Monument to Federal forces at Britton's Lane battlefield in rural Tennessee. |
With apologies to Confederate private-turned-semi-famous author Sam Watkins, the Battle of Britton's Lane (Tenn.) served as "a sideshow of a sideshow to the big show." But small doesn't mean uninteresting. Among the battle's backstories and main storylines:
A Confederate memorial, dedicated in 1897, on the Britton's Lane battlefield. |
- Federals camped in the area where a boyish-looking bandit known as the "Great Western Land Pirate" once roamed.
- A Confederate commander who fought for the United States in 1861.
- A Rebel officer whose close relative became one of America's top 20th-century spies.
- Federal prisoners held at a church where Confederate soldiers on leave later hid in an unusual place to avoid their own capture.
- And a stunning U.S. Army performance despite overwhelming odds.
Roughly 12 miles southwest of Jackson, Tenn., the Britton's Lane battlefield is, ah, isolated. To my right, I find a rolling field of scrub; to my left, a ridge and a strip of woods; above me, a circling vulture or two. No other human appears in sight. On my phone, I find a non-functioning Google Maps app. Damn.
The publicly accessible section of the battlefield includes a Confederate mass grave, the obligatory Civil War Trails marker, a half-dozen other battlefield markers, a monument dedicated in 1897, a "cage" with a scraggly teamster and two faux horses and a reconstructed wartime cabin that served as a battlefield hospital. (The bloodstained floors of the cabin, which originally stood about 3/4 of a mile away, are no more.)
A reconstructed version of the original Britton's Lane battlefield cabin. |
A "cage" with a display of a teamster (below) and two faux horses. |
Here's what else you need to know: In late August and early September 1862, about 3,000 Confederate cavalry troopers with bad intentions roamed the Tennessee countryside near Jackson. In addition to protecting Jackson, an important Federal depot, the U.S. Army guarded the Mississippi and Tennessee Central Railroad and moved supplies throughout the area.
Confederate commander Frank Armstrong (Library of Congress) |
Armstrong was joined by 1,000 horsemen commanded by Colonel William Hicks Jackson, a 26-year-old West Point graduate, who, after the war and death of his first wife married the daughter of a man who owned a 5,300-acre Nashville plantation. His grandson, William Harding, became deputy director of the CIA in 1950.
Confederate soldiers did not brag of the fighting capabilities of Armstrong. He was no Nathan Bedford Forrest afterall. And they desperately needed grub. "Without rations for man or beast," one of them recalled.
A map of the Britton's Lane battlefield published in the Union-controlled Jackson (Tenn.) newspaper on Sept. 6, 1862. The map was flopped in publication process. View corrected map. WARNING: For nerds only. (Library of Congress) |
Battlefield marker for 7th Tennessee (CSA) Cavalry fallen at Battle of Britton's Lane. |
Wary of an attack on Jackson, a U.S. force went looking for them. Composed of a light artillery company and infantry from Illinois (including Shiloh veterans) and an Ohio cavalry unit, the 600-man force was led by 49-year-old Colonel Elias Smith Dennis, a long-haired former politician from Illinois.
For at least one Union soldier, the countryside near Jackson was a "lonesome, Godforsaken region," full of "hair-raising hoots, screams and yells of the owl and the blood-curdling songs of the myriads of musketoes." Daytime was "ominous," nighttime "hideous," recalled Benjamin F. Boring of the 30th Illinois.
Near Denmark, Tenn., where the Yankees made a temporary home, notorious horse thief, slave stealer, counterfeiter and highway robber John A. Murrell supposedly murdered a fellow traveler. ("The Great Western Land Pirate" died in 1844, months after leaving the Tennessee State penetentiary.)
Colonel William Jackson commanded CSA soldiers. |
Near Denmark, Tenn., where the Yankees made a temporary home, notorious horse thief, slave stealer, counterfeiter and highway robber John A. Murrell supposedly murdered a fellow traveler. ("The Great Western Land Pirate" died in 1844, months after leaving the Tennessee State penetentiary.)
"Recollections of this camp," Boring recalled decades later, "haunt my memories still."
On the morning of Sept. 1, the enemies unexpectedly met four miles from Denmark, which sounds kind of strange when I read this sentence out loud. The Federals took a superior defensive position behind a rail fence on a slight rise by a dusty lane on the Britton family farm.
On the morning of Sept. 1, the enemies unexpectedly met four miles from Denmark, which sounds kind of strange when I read this sentence out loud. The Federals took a superior defensive position behind a rail fence on a slight rise by a dusty lane on the Britton family farm.
The ensuing battle called for as "great a degree of nerve and pluck," Boring wrote, "...as was required to face the leaden hail at Shiloh or to stem the artillery at Gettysburg."
"Pretty warm work," another Union veteran recalled. Not all 30th Illinois soldiers were battle-ready. Some spent time sampling the goods at an old still in the rear.
Attacking in waves as infantry and cavalry, the Rebels seemed more like a "yelling, hooting" throng than an organized fighting force. "[T]hey seemed," Boring remembered, "to be firing at the sky."
"A mob of cotton pickers," another Union veteran remembered.
"Many of our foe were bareback riders, their arms mostly double-barrel shot-guns" Boring wrote. "The manner of their riding, the way they flopped their arms and legs and their wild shooting would have struck one humorously but for the circumstances. Their shyness of attack as well proved to us they were not regularly organized, uniformed, and disciplined troops but a body of toughs hastily raised among the old men and boys of the surrounding country ..."
"How so many men got out of that field alive is one of those unaccountable things that sometimes occur in war," a Confederate veteran wrote.
Armstrong's men, meanwhile, put nearly 90 POWs in the Masonic Lodge on the second floor of the Denmark Presbyterian Church, where local Rebel soldiers reputedly hid under the hoop skirts of their girlfriends to avoid their capture by Federal soldiers in 1863. Union captives from the Britton's Lane battle received paroles, but not before some scrawled their names near floorboards of the church -- marks that remain today.
Union commander Elias Smith Dennis |
Attacking in waves as infantry and cavalry, the Rebels seemed more like a "yelling, hooting" throng than an organized fighting force. "[T]hey seemed," Boring remembered, "to be firing at the sky."
"A mob of cotton pickers," another Union veteran remembered.
"Many of our foe were bareback riders, their arms mostly double-barrel shot-guns" Boring wrote. "The manner of their riding, the way they flopped their arms and legs and their wild shooting would have struck one humorously but for the circumstances. Their shyness of attack as well proved to us they were not regularly organized, uniformed, and disciplined troops but a body of toughs hastily raised among the old men and boys of the surrounding country ..."
Union POWs from the Britton's Lane battle on Sept. 1, 1862, were briefly imprisoned on the second floor of the Denmark Presbyterian Church. (CLICK ON ALL IMAGES TO ENLARGE.) |
"How so many men got out of that field alive is one of those unaccountable things that sometimes occur in war," a Confederate veteran wrote.
Armstrong's men, meanwhile, put nearly 90 POWs in the Masonic Lodge on the second floor of the Denmark Presbyterian Church, where local Rebel soldiers reputedly hid under the hoop skirts of their girlfriends to avoid their capture by Federal soldiers in 1863. Union captives from the Britton's Lane battle received paroles, but not before some scrawled their names near floorboards of the church -- marks that remain today.
A view through a window of the first floor of the Denmark Presbyterian Church. |
"One of the fiercest and most brilliant little battles yet recorded in this fearful struggle for constitutional liberty," the Chicago Times called it, adding the Illinois boys fought like "pent-up tigers."
"Desperate engagement and brilliant Union victory," proclaimed a headline in the New York Herald.
To puff up the accomplishment, newspapers exaggerated the size of the Confederate force (8,000 men!) and played up Union exploits. The Times described an incident in which a Confederate captain put a pistol to the head of a 20th Illinois captain and ordered him to surrender. "But our hero was too soon for him," the newspaper reported, "for the words had no sooner passed from his lips than the gallant Captain of the Twentieth shot him dead from his horse."
When Confederate cavalry demanded the surrender of a 20th Illinois teamster, a Union-controlled Jackson (Tenn.) newspaper wrote, the man replied, "Surrender, hell that's ‘played out,’ ” then somehow whipped his mule to escape the enemy. It also reported the discovery on the battlefield of a carpet bag containing a suit of officer's clothes and the commission of hard-driving Confederate cavalry commander Robert "Black Bob" McCulloch.
"Our men were left masters of the field," the Jackson newspaper wrote, "and one hundred and eleven dead rebels told how fearfully they had been dealt with."
Unsurprisingly, witnesses describe gruesome post-battle scenes. Throughout the area, Confederate wounded filled houses. On the battlefield, "men lay on their faces, sprawling on the hard, dusty road, underneath dead or crippled horses, among logs, etc.," Boring recalled. "One old fellow, badly wounded, was lying in a yellow-jackets' nest, and calling piteously to be helped out. He was dragged out, set up against a tree, and given a canteen of water; but he soon fell forward on his face."
Early the next morning, area women grimly flocked to the battlefield to attend to their dead.
"[I]t was a novel as well as a sad scene," Boring recalled, "as we marched away for Canton Station, to see those women and girls pulling the dead bodies of their friends out from among dead horses, logs, brush-heaps, etc, gathering them up out of the road, washing their dirty, bloody faces, laying them out on the grass along the road, crying and taking on over them, amid the jeers and remarks of the tougher class of soldiers as they passed by."
But a local 14-year-old had perhaps the most grim assessment of all, In a diary entry, she wrote:
SOURCES
Unsurprisingly, witnesses describe gruesome post-battle scenes. Throughout the area, Confederate wounded filled houses. On the battlefield, "men lay on their faces, sprawling on the hard, dusty road, underneath dead or crippled horses, among logs, etc.," Boring recalled. "One old fellow, badly wounded, was lying in a yellow-jackets' nest, and calling piteously to be helped out. He was dragged out, set up against a tree, and given a canteen of water; but he soon fell forward on his face."
A war-time image of Benjamin F. Boring of the 30th Illinois. |
"[I]t was a novel as well as a sad scene," Boring recalled, "as we marched away for Canton Station, to see those women and girls pulling the dead bodies of their friends out from among dead horses, logs, brush-heaps, etc, gathering them up out of the road, washing their dirty, bloody faces, laying them out on the grass along the road, crying and taking on over them, amid the jeers and remarks of the tougher class of soldiers as they passed by."
But a local 14-year-old had perhaps the most grim assessment of all, In a diary entry, she wrote:
"Very hot day. Papa got to Mr. Britton's house. Lot of soldiers been hurt... Papa went up road to see where fite was. Boys come here to get water for horses. Sade they won and yank run... awfull smell & boys hurting Papa says to Mama many died at end of lane at woods. Papa says many horses dead on top of Boys. ... many died last nite many was put in soil where they fell...it was to hot on bodies and many flies... awfull smel much sadness. Fences down, awfull flies ..."New earth," she added, was "everywhere."
— Have something to add, correct? E-mail me at jbankstx@comcast.net
SOURCES
- Big Black Creek Historical Association (This is source for diary entry of 14-year-old.)
- Chicago Times, Sept. 5, 1862, report (via New York Times, Sept. 14, 1862.)
- Hubbard, John Milton, Notes of a Private, E.H. Clarke & Brother, Memphis, Tenn., 1909
- Union-controlled Jackson (Tenn.) newspaper, Sept. 6, 1862.
- Tennessee Historical Quarterly, "The Armstrong Raid Including the Battles of Bolivar, Medon Station and Britton Lane, Harbert L. Rice Alexander, Vol. 21, No. 1, March 1962, Pages 31-46
- The National Tribune, Sept. 13 and 20, 1883, Feb. 15 and Sept. 20, 1894
Very interesting. More please.
ReplyDeleteEnjoyed your article. I lived in Jackson thirty years ago and sadly never heard of this battle. Fortunately, I now live in Paducah, KY which is only two hours north. This is now on my summer travel list. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteI do enjoy Civil War tours in Tennessee. Thanks for sharing something I've never seen.
ReplyDeleteG'Day John,
ReplyDeleteExcellent as usual!
Cheers,
Rob
FNQ,Au
Excellent account
ReplyDeleteVisited there Oct. 17. Great community-sponsored battlefield.
ReplyDeleteAnother great article !
ReplyDelete