
"History
of Northeast Missouri"
Edited by Walter Williams, 1911, pages 306-333
Chariton County, written by James S. WALLACE, of
Brunswick
Submitted by: JTice4840
Here is an article sent to me from the Carrol County Mo.
Rootsweb...
The Civil War
During the Civil War it is estimated that six
hundred or seven hundred men in this county enlisted in the
Confederate Army. The first company was organized at Brunswick
and enlisted as Missouri State Guards with the following
officers: Captain, E. W. PRICE; first lieutenant, H. L.
GAINES; second lieutenant, R. A. DICKEY; Jr.. 2nd lieutenant,
J. O. PATTERSON. The officers of the second company were:
Captain, Thomas H. PRICE; first lieutenant, John BARR;
second lieutenant, John CROWDER; Jr.. 2nd lieutenant, William
MCASHAN. These companies were composed of eighty- five men
each. Another company composed of men from the forks of the
Chariton enlisted in Company B, Third Missouri State Guard
with the following officers: Captain, T. H. WALTON; first
lieutenant, John LAMPKIN; second lieutenant William
EWING; Jr. 2nd lieutenant, John TAYLOR. This company is
composed of eighty five men and reenlisted in 1862 in the
Confederate Army, remaining in the service until the close of
the war and was mustered out of Shreveport, Louisiana, in
June, 1865. Captain T. H. WALTON was promoted to the rank of
major and belonged to General ELLIOTT's battalion of General
Joe SHELBY's brigade. In October, 1862, two companies of
Company A, Third Regiment, Missouri State Guard, and Company
I, Eighth Battalion, Missouri Infantry, consolidated and
formed Company E, Eighth Regiment, C. S. A., of which regiment
R. H. MUSSER was lieutenant-colonel and H. L. GAINES, major.
The following officers were elected in Company I, Ninth
Regiment: Captain, James C. WALLACE; first lieutenant,
G. T. VAUGHN; second lieutenant, J.N. THOMPSON; Jr. 2nd
lieutenant, F. F. WEED. This company was made up of men from
Chariton County and participated in the engagements at
Carthage, Drywood, Springfield, Lexington, and Elk Horn. At
Elk Horn Captain WALLACE was severely wounded in the right
thigh. Among other engagements in which this company
participated were at Cypress Bend, Little Rock, Gaine's
Landing, Jenkin's Ferry, and Pleasant Hill, Louisiana.
Captain WALLACE was again wounded in the knee at Jenkin's
Ferry. He surrendered his company May 10, 1865 at Shreveport,
Louisiana.
Several companies of Union
Soldiers were organized at Chariton County and entered the
Union Army in 1861. The officers of Company B, Eighteenth
Missouri Infantry were: Captain, Peter R. DOLMAN; first
lieutenant, Fred PARTENHEIMER; first lieutenant J. J. HERSEL,
resigned; second lieutenant, J. J. ABRIGG. Captain John A.
VANCE organized a company of Home Guard Militia, composed of
Germans living in the southeastern part of the county. Captain
BUCKSHARDT organized another company of Home Guard Militia
composed of Germans and were stationed at Bowling Green
Prairie south of Dalton. Quite a number of men in Chariton
county enlisted in Companies E and H of the Ninth Regiment of
Cavalry, Missouri State Militia, known as Colonel Guitar's
Regiment. The officers of company H, Missouri State Militia
were: Captain, H. S. GLAZE; 1st lieutenant, T. A. H. SMITH;
second lieutenant, J A. DONAHOE; first seargent, J. X.
MITCHELL; Second Sergeant, J. SHAW; third sergeant, F. O.
BOOMER; fourth sergeant, Monte LEHMAN; fifth sergeant, John S.
FOGGIN.
During the last year of the
Civil war there were enacted in Chariton County some of the
darkest deeds of cold-blooded murder that were ever
perpetuated in any civilized community by men who seemed to be
possessed of the instinct of the savage instead of that of
civilized beings. Old men who had borne the burdens of the
early pioneer in this county and whose gray hairs and
tottering forms entitled them to more humane treatment were
shot down by the roadside by these creatures in human form for
the sole reason that they were accused of being southern
sympathizers. On the other hand, there were roving bands of
guerillas scouting over the country, many of them not
connected with any military organization, who retaliated by
killing inoffensive Union men who were non-combatants and had
taken no part in the war. The Union men as well as the
southern sympathizers who remained at home to care for their
families suffered more from these atrocities than those who
enlisted in either army.; Among those who were thus shot by
the militia in 1864 was Moses HURT, who had been a Union man
all during the war. He was taken a short distance from his
home and killed by the roadside. Abner FINELL, one of the
pioneer school teachers in Chariton County and a captain of
the state militia in 1838, was taken from his home by the same
crowd and shot by the roadside a few hundred yards from his
front gate. James STARK Sr. living in the same neighborhood
with Moses HURT, was given the alternative of going in the
militia or going to prison. Be in a southern sympathizer, he
declined doing either and so remained away from home. A
captain of the militia, with some thirty men, went to his home
to arrest him. He was not there and they told his son, James
STARK, Jr., to tell them where his father was or they would
hang him. But none of the family could tell anything of his
whereabouts. They then took James Jr., a boy only sixteen
years old, to the woods, and hung him several times to the
limb of a tree, while the boy protested his inability to tell
them where his father was. They finally hung him to a limb and
rode off and left him hanging. His body was found some
days later and given a decent interment by his neighbors. The
writer of this sketch was a schoolmate of a sister of James
STARK, Jr., for several months during the summer of 1864 and
often heard her tell the story of the brutal murder of her
little brother. Horatio PHILPOTT, one of the pioneers of
Chariton County, who came to the county in 1837 and opened a
mill on the east fork of the Chariton, was known as a southern
sympathizer, as were many of his neighbors. In October, 1864,
he was taken from his home by a company of militia under the
command of Captain TRUEMAN and this aged pioneer, seventy-five
years old, was shot a few yards from his home. When found by
his family he had on his person five gunshot wounds and two
bayonet thrusts. Two of the gunshot wounds were in the head
and the others, with the bayonet thrusts, were in the breast.
Dr. James BRUMMALL, living in the same neighborhood, was
killed the same day by the same company of militia. It is said
that among the soldiers who committed the bloody deeds were
one or two of his neighbors who boasted they killed old Dr.
BRUMMALL. Jesse ROGERS, an old man of more than seventy years
of age, was shot the day by the same soldiers after they had
partaken of his hospitality and they refused to allow the
family to bury him. As a result, his body lay two or three
days before it was buried. He was a quiet, peaceable citizen
and a most humble and devout Christian, whose only crime was
that he was a southern sympathizer. Theophilus EDWARDS, aged
seventy years, was another victim of this same lawless band,
who left a trail of blood along the line of march through the
county.
One of the most brutal and
cowardly deeds committed by men claiming to be soldiers was
the wanton murder of John W. LEONARD, a boy only fifteen years
of age, by the militia stationed at Brunswick. He was arrested
by John COX, who was raised on an adjoining farm and who had
gone to school with young LEONARD. LEONARD was brought to
Brunswick January 4, 1865, and placed in the guard house. At
night he was taken out by a squad of militia and taken to the
Missouri river, where a hole was cut in the ice, and, while he
was pleading for his life, he was thrust in the river and held
until his life was extinct. The charge against him was that it
was reported by some neighborhood spy that he had been active
with bushwhackers and for this without trial, he was made to
forfeit his young life to gratify the lust for blood. The
writer of this sketch knows the charge that John LEONARD was
ever a bushwhacker was a falsehood, for he boarded with the
same boy's mother, ate at the same table, and slept in the
same bed with him from February 1864, until late in August of
the same year and knows positively that he was never a member
of any company of guerillas. The boy's mother, accompanied by
a neighbor woman, came to Brunswick in an Ox wagon a few days
after her son's arrest and tried to find out the fate of the
boy. She was informed that he had been sent to the military
prison at St. Louis. The aged mother died a few years
afterward in the asylum at St. Joseph. Her mental trouble was
caused by grief for her devoted son. Among others who were
killed in Brunswick were Judge J. J. FLOOD, who was shot in
his own house; John T. MCASHAN, who was shot and his body
thrown into the Missouri river; an old man by the name of
PIXLEY, who was shot and his body left in the road near
Brunswick, was partially eaten by hogs; a man by the name of
FRANKLIN, who was shot and his body thrown in Clark
APPLEGATE's yard.
Among the Union men who were
killed by the guerillas, in retaliation for those killed by
the militia, were Senstra COLEMAN, Mr. PARTENHEIMER, Charles
JENSIN, and James BITTINGER. On September 22, 1864, the town
of Keytesville was taken by Captain TODD and THRELDKILL and
their men and about fifty militia, under Captain Berry OWENS,
surrendered. Robert CARMEN and William YOUNG were taken
prisoner and Senator MACKAY plead with TODD to save the life
of CARMEN, as he was the sheriff of the county and a quiet,
peaceable citizen. But they were taken outside of the town and
killed. After General PRICE's raid, many houses were burned by
the militia, among them the fine residences of John D. LOCKE,
Green PLUNKETT, Capt. William HERRYFORD, Martin HURT, and the
John MOORE tavern in Old Chariton. A. KENNEDY's warehouse in
Brunswick, together with a large quantity of furniture and
tobacco and several pianos, was also burned. The loss
was more than $30,000 as the building contained the property
of citizens who were leaving for St. Louis and other cities to
escape the horrors of the Civil War.
From: Nalora <vashti@theshop.net>
The subheading of "The Civil War" is found on pages
324-326


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