By Doug Keller, Pea Ridge National Military Park
Historian
The campaign that would culminate in the Battle
of Pea Ridge began December 25, 1861 with the appointment of Brigadier
General Samuel R. Curtis to command the Union Army of the Southwest.
Curtis’ mission was to destroy, or drive from Missouri his
main opponent, Major General Sterling Price and about 8,000 troops
of the Missouri State Guard, then wintering in Springfield. Hoping
to catch Price when he was most vulnerable, Curtis launched his
10,500 troops during the bitter winter cold of early February, 1862.
Outnumbered and ill-equipped, Price led his troops out of Springfield,
south along Telegraph Road into Confederate held Arkansas, relentlessly
pursued by the dogged and determined Federals. Skirmishes erupted
daily as the two sides trudged south, often buffeted by freezing
winds, rain, sleet, and snow. Reaching Cross Hollow Arkansas, Price
united with a larger better supplied regular Confederate force commanded
by Brigadier General Benjamin McCulloch. On February 17, the pursuing
Federals slammed into McCulloch’s rear guard in the first
Civil War battle in Arkansas on James Dunagin’s farm near
present day Avoca. Bloodied, but not deterred, Curtis slowed his
advance, allowing the now combined forces of Price and McCulloch
to withdraw safely into the Boston Mountains near present day Hog
Eye and Strickler. During their retreat, the Confederates burned
their barracks at Cross Hollow and then ransacked the military
supply depot in Fayetteville, burning several city blocks in the
process, thus making Fayetteville the first American city burned
during the Civil War.
With the unification of Price and McCulloch,
Curtis lost the strategic initiative. Two-hundred miles from his
primary supply base, and with the Confederates increasing in his
front, Curtis deployed his army to cover the approaches and prevent
the enemy from reentering Missouri, then he settled down to wait.
By the first week in March, Curtis’ livestock was so weak
from food shortages that he feared he might not be able to transport
his artillery or ammunition wagons if the Confederates made a sudden
movement. Providentially, Curtis ordered the fragmented parts of
his army to assemble on the bluffs overlooking the north bank of
Little Sugar Creek just north of modern day Avoca. Dirt, rock, and
timber breastworks were constructed, further strengthening an already
formidable position.
Meanwhile, Major General Earl Van Dorn was appointed
to command all Confederate forces west of the Mississippi. Van Dorn
assumed command of the newly christened Army of the West including
all the troops under McCulloch and Price. Hoping to destroy Curtis’
army while it was still scattered, Van Dorn turned his army northward
on March 4 during a late winter storm. Moving north to Fayetteville,
and then up the Elm Springs Road, Van Dorn arrived at Bentonville
the morning of March 6. There he encountered a small Union force
of about 600 troops and cannon led by Brigadier General Franz Sigel.
Sigel had been camped near modern day Centerton, but had received
orders from Curtis to consolidate forces along Little Sugar Creek.
A running fight began as the rebels chased Sigel east out of Bentonville
along modern day Highway 72, across I-540 near the Marriott and
down into Little Sugar Creek valley. Sigel’s force rejoined
Curtis late in the day, and the Confederate army bivouacked along
Little Sugar Creek near Highway 94.
Hoping to draw Curtis out of his strong position,
Van Dorn led his army on long, difficult night march along the Bentonville
Detour toward the Telegraph Road, squarely on the undefended rear
of the union army. But as the sun rose March 7, Van Dorn began to
realize too late that rapid marching in bitterly cold wet weather,
coupled with food shortages had seriously crippled his army. McCulloch’s
troops had fallen behind, and were still eight miles to the rear.
Undaunted, Van Dorn pushed ahead with Price and the Missouri State
Guard to open the battle, at the same time ordering McCulloch to
rejoin him by a shorter route following the now obscure Ford Road.
Responding to reports of enemy activity behind
him, Curtis methodically began withdrawing troops from his earthworks
to accept the rebel attack from the north. Union forces encountered
McCulloch’s troops, including two regiments of Cherokee Indians,
just north of the little hamlet of Leetown about noon. Fighting
raged for at least three hours, including a savage and bitter struggle
in a densely forested thicket known as Morgan’s Woods. The
deaths of McCulloch and his second in command Brigadier General
James McIntosh, coupled with the timely arrival of Union reinforcements
decided the issue. Tired, discouraged, and beaten, the Confederates
retreated in disorder.
Two miles to the east another fierce battle
raged as Van Dorn and Price with about 5,000 Missouri State Guard
troops collided with about 2,200 young men fresh from the farms
and small towns of Iowa and Illinois. Van Dorn had successfully
flanked the Union troops by reaching the Telegraph Road to the north
of Curtis’s position along Little Sugar Creek. The outnumbered
Federals gamely held their ground near a two-story hostelry known
locally as Elkhorn Tavern. By nightfall, the Federals were forced
back about ¾ of a mile where they spent a cold, wet, cheerless
night in a muddy cornfield.
During the night, the survivors of the Leetown
fight rejoined their respective armies for another day’s battle
in the open fields south of Elkhorn Tavern. Determined to break
the Confederate hold on his supply line, Curtis unleashed a massive
and well-coordinated artillery bombardment, followed by a dramatic
infantry assault reminiscent of Napoleonic grandeur. By early afternoon,
the attacking Federals had recaptured all the ground they had lost
the previous day and chased the last of the Confederate rear guard
off the field. Earlier in the day, Van Dorn ordered the army to
retreat after realizing that he had failed to order his supply train
forward, and was unable to re-supply his artillery with much needed
ammunition. Acknowledging the many errors in planning at all levels,
one Confederate officer said “We have fought a battle and
been whipped. Or rather we whipped ourselves”.
The Battle of Pea Ridge, often erroneously
referred to as the largest battle west of the Mississippi, was in
fact the most strategically decisive Civil War battle ever fought
west of the great river. It crushed the best efforts of the Confederates
to reestablish a presence in Missouri, guaranteeing that state’s
political loyalty to the Union. From a military standpoint, it permanently
shifted the balance of power in the region to the Union, making
possible other larger campaigns for control of the strategic Mississippi
river.