In the spring
of 1864, General William Tecumseh Sherman led more that 100,000 Union
soldiers
into northern Georgia.
His mission was to capture the city of Atlanta,
a vital center of transportation and industry. The city’s fall would be
a
staggering blow to the already faltering southern Confederacy. To
protect his
army’s vulnerable supply lines, Sherman
ordered
Union forces at Memphis, Tennessee
to march into North Mississippi.
Their job was
to find and, if possible, destroy Major General Nathan Bedford Forrest
and his
Confederate cavalry.
On
the
morning of June 10, 1864, Union and Confederate troops clashed near Baldwyn, Mississippi
along the sleepy wooded lanes around Brice’s Crossroads. Forrest led
elements
of his cavalry corps in a bloody daylong battle against a much larger
Union
army commanded by Brigadier General Samuel D. Sturgis. Fighting in the
sweltering heat, Forrest used his superior knowledge of the enemy,
aggressive
tactics and favorable terrain to win one of the most decisive victories
of the
American Civil War, completely routing Sturgis’ expeditionary force,
and
capturing most of their weapons and supplies.
Located
on Mississippi Hwy 370
six miles west of Baldwyn, a one-acre site commemorates the battle,
which had
one objective -- make impossible the threat of Confederate General
Nathan
Bedford Forrest to interfere with General William T. Sherman's railroad
supply
line from Nashville to Chattanooga
during the Atlanta
campaign.
This
June, you can watch the
141ST Anniversary Reenactment of the Battle of Brice’s Crossroad.
For
information on lodging and
restaurant information, please visit
http://www.bricescrossroads.com/battle.htm
Brian Brown is a
Little Rock
attorney who practices law with the Laser Law
Firm (he plans to keep practicing until he eventually gets it
right!). He
has been a member of the Roundtable since age 10, has been president a
couple
of times over the years, and has been treasurer since the dawn of
time. He is the author of a book on Civil War genealogical
research,
and really needs no introduction. Brian will be going to Pea Ridge with
Bill
Shea on a tour the prior weekend.

(1828 - 1864)
Patrick
Ronayne Cleburne
Patrick
Ronayne Cleburne, one of
two foreign-born officers to attain the rank of major general in the
Confederate Service, was born March 17, 1828 in Bridgepark Cottage on
the River
Bride, ten miles west of Cork,
Ireland.
After a three year enlistment in Her Majesty's regiment of Foot, he
purchased
his discharge and emigrated to the United States, in 1849, landing at
New
Orleans, Educated as an apothecary, he first worked in
Cincinnati
but soon took up residence in Helena, Arkansas, where he became a
partner in a
drugstore, and then studied law.
By the
outbreak of the Civil War,
he had become successful in the legal profession, and had
accumulated
considerable property. He was elected
colonel of
the 15th Arkansas
in 1861, and was promoted brigadier general rank from March 4,
1862. The
month following he led a brigade at Shiloh and later commanded a
brigade at
Perryville and a division at Richmond.
His promotion to Major General dated from December 13, 1862. Cleburne rapidly
established a reputation as a superb combat officer on every
battlefield of the
Western Army. He further distinguished himself at Murfreesboro,
and received a vote of thanks from the Confederate Congress for
saving the
trains of the Army of Tennessee after the Chattanooga
campaign. A savage fighter of the Bedford Forrest stamp, his
death at the
battle of Franklin,
on November 30, 1864, in the forefront of his division, was a calamity
to the
Confederate cause perhaps only exceeded by the demise of Stonewall
Jackson.
General Cleburne was the first to suggest (in a circular
letter) the
arming of slaves and their masters into military service, a plan
belatedly
put forth by the Confederate government at the end of the war.
First
buried near Franklin, Cleburne's
remains were later moved to Helena, Arkansas.
In
1985, the Pine Bluff Sons
of Confederate Veterans named their Camp after General Cleburne because
the
Jefferson Guard, a Pine Bluff company,
served
under the general, in the 15th Arkansas.
The Camp has sponsored a memorial service each year since for General
Cleburne.
The 20th Annual Patrick R.
Cleburne Memorial Service was held in Helena on March
19. The Gen. Patrick Cleburne Camp, Sons
of
Confederate Veterans, the Col. Robert Shaver Camp, SCV, the Gen. Robert
Newton
Camp, SCV, and Company D, 1st Arkansas Reenactors, sponsor the event.
It is held each year in the Confederate
section of the Maple
Hill Cemetery.
Dr.
Michael B, Dougan, was the
Key Speaker, at the event. Dr. Dougan is a history professor at the Arkansas State
University, in Jonesboro and an
author of several history
books, an outstanding historian and excellent speaker.
(Ref.; "Generals in Gray" by:
Ezra J. Warner, Published by Louisiana State University Press 1991)

THE
LOSS OF A MEMBER
CHARLES
HERBERT HEUSTON,
age 99, of Little Rock, a retired
Transmission
Supervisor for Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, died on the morning
of
February 24, 2005, in Pleasant
Valley Living Center
at Little Rock, Arkansas.
Mr. Heuston was born on November 2, 1905, at Ottumwa, Iowa,
the son of William Oscar Heuston and Edith Coe Heuston. In addition to
his
parents, he was pre-deceased by his wife, Essie Wright Heuston, his
sisters,
Fern Morris, Mildred E. Heuston, and Helen Rouch.
The family moved from Iowa to Winlock, Washington in the early
1900’s,
where his father worked in the timber industry before dying of injuries
suffered in a sawmill accident. The family then moved to Little Rock, Arkansas
to live near his grandfather, Milton Brooks Coe. Charles Heuston
graduated from
the old Little Rock High School and worked for Western Union as a delivery boy and telegrapher
before joining
Southwestern Bell Telephone Company, where he worked until his
retirement at
age 65. He was one of the original members of the Telephone Company
Pioneers.
An active outdoorsman, conservationist, hunter, gun collector, and
shooting
sports enthusiast, he enjoyed watching the stock market in his later
years. He
was a member of the Ozark Society, the old Little Rock Pistol and Rifle
Club,
and the Central Arkansas Gun Club. An amateur historian, he also was a
member
and past president of the Civil War Roundtable of Arkansas,
and enjoyed collecting and
metal detecting for relics of the Civil War, in which his beloved
grandfather
had served as a member of the 8th Iowa
Cavalry
Volunteers.
He leaves behind a loving son, John Charles Heuston, and his wife,
Margaret
Harkins Heuston, and a grandson, Sgt. James Campbell Heuston, USMC, and
his
wife, Kari, currently stationed at Smithville, Massachusetts.
He was buried Saturday, February 26, 2005 at Forest Hills Memorial Park
in
Alexander, Arkansas with Reverend Fred Haustein, Pastor of St. James
United
Methodist Church officiating.
COMING
PROGRAMS
The
141ST Anniversary of the
Engagement at Jenkins’s
Ferry
June 28, 2005 –
July 26,
2005 – TBA
Helena on the Mississippi
August
23, 2004 – TBA
Historian
- Vicksburg
NMP –
“A
Tragedy of
Errors: Failure of the Confederate High Command in the Defense of Vicksburg”
October 25, 2004 –
TBA
November 22, 2005 –
Dave Gruenewald –
Pat Cleburne's Ireland
December 2005 –
No meeting Scheduled in
December
We Who Study Must Also
Strive To Save

From
February’s Meeting
Don
Hamilton reported on the
Adopt-A-Park program and the park that the Roundtable has adopted. As
summer
rolls around, your help is solicited. Contact Don about the needs and a Saturday work event.
Mike
Loum, chair of the CACWHT,
reported that the foundation had its annual meeting and the goals for
the
Central District were set.
Central
Arkansas Civil War
Heritage Trail (CACWHT) has selected the following five areas as
project
priorities. Each is progressing at its own speed.
1. Reed's
Bridge Battlefield
project
2.
Confederate Soldiers' Home
3. Confederate Cemetery
4. Bayou
Fourche panel
5.
Monument identification,
location, condition, National Register status
The
CACWHT meets at 7 p.m. on the
fourth Tuesday of each month, jointly with the Civil War Roundtable of
Little
Rock (except in December, when there is no meeting) at the John Gould
Fletcher
Library at H and Buchanan streets in Little Rock. The
Civil
War Roundtable programs are excellent and guests are encouraged and
welcome to
attend. For more information, contact Mike Loum
<61shelbysmule65@comcast.net>.

A Reminder About
Your 2005
Dues
The
dues are $15.00 for a family
membership. If you would like to pay, your dues contact Brian:
Brian
Brown, Treasurer
Civil
War Roundtable of Arkansas
P.O. Box 25501
Little Rock, Ark. 72221
Visit
www.civilwarbuff.org
Register to receive your newsletter
on-line.
http://civilwarbuff.aristotle.net/newsletter.asp
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In the
National Cemetery Little Rock
The
granite and bronze Minnesota Monument was dedicated
to 162 Minnesota
soldiers who fell in Arkansas
during the Civil War. Erected in 1916, it is one of seven Minnesota
monuments found in the national
cemeteries. The memorialized soldiers were enlisted
in
the 3rd, 5th, 7th, 9th, and 10th Minnesota U.S. Volunteers. The
sculptor was
John K. Daniels of St. Paul,
Minn.
Texas Civil War Organizations
Buy land at
Brice’s Crossroads
A four-acre
tract that marks the grave of a Confederate soldier killed during the
battle of
Brice’s Crossroads near Baldwyn,
Mississippi has
been preserved, thanks to the efforts of two Texas Civil War
Roundtables
and the Civil War Preservation Trust.
The property,
which is northwest of the crossroads, is a wooded area where two cedar
trees
shade the grave of Sergeant James C. Jourdon. He was a cavalryman in
the 17th
Alabama Battalion commanded by Major J.N. George, Colonel William A.
Johnson’s
Alabama Brigade. He was killed during the pursuit
of General
Sturgis by Confederate forces and buried near the Phillips House on the
old Ripley Road.
His
grave was later marked at the site where he fell.
Ed Bearss,
Historian Emeritus, National Park Service, praised the significance of
the
purchase. “I enthusiastically endorse
the purchase of the tract containing the grave of Sergeant Jourdan. Not
only
because of the significance of the ground, but the site includes land
associated both with the Union advance and with flight. It is land
intimately
identified with Sturgis’ rout, underscoring why the Battle of Brice’s
Cross
Roads is so significant.
It also
underscores General Nathan Bedford Forrest’s philosophy of war to get
the
‘skeer’ on the enemy and keep them ‘skeered.’’ Hopefully,
other small tracts associated with the Union rout such as a sight near
the
Agnew house, Hatchie Bottom, of painful memory to the federals; and the
Stubbs
farm can be acquired for the positioning of additional interpretive
markers, he
said.
This hallowed
ground will now be a part of the sites that interpret the battle.
“This
acquisition brings to our total over 1450 acres and $3 million raised
for land
acquisition and interpretation at Brice’s Crossroads,” said John
Haynes,
executive director of the Brice’s Crossroads National Battlefield
Commission.
The Austin, Texas
and Waco, Texas
Civil War
Roundtables raised money for this acquisition during the annual Texas
Civil War
Preservation Seminar in November 2001 with the help of the Harold B.
Simpson History Center
and Hill
College.
Three hundred people attended this fundraiser where funds were
raised specifically for Brice’s Crossroads.
Gary
Carnathan, president of BCNBC, Inc. praised the work of the Texas Civil
War
Roundtable. “The preservation of Brice’s Crossroads Battlefield has
attracted
national interest and Texas
has made substantial contribution tour efforts,” said Carnathan.
Dan Laney,
who is president of the Austin,
Texas Civil
War Roundtable and also a board member of
the Civil War Preservation Trust,
worked with John Haynes, who is also a member of the Trust’s board, to
make the
acquisition a reality in February, 2002.
“Each year,
during our Preservation Seminar, we focus on a topic and last year’s
topic was
Nathan Bedford Forrest. What better place to donate the funds raised at this seminar than at Brice’s
Crossroads,” said
Laney.
Laney and his
roundtable raised $10,400 at the Preservation seminar in 2001, which was given to the CWPT and earmarked for preservation at
Brice’s
Crossroads.
“We have
raised $100,000 during the past years which has gone toward the
purchase of
hallowed land on the sites of Civil War battlefields across the nation
and to
support the History Center at Hill
College in Hillsboro, Texas,”
Laney added.
James
Lighthizer, president of the Civil War Preservation Trust, commended
the
audacious leadership of the Austin and Waco Texas Civil War Roundtable
efforts.
“These two
groups form one of the premier preservation organizations in the
Country. Their
preservation of our American history will be a wonderful gift to the
future
generations of America.
The four
acres will now be a part of the interpretive trail at Brice’s
Crossroads that
will tell the story of that conflict.
$24.95
Wide Awake Films LLc.
info@wideawakefilms.com
www.wideawakefilms.com
Toll
free: 877-531-2434
Spotsylvania comes to life in this documentary.
It
includes some of the staging for the reenactment, as well as 14 minutes
with Ed
Bearss on Upton’s
assault. This is well worth your time. ... C.O.D.
Spotsylvania Court House
The 1864
Civil War battle of Spotsylvania
Court House, Virginia,
was a fight waged by first-string generals. Commanding
battle-hardened, veteran armies. Here, the north's aggressive,
and
successful general, Ulysses S. Grant, fought the south's finest
tactician,
Robert E. Lee. This campaign was the first time during the Civil War
that these
two "heavyweights" opposed each other. In addition, at Spotsylvania
Court House, the savagery because of this mighty confrontation, - this
clash of
determined bulldogs, - was staggering. At the battle of Spotsylvania
after
fourteen days of fighting, nearly 18,000 northerners and 10,000
southerners were killed, maimed, or captured at
the battle of Spotsylvania.
Produced from
footage gathered at the national- level scale 140th Anniversary
Reenactment of
the Battle of Spotsylvania, the documentary features high-definition
footage of
all the highly authentic battle reenactment action. It also features
some of
the most authentic breastworks ever created! When combined with
beautiful high
- definition footage of the Spotsylvania Court House National
Battlefield,
animated battle maps, and high-resolution images of photography taken
after the
1864 battle, Spotsylvania Court House is the first documentary of its
kind!
BONUS
CONTENT:
1) 35-
minute highlight video
from "extra" footage shot at the event (plus a Tornado section)
2)
14-minute tour of Union
General, Emory Upton's assault hosted by legendary Civil War expert, Ed
Bearss,
on the actual battlefield site where it took place
3)
3-minute High Definition tour
of the Spotsylvania portion of the National Military
Park
4) 6-minute
tour of things to see and do in Spotsylvania County.

Tom Ezell,
Harvey Moore (Yankee),
and George Davis provide a
living history
event for a Boy Scout Jamboree in
Macarthur Park
in March.
SEE
YOU TUESDAY NIGHT
For
Brian Brown's Presentation
GOD
BLESS AMERICA

Copyright ©1997
Civil War Round Table of
Arkansas