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P.O. Box 19423
Lenexa,
KS 66285
913-708-5119
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Kansas/Missouri Border War |
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Lawrence
was a town long hated by
Quantrill
and his men. Home of the demagogic antislavery Senator, Jim Lane, it
was also a stronghold of the Red Legs, Union guerrillas who had sacked
much of western
Missouri. An attack on this citadel
of abolition would bring revenge for any wrongs, real or imagined, that
the Southerners had suffered.
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. 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.
In response to the
Lawrence Massacre,
Union Brigadier General Thomas Ewing signed General Order No. 11 on
August 25, 1863 which required all persons living more than one mile
from
Independence, Hickman’s Mill, Pleasant Hill, and Kansas City to
leave their farms unless they took an oath of loyalty to the Union.
The cities that were excluded were already under Union control
This order included Cass, Jackson, Bates and portions of Vernon
Counties. Some did take the oath, but many others fled to other
areas never to return. The remaining homes, building and crops
were burned by the Union Army and the entire area became known as "No
Mans Land."
By denying
Quantrill and his guerillas
the support of the populace, the Union hoped to force them out in the
open where they could be destroyed. The enforcement of Order No.
11 resulted in terrible hardships for the people of Jackson County.
Many Union and Southern families alike were killed in the ensuing
melee.

Evacuation of
Missouri Counties
under General Order No. 11, painting by
George Caleb Bingham, 1870.
Original Painting held in Cincinnati Art
Museum , Cincinnati, OH
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By October,
Quantrill and his men were riding
south towards
Texas to spend the winter. Along the way his men attacked a column
of Union cavalry and wagons near
Baxter
Springs,
Kansas. Then they went on to capture nearby
Fort Blair commaneded by Union
Major General James Blunt. Blunt escaped to nearby Fort Scott, but more
than 80 his soldiers (60 of whom were black) were captured and massacred.
Blunt was relieved of command as a result. Later a drunken
Quantrill boasted that he had
accomplished in one day what Confederate Colonel Jo Shelby and Major
General John Marmaduke had failed for years to do -- beat Blunt.
Upon his arrival in
Texas,
Quantrill reported at Bonham on
October 26, 1863 to General Henry E. McCulloch.
Quantrill and his men were
ordered to help round up the increasing number of deserters and
conscription-dodgers in North
Texas. The band captured a few but
killed even more, whereupon McCulloch pulled them off this duty. The
General then sent them to track down retreating Comanches from a recent
raid on the northwest frontier, which they did without success.
During this time,
Quantrill's behavior had become
too bizarre for many of his own men and he was beginning to lose control
over them. Some wanted to join the regular Confederate army. Anderson's
quarrels with
Quantrill led him to form a
fierce band of his own, including Frank James and his 16-year-old brother,
Jesse James.
During their winter in
Texas, “Bloody Bill” Anderson, took his group
and began to terrorize the area. With two such groups in the
neighborhood,
Texas residents became targets for so many raids
and acts of violence that regular Confederate forces had to be assigned to
protect residents from the activities of the irregular Confederate forces.
Finally, General
McCulloch determined to rid North
Texas of
Quantrill's influence and on
March 28, 1864
Quantrill was arrested on the
charge of ordering the murder of a Confederate Major. However,
Quantrill escaped, returning to
his camp near Sherman,
Texas, pursued by over 300 state and Confederate
troops. His band then crossed the Red River into Indian
Territory, where they re-supplied from Confederate stores and started the
journey back to
Missouri.
Soon, his guerrilla band began to
break up into several smaller units and his vicious lieutenant, "Bloody
Bill" Anderson, known for wearing a necklace of Yankee scalps into battle,
would continue with his own band to terrorize the state of
Missouri. As
Quantrill's authority over his
followers disintegrated they elected George Todd, a former lieutenant to
Quantrill, to lead them.
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From the Rocky Mountain General Store
Vintage
Magazines -
Legends of America and
the
Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of
Vintage Magazines, including True West, Frontier Times,
Treasure and more for our
Old West
and Treasure
Hunting enthusiasts. For most of these, we have only one
available. To see this varied collection, click
HERE!
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