On
the heels of the turbulent "Bleeding Kansas" era which swept this region in the
late 1850s lingered the shadow of civil war. In April of 1861, war between
the Union and Confederacy was officially declared. The old frontier
military post of Fort Scott had been abandoned for over eight years
and a town of the same name had grown in its place. With the advent
of war, the U.S. Army returned and established a military headquarters
in the town of Fort Scott.
As early as August of 1861, the Union Army occupied
its former frontier hospital, the adjacent barracks and stables, and
began construction on new warehouses, powder magazines, wells, a blacksmith
shop, an icehouse, a military prison, and over 40 miles of fortifications
around Fort Scott. As the site of a quartermaster supply depot and countless
regimental camps, Fort Scott would become the largest and strongest
Union point south of Fort Leavenworth.
Uncle Sam's Men
During the four
years of war, soldiers from Wisconsin, Ohio, Iowa, Indiana, and Colorado
passed through the streets of town. Some regiments camped only temporarily
at Fort Scott on their way to campaigns in Missouri, Arkansas and the
Indian Territory, while others were permanently stationed here to protect
the area. Fort Scott also was home to several of its own regiments including
the 2nd Kansas Light Artillery, the 6th Ks. Vol. Cavalry, and the 1st
Ks. Colored Vol. Infantry. The 1st, 2nd and 3rd Indian Home Guards,
recruited primarily from displaced Indian refugees, could even be found
among this sea of faces in town.
Quartermaster Supply Depot
Crucial to the success
of the Union campaigns was the supply depot located at Fort Scott. The
Quartermaster Department issued all rations, feed, horses, wagons, blankets
and equipment for troops camped within 40 miles of Fort Scott.
To capture the millions of dollars in supplies
stored there was a dream of Confederate General Price, and certainly
would have meant disaster to the Union. Rebel troops did pass 12 miles
east and north of Fort Scott in both 1861 and 1864, but an attack never
occurred. The constant guerrilla warfare remained the only challenge
to the men positioned to defend Fort Scott's supplies.
Weary Hearts
Fort Scott's hospital was designated
as a General Hospital', an army classification given to the larger medical
facilities. It was filled with soldiers who suffered from disease or
who sustained wounds in battles and skirmishes in Eastern Kansas and
Western Missouri.
Large numbers of patients forced hospital personnel
to utilize the former guardhouse, infantry barracks, and even tents
as wards. A Hospital Aid Society consisting of concerned citizens attempted
to help the overburdened hospital staff. Despite the care, not all the
soldiers survived. Many died and were buried in the National Cemetery,
two miles southeast of the hospital.
Military Prison
Among the construction performed by
troops during the war was the building of a two-story military prison.
The Provost guards at Fort Scott were responsible for Confederate prisoners
of war, suspected Southern sympathizers, unruly Union soldiers, and
at times unlawful citizens of Fort Scott. The prison housed these men
as they awaited their trials, served sentences, or passed the short
days before their executions.
Haven for the Homeless
From
the very start of the war, Fort Scott provided a safe harbor for refugees.
In the beginning, families fleeing the warfare in Missouri, poured into
Kansas and Fort Scott. Later thousands of homeless passed through from
Arkansas and the Indian Territory. These included hundreds of free Blacks,
escaped slaves, Indians and pro-Union settlers. Often arriving with
few possessions and settled in makeshift camps about town, the most
destitute of these refugees received help from the Army and citizens
of Fort Scott.
Hell's Headquarters
Behind
the scenes of Fort Scott's military headquarters, lies the less memorable
picture of daily toil and pleasure. The snakes, the mosquitoes, the
days of drill and monotony, left many a soldier cursing the war and
camp. Soldiers have left accounts of their attempts to keep entertained
in Fort Scott with a game of baseball or cards, writing letters, a concert
by the 9th Wisconsin Band, or perhaps a dance organized with the ladies
of town. And of course, pay day often found many men seeking entertainment
in Fort Scott's taverns and saloons.
The forced friendship between the town and the
Army was at times naturally strained. When Confederate troops passed
East of the town in September of 1861, the order was made for all troops
and citizens to retreat north to Fort Lincoln on the Little Osage River.
Several Union soldiers who were left in the town took the liberty of
looting many of the citizen's stores and homes which clearly did little
to encourage amity. Relations were stirred again when two soldiers were
accused of raping a young girl. Horrified and outraged, the townspeople
mobbed the prison and hung the soldiers before they ever reached trial.
From Pandemonium to Peace
After
the Civil War ended in April of 1865, the U.S. Army remained at Fort
Scott through the summer. By October, the Army had sold their buildings
and military surplus at public auction, the hospital was closing down,
and the last troops were marching home.
The town resumed a quieter pace, steadily growing
as frontier America expanded, until the next sweep of change brought
by the great railroads, left its imprint on Fort Scott's history.
Suggested Reading
- The American Indian in the Civil War, 1862-1865,
Annie H. Abel.
- The Sable Arm, Dudley Taylor Cornish.
- Civil War Kansas: Reaping theWhirlwind, Albert
Castel.
- Inside War, Michael Fellman.
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