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The
Much-Traveled 21st Missouri
fought for the Union in Tennessee and Texas, and at
points in between.
Written By William B. Allmon

A Brief History
of the Twenty-First Missouri
From the September 1996 Issue
of America's Civil
War
During the Civil
War, infantry regiments from the state of Missouri fought
bravely in both the Confederate and Federal armies. By
war's end, the first regiment of Missourians trained to
fight as infantry in the Union Army, the 21st Missouri
Volunteer Infantry had risen from its humble beginnings
as a home guard regiment to earn an honored place in
Missouri history.
At the beginning
of the war, Missourians hoped to sit out the fighting in
neutrality. But clashes between Union and Confederate
forces, along with home-grown violence by bands of
secessionist Missourians, made long-term neutrality
impossible.
As a result, U.S.
Congressman Frank Blair and Brig. Gen. Nathaniel Lyon,
through the Committee of Public Safety in St. Louis,
began to organize Union state guard regiments for
guerrilla-plagued northeastern Missouri counties. Men
like William Bishop, a wealthy Virginia-born commodity
speculator turned Union colonel, were authorized to
"enlist as many as is thought advisable to serve the
government for as long a period as will be
necessary." Bishop was told by Lyon to return to
Clark County and "organize, equip and swear into
service home guardsmen."
To help organize
the home guard regiment for Clark County, Bishop turned
to a friend, former Ohioan and Mexican War veteran David
Moore of Wrightsville, to "sound the trumpet"
for the Union cause. On June 24, 1861, wearing his 1847
army uniform, Moore rode into Alexandria, Mo., and took
the oath of loyalty to the Union, returning to duty as a
captain of volunteers. On that same day, Moore had
handbills printed inviting "all who are willing to
fight for their homes, their county, and the flag of our
glorious Union" to join him, "bringing their
arms and ammunition."
Moore's little
band soon had grown to 54 men. By the end of the month,
3.000 men had been formed into the state home guard.
Troops raised by Moore and others were assembled at
Kahoka, in the heart of Clark County, on Tuesday, July 4,
1861, and formed into the 1st Northeast Missouri Home
Guards. Moore was elected colonel of the regiment.
In nearby Lewis
County on July 15, 1861, the Lewis County Home Guard of
four companies, with 300 men, were turned over by Stephen
W. Carnegy, who had raised the battalion, to its
commander, Colonel Humphrey Marshall Woodyard, a former
member of the Missouri General Assembly. Woodyard's
command later became the 2nd Northeast Missouri Home
Guard.
The destinies of
both Woodyard's and Moore's units soon intermingled. The
1st Northeast Missouri fought two small battles with
Missouri Confederate units in late July 1861. Those
battles, at Warsaw and Athens, cost the 1st Northeast
Missouri 23 men killed or wounded, but established Moore
as a daring and fearless commander.
The 2nd Northeast
Missouri fought at Clapp's Ford in mid-August 1861 and
then joined with Moore's troops at Fairmont, Mo., on
August 18. Together, the two regiments pursued Rebel
forces commanded by Confederate Colonel Martin E. Greene
until September 11. Moore and Woodyard were sent to
Canton, Mo., and operated against enemy units in
northeastern Missouri from September through November
1861.
By December 1861,
neither Moore nor Woodyard could find enough recruits to
bring their regiments back up to full strength. The
overall commander of Union forces in Missouri, Maj. Gen.
Henry Wager Halleck, decided to take a hand. He ordered
the state units to be re-formed as regiments of Missouri
volunteers or else be disbanded. And so on December 31,
1861, Missouri Governor Hamilton R. Gamble issued Special
Order 15, directing that the "battalion of Missouri
volunteers, heretofore known as the 1st Northeast
Missouri Regiment... and the battalion of Missouri
volunteers heretofore known as the 2nd Northeast Missouri
Regiment" be consolidated into a regiment "to
be hereafter known and designated as the 21st Regiment of
Missouri Volunteers." Moore was given command of the
new volunteer regiment, with Woodyard as his lieutenant
colonel. The 21st Missouri, 10 companies with a total of
962 men, was mustered into the Union army at Canton on
February 12, 1862.
On March 18, 1862,
the 21st Missouri boarded the steamer Die
Vernon and sailed to St. Louis,
where they arrived on March 19 and were billeted at
Benton Barracks. Their stay was short. The next day,
Moore was ordered to "proceed forthwith and report
to Maj. Gen. U.S. Grant, touching at Ft. Henry for
orders."
The regiment
boarded the steamer T.C. Swan
on the afternoon of March 21 and proceeded to Fort Henry
in northwestern Tennessee. From Fort Henry the regiment
sailed downriver to Pittsburg Landing, arriving on
Tuesday, March 25. At Pittsburg Landing, the regiment
joined Brig. Gen. Benjamin Prentiss's 6th Division,
attached to the 1st Brigade of Colonel Everett Peabody.
The regiment established its camp along the East Corinth
Road, between the 16th Wisconsin and 12th Michigan
regiments, in an area "covered with woods," a
soldier wrote years later, "with large cleared
spaces between, and which was intersected by deep
ravines."
Saturday, April 5,
1862, passed quietly. Later that day, Prentiss ordered
Moore to send out a reconnaissance patrol and strengthen
the outpost pickets. Moore led three companies of the
21st Missouri south on a well-beaten trail leading t the
East Corinth Road a half mile from the camp, then
proceeded west beyond the Western Corinth Road. In the
heavy timber and deep ravines beyond Prentiss' front,
Moore did not penetrate deeply into the woods and found
no trace of a Rebel presence other than fresh hoofprints.
If Moore had pressed his patrol farther, he might have
discovered evidence that an entire Confederate army was
close by. Instead, he returned to camp and reported
merely that enemy calvary might be near.
Early the next
morning, the Confederate Army of Tennessee, led by
General Albert Sidney Johnston, attacked Grant's smaller
army, hoping to destroy it before Union reinforcements
arrived. Receiving word of the fighting, Prentiss ordered
Moore to take five companies from his regiment, half the
21st Missouri's strength, and assist the hard-pressed
pickets.
Assembling
Companies A, C, D, H and I, Moore rode off toward the
fighting, leaving Woodyard in command of the 21st's
remaining five companies. Farther up the road, the
officer commanding the pickets, Major James E. Powell,
warned Moore of trouble ahead. Moore downplayed the
danger but sent a lieutenant back to camp to urge
Woodyard and the rest of regiment forward on the
"double quick."
A few minutes
before 7 a.m., Woodyard appeared with the remaining five
companies and joined Moore's column in the woods. The
regiment marched on until it came to a fence along the
roadside.
A volley of
musketry came from behind the fence. Some of the
Missourians dropped to the ground and opened fire,
causing the Confederates to fall back. Moore quickly
ordered the 21st to form ranks in a nearby cotton field
to flank the enemy position.
The men broke down
the fence and found themselves facing the 8th and 9th
Arkansas regiments forming at the south end of the field.
As the regiment exchanged volleys with the Arkansas
regiments, Moore remembered, "it appeared like a
volcano at full blast. The enemy's lines presented the
appearance of a line of fire; the air was filled with
lead and iron." The commander of the 9th Arkansas
was impressed with the sharp firing from the Missourians.
"The almost incessant roar of musketry, " wrote
the officer, "told the desperate character of the
contest being waged between the rebels and the 21st
Missouri." Members of the 21st began falling. Moore,
standing in front of the regiment, was struck by a bullet
in his right leg below the knee.
Moore was carried
off the field, and Woodyard took command and pulled the
regiment out of effective musket range. Woodyard then
re-formed the men along a knoll at the eastern end of the
field. The Confederates, wary of attempting a frontal
attack, tried to pass around Woodyard's right, but he
countered by pulling back to the northeast corner of the
field.
The 21st, along
with four companies of the 16th Wisconsin, held the new
line until Confederate troops outflanked it. With too
small a force to contain them, Woodyard pulled back to a
new position less than a mile from the 1st Brigade's
camps. The men were hardly in their new position when
their thin line was struck by skirmishers from Brig. Gen.
R.G. Shaver's brigade. Firing from behind an incline, the
Missourians were able to halt the onrushing Confederates
for a short time, but with fresh Confederate troops
attacking, the regiment, along with the rest of Peabody's
brigade, began to fall back beyond their camps.
Two hundred men of
the 21st, surviving the rout through their camp, joined
Prentiss and elements of the 18th Missouri, 12th Michigan
and 18th Wisconsin regiments in what became known as the
Hornet's Nest. These units delayed the Confederate
attacks on the rest of Grant's army until 5:30 p.m., when
Prentiss surrendered. Fifty-eight members of the 21st
Missouri were among the 2,200 prisoners captured.
The remainder of
the regiment regrouped in a camp located near Dell's
Branch Creek. The next day, the 21st took part in Grant's
counterattack, which drove the Confederates, now under
General P.G.T. Beauregard, from the field at Shiloh. In
its first battle as a Union regiment, the 21st Missouri
lost 18 killed, 46 wounded, and 58 missing. Moore, one of
the wounded, lost his right leg.
Moore returned to
the regiment three months later, in July 1862. According
to one observer, Moore was a "study in red eyed
pugnacity as he hobbled along on crutches." The 21st
had need of his pugnacity. During July and August, the
regiment was burdened by smoldering discontent in its
ranks, brought on by war weariness and homesickness.
The climax came on
August 6, 1862. Large groups of men from the 21st left
their camps and went into the woods to discuss whether
they should lay down their arms. The mutineers even
talked about shooting the 21st's officers and staging a
unilateral cease-fire. Hearing of this, Colonel Moore
ordered Major Edwin Moore, the 21st's adjutant, to the
two companies "on the double quick" to break up
the meeting. Edwin Moore, along with Companies A and F of
the 21 Missouri, met the mutineers returning to camp and
arrested 60 of them. Six men were charged as ringleaders
of the mutiny. All six were tried, found guilty and
sentenced to a year at hard labor.
On September 19,
the regiment took part in the Battle of Iuka, and later
fought at Corinth on October 3-4, 1862. After a brief
return to Missouri to recruit new men for the regiment,
the 21st returned to La Grange, Tenn., and took part in
Grant's first attempt to take Vicksburg, Miss., in
December 1862. Following that failure, the 21st was
placed on garrison duty at Columbus, Ky., then at Union
City and Clinton, and finally at Memphis, Tenn. The 21st
remained for eight months guarding the crucial river and
railway town.
On January 28,
1864, the good times at Memphis ended when the 21st
boarded the transport Sir William
Wallace as part of the 1st Brigade,
3rd Division, XVI Corps. David Moore, now a lieutenant
colonel, was in command, replacing Woodyard, who had
resigned his commission after his election to the
Missouri Supreme Court.
Throughout 1864,
the 21st took part in many significant battles and
campaigns in the western theater, including William T.
Sherman's Meridian campaign in Mississippi and the Red
River campaign in eastern Texas. After the completion of
the unsuccessful Red River campaign on May 22, the 21st
returned to Vicksburg, then moved back to Memphis.
In the last days
of June 1864, the regiment joined the 3rd Division and
went to Moscow, Tenn., by rail, then marched nine miles
from Moscow to La Grange, the XVI Corps's staging area.
There, the 21st joined the XVI Corps under Maj. Gen. A.J.
Smith. On July 5, the corps moved into Mississippi to
confront Confederate forces under the dreaded cavalryman
Nathan Bedford Forrest. On July 13, with rations running
short, Smith turned the XVI Corps toward Tupelo to forage
for food. The Federal advance was bitterly contested by
Rebel forces striking at both ends of Smith's column. The
regiment reached Tupelo and made camp on a ridge facing
the town of Harrisburg. The Missourians slept that night
with their weapons within easy reach.
At 7 a.m., the
Confederates, mostly dismounted cavalry, advanced on the
3rd Division's positions. The 21st, with the 119th
Illinois on it left and the 58th Illinois on its right,
waited for the attack. The Union lines were hidden from
Confederate view by the top of a hill. At point-blank
range, the 21st rose and fired directly into the oncoming
Confederates.
Following the
volley, the Missourians, "with a yell like that of
demons," charged. Many startled Confederates dropped
their weapons and ran back down the hill with the 21st in
hot pursuit, pouring a "continuous and deadly
fire" upon them. Colonel Thomas J. Kinney,
commanding the 119th Illinois, recalled that "the
Twenty-first Missouri was formed on my right and charged
with us, they, too, capturing many prisoners."
The 21st, along
with both Illinois regiments, drove the Confederates from
the hill. There were no more Confederate attacks that
day, although the 21st Missouri was harassed by heavy
artillery fire. The regiment's casualties in the Battle
of Tupelo were one man killed and 15 wounded. "The
officers and men of the command behaved with the utmost
gallantry," Moore reported, "obeying every
order with that promptness which secures success."
In August 1864,
the 21st Missouri took part in the XVI Corps' expedition
to Oxford, Miss. Then, in September of that year, the
regiment returned to Missouri, where it took part in the
pursuit of Confederate Brig. Gen. Sterling Price's force
until November 1864. Returning to Tennessee in late
November, the regiment helped Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas'
Union forces to destroy the Confederate Army of
Tennessee, led by General John Bell Hood, at the Battle
of Nashville, on December 15-16, 1864.
In January 1865,
the 21st Missouri moved to Clifton, Tenn., then to
Eastport, Miss., where it remained until February 1865.
On February 9, Moore was replaced by Colonel Charles
Tracy as commander of the 21st Missouri. Soon afterward,
the regiment was sent to New Orleans, where it became
part of a reactivated XVI Corps. Still brigaded with the
89th Indiana, 119th and 122nd Illinois regiments, the
21st joined the Military Division of West Mississippi.
In March 1865, the
21st arrived on Dauphin Island in Mobile Bay, and took
part in the capture of Spanish Fort and Fort Blakely on
April 9 and the occupation of Mobile, Ala., on April 12.
While in Mobile, the men of the 21st Missouri learned of
Lee's surrender at Appomattox.
The weeks
following Mobile's capture were dull ones for the men of
the 21st. "The boys in the ranks were
restless," a soldier noted. "Home was on their
minds." The regiment marched to Montgomery, Ala.,
with the XVI Corps on April 13 and remained there until
May 27, when the regiment returned to Mobile on
peacekeeping duty, until mustering out on April 19, 1866.
During its four
years in the Union service, the 21st Missouri fought in
four major battles and participated in five campaigns.
Two officers and 68 enlisted men from the regiment were
killed in action.
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