- Battle of Dry Wood Creek
The Battle of Dry Wood Creek (also known as the Battle of Big Dry Wood Creek or the Battle of the Mules) was fought on
September 2 ,1861 inVernon County, Missouri during theAmerican Civil War . The Confederate troops were successful in their campaign to force theUnion army to abandon southwesternMissouri and to concentrate on holding theMissouri Valley .Background
Following his victory at the
Battle of Wilson's Creek ,Major General Sterling "Pap" Price and hisMissouri State Guard occupiedSpringfield, Missouri . Price then headed northwest with 6,000 poorly trained and under-equipped guardsmen to captureFort Scott, Kansas . FormerKansas "Jayhawker " andsenator Col. James H. Lane led a 600-man battalion of Unioncavalry from Fort Scott to learn the whereabouts of the rumored Confederate force.The battle
Lane's battalion soon encountered Price's men near Big Dry Wood Creek, roughly 12 miles from the fort. Lane surprised the Confederates, but the Southerners' numerical superiority soon determined the encounter’s outcome. After a sharp skirmish lasting two hours, they forced the Union cavalry to retire to Fort Scott and captured their mules. Lane secured the fort, then proceeded towards Kansas City. The Confederates continued on towards Lexington, while Price recruited more guardsmen.
Casualties
Federal losses were 14 men. Confederate losses were 4 killed and 16 wounded, all in
Brigadier General James S. Rains ' Eighth Division,Missouri State Guard .Location
The battle site is just south of
Deerfield, Missouri , on Highway 54 between Nevada and Fort Scott.References
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/mo005.htm National Park Service Battle Summary]
* U.S. War Department, "The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies", 70 volumes in 4 series. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1880-1901. Series 1, Volume 3, Part 1, pages 162–165.External links
* [http://www.griffingweb.com/captain_creitz's_diary.htm Diary of a Union cavalryman present at Dry Wood Creek]
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