3RD
MISSISSIPPI CAVALRY REGIMENT
(aka McGuirk's Cavalry)
from Dunbar Rowland’s
"Military History of Mississippi, 1803-1898"
with supplement by H. Grady Howell
ORGANIZATION:
Name of
Companies and Counties of Muster:
Company A --
Kyle’s Company (raised in Holmes & Madison Counties, MS)
Company B --
Griffin’s Company (raised in Itawamba County, MS)
Company C --
Logan’s Company (raised in Lafayette County, MS)
Company D --
Gwartney’s Company (raised in Lafayette County, MS)
Company E --
Richmond’s Company (raised in Marshall & Yalobusha Counties, MS)
Company F --
Kennedy’s Company (raised in Yalobusha County, MS)
Company G --
Daniel’s Company (raised in Tippah County, MS)
Company H --
Kilgore Rangers (raised in Lafayette County, MS)
Company I --
Webb’s Rangers (raised in Lafayette County, MS)
Company K --
Barksdale’s Rangers (raised in Yalobusha County, MS)
OFFICERS:
Colonel –
John McGuirk
Lieut-Colonels
– James A. Barksdale, 1863; H. H. Barksdale, 1864-65.
Majors – B.
M. Kilgore, F. W. Webb.
Adjutant –
Wm. Joe Walker
Surgeons – R.
B. Dandridge, J. F. Butler
HISTORY:
The companies
were originally organized as Minute Men in 1862, and re-enlisted for
twelve
months in 1863,
under the call of Gen. J. E. Johnston, it being understood between the
Governor
and President Davis that the men should be exempt from conscription
during
their term of service. They were understood to be rationed and paid by
the
Confederate States but the pay was generally several months in arrears.
It is
first mentioned as Mississippi cavalry, three companies, Col. John
McGuirk,
with Gen. Chalmers, headquarters Panola, April, 1863. April 8, at Holly
Springs
ordered to take post near Chulahoma. April 29, detailed to defend
Panola, time
of Federal raid. May 30, assigned to brigade of Gen. {J.}
Z. George, State troops. Colonel McGuirk was
commissioned June 9, 1863; other officers June 11.
{J.
Z. George was
given command of 3rd Brigade of Mississippi State Troops for
northern Mississippi and retained the rank of General.
He discovered he had few troops under his
command. When he took
command within
of the 5th Mississippi Cavalry in the Confederate Army, his
rank was
Colonel. However, he was quite often
referred to as General George. }
The regiment
served under General George in the operations attending the raid of
Colonel
Mizner, June 15-25, 1863, who set out from LaGrange, Tenn., with orders
to
break the railroad south of Panola, turn on Chalmers and sweep the
country of
horses, mules, Negroes and the new crop of wheat. Colonel McCulloch
skirmished
with Mizner after he had crossed the Tallahatchie at Wyatt, and, in
view of the
Federal strength, Gen. George retreated from Panola across to Yockeney,
sending
one company to protect the railroad bridge. The whole command moved to
that
point, but too late to prevent the destruction of the bridge. Colonel
McGuirk
with his regiment, then pursued the Federal column on its return to
LaGrange,
swimming the Tallahatchie at Belmont, overtaking Mizner at Tyro and
pursuing
eighty miles to Hudsonville, "where, on Sunday evening, he overtook and
chastised him handsomely, killing and wounding several and capturing 27
prisoners with about the same number of horses and equipments, an
extraordinary
achievement," considering the arduous service of the command. George's headquarters were at Grenada, and
Colonel McGuirk was in
command of the brigade in July, 1863.
July 21,
General George reported that a detachment from Col. McGuirk's Regiment
had cut
the railroad and taken 15 prisoners near Germantown. In July regiment
was
ordered to Vaiden for enlistment in Confederate service. General George
reported, "I fear half of McGuirk's Regiment cannot be gotten to
Vaiden." The enlistment was not made.
In the field
during the Federal raid from the Big Black and LaGrange, Tenn., to
Grenada,
August, 1863, of which there are no reports. Regiment then in Chalmers'
Cavalry
command, 200 in number, Colonel McGuirk commanding, but scattered
between
Panola and Grenada, arresting deserters and conscripts. Chalmers could
not
collect a command sufficient to hold Grenada, which the raiders
occupied August
20, breaking the railroad and burning the rolling stock. The regiment,
with
Chalmers' command, moved from Grenada to Abbeville September 12.
Assigned to
Slemon's Brigade October 18. "The battalion under the command of
Lieutenant-Colonel Barksdale" was in Chalmers' command, September, 1863.
{General Chalmers' West Tennessee Raid, Oct 5 - 13, 1863}
This
regiment, the Seventh Tennessee (Colonel Duckworth), A. H. Chalmers'
Eighteenth
Battalion, and one rifled gun of McLendon's Battery, in all about 850
men,
constituted the immediate command of General Chalmers when he was
collecting
forces for the raid to Collierville,
Tenn., in October, 1863. With this
command Chalmers was about to move to Salem for a juncture with
Richardson's
Brigade, when a column of Illinois cavalry, under Colonel McCrillis,
advanced
from LaGrange, Tenn., against Holly Springs, whither Chalmers moved on
the 5th.
McCrillis, with 750 cavalry, heard on his approach that Chalmers was
ahead of
him, and began to recross the Coldwater, when Chalmers attacked at
Lockhart's
Mill, October 6. There was a brisk skirmish, in which the four
howitzers posted
by McCrillis on the north bank of the river, played an important part.
Chalmers
then moved to Salem and on the morning of the 8th set out for
Collierville, leaving
Hooves' Regiment to occupy Salem. Meanwhile McCrillis had returned from
LaGrange to the vicinity of Salem
with 1,250 cavalry and mounted infantry and six guns. He attacked
Hooves and
drove him from the town, and Chalmers, learning of this, at a distance
of ten
miles, returned rapidly and attacked McCrillis, who occupied a strong
position
on a long ridge, with his skirmishers through the town. Chalmers had
been
reinforced and had 1,200 in the battle, but only one piece of
artillery, which
was useless after the third fire. After three hours' hard fighting,
said
Chalmers, the enemy was driven from every position. "In this affair the
Second Missouri Cavalry (Lieutenant-Colonel McCulloch), Third Regiment
Mississippi State Cavalry (Colonel McGuirk), and the Eighteenth
Mississippi
Battalion (Major Chalmers) bore the brunt of the conflict, and although
the
last two were composed almost entirely of untried men, they behaved
with a
gallantry equal to that which has ever distinguished the veterans of
the Second
Missouri Cavalry."
Colonel McGuirk, who moved
from his
camp at Wyatt, was the first
to reinforce Hooves, and was ordered to
take the
two regiments and command the front attack, but Chalmers decided to
also attack
in front. The regiment, under Lieutenant-Colonel Barksdale, charged the
Federal
position at Hamer's house, drove the skirmish line from the village,
and
compelled the retreat of the artillery from a hill. Captain Hartin and
Lieutenant Kennedy were wounded in the fight. Captains Logan, Farris,
Griffin,
{H.
H.} Barksdale, McKie, Webb and Lieutenants Thornton and Towns
gallantly
commanded
the companies. The casualties of McGuirk's Regiment was 1 killed, 22
wounded;
of the rest of Chalmers' troops 5 wounded. General Sweeney, commanding
LaGrange, reported that on October 8, "our cavalry, under Color
McCrillis,
with the mounted infantry and a section of Captain Tannrath’s Battery,
under
Colonel Phillips, were attacked by the enemy at Salem and driven back
on the
railroad with considerable loss."
In the night following, Chalmers was reinforced by
Richardson's
Brigade, about
850 men. Colonel Hatch on the other side came up from LaGrange with 750
Union
cavalry, and no artillery, expecting to join McCrillis and Phillips,
but
finding them gone, he sent for reinforcements from Davis’ Mills.
Chalmers
remained most of October 9 in line of battle at Hamar’s house, with his
force
of over 2,000 men and six guns, believing that Hatch had against him
"nine
regiments and nine pieces of artillery." He reported that "there was
some slight skirmishing, but the enemy did not make his appearance in
force." Hatch received orders to fall back to LaGrange, which made it
possible for Chalmers to carry out his plan of a raid on Collierville,
while Hatch, with a force of 2,200, returned again to
hunt for him at Salem and Holly Springs.
Chalmers moved to Holly
Springs on
the
10th for food and
ammunition, and approached Collierville early on the
11th. {Chalmers
cavalry division crossed the Coldwater River on the morning of the
11th. Col. R. V. Richardson was in th lead brigade that formed up
on the ridge south of town and the Union earthworks. He sent McGuirk
around the right flank and Duckworth to the left flank.}
In
the disposition for attack, Col, McGuirk, with his own regiment and
First
Mississippi Partisans, was sent to gain possession of the town and
attack the
fort from the rear. The movements on the left and right drove the
garrison to
the rifle pits and part of them into the fort, and possession was taken
of the
train of cars on which General Sherman was traveling with a battalion
of
regulars as an escort, but the movement on the rear was not so
successful. General Chalmers ascribed this to Colonel McGuirk's delay
at the
cavalry camp northwest of town. {camp of the
7th Illinois Cavalry} In
the attack upon the cavalry camp, 1st {sic}
Lieutenant-Colonel Barksdale commanded the regiment, about 175 men. He
reported
that after the First Partisans were repulsed, his regiment advanced
upon the
camp, firing steadily, and drove the enemy to shelter in the woods and
swamp,
and that he never saw men, even in the Army of Northern Virginia,
deport
themselves with more gallantry. He gave special mention to the conduct
of Maj.
B. M. Kilgore, who fell wounded while leading a charge, and to Captains
Logan,
{H.
H.} Barksdale, Griffin, Gwartney, and Lieutenants Towns and
Thornton,
company
commanders, Lieutenant Turner, Company H, and Lieutenants Thornton and
Tyler,
Company K, collected the prisoners, 89 in number. Lieut. J. H.
Alexander
brought off 18 wagons with mule teams. Sergeant Grizelle color bearer,
distinguished on this as on former fields for gallantry, fell with a
severe
wound as he was carrying the flag, with a captured flag in his other
hand.
Lieutenant White, Company D, carried the colors forward. The casualties
of the regiment
were 1 killed, 6 wounded.
The attack on Collierville
failed, and
General Chalmers retreated. At the crossing of the Tallahatchie, near Wyatt, October 13, the Confederate
command, under Col. R. V. Richardson, was
attacked by Hatch. McGuirk recrossed the river with his two regiments,
about
300 men, dismounted, and two guns of the Buckner Battery$,
and took
position to
check the pursuit. A body of Federals under the famous Captain Hodgman,
Seventh
Kansas Jayhawkers, occupied a log house, which Barksdale and his men
charged in
the face of a heavy artillery fire from two batteries. The house was
taken and
Hodgman wounded and captured. About dark the regiment was again in
action with
Hooves' Regiment, repelling twice the Federal attack. It came up with a
charge
and a yell, said McGuirk. About 9 o'clock the rear guard, volunteers
from this
regiment, crossed the river. The casualties were 1 killed, 6 wounded, 3
missing. Captain Logan, Acting Major; Captain Barksdale, Lieutenant
Hurt
(commanding Company G), were mentioned for gallantry. For
their service in this expedition,
including the engagements at Salem, Collierville
and Wyatt, honorable mention was given to Lieut.-Col.
James A.
Barksdale, Major; B. M. Kilgore, Adjutant; (Captain) W. Joseph Walker,
Sergeant-Major
E. L. Richmond, Orderly C. C. Harris, Capt. H. E. Williamson,
Quartermaster;
Lieut. P. M. Morgan, Commissary; W. F. Baker, Acting Commissary. { $ Buckner Battery was lead by Lt. H.
C. Holt and was armed with four(4) 1.56-inch smooth-bore,
breech-loading Williams Guns.}
The regiment,
under the command of Colonel Barksdale, participated with George's
Regiment in
the gallant cavalry charge at Collierville,
Tenn., November 3, 1863, which was
repulsed by the unexpected volleys from revolving rifles of the Second
Iowa, at
the railroad. The advance of this regiment was on the Quinn's Mill
road, and
the attack was gallantly made, as was testified to both by Chalmers and
Hatch,
the officers commanding on each side. On the retreat, after crossing
the
Coldwater near Quinn's Mill, the regiment joined in the stubborn
resistance
which prevented their pursuers from crossing until the next day. The
casualties
of this regiment were the heaviest in General Chalmers' command -- 1
killed, 3
officers and 19 men wounded,
November 30,
the same two regiments, crossing the Coldwater at very high water,
moved into
Tennessee with Chalmers' expedition in support of S. D. Lee and
Forrest,
reaching Moscow December 4. Slemons' brigade burned the railroad
trestle over
Grisson's Creek, between Moscow and Lafayette.
Colonel Meek,
Eleventh Illinois, reported that his command, which had gathered up
horses and
mules and burned grain and cotton and shops on the Holly Springs road
by way of
Chulahoma, passed through Holly Springs on the evening of the 21st,
stopped to
feed on the Hernando road two miles from Hudsonville, and left that
road for
the LaGrange road when one of his pickets was shot, leaving two
companies to
bring in the wounded man. Later he sent back Major Funke with one
company,
hearing that a fight was on. McGuirk had come in by a by-road, and cut
off the
three companies, which extricated themselves with difficulty, losing 1
killed,
2 wounded and 26 prisoners.
Regiment
assigned to Slemons' Brigade in the organization of the cavalry under S. D. Lee, January, 1864.
February 2,
1864, McGuirk skirmished near LaGrange, Tenn. The regiment participated
in General
Forrest's defeat of Sooy Smith's expedition near Okolona,
February 20-22, 1864, and had 3 wounded (see
Second Cavalry). At the outset of the famous
raid of Forest and Chalmers through Tennessee in April, 1864, Colonel
McGuirk
with his regiment and the First Partisans made a demonstration from
Holly
Springs toward Memphis, which was so effective as to make practicable
the
capture of Fort Pillow April 12.
{Lt-Col.
James A. Barksdale was temporarily assigned or transferred to command
the 5th Mississippi Cavarly. He was killed north of Okolona on
February 22, 1864. In May, 1864, H. H. Barksdale was promoted to
Lt-Colonel and commanded the 3rd Mississippi Cavalry}
In criticizing
the enlistment in State regiments to avoid conscription in the
Confederate
service, General Chalmers wrote, January 6, 1864; "These State
companies
have done more harm than good. I do not include in this remark Colonel
McGuirk's Regiment -- that has done good service -- but both he and his
officers have long since been convinced that the regiment would be more
effective if it were regularly in Confederate service."
Regiment
ordered to report at Macon to the Governor for special and important
service,
March 3, 1864. Aggregate of regiment; 325. Governor Clark appointed
April 30,
1864, as the day for State cavalry to assemble at Tupelo
for transfer to the Confederate service. "As the
regiment of Colonel McGuirk is one of those to be transferred, it is
very
desirable that they should be paid the amount due them for the time
they were
in Confederate service, some five or six months are due them, also pay
for
horses killed in battle." The Governor declared they were in as good a
state of discipline and as effective as any troops, and he consented to
their
transfer to the Confederate service. The regiment was reorganized
at
Oxford in the latter part of April, 1864, and the Colonel commissioned
April
25, 1864. May 1, 1864, the Gholson Brigade was turned over to the
Confederate
States, Colonel McGuirk commanding brigade. May 22, General Forrest
ordered
Brigadier-General Gholson to take command of his brigade. The brigade
was
attached for a time to Forrest's command, and then transferred to the
command
of Wirt Adams before Vicksburg, being ordered to Canton, May 26. {My
ancestors Pvt M. L. Tilghman and Pvt Joel P. Hill enlisted on April
28.}
Gholson's
Brigade was withdrawn from Adams by General Forrest before Slocum's
raid to
Jackson, July, 1864, but rejoined General Adams near Jackson, in time
to
participate in the attack upon Slocum's column about four miles west of
Jackson
on the evening of July 6, when McGuirk's Regiment charged and attempted
to cut
off the wagon train. Another attack was made in the morning of the 7th
and a
third, near Clinton, by Lowry's Regiment. McGuirk's Regiment, commanded
by
Lieutenant Colonel {H. H.} Barksdale,
had 8 wounded, 1 missing. General Gholson
was
severely wounded and Colonel McGuirk took command of the brigade.
Later in July
the brigade was transferred to Georgia and was temporarily assigned to Walthall’s Division on the Atlanta
lines, July 25, and put with
Reynold's Brigade. General Reynolds reported that McGuirk's command
joined him
just before he marched out to the battle on the Lickskillet
road, July 28, and they marched out on the left of his
line. Reynolds charged the Federal line, behind log works, and was
repulsed
after a bloody fight. He reported that Colonel McGuirk, under orders
from some
field officer, charged the works a second time, but was compelled to
fall back
with considerable loss. "The loss in General Gholson's Brigade, some
450
strong, was 144 killed, wounded and missing." The casualties of
McGuirk's
Regiment was 8 killed, including Major T. W. Webb and Lieut. S. H.
White,
commanding Company C. Captain E. L. Richmond was dangerously wounded,
Captains
Daniel and Orr wounded and missing. Total wounded 43, including Lieut’s
James
Miller, R. A. Butler, W. O. Cockram, W. H. Thornton and John Griffin.
In the battle
of Jonesboro, Ga., August 31,
Colonel McGuirk, of Gholson's Brigade, reported to General Granbury
with his
regiment, dismounted, and a battalion of engineer troops (Major
Presstman), and
aided in the rout of the enemy in their front. Granbury wrote: "Seeing
them endeavoring to rally at a crossing opposite my left flank, I
ordered
Colonel McGuirk to advance his two battalions in double-quick time,
which was
executed by that officer promptly and gallantly, and in time for his
command to
deliver a few volleys before the enemy escaped beyond the river."
Moving
his whole brigade up to Flint River, Granbury dressed his line on the
position
of Colonel McGuirk. September 19, General Hood, at Palmetto, ordered
Gholson's
Cavalry Brigade, then at Opelika, up the west side of the Chattahoochee
River,
opposite Newnan. September 28, with Ross' Brigade, formed Ross'
Division of
Jackson's Cavalry. December 12, 1864, McGuirk's Regiment was en route
through
Montgomery to Mobile. December
16-17, it took part in the pursuit of the Federal expedition to
Pollard.
January 6, 1865,
regiment had been ordered to Brandon.
January 20, marching to concentrate with Mabry's Brigade at Canton. February, 1865, McGuirk's Regiment ordered to
report to Gen. Wirt Adams.
Paroled under
the capitulation of Lieut.-Gen. Richard Taylor made at Citronelle,
May 4, 1865.
{Lt-Col.
H. H. Barksdale was among those who surrendered.}
~~~ end of
history ~~~
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