Kentucky was a
border state of key
importance in the
American Civil
War.
President
Abraham Lincoln recognized the
importance of the
Commonwealth when he declared
"I hope to have
God on my side, but I must have
Kentucky." In a September 1861 letter to
Orville Browning, Lincoln wrote "I
think to lose Kentucky is nearly the same as to lose the whole
game. ... We would as well consent to separation at once, including
the surrender of the capital."
Kentucky
was the site
of fierce battles, such as Mill Springs
and Perryville
. It was host to such military leaders as
Ulysses S. Grant on the Union side, who first encountered
serious Confederate gunfire
coming from Columbus,
Kentucky
, and Nathan
Bedford Forrest on the Confederate side. Forrest proved to be a
scourge to the Union Army in such places
as the towns of Sacramento
and Paducah
, where he
conducted guerrilla warfare
against Union forces. Kentucky, being a border state, was
among the chief places where the "
Brother against brother" scenario
was prevalent. Kentucky was the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln, his
wife
Mary Todd, and his southern
counterpart
Jefferson Davis.
Antebellum Kentucky
Kentucky's citizens were split regarding the issues central to the
Civil War. In
1860, slaves composed 19.5% of
the Commonwealth's population, and many Unionist Kentuckians saw
nothing wrong with the
peculiar
institution. The Commonwealth was further bound to the South by
the
Mississippi River and its
tributaries, which were the main commercial outlet for her surplus
produce, although
railroad connections to
the North were beginning to diminish the importance of this tie.
The
ancestors of many Kentuckians hailed from Southern states like
Virginia
, North Carolina
, and Tennessee
, but many Kentucky children were beginning to
migrate toward the North.
Kentucky,
along with North
Carolina
, also
boasted the best educational systems in the South.
Transylvania
University
had long been one of the most respected
institutions of higher learning in the nation, and while its
reputation had begun to fade by 1860, other Kentucky schools like
Centre
College
and Georgetown College
were gaining prominence.
Politically, the Commonwealth had produced some of the country's
best known leaders. Former Vice-Presidents
John C. Breckinridge and
Richard M. Johnson both hailed from the Bluegrass
state, as did
Henry Clay and future
president
Abraham Lincoln. However,
by the time of the Civil War, the Commonwealth was in a politically
confused state. The decline of the
Whig Party, which Clay had
founded, had left many politicians looking for an identity. Many
joined the increasingly popular
Democratic Party, a few
joined the newly-formed
Republican Party, while
still others associated with one of numerous minor parties such as
the
Know Nothing Party.
Kentucky was strategically important to both the North and South.
The Commonwealth ranked ninth in population by 1860, and was a
major producer of such agricultural commodities as
tobacco,
corn,
wheat,
hemp, and
flax. Geographically, she was important to the South
because the
Ohio River would provide a
defensible boundary along the entire length of the state.
Kentucky governor Beriah Magoffin believed that the rights of
the Southern states had been violated and favored the right of
secession, but sought all possible avenues to avoid it. On December
9, 1860, he sent a letter to the other slave state governors
suggesting that they come to an agreement with the North that would
include strict enforcement of the
Fugitive Slave Act, a division of common
territories at the 37th parallel, a guarantee of free use of the
Mississippi River, and a Southern
veto over
slave legislation. Magoffin proposed a conference of slave states,
followed by a conference of all the states to secure these
concessions. Due to the escalating pace of events, neither
conference was ever held.
Magoffin called a special session of the
Kentucky General Assembly on
December 27, 1860 and asked legislators for a convention of
Kentuckians to decide the Commonwealth's course in the war. The
majority of the General Assembly had Unionist sympathies, however,
and declined the governor's request, fearing that the state's
voters would favor secession.
The Assembly did, however, send six delegates
to a February 4 Peace Conference in Washington,
D.C.
, and asked Congress to call a national
convention to consider potential resolutions to the secession
crisis, including the Crittenden
Compromise, authored by Kentuckian John J. Crittenden.
When the
General Assembly convened again on March
20, it called for a convention of the border states in the Kentucky
capital of Frankfort
on May 27, 1861. Again, the call went
unheeded. Legislators also passed a proposed Thirteenth Amendment
to the
Constitution
that would have guaranteed slavery in states where it was already
legal.
War breaks out
On April 15, 1861, President
Abraham
Lincoln sent a
telegram to Kentucky
governor
Beriah Magoffin requesting
that the Commonwealth supply part of the initial 75,000 troops to
put down the rebellion.
Magoffin, a Southern sympathizer, replied
"President Lincoln, Washington, D.C.
I will send not a man nor a dollar for the
wicked purpose of subduing my sister
Southern states. B. Magoffin"
Instead, most Kentuckians favored John J. Crittenden's position
that the Commonwealth should act as a mediator between the two
sides. To that end, both houses of the General Assembly passed
declarations of
neutrality, a position officially declared by Governor Magoffin
on May 20, 1861.
Both sides respected the Commonwealth's neutrality, but positioned
themselves strategically to take advantage of any change in the
situation.
Union forces established Camp Clay
in Ohio
just north
of the city of Newport,
Kentucky
and Camp Joe
Holt
in Indiana
opposite Louisville, Kentucky
. Meanwhile Confederate troops constructed
Forts Donelson
and Henry just across
Kentucky's southern border in Tennessee
, and stationed troops fewer than 50 yards from
Cumberland
Gap
. Volunteers from the Commonwealth left the
state to join up with whichever side they favored. Some covert
recruiting also took place.
Realizing that neutrality was becoming less and less feasible, six
prominent Kentuckians met to find some solution for a state caught
in the middle of a conflict. Governor Magoffin, John C.
Breckinridge, and
Richard Hawes
represented the states' rights position, while Crittenden,
Archibald Dixon, and S. S. Nicholas
advocated the Northern cause. The sextet agreed only to continue
the doctrine of neutrality, however, and called for the formation
of a five member board to coordinate the Commonwealth's defense.
The General Assembly created the board on
May
24 and vested in it supervision of the state's military, a
power reserved in the
Kentucky
Constitution for the governor.
The Commonwealth's military forces, however, proved to be just as
divided as the general populace. The State Guard, under the command
of
Simon B. Buckner, largely favored the
Confederate cause, while the newly-formed Home Guard were mostly
Unionists. Several close calls almost started a conflict within the
state, but Buckner successfully negotiated with Union general
George B. McClellan and Tennessee governor
Isham Harris to maintain the
Commonwealth's neutrality through the summer.
Elections of 1861
The tide of public opinion was beginning to turn in Kentucky,
however. In a special congressional election held June 20, 1861,
Unionist candidates won nine of Kentucky's ten congressional seats.
Confederate sympathizers won only the
Jackson
Purchase
region, which was economically linked to Tennessee
by the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers. Seeing imminent
defeat at the polls, many Southern Rights Advocates
boycotted the election; the total number of
ballots cast was just over half the number that had been cast in
the previous year's election. Governor Magoffin was dealt a further
blow in the
August 5 election for state
legislators. This election resulted in
veto-proof Unionist majorities of 76–24 in the
House and 27–11 in the
Senate.
From that point forward, most of Magoffin's vetoes to protect
southern interests were overridden in the General Assembly. After
clashing with the Assembly for over a year on even the most trivial
issues, Magoffin decided that resignation was his only option.
Magoffin's
lieutenant
governor,
Linn Boyd, had died in
office, and Senate Speaker John Fisk, next in line for the
governorship, was not acceptable to Magoffin as a successor. In an
intricate plan worked out with the General Assembly, Fisk resigned
as speaker and the Senate elevated Magoffin's chosen successor,
James F. Robinson, to the post. Magoffin then
resigned, promoting Robinson to governor, and Fisk was re-elected
as Senate Speaker.
Almost
immediately following the results of the 1861 election, William "Bull" Nelson established Camp Dick Robinson, a Union recruiting
camp, in Garrard
County
. When Crittenden objected to this violation
of Kentucky's neutrality, Nelson replied, "That a camp of loyal
Union men, native Kentuckians, should assemble in camp under the
flag of the Union and upon their native soil [and] should be a
cause of apprehension is something I do not clearly understand."
Governor Magoffin appealed to President Lincoln to close the camp,
but he refused.
Meanwhile, Confederate volunteers covertly
crossed the Tennessee border and massed at Camp Boone, just south of Guthrie
. Kentucky's fragile neutrality was nearing
an end.
Neutrality violated
On
September 4, 1861, Confederate Major General Leonidas Polk violated the Commonwealth's
neutrality by ordering Brigadier General Gideon Johnson Pillow to occupy
Columbus
. Columbus was of strategic importance both
because it was the terminus of the
Mobile and Ohio Railroad and
because of its position along the Mississippi River. Polk
constructed Fort DuRussey in the high bluffs of Columbus, and
equipped it with 143 cannons. Polk called the fort "The Gibraltar
of the West." To control traffic along the river, Polk stretched an
anchor chain across the river from the bank in Columbus to the
opposite bank in
Belmont,
Missouri. Each link of the chain measured eleven inches long by
eight inches wide and weighed twenty pounds. The chain soon broke
under its own weight, but Union forces did not learn of this fact
until early 1862.
In response to the Confederate invasion, Union
Brigadier General Ulysses
S.
Grant
left Cairo,
Illinois
and entered
Paducah,
Kentucky
on September 6, which
gave the Union control of the northern end of the New Orleans and Ohio Railroad
and the mouth of the Tennessee
River. Governor Magoffin denounced both sides for
violating the Commonwealth's neutrality, calling for both sides to
withdraw. However, on September 7, 1861, the General Assembly
passed a resolution ordering the withdrawal of only Confederate
forces. Magoffin vetoed the resolution, but both houses overrode
the veto, and Magoffin issued the proclamation.
The General Assembly
ordered the Union flag to be raised over the state
capitol
in Frankfort
, declaring its allegiance with the
Union.
Its neutrality broken, both sides quickly moved to establish
advantageous positions in the Commonwealth.
Confederate forces
under Albert Sidney Johnston
formed a line in the southern regions of Kentucky and the northern
regions of Tennessee, stretching from Columbus in the west to
Cumberland
Gap
in the east. Johnston dispatched Simon B.
Buckner
to fortify the middle of the line in Bowling
Green
. Buckner arrived on September 18, 1861 and
immediately began intensive drill sessions and constructing
elaborate defenses in anticipation of a Union strike. So impressive
were the fortifications at Bowling Green that a Union officer who
later surveyed them commented, "The labor has been immense their
troops cannot be well drilled their time must have been chiefly
spent in hard work, with the axe and spade."
Confederate government
The seal of the Confederate government of Kentucky
The elected government of Kentucky being decidedly Union, a group
of Southern sympathizers began formulating a plan to create a
Confederate
shadow government for
the Commonwealth.
Following a preliminary meeting on October
29, 1861, delegates from 68 of Kentucky's counties met at the
Clark House in Russellville, Kentucky
on November 18.
The
convention passed an ordinance of secession, adopted a new state
seal, and elected Scott County
native George W. Johnson as governor. Bowling
Green, now occupied by General Johnston himself, was designated as
the state capital, though the delegates provided that the
government could meet anywhere deemed appropriate by the
provisional legislative council and governor. Being unable to flesh
out a complete constitution and system of laws, the delegates voted
that "the
Constitution and
laws of Kentucky, not inconsistent with the acts of this
Convention, and the establishment of this Government, and the laws
which may be enacted by the Governor and Council, shall be the laws
of this state." Though President Davis had some reservation about
the circumvention of the elected General Assembly in forming the
Confederate government, Kentucky was admitted to the Confederacy on
December 10, 1861.. Kentucky was represented by the central star on
the
Confederate
battle flag..
Though it existed throughout the war, Kentucky's provisional
government had very little effect on the events in the Commonwealth
or in the war.
When General Johnston abandoned Bowling
Green early 1862, the government's officers traveled with his army,
and Governor Johnson was killed in active duty at the Battle of
Shiloh
. Continuing to travel with the Army of Tennessee, the government
re-entered Kentucky during Braxton
Bragg's campaign in the Commonwealth, but was driven out
permanently following the Battle of Perryville
. From that time forward, the government
existed primarily on paper, and dissolved following the war.
Confederate line broken

Albert Sydney Johnston was charged
with maintaining a Confederate defensive line in southern Kentucky
and northern Tennessee
Many
small skirmishes occurred in Kentucky in 1861, including "Forrest's First Fight" at Sacramento
, but battles of great military significance did not
begin in earnest until 1862.
Battle of Mill Springs
In January 1862, Union General
George
H. Thomas began to advance on
George B. Crittenden's position at
Mill Springs.
In rainy conditions,
Thomas' army moved slowly, and Crittenden advanced to meet them
before they could be reinforced by forces from nearby Somerset
. The battle commenced on January 19, 1862,
and favored Crittenden's forces early on. However, in the confusion
caused by the rain and fog,
Felix
Zollicoffer, commander of Crittenden's First Brigade, rode into
the midst of the Union forces. A Confederate officer galloped in,
yelling at Zollicoffer to inform him of his mistake. Upon being
identified, Zollicoffer was shot out of the saddle and killed,
disheartening the Confederates and turning the tide of the battle.
Thomas' reinforcements arrived, and Crittenden's forces were forced
to retreat across the flooded
Cumberland River. Many drowned in the
process, and Crittenden was given the blame for the debacle.
Forts Henry and Donelson
General Johnston learned of Crittenden's defeat at Mill Springs
through an account of the battle printed in a Louisville newspaper.
However, he had larger concerns, as
Ulysses S. Grant was advancing up the Cumberland and
Tennessee Rivers toward Forts Henry and Donelson.
Following Grant's
victory at the Battle of
Belmont
, General Polk had anticipated that Union forces
would target the Mississippi River and attack Columbus, and had
withdrawn most of his forces to that location. Lloyd Tilghman was left to defend Fort Henry
with fewer than 3,000 men. Union troops began their assault on the
fort on February 5, 1862, and Tilghman surrendered the following
day.
General Johnston countered by ordering Pillow, Buckner, and
John B. Floyd to the defense of Fort Donelson. None of
the three was specifically given command, a decision that would
prove costly. Grant arrived at Donelson on
February 13, and found himself outnumbered by
some 3,000 troops. Floyd failed to capitalize on his advantage,
however, and Grant was reinforced the next day.
On February 15, the Confederates had nearly cleared
an escape route to Nashville
, but arguments among the generals delayed the
retreat. Floyd seized a steamboat and used it to evacuate
his forces, while Pillow fled in a rowboat. Buckner, left alone in
command, proposed a cease-fire to Grant while terms of surrender
were negotiated. Grant's reply that only "an unconditional and
immediate surrender" could be accepted made him a hero in Union
eyes, and earned him the nickname "Unconditional Surrender"
Grant.
Confederate withdrawal
The collapse of Forts Henry and Donelson made Polk's position at
Columbus untenable; the Confederates were forced to abandon "The
Gibraltar of the West." His line shattered, Johnston abandoned
Bowling Green on February 11, 1862, retreating first to Nashville,
then further south to join
Pierre G. T. Beauregard and Braxton Bragg at
Corinth,
Mississippi
. Cumberland Gap
, the final piece of Johnston's line, finally fell
to Union forces in June 1862.
Morgan's first raids
Almost immediately following the Confederate withdrawal from
Kentucky, General
John Hunt Morgan
began the first of his raids into the Bluegrass state.
In May 1862, Morgan's
riders captured two Union trains at Cave City
, but his apparent goal was to agitate Union forces;
he paroled everyone aboard, returned one of the trains, and sent
the occupants back to Louisville. This move accomplished
little except emboldening Morgan for a more extensive raid in
July.
On July
4, 1862, Morgan and his men left Knoxville, Tennessee
and captured Tompkinsville
five days later. After a brief stop in
Glasgow
, where many of Morgan's troops were from, they
continued to Lebanon
, capturing it on July
12. From there, the cavalry stopped in Harrodsburg
and Georgetown
, and upon seeing that Lexington
was too heavily fortified, turned their attention
to the town of Cynthiana
. Morgan was again victorious at Cynthiana,
but with Union reinforcements closing in on him, he paroled all the
captured soldiers from the battle and rode to Paris
.
On their
exit from the Commonwealth, the cavalry picked up 50 recruits at
Richmond
. They also stopped in Somerset
, where Morgan instructed his telegrapher, George "Lightning" Ellsworth to send
taunting messages to General Jeremiah
Boyle and publisher George
Prentice. At the completion of his escape through the
Commonwealth, Morgan claimed to have captured and paroled 1,200
enemy soldiers, recruited 300 men and acquired several hundred
horses for his cavalry, used or destroyed supplies in seventeen
towns, and incurred fewer than 100 casualties.
Smith and Bragg advance
Morgan's exploits encouraged Confederate General
Edmund Kirby Smith to move on Kentucky.
After conferring with General
Braxton
Bragg at Chattanooga, Smith moved to drive
George W. Morgan from Cumberland Gap in August 1862.
Both generals understood that Smith would capture Cumberland Gap,
then join Bragg in Middle Tennessee. When the two armies met, Bragg
would command the combined force against
Don Carlos Buell in Nashville. Once
Nashville was captured, Bragg and Smith would commence an invasion
of Kentucky.
As the battle at Cumberland Gap wore on, Morgan refused to retreat
or surrender his position. Thinking an invasion of Kentucky was
preferable to a long siege on the Gap, Smith left a detachment to
handle Morgan and proceeded toward Lexington, abandoning the plan
to join Bragg and capture Nashville. The move forced Bragg's hand,
and he too entered Kentucky on
August 28.
As Smith
progressed toward Lexington, Indiana
governor Oliver
P. Morton decided that
Governor Robinson was doing too little to support the Union cause.
He dispatched regiments across the Ohio into Louisville, and
considered himself governor of both Indiana and Kentucky.
Battle of Richmond
Upon learning of Smith's advance into Kentucky, General "Bull"
Nelson prepared to engage the invading army at the
Kentucky River to take advantage of the
better terrain and delay the engagement so more reinforcements
could arrive. He ordered the brigades under
Mahlon Manson and
Charles Cruft not to attack Smith, but to
withdraw to Lexington, but the orders either were not delivered in
time, or they were ignored.
After
some preliminary skirmishes, Smith's army met Mahlon's brigade at
Richmond,
Kentucky
on August 30.
Smith's more experienced troops broke the center of the Union line,
and Mahlon fell back to Richmond Cemetery. By the afternoon,
General Nelson arrived and tried to rally the troops. Riding along
the front of the Union line, the portly Nelson exclaimed, "Boys, if
they can't hit me, they can't hit a barn door!" Unfortunately for
Nelson, he was soon hit twice by Confederate gunfire. Though Nelson
was seriously wounded, he escaped the battle as Confederate cavalry
moved to cut off the Union retreat. He left behind 206 killed, 844
wounded, and 4,303 missing. With only 98 killed, 492 wounded, and
10 missing, Smith had won one of the most complete Confederate
victories of the entire war.
Battle of Munfordville
While Smith continued to Lexington, Bragg was just entering
Kentucky, having delayed at Chattanooga until August 28. Bragg was
told that there were ample supplies in the Glasgow area, but upon
learning that Bragg had entered Kentucky, Buell left George Thomas
to guard Nashville and moved the rest of his army to
heavily-fortified Bowling Green.
Meanwhile, Smith had dispatched Colonel John Scott to look for
Bragg. On the night of
September 13,
Scott encountered
John T. Wilder at Munfordville, and demanded his
surrender. Scott requested the aid of
James Chalmers' Mississippi brigade, which
moved to support Scott throughout the night. The assault commenced
the next morning, and though outnumbered, Scott's forces inflicted
more than 200 casualties in the early fighting. At 9:30 AM,
Chalmers tried to intimidate Wilder into surrender, sending a flag
of truce with the message, "You have made a gallant defense of your
position, and to avoid further bloodshed I demand an unconditional
surrender of your forces. I have six regiments of infantry, one
battalion of infantry sharpshooters, and have just been reinforced
by a brigade of cavalry, under Colonel Scott, with two battalions
of infantry." Upon receiving this message, Wilder replied "Thank
you for your compliments. If you wish to avoid further bloodshed,
keep out of the reach of my guns."
Wilder was soon reinforced by Colonel
Cyrus L. Dunham, who brought a force of 4,000 men.
Scott and Chalmers sought assistance from Bragg's main army. Bragg
was incensed, but arrived the next day to take charge of the
battle. Bragg deployed forces under
William J. Hardee and Leonidas Polk to surround the
town, delaying his assault until
September
17. Bragg sent another request for the force's surrender. At a
council of war, Wilder made an unusual request of Bragg's
subordinate, Simon B. Buckner that he be allowed to inspect the
forces that now surrounded him to determine whether surrender were
the correct course of action. Delighted by this supreme compliment,
Buckner obliged, and after surveying the Confederate line, Wilder
surrendered.
Wilder's force of some 4,000 men was paroled and directed to
Bowling Green, where Bragg hoped they would be a drain on Buell's
supplies. The delay caused by the Confederate victory at
Munfordville may well have cost them a much more important prize
Louisville.
Inauguration of Governor Hawes
While Bragg rested his troops and planned his next move, Buell
marched north from Bowling Green and arrived in Louisville on
September 25.
Seeing his primary
objective fallen into Union hands, Bragg turned to Bardstown
, where he had expected to meet Smith.
Smith was
actually operating independently near Frankfort, and Bragg, now
painfully aware that the lack of cooperation with Smith might prove
the Confederates' undoing in Kentucky, began to disperse his troops
into defensive postures at Bardstown, Shelbyville
, and Danville.
Both Bragg and Smith had been disappointed with the number of
volunteers from Kentucky. Wagonloads of rifles had been sent to the
Commonwealth to equip the anticipated recruits, but although
Confederate sympathies were high, willing volunteers were not, and
many of the rifles remained on the wagons. Bragg hoped to rally
potential recruits by installing
Richard
Hawes, governor of Kentucky's Confederate shadow government, in
an inauguration ceremony in Frankfort. The elected government fled
to Louisville just before the Confederates arrived in
Frankfort.
The ceremony took place on October 4, 1862. First, Bragg addressed
the assembled partisan crowd, promising to defend the Commonwealth.
Then Hawes, who had taken the oath of office months earlier while
traveling with Bragg's
Army of
Tennessee, delivered a lengthy inaugural address. He told the
crowd that the provisional government would "institute as far as
possible such civil institutions, as will protect persons and
property, until the people in their sovereign capacity can
establish a permanent Government founded on the will of the
majority."
The promises made by Bragg and Hawes were short-lived. Before the
inaugural ball could be held, Buell's forces had descended on the
state capital, firing artillery shells that shattered the jovial
atmosphere and put the Confederate forces to flight. Bragg had
sorely underestimated Buell's ability to make a rapid advance on
his position. While preparations were being made for Hawes'
inauguration, Buell was already forcing the Confederate army from
Shelbyville.
Bragg ordered Leonidas Polk from Bardstown
to attack Buell's flank, but Polk was already under attack and
retreating to Bryantsville
. Bragg began a retreat from Frankfort to
Harrodsburg
to regroup with Polk. Meanwhile, Smith
prepared to defend Lexington, where he assumed the bulk of Buell's
force would be directed.
Battle of Perryville
By
October 7, Polk's forces had fallen back
to the town of Perryville
. The dry summer of 1862 had left water in
short supply, and when the Union troops learned of water in
Perryville's Doctor's Creek, they began to move on the Confederate
position.
Bragg shared Smith's assumption that the
bulk of the Union attack would be directed at Lexington and
Frankfort, and ordered Polk's forces to attack and destroy the
approaching Union force before proceeding to Versailles
to meet Smith. The Confederate soldiers in
Perryville, however, realized that a much larger force was
approaching and assumed a defensive posture. In fact, Buell,
Charles Champion Gilbert,
Alexander McCook, and
Thomas Crittenden were all approaching
Perryville.
The Confederates were not the only ones to misjudge the situation,
however. When Bragg learned that his men had not attacked as
ordered, he came to Perryville himself to lead the attack. In
realigning to an attack posture, the Confederates stirred such a
cloud of dust that the approaching Union force believed they were
retreating to Harrodsburg. This gave Bragg's men the advantage of
surprise when they opened fire on McCook's forces at 2 PM on
October 8. While McCook was being pushed
back on the left flank, the Union center held strong until the
right flank began to collapse.
It was not until late afternoon when Buell learned of McCook's
plight, whereupon he sent two brigades from Gilbert's corps to
reinforce him. This halted the Confederate advance on McCook north
of Perryville. Meanwhile, small Confederate brigades encountered
Gilbert's force of 20,000 men to the west and Crittenden force,
also 20,000 strong, to the south. Only then did Bragg realize that
he was facing Buell's main force, and that he was vastly
outnumbered. As night approached and halted the battle, Bragg
conferred with his officers and decided to retreat to Harrodsburg
to meet Smith. From Harrodsburg, the Confederates exited Kentucky
through Cumberland Gap. For the remainder of the war, there would
be no concerted efforts by the Confederacy to hold Kentucky.
On December 17, 1862, under the terms of
General Order No. 11, thirty Jewish families,
longtime residents all, were forced from their homes.
Cesar Kaskel, a prominent local Jewish
businessman, dispatched a telegram to President
Lincoln, and met with him, eventually
succeeding in getting the order revoked.
Morgan strikes again

1863 abstract return showing Union
Forces in Kentucky.
His inability to engage Bragg and Smith on their retreat from
Kentucky led to Buell being replaced by General
William Rosecrans. Rosecrans encamped at
Nashville during the fall and early winter of 1862. Believing that
Rosecrans would begin a campaign as soon as sufficient supplies
were accumluated, Bragg dispatched John Hunt Morgan back into
Kentucky in December 1862 to cut the supply line afforded Rosecrans
by the Louisville and Nashville Railroad.
The Christmas Raid
Morgan's men crossed into Kentucky on
December 22 and captured a Union supply wagon
bound for Glasgow. On
Christmas Day,
Morgan's men rode through Glasgow, bound for Munfordville and the
massive L&N bridge that spanned the
Green River there. After quelling the
stiff Union resistance, Morgan's men destroyed the bridge and
several miles of railroad track. Whatever else might happen, they
had succeeded in disrupting Rosecrans' supply line.
From
Munfordville, Morgan rode to Elizabethtown
, arriving on December
27. The Union commander,
Colonel
H. S. Smith, demanded Morgan's surrender, but Morgan turned the
tables, surrounded Smith, and, after a short skirmish, accepted his
surrender. Again, Morgan destroyed the L&N infrastructure in
the area, then began planning an escape back to Tennessee.
Colonel
John M. Harlan's artillery shelled Morgan's
force as it crossed the
Rolling Fork
River on
December 29, seriously
wounding First Brigade commander
Basil
W. Duke. Duke was taken to
Bardstown for medical treatment, however, and recovered in time to
rejoin the Confederate retreat the next day.
Freezing
rain plagued Morgan's men as they encamped at Springfield
on the night of December
30. Worse yet, scouts reported a massive Union
force concentrated nine miles away at Lebanon
. With
Frank
Wolford's men moving on his position, Morgan made the difficult
decision to move out just after midnight in ever-worsening weather.
He
ordered a few companies to create a diversion, feigning an attack
on Lebanon and burning fence rails to give the appearance of
campfires, while the main body of his force continued to Campbellsville
. The plan worked, and following a march
that many described as their most miserable night of the war,
Morgan's men arrived safely in Campbellsville on
New Year's Eve and captured some welcome
supplies.
The following day, they proceeded through
Columbia
, and returned to Tennessee on January 3.
Morgan crosses the Ohio
Following the Christmas Raid, there were only minor incursions into
Kentucky by various units under
Roy Cluke,
John Pegram,
Humphrey Marshall, among others.
Frustrated Union commanders could only react to these unpredictable
raids. Morgan would soon do them a favor, however, by raising the
visibility of his next raid.
It was widely reported that since his December 1862 marriage,
Morgan had lost some of his bravado. Morgan, eager to dispel such
rumors and weary of guarding Bragg's left flank, proposed a raid
through Kentucky and across the
Ohio
River. Bragg, fearing an attack from Rosecrans, welcomed the
idea of a distraction that would take the pressure off his
Army of Tennessee.
Morgan gathered his
men to an area between Liberty
and Alexandria, Tennessee
. On June 10, he
addressed his unit, telling them that Bragg had sanctioned a raid
to Louisville, and if conditions permitted, across the Ohio River
into Indiana
and possibly Ohio
. He
confided Bragg's true orders to halt at the Ohio River only to
trusted confidant Basil Duke.
The raid
was delayed by orders to intercept a Union raiding party moving on
Knoxville,
Tennessee
, but after three miserable weeks of floundering
through muddy conditions, Morgan's men still had not located the
enemy. They finally began entering Kentucky on July 2, 1863.
Two days later, Morgan engaged Colonel Orlando Moore's forces at
Tebb's Bend, a bridge crossing the
Green River near Campbellsville. As
was his custom, Morgan demanded an unconditional surrender, but
Moore, noting that this was
Independence Day, replied
"It is a bad day for surrender, and I would rather not." Moore's
forces won the day, and Morgan, having suffered 71 casualties,
decided to bypass the bridge.
Morgan again encountered resistance at Lebanon where, despite the
Confederate victory, his nineteen-year-old brother Tom was killed.
From Lebanon, Morgan's men made haste through Springfield toward
Bardstown, where they learned that Union soldiers were less than a
day behind, and that Louisville was already bracing for another
attack.
Morgan had the advantage of surprise,
however, having selected Brandenburg
as his target instead. He sent an advance
detachment to make preparations for crossing the Ohio, and on
July 7, they captured two steamboats, the
John B. McCombs and the
Alice Dean. By midnight, all of Morgan's men
were on Indiana soil.
Over the next few weeks, Morgan rode along the course of the Ohio
River, raiding Indiana and Ohio. On
July 19,
Federal forces captured Duke and 700 of Morgan's men, but Morgan
escaped with 1,100 others. Union pursuit was heavy, and Morgan lost
exhausted men daily, his command dwindling to 363 men by the time
he surrendered on July 26, 1863.
Morgan
was taken to a penitentiary in Columbus, Ohio
, but escaped with several of his officers in
November 1863. Despite the threat of a
court martial from Bragg for disobeying
orders, the Confederacy so desperately needed leaders that Morgan
was restored to his command position.
Forrest raids Paducah

Abstract of the Returns of the XXIII
Corps, Department of the Ohio, responsible for the Military
District of Kentucky (1st and 2nd Divisions), and the District of
Western Kentucky
Following Morgan's capture in the summer of 1863, there were no
major engagements fought in Kentucky until spring of 1864. Portions
of three infantry regiments from Bragg's army had requested to
reorganize as a mounted infantry under
Abraham Buford, but the
Confederacy had no horses to supply them.
In response, Nathan Bedford Forrest, who had been
operating in Mississippi
, began to organize a raid on western Tennessee and
Kentucky. Besides obtaining mounts for the
mounted-infantry-to-be, Forrest intended to disrupt Union supply
lines, obtain general provisions for Confederate forces, and
discourage enlistment of blacks in Kentucky into the Union
army.
On March 25, 1864, Forrest commenced his attack. He met Colonel
Stephen G. Hicks at
Fort
Anderson and demanded an unconditional surrender. Knowing that
Forrest's main objectives were to obtain supplies and horses, Hicks
declined. For the most part, Hicks was right in his assumption that
Forrest would not assault the fort, but Confederate colonel
Albert P. Thompson, a native of the area, did
briefly attempt to capture it before being killed with 24 men from
his unit. Forrest held the city for ten hours, destroying the Union
headquarters, as well as the buildings housing the quartermaster
and commissary.
Forrest also captured a total of 200 horses
and mules before withdrawing to Mayfield
. Following the raid, Forrest granted
furlough to the Kentuckians under his
command so they could secure better clothing and mounts.
As
agreed, every man reported back to Trenton, Tennessee
on April 4.
Unionist newspapers bragged after the raid that Union forces had
hidden the best horses in the area and that Forrest had only
captured horses stolen from private citizens. Furious, Forrest
ordered Buford back into Kentucky. Buford's men arrived on
April 14, forced Hicks back into the fort, and
captured an additional 140 horses in the
foundry, exactly where the newspaper reports had
placed them. They then rejoined Forrest in Tennessee.
The raid was not only
successful in terms of gaining additional mounts, but provided a
diversion for Forrest's attack on Fort Pillow,
Tennessee
.
1864-1865: Military rule
In response to the growing problem of
guerrilla campaigns throughout 1863 and
1864, in June 1864, Maj. Gen.
Stephen G. Burbridge was given command over the
state of Kentucky. This began an extended period of military siege
that would last through early 1865, beginning with
martial law authorized by President
Abraham Lincoln. During Burbridge's rule in
Kentucky, he directed the
execution and
imprisonment of scores of people, including public figures, on
charges of
treason and other high crimes,
much of which were baseless. He would go down in history as the
"Butcher of Kentucky". After a falling out with
Governor Thomas E. Bramlette, Burbridge was
dismissed.
Order of battle for Union forces in Kentucky
- Data is from Tabular Statements Showing the Names of
Commanders of Army Corps, Divisions and Brigades, United States
Army, During the War of 1861 to 1865, compiled from the data
on record in the office of the Quartermaster General of the Army,
Gen. C. McKeever, 1887.
1862-1863
Army of Kentucky
Maj. Gen.
Gordon Granger
- *Granger's command also included garrisons
at Lexington
, Danville
, Falmouth
, Nicholasville
, and Frankfort, Kentucky
Forces at Bowling Green, Kentucky
Brig.
Gen.
Mahlon
D.
Manson
- *Manson's force consisted of what was left
of the command under Maj. Gen. William "Bull" Nelson who had been
defeated at the Battle of
Richmond, Kentucky.
1863-1864
- The forces in Kentucky at times also
included 3 additional brigades of the 1st division, and the
brigades 2nd, 3rd, and 4th divisions of the XXIII Corps which were
in the field near Knoxville, Tennessee
under the command of Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside along with 2 divisions of
the IX Corps, and a part of the
cavalry division of the Department of Ohio under Maj. Gen. George Stoneman.
- Curiously, the official records refer to Boyle's command as the
"District of Western Kentucky", although it included all of
Kentucky except Western Kentucky, which was assigned to
the District of Columbus
1st Division—XXIII Corps
Created G.O.
|
No.
|
103.
|
A.G.O.
|
April 27, 1863.
|
Reorganized April, 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
S.D.
|
Sturgis, Brigadier
General, June 1863
S.P.
|
Carter, Brigadier
General, July 10, 1863
J.T.
|
Boyle, Brigadier
General, Aug 6, 1863
|
| U.S. |
Forces, So. |
Cent. |
Ky.—1st Division, XXIII Corps
Organized October, 1863. |
Discontinued January, 1864. |
Transferred to Dept. of the Ohio.
Commander, Date Assigned
E.H. |
Hobson, Brigadier General, October 1863 |
U.S. |
Forces, Eastetern Ky.—1st Division, XXIII Corps
Organized October, 1863. |
Discontinued January, 1864. |
Transferred to Dept. of the Ohio.
Commander, Date Assigned
G.W. |
Gallup, Col. 14th KY. |
Vols., October 1863 |
| U.S. |
Forces, Somerset, Ky.—1st Division, XXIII Corps
Organized October, 1863. |
Discontinued January, 1864. |
Transferred to Dept. of the Ohio.
Commander, Date Assigned
T.T. |
Garrard, Brigadier
General, October 22, 1863 |
U.S. |
Forces, No. |
Cent. |
Ky—1st Division, XXIII Corps
Organized October, 1863. |
Discontinued January, 1864. |
Transferred to Dept. of the Ohio.
Commander, Date Assigned
S.S. |
Fry, Brigadier General, Oct
1863 |
| U.S. |
Forces, S.W. |
Cent. |
Ky—1st Division, XXIII Corps
Organized October, 1863. |
Discontinued January, 1864. |
Transferred to Dept. of the
Ohio.
Commander, Date Assigned
C. |
Maxwell, Col. 26th Ky. Vols., Oct
1863 |
District of Columbus, Ky (6th Division, XVI Corps)
Denominated 6th Division, XVI Corps, March, 1863.
Changed to 3rd Division, 16th Corps, January 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
A.
|
Asboth, Brigadier
General, January 1863
A.J.
|
Smith, Brigadier General, August
5, 1863
|
1st Brigade—6th Division–XVI Corps
Organized July 14, 1863. |
Transferred to Cavalry Division, December, 1863.
Commander, Date Assigned
Geo. |
E. |
Waring Jr., Col. 4th Mo. Cav., July 1863 & October
1863
C.H. |
Fox, Col. 101st Ills. |
Vols., August 22, 1863
J.K. |
Mills, Col. 24th Mo. Vols., Sept. |
3, 1863 |
- *The District of Columbus became the District of Western
Kentucky, and the troops from the XVI Corps were replaced with
troops from the XXIII Corps.
1864-1865
- The forces in Kentucky at times also included the 1st, 2nd, 3rd
and 4th divisions of the XXIII Corps, under the command of Maj.
Gen. John M. Schofield, assigned to Sherman's forces
for the Atlanta
Campaign
.
5th Division, XXIII Corps
or District of Kentucky
Organized April 1864.
Transferred to Department of the Cumberland, January,
1865.
|
G.O.
|
No 5, A.G.
|
O.
Commander, Date Assigned
S.G.
|
Burbridge,
Brigadier-General, April 1864
|
1st Division, District of Kentucky
Organized April 10, 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
E.H.
|
Hobson, Brigadier General,
April 9, 1864 & December 9, 1864
N.C.
|
McLean, Brigadier
General, July 6, 1864
|
2nd Division, District of Kentucky
Organized April, 1864
Commander, Date Assigned
Hugh Ewing, Brigadier General, April 7,
1864
|
1st Brigade—1st Division–Dist. of Kentucky
Organized April, 1684.
Commander, Date Assigned
G.W. |
Gallup, Col. 14th Ky Mtd. |
Inf., April 13, 1864
S.B. |
Brown, Col. 11th Mich. Cav., May 13, 1864
E.H. |
Hobson, Brigadier General, July 6, 1864
C.J. |
True, Col. 40th Ky Vols., October 6, 1864 |
1st Brigade—2nd Division–Dist. of Kentucky
Organized April, 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
S.D. |
Bruce, Col. 20th Ky. Vols.,
April, 1684
T.B. |
Fairleigh, Lt. |
Col. 26th Ky. Vols.,
May 1864 |
2nd Brigade—1st Division–Dist. of Kentucky
Organized April, 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
C.J. |
True, Col. 40th Ky. Mtd. |
Inf., April 1864
J.M. |
Brown, Col. 45th Ky. Mtd. |
Inf., July 6, 1864
F.N. |
Alexander, Col. 30th Ky. Vols., Sept 1864 |
2nd Brigade—2nd Division–Dist. of
Kentucky
Organized April, 1864.
Commander, Date Assigned
C. |
Maxwell, Col. 26th Ky. Vols., April
1864 & Sept. |
1864
J.H. |
Grider, Col. 52nd Ky. Vols., July
1864
S.P. |
Love, Col. 11th Ky. Vols.,
November 1864
D.J. |
Dill, Col. 30th Wis. Vols., December
1864 |
3rd Brigade—1st Division–Dist. of Kentucky
Organized April, 1864
Commander, Date Assigned
C.S. |
Hanson, Col. 37th Ky. Mtd. |
Inf., April 13, 1864
B.J. |
Spaulding, Lt. |
Col. 37th Ky. Vols., Oct 1864 |
4th Brigade—1st Division–Dist of Kentucky
Organized April, 1864
Commander, Date Assigned
J.M. |
Brown, Col. 45th Ky. Mtd. |
Inf., April 1864
R.W. |
Ratliff, Col. 12th Ohio Cav, July 1864 |
District of Western Kentucky
Organized August, 1864.
|
Discontinued January, 1865.
Commander, Date Assigned
E.A.
|
Paine, Brigadier
General, August 1864
S.
|
Meredith,
Brigadier-General, September 12, 1864
|
References
Notes
See also
- Kentucky
's adjacent states in the American Civil War
- Western Theater of the
American Civil War
External links
Further reading