Editor's note: This article was
originally published in The Charger in the Spring of 2001.
Two days after the disastrous Union
defeat at Bull Run, Richard Yates, Governor of Illinois, sent a
dispatch on July 23, 1861 to Simon Cameron, Secretary of War. He
asked Cameron to authorize sixteen additional regiments from
Lincoln’s home state. “Illinois demands the right to do her full
share in the work of preserving our glorious Union from the assaults
of high handed rebellion, and I insist that you respond favorably to
the tender I have made.”
Sometime in the autumn of 1861,
three young men from Wayne County, Benjamin, John, and Marshall
Crews (a distant relative of CCWRT past president Dick Crews), rode the 125 miles north to Camp Butler on the outskirts of
Springfield, the state capital. Volunteering for
three years service in the 5th Illinois Cavalry Regiment, they were
mustered into D Company, which contained a vast majority of men from
their home county. Other Crews kinsmen from Wayne County joined
infantry regiments.
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The 5th
Illinois Cavalry
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The Crews family came from a region
in southern Illinois known from pioneer times as “Egypt” because,
like the Nile River, the high waters in spring from the Mississippi,
Ohio, and Wabash flooded low lying farm lands. Since most of the
region’s population had roots in Kentucky, Tennessee, and Virginia,
there was more empathy for the Confederacy than in the counties
north of Vandalia. In the election of 1860, Egypt had voted three to
one against Lincoln and the “Black” Republicans. The Cairo Gazette
announced in December of 1860 that “the sympathies of our people
are mainly with the South.” Most of the young men from Egypt who
fought in the Civil War wore Federal Blue, but some fled south of
the Ohio River to join the Confederacy. Company G of the 15th
Tennessee Volunteer Infantry was called the “Southern Illinois
Company.” However, the opposite also occurred -- some of the
troopers in D Company were from the border states of Kentucky and
Missouri.
In February of 1862, after a brief
period of training at Camp Butler and a considerable amount of
sickness resulting from the crowded conditions, the 5th Illinois
Cavalry took to the road under its commander, Colonel Hall Wilson.
The Regiment had been ordered to occupy the Benton Barracks in St.
Louis, Missouri. The following month, the troopers were again on the
move, first to Pilot Knob, and then Doniphan, Missouri where they
saw their first action in a skirmish with the enemy. Pocahontas,
Arkansas was the next destination in the middle of April. Companies
D, F, and L were sent south to Smithville on June 17, and then the
entire regiment was ordered further south to Jacksonport, Arkansas.
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The path
followed by Samuel R. Curtis' forces through Missouri and
Arkansas in 1862
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In the mean time, after a decisive
victory at Pea Ridge, Arkansas on March 7 and 8, Brig. General
Samuel R. Curtis, commander of the Federal Army of the Southwest,
had been marching on Little Rock. Foreshadowing Sherman in Georgia,
Curtis’ forces cut a path of destruction through the heart of
Arkansas. An Illinois soldier later wrote: “Desolation, horrid to
contemplate, marks every section of the country through which the
army has passed, and an air of sickening desolation is everywhere
visible.” However, Curtis for logistical reasons decided to abandon
the attack on Little Rock. He moved north and then east into Jacksonport where he picked up reinforcements that included the 5th
Illinois Cavalry.
On June 26, in need of supplies,
Curtis moved his army south toward Helena, Arkansas on the
Mississippi River where the Federal Navy was supposed to have
delivered the needed provisions. Fearing another march on Little
Rock, Brig. General Albert Rust sent two regiments of Texas cavalry
into battle against a vanguard of Federals as they struggled through
a swamp and straddled the Cache River. The Confederates, “yelling
like savages and swearing like demons,” surprised the Federals
causing them to retreat. But with reinforcements soon on the scene,
the Federals repulsed the attackers.
Writing a week later to General
Henry F. Halleck, Curtis said the Battle of Cache River ended with
“a complete rout of the rebel army in Arkansas. They ran in all
directions.” His army lost 6 killed and 57 wounded, but the
Confederates losses were much greater -- a mass grave held over a
hundred corpses. In addition to the human cost, nearly 70 horses
were killed in a battle that took place three days after
Independence Day.
After a week of marching under a
hot sun, “with only filthy, slimy water from the swamps to drink,”
the Army of the Southwest finally arrived in Helena. Resupplied, the
army spent the next three months in limbo fighting off subtropical
diseases. Occasionally units were sent out to forage. On one such
mission in October, the enemy ambushed troopers of the 5th Illinois
Cavalry. Of the 150 men engaged, four died of battle wounds and
another 81, including
Lieutenant William N. Elliot, were taken prisoner.
Thus ended the first year of the 5th
Illinois Cavalry. But in the months to come, there would be more
fighting and dying in Mississippi, Tennessee, Louisiana, and Texas.
By the end of the war, 447 men from the Regiment, nearly half of its
authorized strength, perished, but only 28 troopers had died of
combat wounds. The most deadly enemy had not been the Confederate
armies. The real killers in the war on both sides were dysentery,
typhoid, malaria, and pneumonia.
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Richard Yates
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Samuel R.
Curtis
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Albert Rust
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