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Baxter Springs Print E-mail
Other Name: Baxter Springs Massacre
State: Kansas
Location: Cherokee County
Campaign: Occupation of Indian Territory North of the Arkansas River (1863)
Dates: October 6, 1863
Principal Commanders: union  Union States: Lt. James B. Pond and Maj. Gen. James G. Blunt
confederate  Confederate States: Lt. Col. William C. Quantrill
Forces Engaged: union  Union States: Detachments from three regiments and an escort
confederate  Confederate States: Quantrill’s Raiders (approx. 400)
Estimated Casualties: union  Union States: 103
confederate  Confederate States: 3
Total: 106 total
Results: Result(s): Confederate victory
Description:

After conducting many raids in Kansas, including the massacre at Lawrence, Quantrill decided to winter in Texas. Along with other partisans, he headed south on the Texas Road and captured and killed two Union teamsters who had come from a post called Baxter Springs. Quantrill decided to attack the post and divided his force into two columns, one under him and the other commanded by a subordinate, David Poole. Poole and his men proceeded down the Texas Road, where they encountered Union soldiers, most of whom were African Americans. They chased and attacked the Union troops, killing some of them before they reached the earth and log fort. After the Union survivors reached the fort, the Rebels attacked, but the garrison, with the help of a howitzer, fought them off. Quantrill’s column moved on the post from another direction and chanced on a Union detachment escorting Maj. Gen. James G. Blunt and wagons transporting his personal items from his former headquarters of the Department of the Frontier at Fort Scott to his new one at Fort Smith. Most of this detachment, including the band and Maj. Henry Z. Curtis (son of Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis), was murdered, but Blunt and a few mounted men returned to Fort Scott. Blunt was removed from command for failing to protect his column, but he was soon restored. Touted as a massacre by some, Baxter Springs was another of the events that characterized the vicious Kansas-Missouri border warfare.

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