Oregon county companies
-shot and killed some of them and arrested others. Jameson and the
-others left the county and never have returned to it since.
-
-But they left some of their sympathizers in the county, and the
-only weapons left them were their tongues; having no conscience or
-principle, and instigated by the wicked one, they began lying and
-preferring all manner of charges against the writer and his men who
-went into the county and, by the aid of the law-abiding citizens, drove
-out and arrested one of the worst set of men that ever lived, the
-savage not excepted, and restored the civil law, so that every citizen
-was secure in person and property.
-
-The writer informed the governor that a large majority of the
-citizens, both Confederate and Federal, had nobly responded to his
-call, had organized two companies of militia to aid the sheriff in the
-enforcement of the civil law; Jamison and his bushwhackers had either
-been arrested, killed or driven from the county, and the strong arm of
-the military law was not needed any longer.
-
-On December 25, 1867, the writer was ordered by the governor to
-withdraw his forces from the counties that had been placed under
-martial law and declare the civil law to be in full force and effect. I
-accordingly returned to Howell county and disbanded my soldiers.
-
-During my march and stay in the counties of Oregon and Shannon, it was
-admitted by all honorable Confederates that I had enforced a strict
-discipline over my men and protected all classes of citizens in person
-and property, had paid the people for all forage and commissaries that
-were required for the soldiers, and had driven out the worst set of
-bushwhackers, thieves and murderers that ever lived.
-
-
-
-
-REMINISCENCES.
-
-
-In the spring of 1866 the loyal men had mostly returned to their homes;
-among them, Benjamin Alsup, who had been taken prisoner by the rebels
-in 1861 and confined in the penitentiary at Little Rock, Ark. He was
-released in 1865, when peace was made. There was but one house left in
-West Plains, an old school house about one-quarter of a mile east of
-the town spring, which was used for a court house. Judge Van Wormer,
-who resided at Rolla, was judge of the circuit court and Mr. Perry
-was circuit attorney. A short time after the return of Mr. Alsup, a
-public meeting of the loyal men was called, signed by several loyal
-men. At the date set the writer was present. The meeting was called to
-order and Mr. Alsup was elected chairman. He stated the object of the
-meeting, and among other things said: "The rebels have hung, murdered,
-imprisoned and driven all the Union men from their homes, and _by the
-living_, they didn't intend that a single rebel should live inside the
-limits of Howell county." He was in favor of giving them ten days'
-notice to leave the county, and if they were not gone by that time,
-to shoot them down wherever found. Someone introduced a resolution
-that the rebels be notified to leave with their families inside of ten
-days or they would force them to leave. The resolution was seconded,
-I got the floor and spoke as follows: "If that course is pursued, it
-will ruin the county; peace has been made and Gen. Grant has ordered
-the rebels to return home and become good citizens. Admitting that
-everything Mr. Alsup has said is true and we were to turn around and
-do the same that they did, we would be just as guilty as they were, and
-it would be a question of might and not of right; and I want to say
-here now, if any man injures a late rebel, except in self-defense or in
-defense of his family or property, I will prosecute him to the bitter
-end of the law." Mr. Alsup called another man to the chair and replied
-to what I had said, saying: "_By the living_, I am surprised at Captain
-Monks, a man who has been treated by the rebels as he has, who now gets
-up here and says he will defend the rebels; _by the living_, I want
-Capt. Monks to understand right here, now, that if any loyal man kills
-a rebel and has to leave the country, and has no horse to ride, I will
-furnish him a good horse to ride off on; and _by the living_, let him
-prosecute me; he will have a sweet time of it." The next man that took
-the floor was a Mr. Hall, who resided about eight miles south of West
-Plains. He said: "I am just like Uncle Ben; if any loyal man kills a
-rebel and has to leave the country, I will furnish him a good horse to
-ride off on, and let Captain Monks prosecute me if he wants to; I don't
-think it would be healthy for him to prosecute me for killing a rebel
-or helping a man who did kill one." The resolution was put to a vote
-and lost by a good majority.
-
-Later in the spring, there was a man by the name of Finley living
-seven or eight miles south of West Plains; the family was composed
-of husband and wife, both of them about sixty-five years of age, a
-daughter of twenty-two years and a son of about eleven. They had been
-rebels, but were very quiet and peaceable citizens; they were residing
-on government land, had good improvements and a good orchard. There
-was a man by the name of Frederick Baker who had homesteaded the land
-Mr. Finley was living on. Baker notified Finley to leave in ten days;
-if not out in that time, they would be killed. Mr. Finley wanted pay
-for his improvements before giving possession. At the expiration of ten
-days, very early in the morning Mrs. Finley went into the lot to milk
-the cows; Baker slipped up to the lot and with a Colt's revolver shot
-the old lady dead. The daughter saw her mother fall, ran to her, and he
-shot her; she fell by the side of her mother. The old man ran to the
-door, reached up to get his gun out of the rack, when Baker placed his
-pistol against his body and shot him dead. The pistol was so close to
-Finley when discharged that the powder set his clothes on fire. The boy
-was the only one of the family left; he ran to the nearest neighbor for
-help and when they got back to the house they found the old man and his
-wife dead and the daughter shot through the breast, maimed for life.
-The old man's clothes were still on fire when the neighbors arrived.
-
-Hall made his words good for he furnished Baker with a first-class
-horse, saddle and bridle, to leave the country on and aided Baker in
-making his escape. As soon as the writer learned of the murder he
-caused an affidavit to be made and procured a warrant for the arrest
-of Baker and had it put into the hands of the sheriff and did all in
-his power to cause Baker's arrest, but by the aid given him by Hall
-and others he made his escape. The writer reported the murder to the
-Governor and the Governor offered a reward of three hundred dollars for
-Baker's body, dead or alive. Baker never was arrested.
-
-The writer was appointed assistant prosecuting attorney by Mr. Perry,
-who was Circuit Attorney at that time. After I qualified I caused
-an affidavit to be made against Mr. Hall charging him with being an
-accessory to the murder before the fact and caused his arrest. I was at
-once notified that if I attempted to prosecute Hall I would meet the
-same fate as the Finley family. Hall was arrested, and the day set for
-his preliminary trial at the school-house east of town. On the day
-set for trial there were quite a number of persons present; the writer
-appeared, armed with a good pistol, laid it by his side during the
-progress of the trial; it was proven by the state that he, Hall, was
-guilty as charged. The justice held him over to wait the action of the
-grand jury and ordered him to enter into a recognizance of two thousand
-dollars for his appearance at the next term of the Howell county
-circuit court, which he readily filled and was released. Soon after his
-release he took the fever and died. Baker never was captured. It was
-one among the dirtiest murders that ever was committed in Howell county.
-
-Gen. McBride, before the war, resided in Texas county, on a farm, and
-was circuit judge of the 18th judicial circuit, which included Howell
-county. He enlisted in the Confederate army and was placed in command
-of the Confederate troops at West Plains. The Union men well remember
-his famous order, given in the spring of 1861, that all Union men join
-the Confederate service, and if they didn't join the Confederate army
-he would hang them as high as Haman. After his term of service expired,
-he moved his family to near Batesville, Ark., where he resided up to
-near the close of the war. He was taken sick and died in the spring of
-1866. Some of the friends of the widow in Texas county sent after her
-and her family to bring them back to her farm. Reaching West Plains on
-their return, they were out of money and provisions. They asked the
-people to help them and a donation was taken up for her in West Plains;
-I donated five dollars to help her back to her home in Texas county.
-
-After the loyal men had returned to their homes and the civil law had
-been fully restored I brought suits by attachment against the following
-persons, to-wit: William Nicks, N. Barnett, for aiding the parties in
-arresting and taking me from my home and abusing me while a prisoner.
-I attached their real estate which was well improved and valuable;
-procured a judgement of $8,000.00 against said real estate, procured
-an execution and ordered the sale of said real estate. Before the time
-for the sale Barnett and William Nicks came to me and admitted that
-Barnett was 1st Lieutenant and Nicks 2nd Lieutenant of Capt. Forshee's
-Confederate company, while I was held prisoner by said company and that
-I was shamefully and cruelly treated while a prisoner, but they were
-sorry for what they had done and hoped I would forgive them. Nicks
-further said to me, that he had saved my life; that while I was a
-prisoner, he overheard some of the Confederate soldiers agree that on
-the next night while I was asleep they would slip up and shoot me in
-the head, and he got his blankets and came and slept with me. I knew
-that Nicks brought his blanket and slept with me one night, but did not
-know why he did it.
-
-Nicks and Barnett further said, "Captain you have us completely at
-your mercy; we believe you are a good man and we were friends before
-the war. You have a judgement against our homes and if you sell them
-you will turn us and our families out of doors and leave us destitute
-without any homes for our wives and children." I said, "I know it is
-hard, for my wife and children were driven from their homes because
-they were loyal to their government; but children shouldn't be held
-responsible for the acts of their parents and I will say to you now
-that I won't sell your homes, I will give them to your wives and
-children; we are commanded in the best book of all books to do good for
-evil; you men can each one pay me a small sum for expenses and I will
-satisfy judgement." Barnett paid me $150. Nicks made a deed to some tax
-lands and I entered satisfaction on the judgements. They both said to
-me that they ever would be grateful for what I had done for them.
-
-The country began to settle up and the people, irrespective of past
-associations, formed new ones, especially the sons and daughters of
-those who wore the blue and the gray, and seemed to forget that they
-had ever been enemies. As time sped on these attachments ripened into
-love. I had but two daughters living. Nancy E. Monks, the oldest,
-married V. P. Renfrow, the son of a Confederate; they have two
-children, a son, Charles, and a daughter, Mattie M., now grown. Mary M.
-Monks, who married H. D. Green, whose father, a Confederate colonel,
-died in the service. They have five children living and one dead, one
-girl and four boys. Their children are Mattie E., now Mattie E. Bugg;
-Will H. D., Frank, Russell and Dick. Adeline Turner, whom I had raised,
-married Jacob Schoffler, a Union soldier, and has ten children, four
-boys and six girls. Abraham Roach, a boy who had made his home with me
-since infancy, married Mattie Hunt, a daughter of Jesse Hunt, a Union
-soldier, has three children living, two girls and one boy, Maggie,
-Frank and Bernice. I don't believe that there is any person that loves
-their children better than I do, and I don't see any difference between
-my grandchildren and my own children. I love my sons-in-law as well
-as my own children; I love the girl and boy that I raised, and their
-families feel as near to me as my own. They are flesh of our flesh and
-bone of our bone, and our highest duty to God and them is to teach them
-patriotism and loyalty to their government and that their first duty is
-to God and their second duty to their country.
-
-[Illustration: FRANK GREEN AND CHARLES RENFROW.]
-
-God forbid that we ever have any more civil war. War is the enemy of
-good society, degrades the morals of the people, causes rapine and
-murder, destroys thousands of lives, brings misery and trouble upon the
-whole people, creates a government debt that our children will not see
-paid, makes friends enemies. God forbid that any more sectional strife
-ever may grow up among the people; may there be no North, no South, no
-East, no West, but let it be a government of the whole people, for the
-people and by the people. May the time speedily come when the civilized
-nations of the earth will know war no more; when the civilized nations
-meet in an international congress, pass an international law that all
-differences between nations shall be settled by arbitration. May this
-nation in truth and in deed become a Christian nation and every man
-speak the truth to his neighbor and adopt the Golden Rule, "Do unto
-others as you would have them do unto you."
-
-I take pleasure in giving the names of some of the loyal men who
-resided in Howell county in 1861, at the commencement of the Civil war,
-who stood for the Union in the dark hour when patriotism and loyalty to
-country were tested: John McDaniel, sr., John McDaniel, jr., Jonathan
-Youngblood, George Youngblood, David Nicholass, Thomas Wallace,
-Martin Keel, Thomas Nicholass, Newton Bond, William Hardcastle, Siras
-Newberry, William Newberry, David Henson, John Black, sr., Daniel
-Black, Peter Lamons, John Lamons, Solomon Lamons, Thomas Lamons, Thomas
-Brisco, Morton Langston, Stephen Woodward, Seth P. Woodward, Dr. D. D.
-Emmons, Alfred Mustion, W. D. Mustion, John Mustion, Wesley Cordell,
-Hugh Cordell, William Maroney, Henry Maroney, Collins Coffey, John
-Coffey, William Coffey, John Chapin, Silas Chapin, Benjamin Alsup,
-Andrew Smith, Andrew V. Tabor, Josiah Carrico, Josephus Carrico, John
-Dent, Esau Fox, Thomas O. Brown, Jacob Shoffler, Thomas Rice, sr.,
-Thomas Rice, jr., John W. Rice, Nathaniel Briggs, Captain Lyle, ----
-Rhodes, Jesse Hunt, Joseph Spears, James West, Jesse West, Dent West,
-Thomas Kelley.
-
-I will give the names of a few of the men of Douglas county who
-remained loyal to their country in 1861: Joseph Wheat, John Wheat,
-Ervin King, John Coats, Locke Alsup, William Alsup, Thomas Alsup, Jack
-Alsup, Shelt Alsup, Aaron Collins, William Collins, Toodie Collins, Doc
-Huffman, Jariah Huffman, Madison Huffman, William Huffman.
-
-I will give the names of a few of the men who resided in Ozark county,
-at the commencement of the war, who remained loyal to their country in
-the dark days when it tried men's souls to be loyal: James Kellet, sr.,
-Marion Kellett, Washington Hawkins. Jesse James, William James, ----
-Brown, R. R. Gilliland, Nace Turley, Washington Webster, Dick Webster,
-Macajar Foster, Jacob Foster, Henry Saunders, Stephen Saunders, Allan
-Saunders, Alexander Huffman, James Hall, Bennett James.
-
-I would love to have space to tell of the patriotism, heroism and
-devotion to their country, besides their good citizenship, of the men
-of Howell, Douglas and Ozark counties, but suffice it to say that there
-never was the same number of men, at any time, who made more sacrifices
-for the preservation of their country than did these men in its darkest
-hour. These patriots are growing old and will soon be gone and their
-lips closed in death, and there will not be one left to tell of their
-sacrifices and the services they rendered to their country in its
-extreme need. History only will tell of the hardships, privations and
-service that they rendered to the government. Will there be no history
-left to tell of the heroism and devotion to their country in its
-darkest hour? The answer will come from ten thousand tongues that their
-history shall be written and go down to our children's children, that
-they may learn of the heroism, privation and sacrifice that was made
-by those brave men and women, that their country might live and not a
-star be dropped from its banner. While history is being written and
-monuments being erected to the Confederate soldiers for heroism, shall
-we be so ungrateful to the loyal men and women, after they are dead and
-gone, and not tell the rising generation of the heroism and sacrifice
-they have made, that their country might live? The answer will come
-from every loyal heart: No; a thousand times no; it shall be written
-and perpetuated for generations not yet born.
-
-
-Has Known Col. Monks Thirty Years.
-
-I have known William Monks for thirty years or more. I have been in
-court with him and a more kind and obliging man I never knew or had
-dealings with. He is very considerate in regard to the feelings of
-others, always willing to help those who need help. In later life he
-joined the church and preached; since he began the Christian life,
-I have never heard of any conduct that was not in conformity to his
-profession of Christianity. Had he had the school advantages that
-others have had, he would have been a power in the community where he
-lived.
-
-The writer of this was born in Lancaster county, Pennsylvania, April
-first, 1824. His father immigrated west and landed in Pittsburg in
-1837. Then the writer of this migrated southwest and finally landed
-in Tennessee. At Springfield he met Catherine Ebbert, or Abbott, as
-they now call it, and married her March 20, 1856. She was born in
-Reeseville, Kentucky, and is still living, aged 76 years last January.
-
- J. B. WINGER,
-
- West Plains, Mo.
-
-[Illustration: MR. AND MRS. J. B. WINGER.]
-
-
-Dr. Dixon's Long Acquaintance.
-
-I will state that I came to Howell county in the year 1866 and settled
-on Hutton Valley near where the town of Willow Springs now is. The
-present townsite was then a small field without a fence and one small
-log cabin. I followed the practice of medicine up to the present date.
-I was 83 years old the 20th of August, 1906, and the picture I send you
-was taken when I was 81 years old. I was born in McMinn county, East
-Tennessee, and remained there until I was eleven years old when I left
-there and have gone through many changes and experiences since then.
-I served in the Mexican war. I married near Louisville, Ky., in 1849.
-My wife is still living and is nearly eighty-five years of age and in
-pretty fair health.
-
-I will state that I have known Col. Wm. Monks and wife for over forty
-years and know them to be good and true people. I will further state
-that there were said to be but seventy-eight families in the entire
-county of Howell, and four families in the town of West Plains in May,
-1866 and Col. Wm. Monks was one of the four. Now I believe there is
-a population in West Plains of over 4,000 and there is room for many
-more. This is an educational town, fine colleges and high schools
-besides quite a number of ward schools houses, almost entirely built of
-brick. Schools last about nine months in the year.
-
- Respectfully yours,
-
- DR. J. C. B. DIXON,
-
- West Plains, Mo.
-
-[Illustration: DR. J. C. B. DIXON.]
-
-
-Union Woman Leaves Arkansas for Missouri.
-
-Mrs. Giddens, a widow, before the war resided in Conway county,
-Arkansas. She had two sons, Brad and John, who were about grown at
-the commencement of the war. This was a Union family and these two
-boys, with others, kept themselves hid until the Confederates issued
-a general order to hunt down all Union men and either force them to
-join the Confederate army or hang them. The boys at once saw that they
-would be arrested and forced into the Confederate service. They held a
-consultation with their mother and decided to try to reach the Federal
-lines near Rolla.
-
-Their mother took a couple of wagons with a large yoke of oxen to each
-wagon, and loaded them with her household goods, wearing apparel and
-provisions to last them through. In the spring of 1864 they started
-for Rolla. The boys traveled at night until they reached Missouri, and
-on reaching Taney county they met some Federal troops and made their
-way to Rolla, where they enlisted and joined the 16th U. S. Cavalry
-Volunteers, and were attached to company K, commanded by Capt. Monks,
-and served until peace was made and they were honorably discharged at
-Springfield. Both of them are still living and are active ministers of
-the church of Christ.
-
-[Illustration: S. B. GIDDENS AND WIFE, MARY DEWETT AND STILLEN
-STELLMAN.]
-
-Their mother aimed to reach Rolla by way of West Plains, and on
-reaching Howell county, near what is known as the Newt Bond farm, the
-bushwhackers stopped her wagons and robbed her, and ordered her to
-exchange her large cattle for smaller ones and her large wagon for a
-small, light wagon, so that the small cattle could pull it. Finally,
-after being stopped several times by the Confederate authorities, she
-reached Rolla and found that her sons had enlisted in the Federal army.
-She saw the stars and stripes unfurled and it appeared like a complete
-change of country. Here she located and remained until her sons were
-discharged from the United States service.
-
- SAMUEL B. GIDDENS.
-
- Summerville, Mo.
-
- * * * * *
-
-All Union families were forced to leave Texas county. The illustration
-contains the pictures of S. B. Giddens and wife, who were driven out;
-also Mrs. Mary Dewett, now over seventy years of age, who was forced to
-leave all she had and flee for her life; Mrs. Stillen Stellman, whose
-father went to Rolla and got the Federal soldiers to guard him while he
-removed his family.
-
-
-Union Men Killed in Izard County, Ark.
-
- Moody, Mo., September 26, 1906.
-
-Prior to and when the war of the rebellion broke out the writer of
-this article was a citizen of Izard county, Arkansas; the few loyal
-people that lived in North Arkansas, had a hope that war would be
-averted and when Ft. Sumter was fired upon they realized the awful
-condition and consequences of war at their very doors; those who
-favored a dissolution of the states had given notice in no uncertain
-way. And when the news was flashed over the country that there had
-been a clash of arms, the persecution of the loyal people began in
-the South and Central states by those that favored secession. They
-organized themselves into companies and went from house to house
-notifying all those that seemed not to take sides either way, that the
-time had come when the sheep and goats had to be separated. The Union
-element was arrested and many were sent to the penitentiary at Little
-Rock, Arkansas, from the counties of Izard, Fulton and Independence.
-Those people were robbed and plundered as long as there was anything
-worth taking and some of them, after they had got all the Union people
-had, commenced arresting and hanging the Union men. They arrested a
-young man and placed a halter around his neck to hang him; he broke
-loose from them and he was run one mile before he was caught; then he
-was taken to a stooping ash tree and hung. The writer was creditably
-informed that a man who was a prominent member of the Baptist church,
-scratched the dirt from under his toes in order that he might hang
-clear of the ground. I have seen the tree he was hanged on many times.
-
-Another brutal murder was perpetrated upon the person of Rube Hudson,
-a Union man who had been run from home and returned home in the winter
-of 1865; from an exposure, he took sick with pneumonia; his wife had
-secreted him under the floor near the chimney and fire place; the news
-got out that he was at home, the rebels raided his house; every thing
-in the way of beds and what little they had left was turned upside
-down and they gave up the hunt and started away; a spell of coughing
-came on him, for he was very ill and he was heard coughing by them and
-they came back and tore up the floor and found him; they dragged him
-out and took him about one hundred yards from the house; there he was
-beaten and hung to make him tell of others who might have come with
-him; finally he was hung and shot to death, where the family could hear
-him pleading for his life; he made a special appeal to one of his near
-neighbors calling his name and asking him to intercede for him and save
-him. The only consolation he got was "you are a goner, Rube; you are a
-goner, Rube," he was left hanging for the family to cut down and bury.
-He met his death for no other cause than that of being a staunch Union
-man.
-
-Another bloodcurdling murder was perpetrated upon the person of Minor
-White, for no other cause than that of being loyal to his country.
-He was honest and upright in his dealings with his fellowmen, but he
-was arrested, taken to the county seat of Izard county, tried and was
-released. Before he started home a friend told him not to go the road
-for they would follow him and kill him, he said: "I have always been
-free to speak my sentiments; I have done nothing that I have to slip
-back home through the woods. I am going to take the public highway, if
-I am killed." He was overtaken about a mile out by the mob that took
-him there; he was shot and otherwise mutilated and left hanging to a
-tree.
-
-I could mention many things that were done to the Union men and women
-in Northern Arkansas that make me shudder to think of, and if I were to
-undertake to relate all that came under my own observation, and many
-incidents that took place in the counties mentioned that were related
-to me by others who are entitled to credit for honor and truth. There
-was not a Union family left at home in the counties above referred to.
-
-I am opposed to war on general principles: first, it never settles the
-issue; second, it is always a poor man's fight and a rich man's fuss;
-third, if the poor soldier is fortunate enough to get back alive, the
-debt is his to pay.
-
- J. M. DIXON.
-
-[Illustration: ADMINISTERING KUKLUX OATH.]
-
-
-
-
-THE KUKLUX
-
-
-The lawless bands that had been roving through the counties of Howell,
-Oregon, Shannon and Dent had been captured, killed or driven out of
-these counties by the officers of the law, aided by the militia forces
-of the state. All classes of persons and men of every political faith
-were secure in their person and property. The civil law was enforced
-to the letter and the people generally looked to the bright future of
-Missouri.
-
-In the fall of 1868, in the month of September during a political
-campaign that was being made in Howell county, while a political
-speaking was going on at Black's store in Benton township in the
-southwest part of the county, a courier came with a dispatch stating
-that Captain Simpson Mason, registering officer of Fulton county,
-Arkansas, had been shot and killed from ambush, near the state line
-adjoining Howell county, by men who styled themselves Kuklux, and had
-ordered all Union men, and especially the officers of the law, to keep
-inside of their doors and to tender their resignations as such officers
-or they would fare the same as Mason had. It was stated that the
-law-abiding citizens were without arms and that the Kuklux were raiding
-the whole country; the whole country was being terrorized by said men
-and in God's name asked us to come and bring men and arms to aid the
-civil officers to enforce the law. The writer advised the people to be
-cool; that if there was an organization in the state of Arkansas to
-overturn the state government and the loyal people of said state were
-helpless, since the rebels at the commencement of the Civil war had had
-no regard for state lines I thought that we would have the same right
-to go down and help our loyal brethern to enforce the civil law.
-
-A committee of twelve men was selected to say what action we would
-take; among the committee were Benjamin Alsup, Rev. Adam Wright, Rev.
-John Collins, David Nicholass. Old men were placed on the committee.
-The committee retired to deliberate upon the matter, and in a short
-time returned and made the following report: "That we, the loyal
-people of Howell county, go at once with all available men and arms."
-The writer had in his possession at that time one hundred Springfield
-rifles, with one thousand rounds of cartridges for each gun. During the
-night and the next day about seventy-five men were organized into a
-temporary company and were placed under the command of Uncle Benjamin
-Alsup. On the night following we made a forced march reaching the
-Widow Pickrum's farm, situated on Bennet's river, in Fulton county,
-Arkansas, the next morning. We found Captain Richardson, with one
-company of state guards, fortified in a barn. On our arrival we offered
-our services to Captain Richardson, which were readily accepted. They
-were looking for an attack to be made by the Kuklux at any moment, as
-Colonel Tracy was said to be at Jackson Port with three hundred and
-fifty well armed Kuklux.
-
-While waiting for further orders from Governor Clayton a vigorous
-search was commenced for the murderers of Captain Mason. We soon
-learned that on the day previous to the murder of Mason he was
-registering the voters on the Big North Fork, at what was known as
-the Calhoun mill, and on the next day he was to meet the people at
-the Harbor Precinct for registration. And on the previous night the
-Kuklux, according to a general move that was to be made throughout the
-state, met at Colonel Tracy's, at the Widow Pickrum farm. Among them
-were Colonel Tracy, Dow Bryant, U. R. Bush, and about forty others;
-they selected about twenty men to do the shooting and divided them into
-three bunches and erected three blinds, as they did not know which road
-Captain Mason might travel. They placed about seven well armed men in
-each blind, who had been sworn by the Kuklux and after they had been
-placed in their blinds one of the men who did the shooting said, "Let
-him come; I am sure to get him for I can hit an old gobbler's neck that
-distance." The blind was erected where the road made a short curve with
-very thick brush on the left side of the road. When Captain Mason and
-posse had approached within about thirty yards of the blind they fired
-a volley, five of the shots taking effect in Mason's body. Captain
-Mason fell from his horse and expired in a few moments. The assassins
-fled through a thick bottom growth. Bryant, Bush, and two or three
-others were arrested, charged with being a part of the men who did the
-shooting. They were arrested by the state guards, as the civil officers
-were afraid to issue a single warrant on account of the threats of the
-Kuklux. On an investigation it was proven that Tracy, Bryant, Bush and
-about forty others were present the night before Mason's murder. And
-that Bush was the man who remarked after he had gone into the blind
-"Let him come. I can get him. I can hit an old gobbler's neck that far."
-
-In the meantime, the governor had gotten a dispatch through to
-Capt. Richardson that the Kuklux in large numbers were organizing
-and threatening to attack the state officers; that he and the state
-officers were barricaded in the state house and that he was organizing
-the state guards as fast as possible. Capt. Richardson was ordered to
-recruit every available man and protect the civil officers as far as
-possible; that he had made arrangements to send arms and ammunition
-up White river on a boat. I suggested to Benjamin Alsup and others
-who had come down from Missouri that the only way we could make our
-acts legal would be to join the state guards and be mustered into the
-state service, to which proposition my old friend Alsup objected and
-remarked: "That's the way with Monks; he is afraid he will hurt some
-rebel, contrary to law. Now, by the living, I came down here to hang
-some of these old rebels and murderers to the first limb we come to,
-and if we have to join the state guards and wait on the civil and
-military law to punish them, they never will be punished. I am going
-back to Missouri." About two-thirds of the men who came down enlisted
-in the state service; Alsup and others returned to Missouri.
-
-As soon as Governor Clayton learned that the writer had come into the
-state with men and arms, he sent another dispatch stating that he
-and all the law-abiding people of the state would ever be grateful
-to him for furnishing men and arms at a time when they were entirely
-helpless and at the mercy of a secret and bloodthirsty enemy, bent on
-overthrowing the state government; that if I would remain in the state
-with my men and arms he would make me lieutenant-colonel of the seventh
-regiment of state guards.
-
-We were watching the movements of the Kuklux, and in about eight
-or ten days after the murder of Capt. Mason, late one evening, the
-deputy sheriff of the county came to headquarters and informed Capt.
-Richardson that there were three hundred and fifty Kuklux, well armed,
-in camp at Salem, the county seat of Fulton county, and intended to
-attack Capt. Richardson before day, the next morning; they had ordered
-him, the deputy sheriff, under penalty of death, to bring Bush and
-turn him over to them. A brief consultation was held by the officers,
-and being satisfied that they were not able to meet the force of Kuklux
-then marching upon them, it was agreed that the writer should take the
-men from Missouri and recruit men for the service and get all the arms
-and ammunition that were left at home and return with all possible
-speed. In the meantime, they would retreat to some secluded place and
-watch the movements of the Kuklux. They turned Bush over to the deputy
-sheriff and he started in the direction of Salem, and Capt. Richardson
-broke camp and retreated. The deputy sheriff had not traveled more than
-two miles when a posse of armed men met him and demanded Bush, and he,
-supposing that they were a part of the Kuklux command, turned him over.
-They took him about two hundred yards and shot him to death. The next
-morning, before daylight, Col. Tracy charged upon the late camp of
-Capt. Richardson, but found it had been vacated.
-
-The Kuklux began a regular, organized system of raiding the Union men's
-houses, especially the officers of the civil law, posting written
-notices, ordering their resignations at once, and if they attempted the
-arrest of any Kuklux, death would be the penalty. They posted a picture
-of a coffin with the notice, at the same time ordering all influential
-Union men to leave the state at once, under the penalty of death. In
-about two weeks the governor ordered a part of the seventh regiment of
-state guards to Fulton county, to be stationed on Bennett's river, and
-to complete the organization of the regiment with all possible speed;
-Col. Dail was placed in command.
-
-After my return home, I organized three companies, commanded by Capt.
-F. M. Monks, Capt. Nicolas and Capt. Rice. About three days after the
-regiment reached Fulton county, the writer rejoined his regiment with
-three companies, one hundred Springfield rifles and one thousand
-rounds of cartridges for each gun, and soon completed the organization
-of the regiment; he was commissioned lieutenant-colonel of the regiment.
-
-The governor had sent arms and ammunition up White river, but the
-Kuklux captured and sunk the boat with all the arms and ammunition. The
-governor said that my arrival saved the north part of the state from
-the control of the Kuklux, as he would not have been able to procure
-arms for months. The regiment began an active campaign at once, by
-which they came into possession of the intentions, aims, secrets and
-oaths of the order; found that the order extended up into Missouri,
-along the state line. It was a complete military organization. The
-intention was to overturn the state government by intimidating the
-civil officers of the state, and with this purpose in view they
-procured a human skull and two thigh bones, and while the member was
-looking on these bones the following oath was administered by the grand
-cyclops:
-
-"We (or I, as the case might be) do solemnly swear before Almighty God
-and these witnesses, and looking upon these human bones, that I will
-obey and carry into effect every order made by any cyclops or assistant
-cyclops, and if I fail to strictly conform and execute every order
-made as above required of me, unless I am prevented from some cause
-which shall be no fault of mine, or if I shall give any information to
-any person or persons except members of this order, that the doom of
-all traitors shall be meted out to me, and that my bones may become
-as naked and dry as the bones I am looking upon. And I take this oath
-voluntarily, without any mental reservation or evasion whatever, for
-the causes set out in said order, so help me God."
-
-After the oath had been taken the persons taking said oath were
-ready for duty. The intentions and aims of this organization were to
-intimidate the civil officers and, if necessary to the accomplishment
-of their aims, to kill and murder all officers of the state by
-assassination or drive them from the state. All civil officers of
-the state were at once notified to tender their resignations and to
-cease to discharge their official duties as peace officers, and if
-they failed to comply with said order, death would be the penalty The
-governor and all the state officers received the same order; all Union
-men that were influential in the state were ordered to keep themselves
-in doors or be driven from the state, or be murdered by assassination.
-The following words, with pictures of coffins, were attached to said
-notices:
-
-"If you fail to comply with this notice, this coffin will be your final
-resting place."
-
-The Kuklux organization, having but one object and aim, to turn the
-state government over to the control of the late rebels or Democratic
-party of the state, was a complete secret military organization with
-the most desperate means to-wit: Murder, by assassination whenever
-ordered by a cyclops or assistant cyclops.
-
-A grand cyclops took the place of a colonel. An assistant cyclops
-lieutenant-colonel. An order from one of these officers to shoot any
-man was final, from which there was no appeal; and men were selected to
-execute said order by the most desperate oath known to man or history.
-This kind of warfare, being inaugurated throughout the whole state,
-with a thorough understanding that their organization would revolt
-against the civil authorities of the state government, and had the day
-set throughout the whole state.
-
-On the same day that Captain Simson Mason was assassinated in Fulton
-county, Ku-Klux attempted to assassinate Governor Clayton in Little
-Rock. They were seen in considerable numbers near the state capitol,
-after night, all wearing masks. They notified the governor, that they
-intended to capture and take possession of the state capitol by a
-force, if he did not resign his office as governor; the danger became
-so great that he barricaded the state house, as he had but few state
-troops. The whole state was invaded by the Kuklux at the same time
-and they commenced raiding the state in bands of from twenty-five to
-two hundred and fifty men; all wore masks and large rubber pouches
-concealed by a cover. They visited the Union men and colored men's
-houses and raided the whole country generally, proclaiming that they
-were dead rebels who had been shot on the different battlefields during
-the civil war and that they had come back to rid the state of black
-republicans and carpet-baggers.
-
-They would claim that they were very thirsty, that they never had a
-drink of water since they had been killed at the battles of Gettysburg,
-Corinth, Vicksburg, and other big battles. They would call on the
-colored people to bring them a bucketful and one of their number would
-pour the whole bucketful into his pouch and called for more water,
-making the colored people believe that they drank the water; then
-they would give the colored people orders not to be caught off their
-plantations, and if so caught, the penalty of death would be inflicted;
-many of the influential colored people were shot down. The author saw a
-number of fresh graves of the colored people that had been shot by the
-Kuklux; saw holes in windows in houses in towns and villages that had
-been shot through after night, while men were reading, who had been
-notified to resign their offices or stop using their influence in favor
-of the enforcement of the civil law.
-
-The author remembers passing some colored people on the side of the
-road; one old colored woman cried out at the top of her voice "Lawd,
-massa, massa are you men hunting dem dar Kuklux? Wi, da told us dat
-bullets wouldn't kill them. I fought we could fight live men but
-when it come to fightin dead men, don't know what to tink about it.
-Wi dey come to our house, rode up to de fence called for water; said
-they hadn't any water since the battle of Shiloh. Wi, one man drank a
-bucketful, and den call for mo. I thought to my soul that they would
-never get enuf water." The author replied, "Auntie, when these rebels
-are killed, they never get back here; the bad man keeps them to build
-fires for him. These Kuklux are the men that ran away from the battle
-of Shiloh and have just crawled out of their dens. That's why they are
-masked." The old woman said, "Dat what I thought bout it." While the
-Kuklux were raiding the country they visited an old darkie's house and
-gave him three day's notice to leave the country; and if he failed to
-leave they would visit him again and death would be his penalty. In
-about three or four day, twenty-five or thirty Kuklux rode up to his
-cabin in the night and called for him; he was armed with an old U. S.
-musket; he fired into the crowd and killed one of the band and then ran
-and made his escape.
-
-Part of the regiment received orders to report to General Upham,
-who was stationed at Cottonplant, on White river, leaving Captain
-Richardson in charge of the forces in Fulton county and Captain Toney
-in charge of the troops in Izard and Sharp counties. The regiment broke
-camp and marched by way of Jacksonport and on their arrival went into
-camp on the Wadel farm, two miles below Jacksonport. The Kuklux had
-declared that we should not march through Jacksonport. A brother-in-law
-of Mr. Wadel from North Missouri invited the writer to supper; the
-writer believing that a trap had been fixed to decoy him outside of the
-lines took one lieutenant and a posse of men and went to his house; on
-our arrival, we found a bountiful supper; had every thing that a hungry
-man could wish; had eggnog served in silver cups with silver spoons.
-The residence was about forty-two by twenty feet; two large rooms with
-a ten-foot hall between, with kitchen on west side, fine portico, with
-about ten or twelve negro cabins, about sixty to one hundred feet from
-the dwelling-house. Just before supper I noticed eight or ten men
-come in on foot dressed in gray clothing. I at once ordered my men
-to be ready at any moment and to not let them get the drop on them.
-Just about the time that most of my men were through eating supper,
-I noticed that some of the men that came in to the supper table had
-arms on their persons and noticed that the negroes were excited. I
-stepped out at a back door and just as I entered the hall door I saw
-the landlord approaching the room where my men were seated at the table
-with a navy pistol cocked in his right hand, holding it behind his
-back. Just as he attempted to open the door where my men were seated at
-the supper table, I sprang forward and grabbed his pistol and wrenched
-it out of his hand, and said to him, "Don't you dare to attempt to
-shoot one of my men." He turned around facing me and said "I went all
-through the Civil war and you are the first men that ever disarmed
-me." In a moment my men had pistols in hand ready for action, and I
-noticed some of the men that came dressed in gray had pistols in their
-pockets. I remarked to them, "I came here on an invitation; I am here
-as a guest, I wish to treat all persons as gentlemen, especially the
-landlord and his family; but this hostile move made upon the part of
-the landlord and the presence of these armed men shows me that there is
-something wrong." I ordered my men to fall in line and return to the
-camp. His wife appeared to be a perfect lady and her husband appeared
-to be under the influence of whiskey. He agreed that if I would release
-him, he would go into his room and stay there until my men had all
-returned to the camp. After he had gone into his room, I gave his
-revolver to his wife on her promising not to give it to him until the
-next morning.
-
-I learned from Mr. Wadel's brother-in-law that he came from northern
-Missouri at the commencement of the war and at about the close of the
-war he married his sister; that he was a cyclops and came to Fulton
-county in the Kuklux raid, and that the men who came that evening were
-all Kuklux, that if I had gone alone to his supper, I would have been
-killed.
-
-The next morning we broke camp and resumed our march. On the regiment
-arriving at Cottonplant, Col. Dail reported to Gen. Upham and we were
-ordered into camp. As soon as the citizens of the city learned of my
-arrival, they requested Gen. Upham that I be invited to deliver a
-speech in the city hall; that they had heard and read of Col. Monks
-and they wanted him to deliver an address to the people at early
-candle-light on the present condition of the state. There were about
-seven or eight hundred men stationed at the post. After supper, the
-adjutant sent an order by an orderly to detail about fifty men for a
-patrol guard; that the soldiers had broken into the warehouse and were
-taking out whiskey and other articles. I ordered the detail to be made
-and report at headquarters for further orders. Our headquarters were
-not more than forty yards from the warehouse. I spoke in an audible
-voice, "Now, we claim that our mission as soldiers is to protect
-persons and property. I want you to see that your guns and pistols
-are well loaded, and go direct to the warehouse first and arrest all
-soldiers that you find in or about the warehouse and take them to the
-guardhouse and there keep them safe until further orders, and patrol
-the city closely. Order all soldiers and officers who have not passes
-to be inside of their quarters in thirty minutes, and if you find any
-soldiers on the street after thirty minutes, arrest them and take them
-to the guardhouse; if they resist you, shoot them; and if you have to
-shoot, shoot to kill." About that time some man near the warehouse
-called out: "Who in hell are you? This whiskey is Kuklux whiskey,
-and we will take what we please." I replied, "If we cannot enforce
-discipline over the soldiers, we will go back home and send others; you
-will find out who I am if you wait until the patrol gets there."
-
-I ordered the officer to sound the reveille. Inside of thirty minutes
-every soldier was inside of his quarters. The citizens said that such
-a thing had not occurred since the post had been established. Capt.
-Sharp was reckless when drinking; he had mutinied and the men that were
-disposed to be wild had terrorized the people of the city. Gen. Upham
-had failed to enforce discipline over Capt. Sharp and his company.
-Capt. Sharp had ridden up and down the streets before the regiment had
-arrived and proclaimed, "when Colonel Monks arrives we will clean all
-the Kuklux up." The citizens were considerably frightened on my arrival
-in August, but after they saw how completely I enforced discipline
-everything became quiet, they appeared to be perfectly secure in person
-and property.
-
-On the next night, at early candle light, the large hall was filled.
-After being introduced by Gen. Upham, I spoke in part as follows:
-
-"Gentlemen and fellow citizens of Arkansas: I am from your sister
-state, Missouri, and I am very sorry to find you people in the state
-of war. War is not very pleasant; it has its effects upon society;
-demoralizes the morals of the people, besides the great sacrifice
-of life and property. Besides this, it alienates those who should
-be brethern and makes them bitter enemies. Your people may ask the
-question, what right have you Missourians to come down into our state?
-My first answer will be, Captain Simpson Mason was but recently
-assassinated in Fulton county, near the state line, while in the
-discharge of his official duty. At the commencement of the civil war
-he was a citizen of Fulton county, Arkansas, and I was a citizen of
-Howell county, Missouri. Both of us were unconditional Union men.
-Both of us were driven from our homes and posses of men from your
-state, regardless of the state lines, scouted our county, murdering
-and driving out Union men, women and children and hung and shot down
-loyal men. Captain Mason and I met in the early part of the war of
-the rebellion and soon become fast friends. Served together during
-the war. When peace was made we determined to go back home. Men would
-meet us and say "If you men go back among the old rebels who hate you
-so badly they will kill you." Our reply would be, "Damn a man that is
-afraid to go back and enjoy the fruits of his victory." We met and
-pledged our sacred honor to each other that if, after our return to our
-old homes, either one of us was killed by the late rebels, the other
-would do all in his power to bring the guilty parties to justice. A
-better and truer man never lived than Captain Simpson Mason. Each of
-us came back with the olive leaf in his mouth. Now I don't say that
-all rebels are Kuklux, but I will say all Kuklux have been late rebels
-and have organized a secret organization, the objects and aims of
-which are to overturn the civil government of your state by murder and
-intimidations, through the most vile and desperate means known to man,
-the savage not excepted. Besides your organization extends into the
-border counties of Missouri and as the rebels thought right to cross
-the state line during the Civil war, we think it right to cross it
-now to help our loyal brethern, and these are the causes that brought
-us to your state. We don't want booty. We want to see the civil law
-enforced, and we ask your cooperation, and promise you, that all law
-abiding citizens, be they Union or rebel, shall be protected in person
-and property during our stay in your state and we intend to enforce the
-very strictest discipline among our troops. I hope by the cooperation
-of the people of your state this unholy war will soon cease." At the
-conclusion of the speech they gave three cheers for Missouri troops.
-
-[Illustration: MAKING A PLEDGE--Col. Wm. Monks and Capt. Simpson
-Mason.]
-
-On the third day after our arrival at Cottonplant, Captain J. B.
-Nicholas' and Captain Sharp's companies were ordered to be detached
-from the regiment and placed under the command of the author and
-ordered to march at once and report at Marion, the county seat of
-Crittenden county for further orders. On our arrival at Marion we were
-ordered to proceed directly to Osceola, the county seat of Mississippi
-county, Arkansas and to erect a military post and issue an order
-ordering all the persons that were armed to come in and take the oath.
-On our arrival at that place to report the same to the Governor of the
-state. I issued the following general order:
-
-"To the people of the state of Arkansas, especially the citizens
-of Mississippi county; greeting; whereas a part of the people,
-disregarding their duties as good law-abiding citizens, have by
-and through a secret organization known as Kuklux revolted against
-the civil government of the state of Arkansas and are now armed
-and attempting by murder and intimidations to overthrow the civil
-government of the state, now therefore, by the authority in me vested
-and as commander of said post, do order all persons who may be in
-armed hostility to the present government and those who may be by act
-or deed aiding or encouraging those who are in arms against the legal
-constituted laws of the state to return to their allegiance and aid in
-enforcing the civil law. And any person who may be found from and after
-this date armed or aiding or abetting those who are in arms against the
-civil law of the state will be promptly arrested and punished to the
-extent of the law.
-
-WM. MONKS, commanding the post."
-
-When I arrived there was not a single civil officer in this county.
-They had either resigned or had kept themselves indoors. I at once
-commenced a vigorous campaign and soon learned that there were two men
-charged with being cyclops; one of them resided about thirty miles
-down the river on an island; he was charged with killing eight or ten
-colored people. I made a detail of about fifty men and placed them in
-charge of Captain Sharp and ordered him to go down and arrest both and
-bring them up to headquarters. The second day after the scouts started
-they returned by steamboat with both men, as well as several other
-prisoners. After the boat arrived Captain Sharp came to headquarters
-and suggested the release of one of the men as he didn't think he was
-guilty. I ordered the prisoners brought to headquarters at once. There
-was a man by the name of Edington who resided in Osceola, one of the
-wealthiest men in the county; he was well acquainted with one of the
-men, as he had been sheriff of the county in which he resided and
-a colonel in the Confederate army. He asked me to parole him to the
-limits of the city and he would go on his bond for one thousand dollars
-until said charges could be investigated. In a few days after he was
-paroled Mr. Edington came into the office and informed me that after
-his arrest and while on the boat coming up the river Cap. Sharp came
-to him in the presence of the captain of the steamboat and remarked.
-"Well, colonel, you have got a hard man holt of you now; if you will
-pay me one hundred and fifty dollars I can use my influence with Col.
-Monks and have you released." The colonel said to Captain Sharp that
-he didn't have the money with him. The captain of the steamboat said
-to the colonel, "I have the money, I will loan it to you." The colonel
-paid Captain Sharp one hundred and fifty dollars. Captain Sharp agreed
-to have him released and let him go back on the boat. Mr. Edington said
-he had watched all my proceedings since I took command of the post and
-had become satisfied that my highest aim was to protect every person in
-his person and property.
-
-I ordered the orderly to arrest the colonel and bring him to
-headquarters. I told him that I had been informed that after his arrest
-and while in custody of Captain Sharp on the steamboat he paid Captain
-Sharp one hundred and fifty dollars and Captain Sharp was to release
-him and let him return home on the boat. He admitted that he paid the
-money and made a full statement of all the facts that caused him to
-pay the money. I notified Captain Sharp to appear at headquarters at
-once. Informed him of what I had just learned, that while he had the
-colonel prisoner, coming up on the steamboat, that he, the prisoner,
-paid him one hundred and fifty dollars to procure his release. Captain
-Sharp admitted that it was true; I asked the captain if he had the
-money. He said he had. I asked the colonel if he had a friend that he
-could pay the money to; that I could not pay the money to him, that he
-might bribe another one of my officers. He said that I could pay the
-money to Mr. Edington. Captain Sharp paid the money to Mr. Edington by
-the order of the colonel. I ordered the colonel to the guardhouse for
-bribing my officers. I ordered Captain Sharp to report at headquarters
-the next day at ten o'clock. The Captain promptly appeared at the
-hour set. We went into the back room of my office alone. The captain
-and myself took seats. I said to the captain, "I am very sorry that
-this thing occurred; that you have allowed one of your prisoners to
-bribe you and you have betrayed that confidence imposed in you by
-the state. It become my painful duty to place you under arrest and
-of all crimes known to the criminal calender the worst is that one
-of treason. We claim that we are hunting violaters of the law and if
-we become violaters of the law then it will devolve on the state to
-place a new set of men in the service so that all violaters of the law
-can be arrested and brought to justice. Now I have been informed that
-while you composed a part of the command stationed at Cottonplant under
-General Upham you was arrested for disorderly conduct and you caused
-your company to mutinize. Now I want to say to you that I am going to
-put you under arrest and disarm you and I will parole you to the limits
-of the city and your first lieutenant will be placed in command of the
-company and if you cause your men to mutinize I will arrest the whole
-company and send them to Little Rock."
-
-I ordered the whole company to appear at headquarters and informed
-them of what I had done. I then sent the orderly and brought out the
-colonel and paroled him to the limits of the city under one thousand
-dollar bond. I never had a more obedient set of soldiers in all my
-service than Captain Sharp's company and they were as true and as brave
-men as ever lived. Captain Sharp said he was sorry for what he had
-done and I had done my duty and in about one week I returned his arms
-and placed him in command of his company. And during the remainder
-of service Captain Sharp discharged every duty with honor to himself
-and his state. While I was in command of the post I made a vigorous
-campaign. Arrested or drove out all the armed Kuklux and had the civil
-law fully put in force and the ministers of the gospel reorganized
-their churches and business of all kinds was resumed. Intimidations
-of the people, of the civil officers, and of the county by the Kuklux
-was a thing of the past. I received orders from the adjutant general
-at Little Rock to declare the civil law enforced in Mississippi county
-and to report with my command to the commander of the post at Marion,
-Crittendon county, Arkansas, for further orders. My command was
-conveyed by steamboat to Hopefield and from Hopefield we marched to
-Marion.
-
-And in obedience to said orders I issued the following order: "To all
-whom it may concern, especially to the citizens of Mississippi county,
-Arkansas, I send greeting. It affords me great pleasure to say to the
-people of Mississippi county that the Kuklux organization is completely
-broken up and there is no armed opposition to the enforcement of the
-civil law. Therefore, by the power in me vested I declare the civil law
-from this date in full force and effect in said county. And I invite
-all good citizens to aid in the enforcement of the civil law.
-
-WM. MONKS, Commander of the post."
-
-And when the people of the city learned that my command had been
-ordered to leave the city they at once presented the writer with a
-new suit of clothes. And on the arrival of the boat and while we were
-loading our camp equipage, arms and amunition, about three or four
-hundred persons composed of men, women, and children assembled on
-the bank of the river to bid us good-bye. And as the boat moved out
-they waved their handkerchiefs and hats and gave three cheers for the
-soldier boys and their commanders.
-
-On our arrival at Marion we turned over our guns, amunition and camp
-equipage and were ordered by the adjutant general to proceed to
-Jacksonport for further orders and on our arrival at Jacksonport the
-writer was ordered to leave his command at Jacksonport and to report
-in person to the governor at Little Rock. On my arrival at Little
-Rock I was informed by the adjutant general that the governor was
-dangerously sick and confined to his room. The legislature of the state
-being in session I was invited by both houses to deliver an address to
-the legislature. Both bodies met in the lower house. The writer was
-introduced by the speaker. Spoke as follows:
-
-"Mr. President of the General Assembly of the State of Arkansas,
-it affords me great pleasure to have the honor of addressing this
-august body of men assembled in this hall. Men who have been elected
-by the people of the whole state. Men who have the interest of the
-people at heart. Men who have the confidence of the people. Men who
-are intelligent and know what kind of laws the people need. Men who
-are determined to do your whole duty; men who have the courage,
-patriotism and love of country at heart, who have stood by your post
-while one of the most secret organizations, known as Kuklux, bound by
-one of the most desperate oaths to overturn your state government by
-intimidation and murder of all the civil officers of the state and
-to kill and murder the loyal citizens of your state. The intention
-of said organization was to overturn the legally constituted laws of
-the state, but through the untiring effort of your governor and his
-subordinate officers and the loyal people of your state and the valor
-and patriotism of your soldiers, this organization has been completely
-routed and broken up and the civil law is again declared to be enforced
-in your state. Now may your wisdom as legislators guide you and your
-successors in all duties that you may be called upon to perform in
-the legislative capacity. And may you always have the interest of the
-whole people at heart. And may all the laws that may be enacted by this
-legislature or your successors be in the interest of the whole people.
-And may patriotism and the love of both state and nation grow in the
-hearts of your people and may they become so united that nothing can
-sever that cord of love for their state and nation. May God's blessing
-guide and direct every one of your public acts, and go with you to your
-homes and families and now that your state is once more at peace and
-the civil law is being enforced, and your people are secure both in
-person and property, I therefore will return to Missouri to the bosom
-of my family. I bid you all good bye."
-
-The whole house rose to its feet and gave three cheers and pressed
-forward to give the writer a good, parting handshake.
-
-The governor continued to grow worse. The doctors would not admit any
-person to his sick room. The adjutant general informed me that the
-governor wanted to see me in person. That I had come to the rescue of
-the people with men and arms, when the loyal people were completely
-overpowered and saved the northern part of the state from the control
-of the Kuklux. He said the governor was well pleased with my services
-while in the State; that even the rebels spoke in the highest terms
-in regard to the discipline that I enforced over my men; that I had
-protected the person and property of both Union and rebel, and that
-I had given general satisfaction to all classes of persons that were
-favorable to the enforcement of the civil law and that it was the
-desire of the governor to promote me to a brigadier-general for the
-valuable services that I had rendered in the state, and place me in
-command of the northern district. I said "You can tell the governor
-when he gets well that I was very sorry to find him sick, that it
-would have been a pleasure to me to have met him in person. And the
-offer that he has made to me to promote me to brigadier-general for
-the meritorious services that I have rendered to the state places me
-under many obligations to his honor for the high esteem and confidence
-he imposes in me, as touching my military service, and as a private
-citizen while in this state. And while I thank him for his offer to
-promote me to the rank of brigadier-general and place me in command of
-the northern district of Arkansas, I must decline the offer and return
-to Missouri for I love the people of my state, I love my home and my
-desire is to become a private citizen. The only thing that impelled me
-to come into your state was to aid the state in enforcing the civil law
-and protect your people from assassination and murder and to do all in
-my power to aid in bringing violaters of law to justice. This being
-accomplished and civil law again being enforced in every part of the
-state, my services as a soldier and an officer not being needed any
-longer I will ask you again to give my respects to the governor and
-will ever hold his memory sacred, and may God's blessing rest upon
-the people of your state and your chief executive. So I will bid you
-good-bye."
-
-I returned to Jacksonport and rejoined my command and marched directly
-to West Plains. There my men bid each other good-bye and returned to
-their homes, hoping that this thing of war would be over forever.
-
-On my arrival home I found, to my great surprise, a new political
-organization, composed of men who styled themselves Liberal
-Republicans, and democrats and rebels; and through some of the most
-vicious and unprincipled rebels, they charged me with being a thief
-and a murderer. My friends came to me and requested that I at once
-institute suits of slander against them, for they knew that it was
-false from beginning to end. During the intervening time they had
-called an indignation meeting and publicly denounced me as a thief and
-murderer. I instituted a civil suit for slander against all persons who
-took part in said indignation meeting. I also instituted suit against
-one other man on the same charge. The county of Howell at that time,
-especially the judicial circuit, was presided over by a judge, who was
-an extreme democrat. The defence made application to the judge for
-a change of venue from this judicial circuit; he ordered the change
-sent to Laclede county, to the city of Lebanon, before Judge Fian.
-The defence then set about taking depositions. I was notified to
-meet them in Sharp county at Evening Shade for the purpose of taking
-depositions. When we met at Evening Shade they commenced hunting around
-for witnesses to prove their charges, but failed to find a single
-one. But every person they interviewed touching the charges declared
-that they were false and that Colonel Monks enforced discipline over
-his men while he was in their state and protected every one in
-person and property and that all classes of persons regarded him as
-being perfectly honest and a good military officer; they failed to
-procure a single witness at that place. I next was notified to meet
-them in Oregon county, at the court house, for the purpose of taking
-depositions. I accordingly armed myself with two good navy revolvers
-and went to Alton, the county seat of Oregon county; the circuit court
-being in session at that time, on my arrival I put up at a boarding
-house conducted by Alfred Harris, who still resides in that county.
-Circuit court being in session I went into the court room and remained
-until recess. Just after recess the judge came and told me that he had
-been informed that a mob then had the court house surrounded and was
-going to mob me whenever I entered the square, and to remain in the
-court room for a few minutes and he would try and have the mob removed;
-in eight or ten minutes the deputy sheriff returned and informed me
-that the mob had been removed, and that I could go down and go to my
-hotel. As I passed down I saw about fifty or sixty men in front of the
-saloons, swearing at the top of their voices "He fought us during the
-civil war and he shall not be allowed to come into this county and
-live." After reaching the hotel, Mr. Harris with several other friends
-urged me not to meet the parties, who were going to take depositions in
-one of the rooms of the court house, for they believed the mob would
-kill me. I laughed and told them that I reckoned not and that I thought
-the war was over and that they couldn't play that game on me, to notify
-me to meet them to take the depositions and then prepare a mob to
-prevent me from appearing, so that they would be able to manufacture
-evidence in the case. And I would either be present at one o'clock,
-the time I was notified to meet them, or I would die in the attempt.
-So I appeared promptly at one o'clock, the time set, but not one of
-the opposite party, either attorney or client put in an appearance.
-I remained there until four o'clock and still no appearance had been
-entered by the defendants or their attorneys, and I again returned to
-my hotel, after circuit court had adjourned for the day.
-
-While we were seated at the table eating supper, a man rapped at the
-hotel door and called to Mr. Harris, the landlord, that he wanted to
-see him privately for a few moments. Mr. Harris soon returned and
-remarked to the writer that he had been ordered to deliver a message;
-that he had just been informed that a mob of about one hundred men then
-had the hotel surrounded and they would give me ten minutes to get out
-of town or I would be shot to death. I replied to Mr. Harris, "In the
-first place, I am too old to run; and in the second place, if these
-bushwhackers have not shed enough innocent blood, they will have the
-best opportunity now that they will ever get; tell them that I don't
-intend to leave or run." Mr. Harris said that he would deliver the
-message to the bearer.
-
-There were two Confederates seated at the table, eating. They said,
-"What does this mean? We thought the war was over." They got up and
-left the table. After the writer finished his supper, he retired to
-the sitting room, which adjoined Mr. Harris' library. Mr. Harris
-immediately came in and offered to barricade the doors and windows.
-I objected. He then remarked that the mob would shoot in through the
-windows, that he would blind the windows. I consented to his putting
-blinds on the windows, but that the doors shouldn't be interfered
-with. There was but one door entering the sitting room except the door
-that came through the library. I took my seat on a bench where I could
-reach the knob of the door with my left hand and hold my revolver in
-my right hand. Mr. Harris proposed to blow out the lights, to which
-I objected. I told him that if the mob came I wanted the light so
-that I could see how to shoot. He then took his seat and entered into
-conversation. In a few moments some person took hold of the knob of
-the door. I rose to my feet with my revolver cocked, in my right hand
-and let the door open just so that one man could enter at a time. Mr.
-Maxey, of Howell county, an attorney-at-law, had come in to get a
-book out of the library, not knowing that there was any trouble up.
-As he came inside of the room I had my pistol cocked and presented on
-his left breast. When I recognized Mr. Maxey I lowered my pistol and
-remarked to him, "Your face has saved your life." Mr. Maxey became very
-much excited, walked across the floor once or twice, and inquired what
-was up. I informed him of the notice of the mob and the time that I had
-been given to leave the hotel and that the time had then expired, and
-that when I heard him take hold of the door, I supposed the mob was
-coming. Mr. Maxey remarked that "This thing will never do, I'm going
-to see if it can't be stopped." I requested him to say to every person
-that might be disposed to come into the house to make themselves known
-outside of the door before entering the house.
-
-In a short time the circuit judge and deputy sheriff, with two or
-three others, came to the door and made themselves known and came in.
-The circuit judge said: "Colonel, I have been informed that you have
-been notified by a mob to leave the town in ten minutes or you would
-be shot to death, and I have come to see if you wanted a guard." I
-replied that I didn't. "If these God damn bushwhackers haven't shed
-enough innocent blood and are still bloodthirsty, they will never have
-a better opportunity; so just let them come." The judge and sheriff and
-those who came with them left the room. I remained in the room until
-the usual bedtime. I heard them cursing outside and declare that they
-would take me out before daylight. I thought of my horse that was in
-the stable, a few yards away. I remarked to Mr. Harris that I was going
-to the stable to look at my horse. He begged me not to go out, that I
-would be shot down. I said to him that it was a game that two or more
-could work at.
-
-[Illustration: LOYAL WOMEN OF HOWELL COUNTY.]
-
-On reaching the stable, I heard the men quarreling on the public
-square. A man by the name of Jones, who had been a Confederate and
-then was prosecuting attorney of the county, and another citizen, who
-appeared to be leading the mob, were having an altercation. Jones
-remarked to the other man that he had never met Col. Monks until to-day
-and that he appeared to be a perfect gentleman, that the war was over,
-and that he had the same right to come here and transact business as
-any other man; to which the other declared, with an oath, that a man
-who had fought them through the war shouldn't come there, and they
-intended to take him out and shoot him before daylight; and further
-charged that Jones was not a good Confederate. Jones then gave him
-the lie. The two appeared to be about to come together, but others
-interfered to keep them separated. I returned to the hotel and said to
-Mr. Harris that the seat of war had moved up onto the square.
-
-Mr. Maxey informed me that just outside of the door of the hotel he met
-the mob, and they declared that they intended to take Monks out and
-shoot him before daylight. He replied to them that they might do it,
-but they had better take their stretchers along, for some other persons
-would have to bring some of them out; that he had just been in the
-house and in a moment he was confronted by Col. Monks with a revolver
-presented at his left breast and the very devil was in his eye, and if
-they entered the room he would shoot as long as he could move a finger.
-
-When bedtime came, I was placed in an upper room and locked the door,
-expecting that if they located my room they would shoot through the
-windows. I could still hear them cursing and threatening to take me out
-until late in the night. The next morning everything was quiet. I went
-to the stable and took my horse down to the spring to water; a number
-of men were standing at the side of the street, and one said: "Where do
-you suppose the captain and his men are?" I remarked to them that they
-were just like a pack of wolves; they were in the brush this morning,
-waiting for night to again renew their howling. There was one, Capt.
-Wagoner, who resided in town, who remarked to me the next morning that
-he never was as proud of anything in his life; that if they could have
-scared me and I had attempted to leave town in the night, they intended
-to murder me.
-
-After circuit court convened, I went into court, and at noon of that
-day the court adjourned. And I, with a number of others, went to
-Thomasville, put up at the hotel, had my horse fed and took supper.
-While on the road, the man that led the mob passed me on his way to
-Thomasville, where he resided. The defendants and their attorneys
-failed to produce a single witness to testify in the case. I returned
-home to West Plains.
-
-I was notified to meet them at other places in the country, to take
-depositions in said cause. The political feeling was strong then
-between the parties, and they sent the suits to a county over a hundred
-miles distant from where the suits were instituted; this county, at
-that time, was completely controlled by the democratic party.
-
-When the suits came up to be tried, over half of the jury had been late
-rebels, yet they failed to introduce a single witness to support their
-charges, and I recovered a verdict in each case. Judge Fian, who tried
-the case, said that he was never so surprised in his life; that he
-opened up the floodgates and let them bring in all their evidence from
-the beginning of the war up to the time of the trial. Judge Fian had
-been a colonel on the Federal side in the Civil war.
-
-On the account of failure to get any proof the juries were compelled to
-give a verdict in both cases for Col. Monks, although it was against
-the will and feeling of them. It cost the defendants between five and
-seven hundred dollars. After the trials, all parties returned to Howell
-county. The defendants, after they had procured a change of venue to
-Laclede county, boasted openly before trials, that they were going
-to beat both cases, that they had got them into a democratic county.
-The defendants being beaten at all points, returned, but not being
-satisfied, and being backed by the late bushwhackers and Kuklux (the
-most desperate set of men that ever lived,) at the next term of the
-Howell county circuit court they procured the appointment of a special
-prosecution attorney, who had been a late rebel and selected a jury of
-men composed of liberal Republicans and so-called democrats, with the
-express purpose of indicting the writer for killing one of the most
-desperate bushwhackers and rebel desperadoes that ever was in South
-Missouri. The men who composed the jury knew well that he was killed
-in an open hand to hand fight during the Civil war. The writer soon
-found out that they were trying to get a bill of indictment against the
-writer, so the writer watched the proceedings of the grand jury. On
-Saturday the grand jury came into court and turned in their indictments
-and reported to the court that they had no more business. The court
-discharged them.
-
-At the same moment the writer asked the court if there was any bill
-of indictment preferred against him. He ran over the indictments and
-informed the writer that there was an indictment against him, for
-murder in the first degree. The Judge said that he was sorry that I
-had called it out for he wanted to go home until Monday. I told him
-"Just adjourn your court and go home. The sheriff is here." I remarked
-to the jury that they needn't have put the county to any cost hunting
-witnesses; if they had come to me, I could have told them that I killed
-him and the only thing that I was sorry for, was that I hadn't killed
-a lot more of the bushwhackers. I would love to ask this jury if they
-have indicted any of the bushwhackers and rebels who have hung and
-murdered Union men all over Howell county, irrespective of age; the
-most of those men were killed at their homes or taken from their homes
-and afterwards killed. A part of the men who did these things are still
-living in Howell county and that jury knows it.
-
-The sheriff and the judge stepped out of the court house and in a few
-minutes returned, and the judge remarked "I will turn you over to the
-sheriff." He then ordered the sheriff to adjourn the court until the
-next Monday. The sheriff remarked to the writer "You can go where you
-please and report to the court at ten o'clock next Monday." The writer
-remarked, in the presence of the judge and sheriff, "I did not know
-that a man indicted for murder in the first degree could be paroled."
-The sheriff adjourned the court and he and the judge left the court
-house together. When I met a number of my friends (as there was a
-political meeting going on that day) and informed them that I had been
-indicted and paroled until next Monday, I couldn't make some of them
-believe it.
-
-[Illustration: CAPT. WILL H. D. GREEN, GRANDSON.
-
- LIEUT. MARK SPRINGER, CO. K.]
-
-I appeared at ten o'clock the next Monday morning and before court
-was convened, Edward Seay, an attorney-at-law, one among the ablest
-lawyers at the bar, a strong rebel sympathizer, came to the writer and
-said, "It is a shame that you have been indicted. It has been done for
-political purpose and I want your consent to file a motion to quash the
-indictment." I remarked to him that I would rather have it tried before
-a jury of my country so that I could show the intention and aims of
-those who caused said indictments to be procured. He still plead with
-me to let him file a motion to quash it, that it would not cost me one
-cent. I at last told him to use his own pleasure in regard to it, so
-he filed a motion to quash it, and submitted the motion to the court
-without any argument, and the court sustained the motion and quashed
-the indictment. So ended that charge of murder against the writer. They
-saw they were beaten again and their schemes were again exposed to the
-whole people and they fell back sullen and became desperate.
-
-In a short time the writer was informed that they were threatening to
-assassinate him and to be continually on the watch. I put men on their
-trails. Several attempts were made to decoy the writer into their nets,
-but they failed. They then employed one Dr. Beldon, who made an attempt
-to shoot the author in his own dooryard, but the writer saw him in time
-to prevent his shooting, and he left the county at once. Shortly after,
-the author was again warned to be on the watch, that they were still
-making threats.
-
-There was a man by the name of W. H. McCowen, who had been a
-Confederate colonel, living in West Plains. He was known to be a very
-dangerous man when drinking and was an uncompromising rebel. The writer
-then resided in the house south of the town spring, known as the West
-Plains House, and the street ran within a few feet of the gate, which
-opened into a hall between the house and kitchen. There was a saloon
-about forty yards west of the house, on the same street, run by a man
-by the name of Jackson, another uncompromising rebel. This saloon
-appeared to be headquarters for these would-be assassins. I had just
-brought my horse from the stable and tied him by the gate, with the
-intention of going to my farm. Mrs. Lasater, who still resides in West
-Plains, had just come over to my house and was there at the time of the
-shooting. Mrs. McCowen, the wife of Col. McCowen, came to my house that
-morning, came in the back way, and appeared to be very much excited,
-and informed me that certain men were going to assassinate me that
-morning; that to her knowledge they had been plotting for three days.
-They had been using every inducement, making her husband drunk and
-trying to work him into it. She had shut him up and locked the doors
-to keep them away from her husband, but they would raise the windows
-and come in. She had done all she could to keep her husband out of it,
-and she thought it was her duty to come and let me know that they had
-agreed to shoot me that morning. I thanked her for the information and
-said to her that I would ever be grateful to her. I further said to her
-that I did not want to hurt the colonel or any other person, but they
-must not come to my house on that kind of business if they didn't want
-to get hurt. In a few moments she returned home, going around the back
-way.
-
-I at once sent to S. P. Woodworth, a merchant who resided in West
-Plains and a strong Union man, for his double-barrelled shotgun. I had
-two good navy pistols. He sent me his gun and said it was well loaded
-with buckshot and was sure to fire. I advised the women, if they came,
-to keep cool and go into the back room so they would be out of danger.
-I raised the two front windows of the sitting-room about two or three
-inches, so I could shoot under them, keeping a close watch on the
-saloon. In about thirty minutes after Mrs. McCowen left, I saw two of
-the men leave the saloon and come in the direction of my house. They
-came to the gate, opened it and stepped onto the porch. My wife went to
-the door and begged them to leave. One of the men said that he wanted
-to see the colonel. He was armed with two first-class pistols, one of
-the pistols belonging to Col. McCowen. I cocked both barrels of my
-shotgun and stepped out on the porch with my gun presented and ordered
-him to turn around and leave my premises in one minute. Just at that
-moment my youngest daughter, now the wife of Mr. Green, sprang forward
-and caught my gun. I said to her; "For God's sake keep away from me."
-But she stood by my side. During this time he had passed outside of the
-gate and had gotten behind a tree; had his pistol cocked and presented
-at me and in a moment I had him covered with my shotgun. He would
-attempt to get sight on me and would dodge his head back behind the
-tree. Not knowing where the other man was, I watched his head and when
-he attempted to take sight I fired at his head; at the crack of the gun
-he fell. Then six or seven men commenced jumping out at the door of the
-saloon. The first thing I thought of was, "They will pretend to arrest
-me and give the mob a chance to shoot me after I am disarmed." I sprang
-on my horse and rode east and in a few moments five or six men came to
-my door and asked my wife who shot first. She ordered them to leave the
-house. They soon found that one of the would-be assassins was shot. On
-an examination it was found that one of the shot had struck him in the
-right side of the forehead, the right side of the brim of his hat was
-torn into fragments and the tree had caught a part of the load. The
-tree is still standing in the yard. Immediately afterward I sent them
-word that they had again opened the ball and I was ready to fight it
-out. I never saw men begin to plead for peace as hard in my life. The
-sheriff and others would come to me and say: "Colonel, why didn't you
-shoot some of those fellows long ago? That is just what they needed." I
-asked them why they hadn't arrested some of the assassins long ago.
-
-When the Union men learned that an attempt had been made by these
-would-be assassins to assassinate me about two hundred and fifty of
-them headed by such men as J. F. Reiley, Esau Fox, Andrew V. Tabor,
-David B. Nicholass, John B. Nicholass, Josiah Carico, Chas. Long, J.
-Youngblood, and Geo. Youngblood rode into town well armed and publicly
-notified these assassins and those who were aiding and abetting them,
-that if another attempt was made to assassinate Colonel Monks, or if
-they did assassinate him it would take ten of their leaders to pay
-the debt and they knew just who they were. On an investigation, it
-was proven that on the night before they attempted the assassination
-about ten or twelve of these would-be assassins met together in the
-town of West Plains, and one of their leaders set out among other
-causes why Colonel Monks would have to be killed; that they had tried
-to scare him away from the country but found they couldn't scare him
-and the only way to keep the republican party from going into power
-again in this county was to kill Colonel Monks. Some of the men that
-were present were hired to do the shooting next morning and paid the
-money. They drank a health to each other on the death of Colonel Monks
-next morning. The man who advised and instructed them and paid them a
-part of the money is still living in Howell county. This failure in
-their attempt to assassinate me and the action taken by the loyal men
-appeared to put a quietus on their idea of assassination; if they ever
-made any further effort the writer never learned about it. They had
-been defeated in every attempt made either to slander or murder me.
-
-I want to say here that I shall ever hold sacred the memory of Mrs.
-McCowen, for I owe to her the preservation of my life, and may God's
-blessing ever follow her and rest upon her.
-
-The bushwhackers and the Kuklux element were not yet satisfied and had
-but one way to vent their spleen against me. That was to get right down
-to hard lying. Having failed to prove a single one of their charges
-against me in the courts they were bent on injuring me and damaging my
-character. With no regard for the truth they would go around secretly
-and tell strangers who knew nothing about me that I was a murderer
-and a thief. The better element among those who had been Confederates
-declared openly that these statements were false from beginning to end.
-Many of them have said that I was an honest man, and that if any one
-wished to employ an honest lawyer Monks was the man to go to, for no
-one could buy him.
-
-Sometimes I would be informed that a late Confederate would say: "I
-believe Col. Monks was a good man and an honest one. But I dislike him
-because he fought us so hard during the war." I would reply: "Tell him
-that I couldn't please them in any way at the commencement of the war;
-I didn't want to take up arms. I was an unconditional Union man, and
-they, the rebels, came to my home and arrested me, took me into their
-command and swore that I should fight; that they would make me fight
-and attempted to force me into the Confederate lines, and when I found
-that nothing else would do them but to fight, and I went to fighting,
-then they turn about and curse me for fighting."
-
-Again I would be informed that some of those persons, who had no regard
-for the truth, would secretly charge me with being a murderer. In
-reply I would inform them that every part of the country where I had
-performed military service was now in the control of the Democratic
-party and there was no limitation to the crime of murder.
-
-
-Henry Dixon Green.
-
-Henry Dixon Green was born in Henderson county Ky., in the year 1851.
-His father, H. D. Green, was a colonel in the Confederate army, and
-died while in the service. In 1876, the younger Green left his native
-state, taking Horace Greeley's advice, and went west to grow up with
-the country. He located at West Plains, Mo., and soon began reading law
-in the office of Hon. A. H. Livingston. He was admitted to the bar, and
-formed a co-partnership with Mr. Livingston in the practice of law,
-which continued for several years. Afterwards he formed a partnership
-with Judge B. F. Olden. This firm was for years the local legal
-representative for the Kansas City, Fort Scott and Memphis Railroad
-Company, now part of the Frisco System. Mr. Green acted as claim agent
-for this railroad, and afterwards had charge of the claim department
-of the Missouri Pacific Railroad Company for the territory of Kansas,
-Nebraska, Colorado and Indian Territory, but resigned to resume the
-general practice of law at West Plains, Mo. He has served as Probate
-Judge of Howell county.
-
-[Illustration: RUSSELL GREEN AND DIXON GREEN.]
-
-Mr. Green was married in 1878 at West Plains to Miss Mary M. Monks,
-daughter of Col. Wm. Monks. Mrs. Green is a strong republican while Mr.
-Green is a strong supporter of the principles of the democratic party;
-but their home life is perfectly peaceful and happy. Five children
-have brightened this home, a daughter, now Mrs. Arch Bugg, and four
-sons, Will H. D., Frank, Russell and Dixon. The children all take their
-politics from their mother. The oldest son, Will, has been admitted to
-the Howell county bar and is now practicing law with his father. He is
-also Captain of Company K, the local military company of West Plains.
-The second and third sons are also members of the company. Frank works
-and studies at present in his father's law office, and the other boys
-are in school.
-
-
-
-
- * * * * * *
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
-Silently corrected simple spelling, grammar, and typographical
-errors.
-
-Retained anachronistic and non-standard spellings as printed.
-
-Changed a few instances of Ku-Klux (excepting the title page)
-to Kuklux as the author clearly preferred the latter spelling.
-
-Changed lop-eard, lopeard, and lop-eared to lopeared as that
-spelling was somewhat dominant.
-
-
-
-***END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK A HISTORY OF SOUTHERN MISSOURI AND
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