Title: Reaping the Whirlwind
1Reaping the Whirlwind
- The Impact of the Civil War on Missouri
2Missouri The worst place to be 1861-1865
- Compared to elsewhere
- War began earlier
- More vicious in character
- Greater impact on civilians
- Effects lasted longer
- Why was this so?
3Prelude to Civil War Bleeding Kansas, 1856-1858
- Kansas-Nebraska Act, 1854
- Missourians and Kansas settlement
- Missouri pukes and Border Ruffians
- Kansas Jayhawkers
- Free State Kansas, 1861
- Volcano waiting to re-erupt
4Missouri 1861 civil war within the Civil War
- Social and political makeup of Missouri
- Lyon vs. Price and the Missouri State Guard
- From Wilsons Creek to Lexington to Springfield
- Missouri secession, Oct. 1861
5Missouris Rival Governments
- Confederate
- Claiborne Fox Jackson, 1861-1862
- Thomas C. Reynolds, 1862-1865
- Union
- Hamilton R. Gamble, 1861-1864
- Willard P. Hall, 1864-1865
- Thomas C. Fletcher, 1865-1869
- Few Missourians truly neutral
- But many hoped to avoid participation
- Circumstances forced everyone to take sides
6A war more vicious than elsewhere
- Kansans revenge, 1861-1862
- Lane, Montgomery the Redlegs
- Target Missourians indiscriminately
- Gambles policy
- Let Missourians police Missouri
- Free troops from other states to fight elsewhere
- Confederate policy reclaim Missouri
7Politics Logistics guerrilla war
- Large scale operations required rivers or
railways to supply the armies - Union controlled these in Missouri 1861-1865
- Ran west-east, connecting state to Illinois
-
8Politics Logistics guerrilla war
- Impact on Confederate policy
- No rivers or RR ran North South to assist CSA
re-conquest of Missouri - Confederates therefore relied on raids and
guerrilla tactics - Men forced to live off the civilian population
- Union anti-guerrilla operations
- Decentralized for same reason
- Also lived off civilians
- Both sides sought to take food from civilians
supporting the other side
9Guerrillas anti-guerrillas a cycle of violence
and its consequences
- Each side employed disguise ambush avoided
show-downs - Atrocities revenge
- Consequence of frustration target civilians
supporting the enemy
10Civilian response to guerrilla war
- Cant strike back at oppressors
- So identify enemy civilians in their
neighborhood for retaliation - Burn them out
11The ravages of war
- Towns burned
- Osceola
- Bower Mills
- Galena
- Ozark
- Rockbridge
- Vera Cruz
- West Plains
- Lamar
- Salem
- Eminence
- Doniphan
- Forsythe
- Union soldiers letter
- Crops ungathered, houses deserted, barns
stables falling to pieces, fences torn down and
stock running loose and uncared for, are all
around . . . I have been all over the country
about here without meeting with a half dozen
habital dwellings.
12Union policy
- Fight guerrillas in the field with Missouri State
Militia - Control male population through Enrolled Missouri
Militia
- Hold civilian southern sympathizers responsible
- Taxation confiscation of property
- Suppression of newspapers
- Arrests banishments
13Renewed cycle of violence
- Sack of Lawrence, Kan., Aug. 21, 1863
- Order No. 11, Aug. 25, 1863
14Profile of Missouri mid-war, 1863-1864
- Union controlled major cities and towns, which
were garrisoned fortified - Guerrillas roamed countryside
- Economy skewed
- Urban areas enjoyed wartime prosperity
- Countryside in chaos
- Impact worst in Ozarks
- Massive civilian dislocation
- No safe transportation
- Reverted from market to subsistence economy
15300,000 civilian refugees
- Vastly exceeded numbers in other states
- Patterns of flight
- Out of state
- Urban areas/Union strongholds
- St. Louis
- Lexington
- Rolla
- Springfield
- Union authorities unprepared
16Poor conditions in refugee camps
- Letter of Rev. Francis Springer, July 30, 1863
- Refugees come into camp nearly every day,
chiefly women and children. - Their wagons are usually loaded with bedclothes,
wearing apparel, provisions, and a few cooking
utensils - Unwashed, half-clad shoeless boys and girls
are all in pitiable abundance
17Plight of African Americans
- Missouri slaves exempted from the 1863
Emancipation Proclamation - Not freed until Jan. 1865, by state legislature
- Most provisions for refugees limited to whites
- Tried to find jobs
- Pressed into working for the military
- Faced prejudice harsh conditions
- James E. Yeatman
- He is seized on the street, and ordered to go
and help unload a steamboat, for which he will be
paid, or sent to work in the trenches, or to
labor for some quartermaster, or to chop wood for
the government. He labors for months, and at
last is only paid with promises, unless it may be
perchance with kicks, cuffs, and curses.
18Plight of African Americans
- Many African Americans enlisted to provide for
families - Five black Missouri regiments raised, 1863-1864
- Missouri black refugees enlisted in other states
units as well
19The impact of the war on civilians
- Topics needing study
- Number of civilian deaths?
- Number of widows and orphans?
- Number of property claims/lawsuits?
- Tentative conclusions
- Mo. only state with more civilian deaths than
battle deaths among its citizens - Property losses higher than any other state
- More refugees than any other state
20Aftermath of war
- Radicals in power, 1865-1870
- Ex-Confederates disfranchised by Drake
Constitution - Political violence, 1866-67
- Return to conservatism, 1870
- Outlaw violence
- African Americans left out
- Yet Missouri not redeemed like other states
- Character of state shifted permanently
- Economic prosperity
- Immigration urban growth
- Abandon farms property assumed by outsiders
- Mo. became mid-western rather than Southern
21Conclusion
- Missourians did not see large-scale battles, but
they endured widespread violence - Missouri civilians faced greater physical danger
than those elsewhere - Missouri civilians suffered greater property
losses than those elsewhere - Missouri truly was the worst place to be
1861-1865.