Stand Watie
Stand Watie
Compiled Military Service Record
Stand Watie |
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Cherokee Chief and General Stand Watie |
Stand Watie (Confederate)
Biographical
data and notes: - Born Dec. 12, 1806, in Rome, GA - Stand Watie died on Sep. 9, 1871, at Honey Creek, DE - Note:
Last CSA general in the field to stand down
Enlistment: - 54 years of age at time of enlistment - Enlisted
on Oct. 15, 1861, as Colonel
Mustering information: - Commissioned into Field and Staff, 1st Cherokee Cav
(U.S. Indian Troops) on Oct. 15, 1861 - Discharged due to promotion
from 1st Cherokee Cav (U.S. Indian Troops) on May 6, 1864 - Commissioned
into Gen Staff (Confederate States) on May 6, 1864
Promotions: -
Promoted to Colonel (Full, Vol) on Oct. 15, 1861, (1st Cherokee Mounted Rifles) - Promoted to Brig-Gen (Full, Vol) on May
6, 1864
Stand Watie
Biography
/ History
Biography: Brigadier-General
Stand Watie
Brigadier-General Stand Watie, of white and Indian blood, was a prominent man in the Cherokee nation
and intensely Southern in sentiment. From the beginning of the war between the North and South, efforts were made
by Ben McCulloch and Albert Pike to secure for the Confederacy the alliance of the tribes of the Indian Territory.
Stand
Watie and others of his class were anxious to form this alliance, but John Ross, the principal chief of the Cherokees,
hesitated. After the decisive victory of the Confederates at Wilson's
Creek, the party represented by Watie succeeded in persuading Ross to join the South. Before that time General McCulloch
had employed some of the Cherokees, and Stand Watie, whom he had appointed colonel, to assist in protecting the northern
borders of the Cherokees from the raids of the "Jayhawkers" of Kansas.
When
the Cherokees joined the South, they offered the Confederate government a regiment. This offer was accepted, and in October,
1861, the first Cherokee regiment was organized, and Stand Watie was commissioned colonel. In December, 1861, he was
engaged in a battle with some hostile Indians at Chusto-Talasah, in which the Confederate Indians defeated a considerable
force of the hostiles.
Colonel Watie pursued the enemy, overtook him, had a running fight and killed 15 without
the loss of a man. He participated also in the battle of Pea Ridge, March 6 and 7, 1862. Gen. Albert Pike, in his
report of this battle, said: "My whole command consisted of about 1,000 men, all Indians except one squadron. The
enemy opened fire into the woods where we were, the fence in front of us was thrown down, and the Indians (Watie's
regiment on foot and Drew's on horseback), with part of Sim's regiment, gallantly led by Lieutenant-Colonel Quayle, charged
full in front through the woods and into the open grounds with loud yells, took the battery, fired upon and pursued the
enemy retreating through the fenced field on our right, and held the battery, which I afterward had drawn by the Cherokees
into the woods."
But though the Indians were so good on a sudden charge, they were easily thrown into confusion
when the Federal artillery opened upon them, and it required the greatest exertion on the part of their officers to
keep them under fire. There was considerable fear after this battle lest the Indian Territory
should be entirely lost to the Confederacy, but Watie and his regiment were firm in their adherence.
Gen. William
Steele, in his report of the operations in the Indian Territory, in 1863, says of Colonel
Watie that he found him to be a gallant and daring officer. On April 1, 1863, he was authorized to raise a brigade,
to consist of such force as was already in the service of the Confederate States from the Cherokee nation and such
additional force as could be obtained from the contiguous States.
In June, 1864, he captured the steamboat Williams
with 150 barrels of flour and 16,000 pounds of bacon, which he says was, however, a disadvantage to the command, because
a great portion of the Creeks and Seminoles immediately broke off to carry their booty home. In the summer of 1864,
Colonel Watie was commissioned a brigadier-general, his commission dating from May 10th. In September he attacked
and captured a Federal train of 250 wagons on Cabin creek and repulsed an attempt to retake it.
At the end of the
year 1864, General Watie's brigade of cavalry consisted of the First Cherokee regiment, a Cherokee battalion, First
and Second Creek regiments, a squadron of Creeks, First Osage battalion, and First Seminole battalion. To the end, General
Watie stood by his colors. He survived the war several years, and died in August, 1877.
Source: Confederate Military History, vol. XIV, p. 417
Recommended Reading: General
Stand Watie's Confederate Indians (University of Oklahoma Press). Description:
American Indians were courted by both the North and the South prior to that great and horrific conflict known as the American
Civil War. This is the story of the highest ranking Native American--Cherokee chief and Confederate general--Stand Watie, his
Cherokee Fighting Unit, the Cherokee, and the conflict in the West...
Recommended Reading: Rifles for Watie.
Description: This is a rich and sweeping
novel-rich in its panorama of history; in its details so clear that the reader never doubts for a moment that he is there;
in its dozens of different people, each one fully realized and wholly recognizable. It is a story of a lesser -- known part
of the Civil War, the Western campaign, a part different in its issues and its problems, and fought with a different savagery.
Inexorably it moves to a dramatic climax, evoking a brilliant picture of a war and the men of both sides who fought in it.
Recommended
Reading: The
Blue, the Gray, and the Red: Indian Campaigns of the Civil War (Hardcover: 288 pages). Description: Inexperienced Union
and Confederate soldiers in the West waged numerous bloody campaigns against the Indians during the Civil War. Fighting with
a distinct geographical advantage, many tribes terrorized the territory from the Plains to the Pacific, as American pioneers
moved west in greater numbers. These noteworthy--and notorious--Indian campaigns featured a fascinating cast of colorful characters,
and were set against the wild, desolate, and untamed territories of the western United
States. This is the first book to explore Indian conflicts that took place during the Civil
War and documents both Union and Confederate encounters with hostile Indians blocking western
expansion. Continued below...
From
Publishers Weekly: Beginning with the flight
of the Creeks into Union territory pursued by Confederate forces (including many of Stand Watie's Cherokees), this popular
history recounts grim, bloody, lesser-known events of the Civil War. Hatch (Clashes
of the Cavalry) also describes the most incredible incidents.... Kit Carson, who fought Apaches and
Navajos under the iron-fisted Colonel Carleton, arranged the Long Walk of the Navajos that made him infamous in Navajo history
to this day. The North's "Captain" Woolsey, a volunteer soldier, became a brutal raider of the Apaches. General Sibley, a
northerner and first Governor of Minnesota, oversaw the response to the Sioux Uprising of 1862 that
left several hundred dead. The slaughter of Black Kettle's Cheyennes at Sand Creek in
1864 by Colorado volunteers under Colonel Chivington,
a militant abolitionist whose views on Indians were a great deal less charitable, “forms a devastating chapter.”
Hatch, a veteran of several books on the Indian Wars that focus on George Armstrong Custer, has added to this clear and even-handed
account a scholarly apparatus that adds considerably to its value.
Recommended
Viewing: Indian Warriors - The Untold Story of the Civil
War (History Channel) (2007). Description:
Though largely forgotten, 20 to 30 thousand Native Americans fought in the Civil War. Ely Parker was a Seneca leader who found
himself in the thick of battle under the command of General Ulysses S. Grant. Stand Watie--a Confederate general and a Cherokee--was known for his brilliant guerrilla tactics.
Continued below...
Also highlighted is Henry Berry Lowery, an Eastern
North Carolina Indian, who became known as the Robin Hood of North Carolina. Respected Civil War authors, Thom Hatch and Lawrence
Hauptman, help reconstruct these most captivating stories, along with descendants like Cherokee Nation member Jay Hanna, whose
great-grandfathers fought for both the Union and the Confederacy. Together, they reveal a new, fresh perspective and the very personal reasons
that drew these Native Americans into the fray.
Recommended
Reading: The
American Indian in the Civil War, 1862-1865 (Bison Book) (403 pages) (University
of Nebraska Press). Description:
Annie Heloise Abel describes the divided loyalties of Native Americans and the American Civil War and
makes it vividly clear that it brought only chaos and devastation to the Indian Territory.
For example, she describes in detail the 1862 Battle of Pea Ridge, a bloody disaster for the Confederates but a glorious moment
for Colonel (later promoted to "General") Stand Watie and his Cherokee Mounted Rifles. The Indians were soon swept
by the war into a vortex of confusion and horror.
Recommended
Reading: The Cherokee Nation in the Civil War
(Hardcover). Description: This book offers a broad overview of the war as it affected the Cherokees--a social history of a
people plunged into crisis. The Cherokee Nation in the Civil War shows how the Cherokee people, who had only just begun to
recover from the ordeal of removal, faced an equally devastating upheaval in the Civil War. Clarissa W. Confer illustrates
how the Cherokee Nation, with its sovereign status and distinct culture, had a wartime experience unlike that of any other
group of people--and suffered perhaps the greatest losses of land, population, and sovereignty. Continued below…
No one questions
the horrific impact of the Civil War on America,
but few realize its effect on American Indians. Residents of Indian Territory
found the war especially devastating. Their homeland was beset not only by regular army operations but also by guerrillas
and bushwhackers. Complicating the situation even further, Cherokee men fought for the Union
as well as the Confederacy and created their own "brothers' war." About the Author: Clarissa W. Confer is Assistant Professor
of History at California University of Pennsylvania.
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