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Principal Commanders |
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Col. James Garfield [US] |
Brig. Gen. Humphrey
Marshall [CS] |
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Estimated Casualties: 92 total (US 27; CS
65) |
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The Battle of Middle Creek, January 10th, 1862
Maintaining control of Kentucky, the Union’s ninth
most populous state, was very important to President
Lincoln, who had been born there and appreciated its
strategic value. The Union campaign leading up to the
Battle of Middle Creek, initiated under his leadership,
was part of an overall strategy designed to keep his
native state within the Union fold.
The Battle of Middle Creek was a tragic example of the
fratricidal, neighbor-against-neighbor warfare that
characterized the struggle for Kentucky. Men of the 14th
Kentucky Infantry, U.S.A. and the 22nd Kentucky
Infantry, U.S.A., charged up the steep hillsides
overlooking Middle Creek and engaged in hand-to-hand
combat with men of the 5th Kentucky Infantry, C.S.A.
The battle was also a testing-ground on which
reputations were made and lost. The badly-needed Union
victory brought |
national attention to an obscure Ohio college
professor named James A. Garfield and launched him
on a military career that led eventually to the
White House. The precipitous Confederate retreat
which followed the battle cast a shadow over
Humphrey Marshall and called into question his
competence as a military commander.
Commander of the First Kentucky Cavalry during the
Mexican War, Marshall was much revered for his
military sagacity. In November, 1861, he traveled to
Wytheville, Virginia, accepted the Brigadier
General’s commission offered him by President
Jefferson Davis, and took command of the Army of
Southwestern Virginia. His brigade was made up of
natives of Southwestern Virginia and Eastern
Kentucky. Wythe County’s 29th Virginia Infantry and
Wise County’s 54th Virginia Infantry had been
strengthened by Captain Jeffress’ artillery battery
from Nottaway County, Virginia.
Marshall and his men set out for Kentucky in late
December, 1861, and when they reached Pound Gap,
they were reinforced by Colonel John S. Williams’
5th Kentucky Infantry, which was still licking the
wounds it had received during the Battle of Ivy
Mountain. Williams’ men had established a Winter
Camp at Pound Gap following their retreat from
Pikeville on November 8th.
With the 5th Kentucky leading the way, Marshall’s
men marched down the Big Sandy Valley and
established a fortified camp at Hager Hill in
Johnson County and a cavalry camp at the mouth of
Jenny’s Creek, near Paintsville.
When word reached Union headquarters in Louisville
that the Confederates had reoccupied Eastern
Kentucky, Don Carlos Buell, Commander of the Army of
the Ohio, contacted Colonel James A. Garfield and
gave him the mission of driving them back into
Virginia. Garfield was given command of the 18th
Brigade, numbering approximately 1,500 men.
Garfield ordered one of his regiments, the 40th Ohio
Infantry, to march from Lexington to Prestonsburg
and cut off the Confederate line of retreat, and he
ordered the 42nd Ohio Infantry and the 14th and 22nd
Kentucky Infantries to proceed up the Big Sandy
Valley from their base at Catlettsburg. At Louisa
they were joined by the 1st Ohio, the 1st Kentucky,
and the 2nd West Virginia Cavalry regiments. With
Garfield leading the way, the brigade then advanced
slowly over muddy roads towards Paintsville.
Near Paintsville, on January 7th, the 2nd West
Virginia Cavalry surprised the Confederate cavalry
as they were breaking camp at the mouth of Jenny’s
Creek. They initially routed them but were bloodied
after their pursuit ended in am ambush. Garfield
advanced on Hager Hill, only to find that the
Confederates had abandoned it. When Garfield’s
message to Colonel Cranor, who was advancing from
Salyersville, was intercepted, he ordered Cranor and
his regiment, the 40th Ohio, to join him at
Paintsville.
Meanwhile, Marshall was moving south to the Forks of
Middle Creek. There he could avoid the planned
entrapment and guard his supply line and line of
retreat into Virginia.
The Middle Creek valley provided excellent defensive
positions for the Confederates, who were poorly
armed and equipped, not to mention cold and hungry.
On his right wing, along the ridge overlooking the
creek, Marshall placed the 29th Virginia and the 5th
Kentucky. He posted Jeffress’ artillery battery in
the center, next to his command post, so it could
sweep the plain. The 54th Virginia he stationed on
the hill behind the battery, keeping it in reserve.
He stationed his two best cavalry companies,
dismounted and commanded by Captains Clay and
Thomas, on a low ridge running to his left. Cavalry
companies commanded by Cameron, Holliday, Shawhan,
and Stone were held in reserve on his immediate
right.
At about 1 pm on January 10th, Garfield’s
skirmishers encountered Marshall’s pickets, which he
had placed about a half-mile upstream from the mouth
of Middle Creek. Unsure of Marshall’s position,
Garfield ordered a squad of twenty cavalrymen to
dash into the valley and draw fire. This ploy sprung
Marshall’s trap. A volley from Clay’s and Thomas’
cavalry companies revealed the Confederate position.
Seeing this, Garfield ordered his troops to come
forward and begin deploying.
After ascending Graveyard Point, which provided him
with an excellent view of the Confederate position,
Garfield ordered the 40th and 42nd Ohio to cross the
swollen creek and attack the Confederate line on the
hills bordering the south side of the creek. With
his Ohio regiments drawing heavy fire, he then
ordered the 14th Kentucky and the 22nd Kentucky to
assault the Confederate position on his immediate
left, held by Colonel John S. Williams’ 5th Kentucky
Infantry.
Here disaster almost overtook the Kentucky
Unionists. Since they wore sky-blue jackets, the men
of the 14th were initially mistaken for rebels by
their Ohio comrades. Only quick thinking by Garfield
and a “Hurrah for the Union,”--which the
Confederates promptly answered with “Hurrah for Jeff
Davis,”--saved the Kentuckians from sustaining heavy
casualties.
The piecemeal Union attack slowly forced the
Confederates up the steep hill. At 5 pm, with the
sun sinking below the horizon, the fighting petered
out. Marshall, fearing that his hungry men would
desert him in droves if they remained in their
present position, decided to burn his heavier wagons
and retreat southward, using the left fork of the
creek as his escape route. He knew that food for his
men and forage for his horses could be obtained at
the Joseph Gearhart Farm near modern-day Hueysville.
Having been reinforced by Cranor’s 40th Ohio,
Garfield chose to remain on the battlefield. After
his burial details had buried the ten Confederates
Marshall decided to leave behind, he withdrew to
Prestonsburg, where he commandeered a house owned by
Prestonsburg lawyer John M. Burns and made it his
temporary headquarters.
Garfield’s victory at Middle Creek earned him a
promotion to Brigadier General. The problems which
Marshall experienced during the campaign caused
Confederate authorities to question his ability as a
military commander. Marshall’s difficulties also
demonstrated that the long supply line which the
campaign required, extending over the mountains from
Virginia, made it impossible for the Confederates to
hold a position in Eastern Kentucky for more than a
few weeks.
For his part, Garfield demonstrated that the Big
Sandy River could be used to concentrate men and
material against any threat mounted by the
Confederates from Southwestern Virginia. Although
the Big Sandy Valley remained a no-man’s-land for
the remainder of the war, the Confederates never
regained the advantage which they surrendered as a
result of the Battle of Middle Creek.
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