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William
Quantrill |
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On October 17,
1862,
Quantrill and his band moved to attack Shawnee,
Kansas. As they neared their destination, they came upon a Federal supply train,
where they captured twelve unarmed men. Later these 12 drivers and
Union escorts would be found dead, all but one shot in the head. Continuing on, Quantrill and his band attacked the town, killing two men
and burning the settlement to the ground.
Shortly thereafter,
Quantrill traveled to
Richmond, Virginia, where he sought a regular command under the
Confederacy Partisan Ranger Act. However his reputation for
brutality had preceded him and his request was denied. Yet, they did
promote him to the rank of colonel in November, 1862.
At
about the same time, the Commander of the
Department of
Missouri,
Major General Henry W. Halleck, ordered that guerrillas such as
Quantrill and his men would be
treated as robbers and murderers, not normal prisoners of war.
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Missouri Border Ruffians
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Quantrill’s tactics became even more aggressive after this
proclamation, as he no longer adhered to the principals of accepting
enemy surrender.
In May, of
1863,
Quantrill and his band moved closer to the
Missouri-Kansas
border. Brigadier General Thomas Ewing, Jr. from
Kansas,
who commanded the district border, was not happy with
Quantrill’s presence. Soon, he issued General Order Number 10, which stated that any person
- man, woman or child, who was directly involved with aiding a band of
guerrillas would be jailed.
The idea was,
by taking away the Border Ruffians means of food and shelter; the
guerillas would leave the area. Before long, women and children were
rounded up and placed in a dilapidated three story building in
downtown Kansas City,
Missouri.
Of particular interest to the Federal
Troops were the known relatives of the Border Ruffians, including
family members of “Bloody Bill” Anderson and the Younger Brothers.
Though
signs that the building housing the women and children was
unstable, such as large cracks in the walls and ceilings, and
large amounts of mortar dust on the floor, the signs were ignored. On
August 13, 1863, the building collapsed killing 5 women and injuring
dozens of others.
Among the killed and injured in the
collapse were women who were close relatives of prominent Confederate
guerrillas. Those killed in the collapse, included Josephine Anderson,
sister of "Bloody Bill Anderson", Susan Crawford Vandever and Armenia
Crawford Selvey, Cole Younger's cousins, Charity McCorkle Kerr, wife
to Quantrillian member Nathan Kerr, and a woman named Mrs. Wilson. Many others were injured and scarred. Caroline Younger, sister
to Cole and James Younger, would die two years later as a result of her injuries. Another Anderson sister was
crippled for life, when both of her legs were broken in the incident.
When news of the collapse reached the
families of the dead and injured, they went wild. Soon crowds began to
gather around the ruins as the dead and wounded were carried off,
shouting "Murder!" at the Union forces. Just four days later on
August 18, 1863, General Ewing issued
General Order Number 10, which "officially" stated that any person -
man, woman or child, who was directly involved with aiding a band of
guerrillas would be jailed.
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Later,
Quantrill
and his men would claim that the building was deliberately weakened,
giving them ammunition for the infamous attack on
Lawrence
that was about to come.
Early on the morning of
August 21, 1863,
Quantrill,
along with his murderous force of about 400, descended on the still
sleeping town of
Lawrence,
Kansas. Incensed by the free-state headquarters town,
Quantrill
set out on his revenge against the Jayhawker community. In this carefully
orchestrated early morning raid, he and his band, in four terrible hours,
turned the town into a bloody and blazing inferno unparallel in its
brutality.
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The
Lawrence,
Kansas
Raid as illustrated in
Harper's Weekly, September, 1863.
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Quantrill and his bushwhacker mob
of raiders began their reign of terror at 5:00 a.m., looting and burning
as they went, bent on total destruction of the town, then less than 3,000
residents. By the time it was over, they had killed approximately
180 men and boys, and left
Lawrence
nothing more than smoldering ruins.
Continued
Next Page
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Quantrill's
Raiders "sacking" a town during the
Kansas-Missouri Border War. Illustration appeared in Harpers Weekly,
September, 1862.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Vintage
Photographs of the Old West - From our personal
Photo Print Shop, you can now order prints that provide
dramatic glimpses into the rich heritage of the
American
West. From notorious
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to
Indian Chiefs,
buffalo
roaming the range, and pioneers on the trail, this varied collection grows
daily.
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