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Soldiers in American History

More Lists:      Explorers | Gunfighters | Lawmen | Native Americans | Outlaws | Outlaw Gangs |                 Scoundrels | Soldiers | Trail Blazers & Cowboys | Vigilantes | Women

 

 

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Bloody Bill AndersonWilliam "Bloody Bill" Anderson (1839-1864) - William "Bloody Bill" Anderson led a raid on Centralia, Missouri where a gang of more than 100 guerillas robbed the passengers of an incoming train. Twenty-four unarmed and wounded Union soldiers were dragged from the train by the frenzied ruffians and were murdered. The band of guerrillas was followed by an experienced Federal Infantry. About three miles south of Centralia, the Union forces were bushwacked by the band and were nearly annihilated. Over 120 federal troops were killed. Only three of the guerrilla forces were reported to have been killed in the battle. Both Frank and Jesse were part of this murderous raid. Jesse is said to have killed Union Major A.V. Johnson, who was one of the soldiers on the train and is “credited” with taking the lives of seven other men on that tragic day.

 

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Young Federal soldiers during the Civil War.

 

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Federal forces aggressively pursued the band and on October 26, 1864, ambushed them in Ray County, Missouri, killing Anderson, and his men retreated. Allegedly, a silken cord with fifty-three knots was found on his body, each knot signifying a man whom Anderson had killed. Human scalps were also found on his bridle.

 

James Bowie (1796-1836) - An aggressive frontiersman, pioneer, explorer, and commander of the volunteers at the Alamo, where he died. More ...

 

Buffalo Soldiers - Though African Americans have fought in various military conflicts since colonial days, they did not receive the nickname of “Buffalo Soldiers” until they began to battle Cheyenne warriors in 1867. More ...

Kit Carson

Kit Carson

This image available for photographic prints HERE.

 

Christopher "Kit" Carson (1809-1868) - A daring and brave explorer, mountain man, trapper, scout, soldier, and buffalo hunter, Carson was born in Kentucky on December 24, 1809 but spent his childhood in Boone's Lick, Missouri. He was apprenticed to a saddle-maker when he turned fourteen, but was hired on as a hostler for a party on its way to Santa Fe in 1826. During the next half century, Carson would earn a reputation as a skilled trapper, adventurer, Indian agent, and soldier. Utilizing Taos, New Mexico as his primary base camp, he led several expeditions that often took him as far West as California, as well as deep into the Rocky Mountains.

 

He led John Fremont to California and Oregon and also the forces of U.S. General Stephen Kearney to California. He later served in the Civil War, became a rancher, an Indian Agent, and fought in several Indian Wars. Carson resigned from the army in November, 1867 and settled at Boggsville, Colorado, where he died on May 23, 1868.  More ...

 

Davy Crockett (1786-1836) - Frontiersman, explorer, and American folk hero, Crockett a represented Tennessee in the U.S. Congress, served in the Texas Revolution, and died at the age of 49 at the Battle of the Alamo. More ...

 

General George CrookGeorge Crook (1828-1890) - General Sherman said the greatest Indian fighter of them all was General Crook, who finished near the bottom of his West Point class. As a young officer he fought Indians in the Rouge River and the Yakima wars. He served with distinction in the Civil War, first commissioned as a Colonel of Ohio's 36th regiment and led it on duty in western Virginia. He was promoted to the rank of brigadier general on September 7, 1862. He led his troops in the Maryland Campaign and saw action in the battles of South Mountain and Antietam.

 

At the end of the Civil War, Crook then fought the Paiute in the rugged desert of eastern Oregon, pacifying the region within a year. When President Grant sent him to Arizona to fight the Apache, he reorganized his command, employed Indian scouts, and put constant pressure on the roving war parties. In two years most of the Apache were on reservations.

 

As commander of the Department of the Platte, Crook led the Powder River and Yellowstone expeditions against the Sioux. Defeated by Crazy Horse at the Rosebud, he failed to link up with General Terry, a circumstance that may have played a part in the massacre at the Little Bighorn.

 

Crook was returned to Arizona in 1881 when the Apache rose again. After eight months of hard campaigning, Crook had the Apache back on reservations. The Apache went on the warpath two years later, and Crook's last campaign ended in the surrender of Geronimo. After leaving the army, he worked for better treatment of the Indians. At Crook's death, his old adversary, Red Cloud, said "He never lied to us. His words gave my people hope."

Nathan Bedford ForrestNathan Bedford Forrest (1821-1877) - Born to a poor Scots-Irish family in Chapel Hill, Tennessee on July 13, 1821, Forrest was the first of twelve children. His father died when he was 17 and the ambitious young man soon pulled his family out of poverty, becoming a business and plantation owner, as well as a slave trader. By the time the Civil War broke out in 1861, he had become one of the wealthiest men in the South. Forrest enlisted in the Confederate Army as a private, joining the Tennessee Mounted Rifles in July, 1861. When he began to buy horses and equipment the regiment, using his own money, he gained the attention of the "higher-ups" and was soon commissioned as a Colonel and given command of his own regiment in October, 1861 -- Forrest's Tennessee Cavalry Battalion.

Though he had no formal military training or experience, he quickly proved himself to be an exemplary officer, first distinguishing himself in the Battle of Fort Donelson in February, 1862. He led his men in the Battle of Shiloh in April, 1862, where he was wounded and several months later in July, he was promoted to a Brigadier General. He then led his men in the First Battle of Murfreesboro, the Battle of Day's Gap, Chickamauga, Paducah, Fort Pillow, Brice's Crossroads, Spring Hill, Franklin, and Nashville. By February, 1865, he had been promoted to a Lieutenant General.

During the war, he was one of the most highly regarded cavalry and partisan rangers, as well as one of the most innovative and successful generals. His tactics of mobile warfare are still studied by modern soldiers.

After the war, Forrest settled in Memphis, Tennessee, but was financially ruined due to the abolishment of slavery. Eventually, he took a job with the Marion & Memphis Railroad, where his business skills soon placed him in the position of President. It was at this time that the Ku Klux Klan movement was forming and by 1867, he was made its first Grand Wizard. This choice, as well as allegations of brutality in the Battle of Fort Pillow, led to Forrest's heroic reputation suffering dramatically. However, in 1869, Forrest, who disagreed with the increasingly violent tactics of the Ku Klux Klan ordered it disbanded. Though the order was ignored, Forrest distanced himself from the organization.

In October, 1877, he died from complications of diabetes and was buried at Elmwood Cemetery in Memphis. In 1904 his remains were moved to Forrest Park, a Memphis city park.

 

John Charles Fremont (1813-1890) - Was an explorer, military officer, and politician who led multiple surveying expeditions through the western territory of the United States. More ...

 

 

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From the Rocky Mountain General Store

 

Old West Books - Legends of America and the Rocky Mountain General Store has collected a number of Old West books for our frontier enthusiasts.  For many of these, we have only one available.  To see this varied collection, click HERE!

 

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