by Thomas R. Reid13th Texas Cavalry Regiment
The Thirteenth Texas Cavalry mustered on 22 February 1862 in northeast Texas and 1 March 1862 in the southern counties. Both Colonel John Howell Burnett, the regimental commander, and Anderson Floyd Crawford, the second in command, had resigned from the Texas Senate in January. Counties represented in the unit were Henderson, Anderson, Houston, Cherokee, Leon, Trinity, Angelina, Polk, Tyler, Jasper, Newton, Hardin, and Newton. The initial strength of the regiment was 1,125 officers and men, but was reduced to 842 primarily as a result of the Confederate Conscription Act of 16 April 1862, which exempted men under eighteen or over thirty-five, and required that units undergo reorganization and a reelection of officers. The reorganization took place at Porter's Springs, Houston County, on 24 May 1862. On 7 June 1862 the regiment, along with Major Robert Simonton Gould's 6th Texas Cavalry Battalion, departed for Arkansas. Brig. Gen. Henry Eustace McCulloch delayed them north of his headquarters in Tyler, Texas for training and to allow stragglers to rejoin the unit. They departed for Little Rock on 2 July 1862.
The regiment was delayed in Lafayette County, Arkansas, by an epidemic of measles and typhoid fever. They were initially camped near Spring Bank, but moved later to a camp near Walnut Hills. The 13th lost thirty men to disease during July and August. The Texans continued on to Little Rock, leaving Walnut Hills on 22 August 1862 and arriving in Little Rock 6 September 1862, and proceeding north to Camp Holmes where they arrived on the ninth.
The regiment was added to the first brigade of a newly organized Texas division commanded by Brigadier Gen'l McCulloch. In October 1862 three brigades of the division engaged in a number of pointless movements along White River. Heavy rains and freezing weather resulted in significant illness due to exposure. The division returned to Camp Nelson, near Austin, Arkansas, on 14 October 1862. An epidemic of typhoid fever, pneumonia, and tuberculosis soon broke out. The 13th Texas was reduced by deaths and disability discharges from 855 in June 1862 to 615 at the end of February 1863. November 1862 was the worst, with twenty-five deaths. Due to conditions in Arkansas, rations were limited and of poor quality.
Shortly after Christmas of 1862, Major General John George Walker replaced Brigadier Gen'l McCulloch as division commander. McCulloch assumed command of the third brigade. The division was ordered to Pine Bluff, Arkansas in early January 1863. On the 11th Walker received orders to reinforce Arkansas Post, a fortress defending the Arkansas River. After a forced march, it was learned that the Post had surrendered on the twelfth. Union General William T. Sherman reported that 4,791 prisoners, many from the fourth brigade of the Texas division, had been captured. The 13th and other regiments of Walker's Division were directed to construct defensive earthworks near Pine Bluff to counter the threat that Union forces would continue up the Arkansas River.
Snow and freezing weather plagued the regiment, who lost 1st Lieutenant George Gaston of Company D and Private John Mitchell of Company K to exposure. The Union threat did not materialize, and the division was moved into winter quarters near Pine Bluff at Camp Mills and later Camp Wright, four miles northwest of Pine Bluff.
The remainder of the winter of 1862-1863 was warmer, and the regiment was resupplied with tents, blankets, and clothing. During February and March 1863, many soldiers of the 13th were convinced that their enlistments were concluding, unaware that they had made a commitment to a three-year enlistment during the reorganization. Desertions were a serious problem during the spring. The 13th Texas followed the division to Louisiana on 26 April 1863 as part of an attempt to relieve the Union threat to Vicksburg.
The movement of Walker's Division to Louisiana caused Union General Nathaniel Banks to withdraw from Alexandria, where the 13th arrived on 28 May 1863. Confederate Major General Richard Taylor was directed to attack a chain of Union logistical bases on the west bank of the Mississippi that supported Grant's siege of Vicksburg. The 13th Texas was detached from the division and assigned to Brig. Gen. Paul Octave Hebert for operations against the Federal camps at Lake Providence, Louisiana, north of Vicksburg. The action involved the 13th Texas, the 13th Louisiana Partisan Cavalry, and one section of artillery. After building a floating bridge on Bayou Macon near Caledonia, the force encountered elements of the 1st Kansas Mounted Infantry near Bunch's Bend, skirmishing with the Union forces and capturing a number of supply wagons and prisoners. The attack on Lake Providence on 9 June 1863 was indecisive, and Federal forces prevented a battle by destroying the bridge on the Tensas River. The 13th Texas had one killed, Sgt. Carlisle McClung of Company F, and two Privates and one Lieutenant captured. The Texans returned to the rail yard at Delhi to wait for the remainder of the division.
The remainder of 1863 was uneventful for the 13th Texas, marked by picket duty on the Red River near Cheneyville, Opelousas, and Marksville, and on the Mississippi south of Simmesport in December. The division moved into winter quarters in late December one mile south of Fort DeRussy and two miles north of Marksville. The winter was spent improving the defenses of the fort and constructing a raft of floating timber on the Red River to prevent Union gunboats from navigating the river. Company E, commanded by Capt. James Brown Rounsaville, was detached to the garrison at Fort DeRussy.
A major campaign against Confederate forces in Louisiana was launched by Maj. Gen. Nathaniel P. Banks 13 March 1864. His combined force of soldiers and sailors numbered nearly 40,000. Between that date and 4 April 1864, the 13th and Walker's Division withdrew to a few miles north of Mansfield on the road to Shreveport. Fort DeRussy withstood the Federal attack for only a few hours on 14 March 1864. The majority of Company E, 13th Texas, escaped, but five soldiers were captured. Units from Texas, Arkansas, and Missouri augmented Major General Taylor's forces near Mansfield in early April. A major battle with Banks' invasion force was fought a few miles south of Mansfield at a site known as Sabine Crossroads. It was a decisive Confederate victory, and Federal forces withdrew the night of 8 April 1864 to positions near Pleasant Hill. The 13th Texas lost ten killed, forty-one wounded, and six missing in the battle of Mansfield on 8 April 1864 and the battle of Pleasant Hill the following day. Pleasant Hill was a much deadlier conflict, since Union lines were heavily fortified with barricades of logs and fence rails. Lieutenant Colonel Crawford, commanding the 13th Texas, lost two horses that day. Union forces retreated the night of the ninth to Grand Ecore on the Red River, pursued by Confederate cavalry.
A second invasion column, commanded by Union General Frederick Steele, had pushed south from Little Rock and had occupied Camden, Arkansas. Steele's forces had originally intended to join those of General Banks in Shreveport. Walker's Division and the 13th Texas marched north on the military road from Shreveport to Camden, arriving at Camden, which had been abandoned by Steele, on 28 Apr. 1864. Due to chronic health problems Colonel Burnett had been transferred to garrison duty in Crockett, Texas and resigned 22 Apr. 1864. Walker's forces continued the pursuit of Union forces to Jenkins' Ferry on the Saline River, where a battle was fought in rain and mud as Steele's forces attempted to retreat across the river. The outcome of the battle was indecisive and costly to the Confederates. The 13th Texas was among the more fortunate in the division, with only one killed and eleven wounded.
Following the battle of Jenkins' Ferry, the division withdrew to Camden, where they improved the defensive positions along the river. Returning to Louisiana, they found that General Banks' forces had already withdrawn, leaving Simmesport for New Orleans on 21 May 1864. Maj. Gen. Walker was replaced as division commander temporarily by Brig. Gen. Wilburn King, and later, on 4 September 1864 by Maj. Gen. John H. Forney. Plans to deploy Walker's Division across the Mississippi to join a new command of General Taylor caused much dissention and many desertions. The plan was abandoned later that month, and the division returned to Arkansas to counter a Federal threat, which never materialized.
The 13th Texas and Walker's Division returned to Louisiana at the end of November 1864 and moved into winter quarters near Minden, Louisiana. The Texans moved camp to Shreveport on 27 January 1865, and were honored by a huge barbecue on Saturday, 18 February 1865. Ordered to return to Texas, they arrived at Camp Groce, near Hempstead, Texas, on 15 April 1865. Most of the 13th Texas Cavalry was home on leave when Generals Kirby Smith and John Magruder surrendered the Trans-Mississippi forces 2 June 1865 at Galveston, Texas.
Field and staff officers:Cols. John H. Burnett (elected, 1 March 62), Anderson F. Crawford (promoted, 22 April 64); Lt. Cols. Anderson F. Crawford (elected, 1 March 62), Charles R. Beaty (promoted, 22 April 64); Majors Charles R. Beaty (elected, 1 March 62), Elias T. Seale (promoted, Nov 64); Adjutants John M. Hilliard (1 March–23 May 62), Capt. James C. Wooters (24 May–27July 62), Lt. James R. Burnett (28 July–20 Nov 62), Capt. J. Pat Henry (21 Nov 62–10 Jan 65), 2nd Lt. Ernest Geisendorff (11 Jan–2 June 65); Surgeons Capt. William F. Corley (1 March–23 May 62), Capt. John M. Hilliard (24 May–28 July 62), Capt. Edward Currie (29 July–15 Nov 62), 2nd Lt. John J. Burroughs (acting; 29 Oct 62–9 June 63), Dr. Thomas H. Hollis (21 Aug 63–2 June 65); Asst Surgeons Lt. J. C. Brubaker, Lt. John L. Cornish (resigned, 2 Dec 64), Lt. W. P. Means, Lt. Shadrach J. Collins; QMs Capt. Armisted T. Monroe, Capt. Riley J. Blair, (11 Dec 62); Commissary Wilson E. Hail (1 March 62–20 Nov 62), Lt. James H. Finch (no record after 63); Chaplain John B. Renfro, (1 March–21 Oct 62), Richard F. Fancher, (10 Jan–26 Aug 64); Sgt. Major Riley J. Blair, Co. "C" (24 May 62–7 Feb 63), James B. Rounsaville, Co. "C" (8 Feb–2 Dec 63), B. C. Crawford, Co. "G" (12 Feb–9 April 64; KIA, Pleasant Hill), Henry Ralph, Co. "G", (April 64–2 June 65); Color Bearer George A. Hadon, Co. "B" (24 May 62–23 Jan 63; died of disease, Camp Nelson, AR), Ransom P. Horde, Co. "G", (10 Dec 63–22 Aug 64), Edman F. Bridges, Co. "C", (appointed, 23 Aug 64), Cpl. Soloman Wishard, Co. "I" (as of April 65)
Captains and counties from which the companies came:
Historical Resources:
by M. Jane Johansson28th Texas Cavalry
Colonel Horace Randal, an 1854 graduate of the United States Military Academy, organized the 28th Texas Cavalry. The unit began its organization at a camp three miles east of Marshall, TX. In April 1862, Companies “B” and “E” from Cherokee County arrived at the camp, followed by companies “A”, “C”, “D”, “F”, and “G” in May. In June, Company “K” was formed by surplus men from companies “A” and “C”. The remaining companies (“H”, “I”, “L”, and “M”) joined the regiment in July.
The unit traveled to Shreveport, LA, in July 1862 where they remained until 18 July 1862. The soldiers then traveled northward and arrived in Austin, AR, on 3 September 1862. By late September, the unit was dismounted (i.e., the unit was converted to infantry). The 28th Texas Cavalry was dismounted because of a surplus of cavalry units in Arkansas and because of a lack of forage for the horses. The men refused to call themselves “infantry”, preferring instead the term “dismounted cavalry” as though it were a temporary condition. Much to the disappointment of the men, the 28th Texas was never remounted. During this time period, companies “L” and “M” were removed from the unit. Company “L” remained mounted and became part of Lt. Colonel Charles L. Morgan’s Texas Cavalry Regiment. Company “M” became part of the 14th Texas Infantry, a unit that often served in the same brigade as the 28th Texas.
In September 1862, the unit was brigaded with the 11th, 14th, and 15th Texas infantry regiments, and the 6th Texas Cavalry Battalion (Dismounted). Colonel Horace Randal became commander of this brigade, and Lt. Colonel Eli H. Baxter, jr., became commander of the 28th Texas.
The 28th spent the entire war in the Trans-Mississippi Department and campaigned extensively in Arkansas and Louisiana. By December 1862, the unit became part of Major General John G. Walker’s Division. This division was comprised of three brigades made up entirely of Texas units. The major campaigns that the 28th Texas Cavalry (dismounted) served in were the following:
•Attempt to Relieve Vicksburg, Mississippi (November 1862 - July 1863). The unit was held in reserve at the battle of Milliken’s Bend. Walker’s Division traveled about 1,600 miles during this campaign.
•Repulse of Major General William B. Franklin’s army (fall of 1863). Randal’s Brigade (including the 28th Texas) went on an expedition from Alexandria toward Harrisonburg, LA. The men were probably involved in light skirmishing and lost two men captured. In addition, the unit was involved in a skirmish near Moundville, LA, on 24 October 1863. Walker’s Division then spent much of November bombarding enemy transports on the Mississippi River.
•Red River Campaign (March-April 1864). Portions of Company “D” and Company “I” were stationed at Fort DeRussy, LA, when Union forces started their advance up the Red River. Twenty-three soldiers, from a detachment of thirty-five men, escaped capture at the fort. The 28th Texas fought at the battles of Mansfield (April 8th) and Pleasant Hill (April 9th). Casualties for the 28th Texas at Mansfield were: 4 killed and 17 wounded; and at Pleasant Hill: 9 killed and 44 wounded, with 2 missing.
•The March to Arkansas (April 1864). With little rest, the men of Walker’s Division marched into Arkansas in an attempt to destroy a Federal army under the command of Major Gen’l Frederick Steele. Along with Confederate troops from Missouri and Arkansas, Walker’s Division attacked Steele’s army near Jenkins’ Ferry on 30 April 1864. The 28th Texas lost 20 killed and 40 wounded at this battle. Horace Randal was mortally wounded at this battle and died on 2 May 1864.
•The Last Year (May 1864-May 1865). Further marches took place in Arkansas and Louisiana in this last year, but the unit saw no fighting. In March 1865, the division returned to Texas where they disbanded in May 1865. Field and staff officers:Col. Horace Randal (mortally wounded, Jenkins' Ferry; died, 2 May 64); Lt. Col. Eli H. Baxter, jr. (wounded slightly in the arm at either Mansfield or Pleasant Hill); Majors Henry Gerard Hall, and Patrick Henry; Surgeons Leonard Randal (resigned, 9 June 63), Edward W. Cade (resigned, 6 July 64); M. J. Birdsong; Asst Surgeons William P. Smith (resigned, 20 Oct 63); T. Y. T. Jameson; John C. Rosser; W. W. McCartney (dropped); Adjutants George T. Howard; William Neal Ramey; QM Alfred M. Truit (resigned, 27 Aug 63); Asst QM Nathan P. Ward; Commissary John A. Harris (resigned, 4 May 63); and Chaplain Frank J. Patillo.
Captains and counties from which the companies came:
Historical Resources:
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