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{{more citations needed|date=April 2016}}
{{For|the battlefield|Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site}}
{{Short description|1864 battle of the American Civil War}}
{{Use American English|date=March 2017}}
{{Use mdy dates|date=March 2017}}
{{Infobox military conflict
{{Infobox military conflict
| conflict = Battle of Brice's Crossroads
| conflict = Battle of Brice's Cross Roads
| partof = the [[American Civil War]]
| partof = the [[American Civil War]]
| image = Brices Crossroads.svg<!-- EDITORS NOTE: Please do not change this image as it currently conforms to TemplateData for Infobox military conflict. Thank you. -->
| image = [[File:Brices-cross-roads-NBS.jpg|300px]]
| image_size = 300
| caption = [[Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site]]
| caption = The Battle of Brice's Cross Roads, June 10, 1864
| date = {{Start date|1864|6|10}}
| date = June 10, 1864
| place = [[Prentiss County, Mississippi|Prentiss County]] and [[Union County, Mississippi]]
| place = Near [[Baldwyn, Mississippi]]
| result = [[Confederate States of America|Confederate]] victory
| coordinates = {{coord|34|30|22.0|N|88|43|44.0|W|region:US-MS_type:event|display=inline,title}}
| combatant1 = {{flagicon|USA|1863}} [[United States]] ([[Union (American Civil War)|Union]])
| result = Confederate victory
| combatant2 = {{flagicon|CSA|1863}} [[Confederate States of America|CSA (Confederacy)]]
| combatant1 = {{flag|Confederate States|1863}}
| commander1 = [[Samuel D. Sturgis]]
| combatant2 = {{flag|United States|1863}} ([[Union (American Civil War)|Union]])
| commander2 = [[Nathan Bedford Forrest|Nathan B. Forrest]]
| commander1 = {{flagicon|CSA|army}} [[Nathan Bedford Forrest|Nathan B. Forrest]]
| units1 = Mississippi Expedition
| commander2 = {{flagicon|USA|1863}} [[Samuel D. Sturgis]]
| units2 = Forrest's Cavalry Corps
| strength1 = ~8,500
| strength1 = 3,500 cavalry
| strength2 = ~3,200
| strength2 = 4,800 infantry<br>3,300 cavalry<br>22 guns
| casualties1 = 2,610
| casualties1 = 96 killed<br> 396 wounded
| casualties2 = 223 killed<br>394 wounded<br>1,632 missing/captured<br>16 guns<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.battlefields.org/learn/civil-war/battles/brices-cross-roads|title = Brice's Cross Roads}}</ref>
| casualties2 = 492
| notes = <ref name="hooker">{{cite book |last1=Wheeler |first1=Lieut.-Gen. Joseph |author-link1=Joseph Wheeler |last2=Hooker |first2=Col. Charles E. | author-link2=Charles E. Hooker |editor1-last=Evans |editor1-first=[Brig.] Gen. Clement A. |editor1-link=Clement A. Evans |title=Confederate Military History |volume=VII: Alabama and Mississippi |location=Atlanta, Ga. |publisher=Confederate Publishing Company |pages=[https://archive.org/details/confederatemili01evangoog/page/n213 195]–199 |date=1899 |url=https://archive.org/details/confederatemili01evangoog |access-date=April 9, 2016 |name-list-style=amp |author-mask=2}}</ref><ref name="andrews">{{Cite book |editor-last=Andrews |editor-first=C. C. |editor-link=Christopher Columbus Andrews |title=Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, 1861–1865 |publisher=Pioneer Press |location=St. Paul, Minn. |pages=420–426 |date=1891 |url=https://archive.org/stream/minnesotacivil01minnrich#page/n7/mode/2up |lccn=02014556 |access-date=April 9, 2016}}</ref>
| map_type = Mississippi
| map_size = 280
| map_caption = Location in Mississippi
| map_label = Brice's Cross Roads
| map_relief = Yes
| campaignbox = {{Campaignbox Forrest's Defense of Mississippi}}
}}
}}
The '''Battle of Brice's Cross Roads''', also known as the '''Battle of Tishomingo Creek''' or the '''Battle of Guntown''', was fought on Friday, June 10, 1864, near [[Baldwyn, Mississippi]], then part of the [[Confederate States of America]]. A [[United States Army|Federal]] expedition from [[Memphis, Tennessee]], of 4,800 infantry and 3,300 cavalry, under the command of Brigadier-General [[Samuel D. Sturgis]], was defeated by a [[Confederate States Army|Confederate]] force of 3,500 cavalry under the command of Major-General [[Nathan Bedford Forrest|Nathan B. Forrest]].<ref name=hooker/> The battle was a victory for the Confederates. Forrest inflicted heavy casualties on the Federal force and captured more than 1,600 [[Prisoner of war|prisoners of war]], 18 artillery pieces, and wagons loaded with supplies. Once Sturgis reached Memphis, he asked to be relieved of his command.<ref name=andrews/><ref name="wynne">{{cite book |last=Wynne |first=Ben |title=Mississippi's Civil War: A Narrative History |edition=1st |location=Macon, Georgia | publisher=Mercer University Press |pages=158–161 |date=2006 |isbn=978-0-88146-039-1}}</ref>
{{Campaignbox Forrest's Defense of Mississippi}}


==Background==
The '''Battle of Brice's Crossroads''' was fought on June 10, 1864, near [[Baldwyn, Mississippi|Baldwyn]] in [[Lee County, Mississippi]], during the [[American Civil War]]. It pitted a 4,787-man contingent led by [[Confederate States Army|Confederate]] [[Major General]] [[Nathan Bedford Forrest]] against an 8,100-strong [[Union army|Union]] force led by [[Brigadier General]] [[Samuel D. Sturgis]]. The battle ended in a rout of the Union forces and cemented Forrest's reputation as one of the great cavalrymen.
{{further|Western Theater of the American Civil War}}
In March 1864, Lieutenant-General [[Ulysses S. Grant|Ulysses Grant]], newly named [[General-in-chief#United States|General in Chief of the Armies of the United States]], and his most trusted subordinate Major-General [[William Tecumseh Sherman]], planned a new, coordinated strategy to cripple the Confederate States and win the war. Grant would smash General [[Robert E. Lee]]'s army in [[Virginia]] and head for [[Richmond, Virginia|Richmond]]. At the same time, Sherman would destroy the other main Confederate force, the [[Army of Tennessee]], and seize the key city of [[Atlanta]]. Calling itself the "Gate City of the South," Atlanta was the strategic back door to the Confederate States. It was the [[Southern United States|South]]'s most productive [[arsenal]] after Richmond and a critical transportation hub: Four railroads radiating from the city carried supplies to their forces.<ref>{{cite book |author=<!--Staff writer(s); no by-line.--> |title=Illustrated Atlas of The Civil War |series=Echoes of Glory |edition=1st |location=Alexandria, Virginia |publisher=[[Time Life|Time Life Books]] |page=248 |date=1998 |isbn=0-7370-3160-3}}</ref>


==Prelude==
The battle remains a textbook example of an outnumbered force prevailing through better tactics, terrain mastery, and aggressive offensive action. Despite this, the Confederates gained little through the victory other than temporarily keeping the Union out of [[Alabama]] and [[Mississippi]].
Sherman began his [[Atlanta Campaign]] during the first week of May, moving slowly south while battling Confederate forces under General [[Joseph E. Johnston]], an excellent defensive fighter. Johnston called in reinforcements, including Lieutenant-General [[Leonidas Polk]] and two divisions of his [[Army of Mississippi#Army of Mississippi (1863–64)|Army of Mississippi]], which in turn left Major-General [[Stephen D. Lee]] in command of all remaining Confederate forces within Polk's Department of Alabama, Mississippi, and East Louisiana. Lee took charge of the department, but wisely gave Forrest authority to act independently in the northern part of Mississippi and Tennessee.<ref name=wynne/><ref name=hooker/>


During the four-month Atlanta Campaign, the U.S. Army advanced steadily, but in the process extended their supply lines that stretched back to [[Nashville, Tennessee]]. As the campaign progressed, Sherman grew concerned the brazen Forrest might move his Confederate cavalry force out of [[North Mississippi]] into [[Middle Tennessee]], strike the supply lines, and perhaps jeopardize the entire Federal effort. As a result, Sherman in late May ordered Sturgis out of Memphis and into North Mississippi with a force of just over 8,000 men. Sturgis's mission was to keep Forrest occupied and, if possible, destroy the Confederate cavalry force that Forrest commanded. Sherman's orders to Sturgis came just in time, as Forrest's cavalry had just left for Middle Tennessee and was forced to turn back to Mississippi to once again defend the northern part of the state. The Federal expedition marched out of Memphis on June 1. Sturgis had a great deal of discretion in his movements, but was generally expected to "proceed to [[Corinth, Mississippi|Corinth]], Mississippi, by way of Salem and Ruckersville, capture any force that may be there, then proceed south, destroying the [[Mobile and Ohio Railroad]] to [[Tupelo, Mississippi|Tupelo]] and [[Okolona, Mississippi|Okolona]], and as far as possible toward [[Macon, Mississippi|Macon]] and [[Columbus, Mississippi|Columbus]]."<ref name=wynne/>
==Situation==
Union Gen. [[William Tecumseh Sherman]] had long known that his fragile supply and communication lines through [[Tennessee]] were in serious jeopardy because of depredations by Forrest's cavalry raids. To effect a halt to Forrest's activities, he ordered Gen. Sturgis to conduct a penetration into northern Mississippi and Alabama with a force of around 8,500 troops to destroy Forrest and his command. Sturgis, after some doubts and trepidation, departed [[Memphis, Tennessee|Memphis]] on June 1. Gen. [[Stephen D. Lee]], alerted of Sturgis's movement, warned Forrest. Lee had also planned a rendezvous at Okolona, Mississippi, with Forrest and his own troops but told Forrest to do as he saw fit. Already in transit to Tennessee, Forrest moved his cavalry (less one division) toward Sturgis, but remained unsure of Union intentions.

Forrest soon surmised, correctly, that the Union had actually targeted [[Tupelo, Mississippi]], located in Lee County, about {{convert|15|mi|km}} south of Brice's Crossroads. Although badly outnumbered, he decided to repulse Sturgis instead of waiting for Lee, and selected an area to attack ahead on Sturgis's projected path. He chose Brice's Crossroads, in what is now Lee County, which featured four muddy roads, heavily wooded areas, and the natural boundary of Tishomingo Creek, which had only one bridge going east to west. Forrest, seeing that the Union cavalry moved three hours ahead of its own infantry, devised a plan that called for an attack on the Union cavalry first, with the idea of forcing the enemy infantry to hurry to assist them. Their infantry would be too tired to offer real help and the Confederates planned to push the entire Union force against the creek to the west. Forrest dispatched most of his men to two nearby towns to wait.


==Battle==
==Battle==
At 9:45&nbsp;a.m., on June 10, a brigade of [[Benjamin H. Grierson]]'s Cavalry Division reached Brice's Cross Roads. The battle started at 10:30&nbsp;a.m. when the Confederates performed a stalling operation with a brigade of their own. Forrest ordered the rest of his cavalry to converge around the cross roads. The remainder of the Federal cavalry arrived in support, but a strong Confederate assault soon pushed them back at 11:30&nbsp;a.m., when the balance of [[Forrest's Cavalry Corps]] arrived on the scene. Grierson called for infantry support and Sturgis obliged. The line held until 1:30&nbsp;p.m. when the first regiments of U.S. infantry arrived.{{citation needed|date=April 2016}}
[[File:Brices Crossroads.svg|300px|thumb|right|Battle of Brice's Crossroads]]
At 9:45 a.m. on June 10, a brigade of [[Benjamin H. Grierson]]'s Union cavalry division reached Brice's Crossroads and the battle started at 10:30 a.m. when the Confederates performed a stalling operation with a brigade of their own. Forrest then ordered the rest of his cavalry to converge around the crossroads. The remainder of the Union cavalry arrived in support, but a strong Confederate assault soon pushed them back at 11:30 a.m., when the balance of Forrest's cavalry arrived on the scene. Grierson called for infantry support and Sturgis obliged. The line held until 1:30 p.m. when the first regiments of Federal infantry arrived.


The Union line, initially bolstered by the infantry, briefly seized the momentum and attacked the Confederate left flank, but Forrest launched an attack from his extreme right and left wings, before the rest of the federal infantry could take to the field. In this phase of the battle, Forrest commanded his artillery to unlimber, unprotected, only yards from the Federal position, and to shell the Union line with grapeshot. The massive damage caused Sturgis to re-order the line in a tighter semicircle around the crossroads, facing east.
The Federal line, initially bolstered by the infantry, briefly seized the momentum and attacked the Confederate left flank, but Forrest launched an attack from his extreme right and left wings, before the rest of the Federal infantry could take the field. In this phase of the battle, Forrest commanded his field artillery to unlimber, unprotected, only yards from the Federal line, and to shred their troops with [[Canister shot|canister]]. The massive damage caused Sturgis to reorder his line in a tighter semicircle around Brice's Cross Roads, facing east.{{citation needed|date=April 2016}}


At 3:30, the Confederates in the [[2nd/22nd Tennessee Cavalry (Barteau's)|2nd Tennessee Cavalry]] assaulted the bridge across the Tishomingo. Although the attack failed, it caused severe confusion among the Federal troops and Sturgis ordered a general retreat. With the Tennesseans still pressing, the retreat bottlenecked at the bridge and a panicked rout developed instead. The ensuing wild flight and pursuit back to Memphis carried across six counties before the exhausted Confederates retired.
At 3:30, Forrest's [[2nd/22nd Tennessee Cavalry (Barteau's)|2nd Tennessee Cavalry]] assaulted the bridge across the Tishomingo. Although the attack failed, it caused severe confusion among the U.S. troops, and Sturgis ordered a general retreat. With the Tennesseans still pressing, the retreat bottlenecked at the Tishomingo bridge and a panicked rout developed instead. During the retreat, Black Union troops inflicted heavy losses on Forrest's troops, a turn of events seen as revenge for the [[Fort Pillow massacre]] of Black Union troops by Confederates under Forrest, which allowed Sturgis to escape and plan further raids.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Jennings |first1=John M. |editor1-last=Jennings |editor1-first=John M. |editor2-last=Steele |editor2-first=Chuck |title=The Worst Military Leaders in History |date=2022 |publisher=[[Reaktion Books]] |location=London |isbn=9781789145830 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=GDhVEAAAQBAJ|page=61|access-date=January 29, 2024 |chapter=Nathan Bedford Forrest}}</ref> Sturgis' forces fled wildly, pursued across six counties on their return to Memphis before the exhausted Confederate attackers retired.<ref>{{cite book |last=Foote |first=Shelby |author-link=Shelby Foote |title=The Civil War, A Narrative |volume=3: Red River to Appomattox |title-link=The Civil War: A Narrative |location=New York |publisher=[[Random House]] |pages=370–373 |year=1974 |isbn=0-307-29038-7 |oclc=704441101 |ol=10352813M}}</ref>


==Aftermath==
==Aftermath==
In correspondence with Brigadier-General Sturgis, Colonel Alex Wilkin, commander of the [[9th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment|9th Minnesota Infantry Regiment]], listed several reasons for the loss of the battle. He stated that General Sturgis, knowing that his men were under-supplied, having been on less than half rations, had been hesitant to advance on the enemy, but had done so against his better judgment because he had been ordered to do so. When the cavalry had engaged the enemy, many of the infantry had been ordered to advance double-time to support the cavalry. In their weakened condition, many had fallen out in the advance. Those who did arrive were exhausted at the beginning of the battle, while the Confederates were fresh and well fed, owing to a large supply in their rear.<ref name=andrews/>
The Confederates suffered 492 casualties to the Union's 2,164 (including 1,500 prisoners). Forrest captured huge supplies of arms, artillery, and ammunition as well as plenty of stores. Sturgis suffered demotion and exile to the far West. After the battle, the [[Union Army]] again accused Forrest of massacring black soldiers.


The roads to Tupelo were wet and sloppy due to six sequential days of rain, which slowed the advance of the supply wagons and ammunition train. Several men were detailed to try to make the roads passable. Additionally, the horses pulling the trains were poorly fed because there had been little in the way of forage for them to eat along the way. This accounted for Major-General Forrest's capture of the artillery and supplies. Intelligence had entirely favored the South, because the Confederates had been constantly fed information about the position and strength of the Federals from civilians in the area, while Brigadier-General Sturgis had received no such intelligence. Because of this information, Forrest planned to meet the Federals at a place where he could ambush Sturgis and make retreat as difficult as possible. This location was close to his supply depot, and very far from the U.S. Army's. When the retreat had occurred, with food and supplies exhausted, many of the Federal soldiers were unable to retreat with the rest because of fatigue. This was why so many Federals were taken prisoner during the battle. Finally, Wilkin stated that the rumors that Sturgis had been intoxicated at the battle were false.<ref name=andrews/>
The following is a list of [[Field artillery in the American Civil War|artillery pieces]] captured by Forrest:<ref>O.R., Series I, Vol. XXXIX, Part 1, [http://books.google.com/books?id=ytEUAAAAYAAJ&pg=PA227&dq=12+pounder&as_brr=1 p. 227].</ref>
*One {{convert|3|in|mm|adj=on}} steel gun, rifled
*Three 6-pounder James bronze guns, rifled
*Two {{convert|3.8|in|mm|adj=on}} James bronze guns, rifled
*Five 6-pounder bronze guns
*Two 12-pounder bronze howitzers
*Three 12-pounder Napoleon bronze guns


==Union order of battle==
==Factors leading to the Union loss==
{| class="wikitable" style="text-align:center; width:60%;"
|+Sturgis' Expedition{{sfn|Dyer|1908|p=514}}<ref group=note>Dyer did not specify division or brigade commanders.</ref>
! width=15% | Commander
! width=15% | Division
! width=10% | Brigade
! width=30% | Unit
|-
| rowspan=25 | Brigadier General<br>[[Samuel D. Sturgis]]<br>[[File:Samuel D. Sturgis - Brady-Handy.jpg|thumb|center|upright=0.4]]
| rowspan=15 | '''Infantry Division'''<br>Colonel [[William L. McMillen]]<br>[[File:Colonel William L. McMillen.jpg|thumb|center|upright=0.3]]
| rowspan=7 | 1st Brigade
| [[114th Illinois Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[93rd Indiana Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[9th Minnesota Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[72nd Ohio Infantry]] Regiment
|-
| [[95th Ohio Infantry]] Regiment
|-
| [[Battery "E", 1st Illinois Light Artillery Regiment]]
|-
| [[6th Independent Battery Indiana Light Artillery]]
|-
| rowspan=5 | 2nd Brigade
| [[81st Illinois Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[95th Illinois Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[108th Illinois Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[113th Illinois Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[Battery "B", 2nd Illinois Light Artillery Regiment]]
|-
| rowspan=3 | 3rd Brigade
| [[55th United States Colored Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| [[59th United States Colored Infantry Regiment]]
|-
| Battery F, 2nd Light Artillery Regiment U.S. Colored Troops
|-
| rowspan=10 | '''Cavalry Division'''<br>Brigadier General<br>[[Benjamin Grierson]]<br>[[File:Benjamin H Grierson.JPG|thumb|center|upright=0.3]]
| rowspan=6 | 1st Brigade
| [[3rd Illinois Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[9th Illinois Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[7th Indiana Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[4th Missouri Cavalry Regiment (Union)|4th Missouri Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[2nd New Jersey Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[19th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| rowspan=4 | 2nd Brigade
| [[3rd Iowa Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[4th Iowa Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[10th Missouri Cavalry Regiment (Union)|10th Missouri Cavalry Regiment]]
|-
| [[7th Independent Battery Wisconsin Light Artillery]]
|-
|}


==Battlefield preservation==
In correspondence with General Sturgis, Colonel Alex Wilkin, commander of the [[9th Minnesota Volunteer Infantry Regiment]] gave several reasons for the loss of the battle.<ref>{{Cite book |editor1-first=C. C. |editor1-last=Andrews |editor1-link=Christopher Columbus Andrews |publisher = Printed for the state by the [[St. Paul Pioneer Press|Pioneer Press Co]] |publication-place = St. Paul, Minn |url = http://openlibrary.org/books/OL7088819M/Minnesota_in_the_civil_and_Indian_wars_1861-1865 |title = Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars 1861-1865 |publication-date = 1891 |pages=420–426}}</ref> He stated that General Sturgis, knowing that his men were under-supplied, having been on less than half rations, had been hesitant to advance on the enemy, but had done so against his better judgment because he had been ordered to do so. When the cavalry had engaged the enemy, many of the infantry had been ordered to advance double-time to support the cavalry, and in their weakened condition, many had fallen out in the advance. Those who did arrive were exhausted at the beginning of the battle, while the Confederates were fresh, and well fed owing to a large supply in their rear.
[[File:Brice's_Cross_Roads_Battlefield_Mississippi.jpg|305px|thumb|right|Map of Brice's Cross Roads Battlefield core and study areas by the [[American Battlefield Protection Program]]]]
The [[Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site]], established in 1929, commemorates the Battle of Brice's Cross Roads and is considered one of the best preserved of the American Civil War. The [[National Park Service]] erected and maintains monuments and interpretive panels on a small {{convert|1|acre|m2|adj=on}} plot at the cross roads. In 1994, concerned citizens organized the Brice's Cross Roads National Battlefield Commission, Inc., to protect and preserve additional battlefield land. With assistance from the Civil War Trust (now the [[American Battlefield Trust]]), and the support of federal, state, and local governments, BCNBC has purchased for preservation over {{convert|1,420|acre|km2}}.<ref name="CWT">{{cite web |last1=Zeller |first1=Bob |date=June 20, 2014 |title=An Entire Battlefield Saved |url=https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/entire-battlefield-saved |access-date=12 October 2018 |publisher=American Battlefield Trust}}{{Cite web|url= https://www.battlefields.org/visit/battlefields/brices-cross-roads-battlefield|title=Brice's Cross Roads Battlefield|website=[[American Battlefield Trust]]|access-date=June 20, 2023}}</ref> Much of the land was purchased from The Agnew Family, who still own some of the property that became the site of the battlefield. The modern Bethany Presbyterian Church is at the southeast side of the cross roads. At the time of the battle this congregation's meeting house was located further south along the Baldwyn Road. Bethany Cemetery, adjacent to the National Park Service monument, predates the American Civil War. Many of the area's earliest settlers are buried here. The graves of more than 90 Confederate soldiers killed at the cross roads are also located in Bethany Cemetery. Federal soldiers were buried in common graves, but were later reinterred in the [[Memphis National Cemetery]].<ref name="TW-1991">{{cite news|last1=Thomas|first1=William|title=Lost Confederate burial site discovered|url=http://www.tulsaworld.com/archives/lost-confederate-burial-site-discovered/article_448fe76c-9477-5d4f-aff6-073b3b0fbfd2.html|access-date=10 June 2016|newspaper=Tulsa World|date=1991}}</ref>


The [[American Battlefield Trust]] and its partners, including BCNBC, have been acquiring and preserving land at Brice's Cross Roads since 1996, when the Trust's predecessor organization, the Association for the Preservation of Civil War Sites (APCWS), acquired and preserved 797.7 acres – about two-thirds of the battlefield – in two purchases. In 2001, two years after the merger of the APCWS and the original Civil War Trust, the new organization, the Civil War Preservation Trust, now known as the [[American Battlefield Trust]], acquired 512.8 additional acres. Additional purchases during the past 16 years have increased the total battlefield land acquired and preserved to 1,500 acres as of late-2021, which is nearly the entire battlefield.<ref>[https://www.battlefields.org/learn/articles/entire-battlefield-saved Entire Battlefield Saved] Accessed Jan. 5, 2018.</ref>
The roads were also wet due to a recent rain storm, that slowed the advance of the supply wagons and ammunition train, and several men were employed to try to make the roads passable. Additionally, the horses pulling the trains were poorly fed because there was little in the way of forage for them to eat along the way. This accounted for Forrest's capture of the artillery and supplies.


==See also==
Intelligence had entirely favored the South, because the Confederates had been constantly fed information about the position and strength of the Union army from civilians in the area, while Sturgis had received no such intelligence. Because of this information, the South had been able meet the Union Army at a place where they could ambush Sturgis and make retreat as difficult as possible (Tishomingo Creek was in their rear with only a single bridge as a crossing point.) This place was close to the Confederate supply depot, and very far from the Union's.
{{Portal|American Civil War|Mississippi}}
* [[List of American Civil War battles]]
* [[Troop engagements of the American Civil War, 1864]]


==References==
When the retreat had occurred, with food and supplies exhausted, many of the Union soldiers were unable to retreat with the rest because of fatigue. This was much of the reason why so many Union soldiers were captured during the battle.
===Footnotes===
{{reflist|group=note}}


===Citations===
Finally, Wilkin stated that the rumors that Sturgis had been intoxicated during the battle were entirely false.
{{Reflist|30em}}


==Battlefield today==
==Further reading==
{{Div col|colwidth=30em}}
The battle is commemorated at [[Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site]], established in 1929. The [[National Park Service]] erected and maintains monuments and interpretive panels on a small {{convert|1|acre|m2|adj=on}} plot at the crossroads. This is the spot where the Brice family house once stood. The Brice's Crossroads Museum is in [[Baldwyn, Mississippi]], just over a mile from the battlefield. Brice's Crossroads is considered one of the most beautifully preserved battlefields of the Civil War.
* {{cite web |last=Bearss |first=Edwin C. |title=Protecting Sherman's Lifeline: The Battles of Brices Cross Roads and Tupelo 1864 |publisher=[[National Park Service]] |date=1971 |url=https://archive.org/details/protectingsherma00life |access-date=April 9, 2016}}
* {{cite book |last=Brown |first=Dee |author-link=Dee Brown (writer) |date=1998 |editor-last=Banash |editor-first=Stan |title=Dee Brown's Civil War Anthology |edition=1st |location=Santa Fe, N.M. |publisher=Clear Light |isbn=1574160095 |lccn=98005448 |url-access=registration |url=https://archive.org/details/deebrownscivilwa0000brow }}
* {{cite book |title=Diary of Samuel A. Agnew, September 27, 1863 – June 30, 1864 |url=http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/agnew/menu.html |series=[[Southern Historical Collection]] |institution=[[University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill]] |access-date=April 9, 2016}}
* {{cite book|last=Dyer |first=Frederick H. |title=A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Sturgis' Expedition |volume=3 |year=1908 |location=Des Moines, Iowa |publisher=Dyer Publishing Co. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OBkNAQAAMAAJ&pg=PA514 |page=514 |access-date=October 7, 2020 }}
* {{cite report |author=National Park Service |author-link=National Park Service |title=Update to the Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Report on the Nation's Civil War Battlefields Final DRAFT – State of Mississippi |url=https://www.nps.gov/abpp/CWSII/MississippiBattlefiledProfiles/Big%20Black%20River%20Bridge%20to%20Corinth.pdf |date=n.d. |access-date=April 9, 2016}}
{{Div col end}}


==External links==
In 1994 concerned local citizens formed the Brice's Crossroads National Battlefield Commission, Inc., to protect and preserve additional battlefield land. With assistance from the [[Civil War Preservation Trust]] (formerly the APCWS and the Civil War Trust), and the support of Federal, State, and local governments, the BCNBC, Inc. has purchased for preservation over {{convert|800|acre|km2}} of the original battlefield. Much of the land purchased came from the Agnew Family in Tupelo who still owns some of the battlefield property.<ref>The Agnew family also gave Samuel Agnew's diary to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Samuel Agnew was the minister of Bethany Associate Reformed Presbyterian Church in the 1870s-1902. His diary recounts his experiences during and after the battle. It recounts in detail the aftermath of the engagement and the effect it had on the community. A link to the article is provided in the external links section.</ref>
{{Commons category}}
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The modern Bethany Presbyterian Church sits on the southeast side of the crossroads. At the time of the battle this congregation's meeting house was located further south along the Baldwyn Road. However, the Bethany Cemetery adjacent to the Park Service monument site predates the Civil War. Many of the area's earliest settlers are buried here. The graves of more than 90 Confederate soldiers killed in the battle are also located in this cemetery. Union dead from the battle were buried in common graves on the battlefield, but were later reinterred in the National Cemetery at [[Memphis, Tennessee]].
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* [https://www.nps.gov/places/brices-cross-roads-national-battlefield-monument.htm Battle of Brice's Cross Roads] at [[American Battlefield Protection Program]]
* [https://www.battlefields.org/learn/civil-war/battles/brices-cross-roads Battle of Brice's Cross Roads] at [[American Battlefield Trust]]
* [https://www.nps.gov/brcr/why-brices-happened.htm Battle of Brices Cross Roads] at [[National Park Service]]
* {{YouTube|id=hy8bWsCAETc|title=Battle of Brice's Crossroads - Forrest's Greatest Victory (Lecture)}}
<!-- Please: Follow the [[WP:EL]] guideline where possible and consider discussing on the talk page. Thank you. -->


{{Mississippi in the Civil War|state=expanded}}
The roads that form Brice's Crossroads lead to [[Baldwyn, Mississippi|Baldwyn]], [[Tupelo, Mississippi|Tupelo]], [[Ripley, Mississippi|Ripley]], and [[Pontotoc, Mississippi]]. Tupelo is the county seat for historic [[Lee County, Mississippi]]. The roads, paved today, are still a major route into Lee, Prentiss, and Union counties, with thousands of cars traveling through the national battlefield to reach other destinations.
{{Authority control}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Brice's Cross Roads, Battle Of}}
==Notes==
[[Category:1864 in Mississippi]]
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Atlanta campaign]]

[[Category:Battles of the American Civil War in Mississippi]]
==References==
[[Category:Battles of Forrest's Defense of Mississippi of the American Civil War]]
* [http://www.cr.nps.gov/hps/abpp/battles/ms014.htm National Park Service battle description]
[[Category:Battles of the Western Theater of the American Civil War]]
* U.S. War Department, [http://ehistory.osu.edu/osu/sources/records/list.cfm ''The War of the Rebellion'']: ''a Compilation of the [[Official Records of the American Civil War|Official Records]] of the Union and Confederate Armies'', U.S. Government Printing Office, 1880&ndash;1901.
[[Category:Confederate victories of the American Civil War]]
* [http://www.nps.gov/hps/abpp/CWSII/MississippiBattlefiledProfiles/Big%20Black%20River%20Bridge%20to%20Corinth.pdf CWSAC Report Update]

==External links==
* [http://www.bricescrossroads.com Brice's Crossroads website]
*[http://docsouth.unc.edu/imls/agnew/agnew.html Samuel Agnew's 1863-1864 Diary]

{{Coord|34|30|22|N|88|43|44|W|display=title|region:US-MO_type:event}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Battle Of Brice's Crossroads}}
[[Category:Battles of Forrest's Defense of Mississippi of the American Civil War|Brice's Crossroads]]
[[Category:Battles of the Main Western Theater of the American Civil War|Brice's Crossroads]]
[[Category:Confederate victories of the American Civil War|Brice's Crossroads]]
[[Category:Prentiss County, Mississippi]]
[[Category:Union County, Mississippi]]
[[Category:Mississippi in the American Civil War]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1864]]
[[Category:Conflicts in 1864]]
[[Category:1864 in Mississippi]]
[[Category:History of Lee County, Mississippi]]
[[Category:June 1864 events]]

[[ja:ブライス交差点の戦い]]

Latest revision as of 11:36, 24 November 2024

Battle of Brice's Cross Roads
Part of the American Civil War

The Battle of Brice's Cross Roads, June 10, 1864
DateJune 10, 1864
Location34°30′22.0″N 88°43′44.0″W / 34.506111°N 88.728889°W / 34.506111; -88.728889
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
 Confederate States  United States (Union)
Commanders and leaders
Confederate States of America Nathan B. Forrest United States Samuel D. Sturgis
Strength
3,500 cavalry 4,800 infantry
3,300 cavalry
22 guns
Casualties and losses
96 killed
396 wounded
223 killed
394 wounded
1,632 missing/captured
16 guns[1]
[2][3]
Brice's Cross Roads is located in Mississippi
Brice's Cross Roads
Brice's Cross Roads
Location in Mississippi

The Battle of Brice's Cross Roads, also known as the Battle of Tishomingo Creek or the Battle of Guntown, was fought on Friday, June 10, 1864, near Baldwyn, Mississippi, then part of the Confederate States of America. A Federal expedition from Memphis, Tennessee, of 4,800 infantry and 3,300 cavalry, under the command of Brigadier-General Samuel D. Sturgis, was defeated by a Confederate force of 3,500 cavalry under the command of Major-General Nathan B. Forrest.[2] The battle was a victory for the Confederates. Forrest inflicted heavy casualties on the Federal force and captured more than 1,600 prisoners of war, 18 artillery pieces, and wagons loaded with supplies. Once Sturgis reached Memphis, he asked to be relieved of his command.[3][4]

Background

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In March 1864, Lieutenant-General Ulysses Grant, newly named General in Chief of the Armies of the United States, and his most trusted subordinate Major-General William Tecumseh Sherman, planned a new, coordinated strategy to cripple the Confederate States and win the war. Grant would smash General Robert E. Lee's army in Virginia and head for Richmond. At the same time, Sherman would destroy the other main Confederate force, the Army of Tennessee, and seize the key city of Atlanta. Calling itself the "Gate City of the South," Atlanta was the strategic back door to the Confederate States. It was the South's most productive arsenal after Richmond and a critical transportation hub: Four railroads radiating from the city carried supplies to their forces.[5]

Prelude

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Sherman began his Atlanta Campaign during the first week of May, moving slowly south while battling Confederate forces under General Joseph E. Johnston, an excellent defensive fighter. Johnston called in reinforcements, including Lieutenant-General Leonidas Polk and two divisions of his Army of Mississippi, which in turn left Major-General Stephen D. Lee in command of all remaining Confederate forces within Polk's Department of Alabama, Mississippi, and East Louisiana. Lee took charge of the department, but wisely gave Forrest authority to act independently in the northern part of Mississippi and Tennessee.[4][2]

During the four-month Atlanta Campaign, the U.S. Army advanced steadily, but in the process extended their supply lines that stretched back to Nashville, Tennessee. As the campaign progressed, Sherman grew concerned the brazen Forrest might move his Confederate cavalry force out of North Mississippi into Middle Tennessee, strike the supply lines, and perhaps jeopardize the entire Federal effort. As a result, Sherman in late May ordered Sturgis out of Memphis and into North Mississippi with a force of just over 8,000 men. Sturgis's mission was to keep Forrest occupied and, if possible, destroy the Confederate cavalry force that Forrest commanded. Sherman's orders to Sturgis came just in time, as Forrest's cavalry had just left for Middle Tennessee and was forced to turn back to Mississippi to once again defend the northern part of the state. The Federal expedition marched out of Memphis on June 1. Sturgis had a great deal of discretion in his movements, but was generally expected to "proceed to Corinth, Mississippi, by way of Salem and Ruckersville, capture any force that may be there, then proceed south, destroying the Mobile and Ohio Railroad to Tupelo and Okolona, and as far as possible toward Macon and Columbus."[4]

Battle

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At 9:45 a.m., on June 10, a brigade of Benjamin H. Grierson's Cavalry Division reached Brice's Cross Roads. The battle started at 10:30 a.m. when the Confederates performed a stalling operation with a brigade of their own. Forrest ordered the rest of his cavalry to converge around the cross roads. The remainder of the Federal cavalry arrived in support, but a strong Confederate assault soon pushed them back at 11:30 a.m., when the balance of Forrest's Cavalry Corps arrived on the scene. Grierson called for infantry support and Sturgis obliged. The line held until 1:30 p.m. when the first regiments of U.S. infantry arrived.[citation needed]

The Federal line, initially bolstered by the infantry, briefly seized the momentum and attacked the Confederate left flank, but Forrest launched an attack from his extreme right and left wings, before the rest of the Federal infantry could take the field. In this phase of the battle, Forrest commanded his field artillery to unlimber, unprotected, only yards from the Federal line, and to shred their troops with canister. The massive damage caused Sturgis to reorder his line in a tighter semicircle around Brice's Cross Roads, facing east.[citation needed]

At 3:30, Forrest's 2nd Tennessee Cavalry assaulted the bridge across the Tishomingo. Although the attack failed, it caused severe confusion among the U.S. troops, and Sturgis ordered a general retreat. With the Tennesseans still pressing, the retreat bottlenecked at the Tishomingo bridge and a panicked rout developed instead. During the retreat, Black Union troops inflicted heavy losses on Forrest's troops, a turn of events seen as revenge for the Fort Pillow massacre of Black Union troops by Confederates under Forrest, which allowed Sturgis to escape and plan further raids.[6] Sturgis' forces fled wildly, pursued across six counties on their return to Memphis before the exhausted Confederate attackers retired.[7]

Aftermath

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In correspondence with Brigadier-General Sturgis, Colonel Alex Wilkin, commander of the 9th Minnesota Infantry Regiment, listed several reasons for the loss of the battle. He stated that General Sturgis, knowing that his men were under-supplied, having been on less than half rations, had been hesitant to advance on the enemy, but had done so against his better judgment because he had been ordered to do so. When the cavalry had engaged the enemy, many of the infantry had been ordered to advance double-time to support the cavalry. In their weakened condition, many had fallen out in the advance. Those who did arrive were exhausted at the beginning of the battle, while the Confederates were fresh and well fed, owing to a large supply in their rear.[3]

The roads to Tupelo were wet and sloppy due to six sequential days of rain, which slowed the advance of the supply wagons and ammunition train. Several men were detailed to try to make the roads passable. Additionally, the horses pulling the trains were poorly fed because there had been little in the way of forage for them to eat along the way. This accounted for Major-General Forrest's capture of the artillery and supplies. Intelligence had entirely favored the South, because the Confederates had been constantly fed information about the position and strength of the Federals from civilians in the area, while Brigadier-General Sturgis had received no such intelligence. Because of this information, Forrest planned to meet the Federals at a place where he could ambush Sturgis and make retreat as difficult as possible. This location was close to his supply depot, and very far from the U.S. Army's. When the retreat had occurred, with food and supplies exhausted, many of the Federal soldiers were unable to retreat with the rest because of fatigue. This was why so many Federals were taken prisoner during the battle. Finally, Wilkin stated that the rumors that Sturgis had been intoxicated at the battle were false.[3]

Union order of battle

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Sturgis' Expedition[8][note 1]
Commander Division Brigade Unit
Brigadier General
Samuel D. Sturgis
Infantry Division
Colonel William L. McMillen
1st Brigade 114th Illinois Infantry Regiment
93rd Indiana Infantry Regiment
9th Minnesota Infantry Regiment
72nd Ohio Infantry Regiment
95th Ohio Infantry Regiment
Battery "E", 1st Illinois Light Artillery Regiment
6th Independent Battery Indiana Light Artillery
2nd Brigade 81st Illinois Infantry Regiment
95th Illinois Infantry Regiment
108th Illinois Infantry Regiment
113th Illinois Infantry Regiment
Battery "B", 2nd Illinois Light Artillery Regiment
3rd Brigade 55th United States Colored Infantry Regiment
59th United States Colored Infantry Regiment
Battery F, 2nd Light Artillery Regiment U.S. Colored Troops
Cavalry Division
Brigadier General
Benjamin Grierson
1st Brigade 3rd Illinois Cavalry Regiment
9th Illinois Cavalry Regiment
7th Indiana Cavalry Regiment
4th Missouri Cavalry Regiment
2nd New Jersey Cavalry Regiment
19th Pennsylvania Cavalry Regiment
2nd Brigade 3rd Iowa Cavalry Regiment
4th Iowa Cavalry Regiment
10th Missouri Cavalry Regiment
7th Independent Battery Wisconsin Light Artillery

Battlefield preservation

[edit]
Map of Brice's Cross Roads Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection Program

The Brices Cross Roads National Battlefield Site, established in 1929, commemorates the Battle of Brice's Cross Roads and is considered one of the best preserved of the American Civil War. The National Park Service erected and maintains monuments and interpretive panels on a small 1-acre (4,000 m2) plot at the cross roads. In 1994, concerned citizens organized the Brice's Cross Roads National Battlefield Commission, Inc., to protect and preserve additional battlefield land. With assistance from the Civil War Trust (now the American Battlefield Trust), and the support of federal, state, and local governments, BCNBC has purchased for preservation over 1,420 acres (5.7 km2).[9] Much of the land was purchased from The Agnew Family, who still own some of the property that became the site of the battlefield. The modern Bethany Presbyterian Church is at the southeast side of the cross roads. At the time of the battle this congregation's meeting house was located further south along the Baldwyn Road. Bethany Cemetery, adjacent to the National Park Service monument, predates the American Civil War. Many of the area's earliest settlers are buried here. The graves of more than 90 Confederate soldiers killed at the cross roads are also located in Bethany Cemetery. Federal soldiers were buried in common graves, but were later reinterred in the Memphis National Cemetery.[10]

The American Battlefield Trust and its partners, including BCNBC, have been acquiring and preserving land at Brice's Cross Roads since 1996, when the Trust's predecessor organization, the Association for the Preservation of Civil War Sites (APCWS), acquired and preserved 797.7 acres – about two-thirds of the battlefield – in two purchases. In 2001, two years after the merger of the APCWS and the original Civil War Trust, the new organization, the Civil War Preservation Trust, now known as the American Battlefield Trust, acquired 512.8 additional acres. Additional purchases during the past 16 years have increased the total battlefield land acquired and preserved to 1,500 acres as of late-2021, which is nearly the entire battlefield.[11]

See also

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References

[edit]

Footnotes

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  1. ^ Dyer did not specify division or brigade commanders.

Citations

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  1. ^ "Brice's Cross Roads".
  2. ^ a b c —— & Hooker, Col. Charles E. (1899). Evans, [Brig.] Gen. Clement A. (ed.). Confederate Military History. Vol. VII: Alabama and Mississippi. Atlanta, Ga.: Confederate Publishing Company. pp. 195–199. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
  3. ^ a b c d Andrews, C. C., ed. (1891). Minnesota in the Civil and Indian Wars, 1861–1865. St. Paul, Minn.: Pioneer Press. pp. 420–426. LCCN 02014556. Retrieved April 9, 2016.
  4. ^ a b c Wynne, Ben (2006). Mississippi's Civil War: A Narrative History (1st ed.). Macon, Georgia: Mercer University Press. pp. 158–161. ISBN 978-0-88146-039-1.
  5. ^ Illustrated Atlas of The Civil War. Echoes of Glory (1st ed.). Alexandria, Virginia: Time Life Books. 1998. p. 248. ISBN 0-7370-3160-3.
  6. ^ Jennings, John M. (2022). "Nathan Bedford Forrest". In Jennings, John M.; Steele, Chuck (eds.). The Worst Military Leaders in History. London: Reaktion Books. p. 61. ISBN 9781789145830. Retrieved January 29, 2024.
  7. ^ Foote, Shelby (1974). The Civil War, A Narrative. Vol. 3: Red River to Appomattox. New York: Random House. pp. 370–373. ISBN 0-307-29038-7. OCLC 704441101. OL 10352813M.
  8. ^ Dyer 1908, p. 514.
  9. ^ Zeller, Bob (June 20, 2014). "An Entire Battlefield Saved". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved October 12, 2018."Brice's Cross Roads Battlefield". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved June 20, 2023.
  10. ^ Thomas, William (1991). "Lost Confederate burial site discovered". Tulsa World. Retrieved June 10, 2016.
  11. ^ Entire Battlefield Saved Accessed Jan. 5, 2018.

Further reading

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