|
Battle
Flags at the Battle of Mill Springs, Kentucky
compiled by
Geoffrey R. Walden
Click
here
to go directly to the page on Confederate flags.
Confederate
Flags
In contrast to many
other battle studies, much more information is available on the flags
flown by Confederate units during the campaign and battle of Mill
Springs, than is known about their Federal counterparts. This is
mainly due to flag captures; at least eleven Confederate flags were
taken by the Federals either during the battle, or picked up in the
Beech Grove camp after the Confederates had abandoned it.
Most Federal infantry
regiments carried two flags, the National flag and a regimental color,
and the standard Confederate practice was to have one regimental
color. However, many Confederate regiments were formed from companies
that had been recruited in a single locality, and many of these
companies were presented with their own flag before going off to war,
often by the ladies of their town or county. The companies naturally
felt a great deal of pride for these banners, many of which had been
presented during formal ceremonies, and which had patriotic slogans
applied by the ladies. The new troops were reluctant to give up these
special flags, and it appears that the practice early in the war in
the Southern forces, particularly those in the Western Theater, was to
carry these company flags into battle. The flag of the company that
became the color company was often designated as the regimental color.
However, this plethora of flags undoubtedly produced confusion on the
battlefield, and the practice of carrying multiple flags had largely
died out by mid-1862.
That the Confederates
in the Mill Springs campaign carried more than one flag in some
regiments is amply demonstrated by the 15th Mississippi Infantry,
which lost at least six flags during the campaign. Indeed, as many as
nine early-war flags of the 15th Mississippi Infantry may be
identifiable today, indicating that each company probably carried its
own banner. It must also be noted that many of the Mill Springs
"captures" were found in the Confederate camps at Beech
Grove and Mill Springs after their retreat, and it is possible that
these flags were in storage at the time of the battle, and that each
Confederate regiment carried only one flag into the battle.
However, the large number of flags reported to have been captured
during the actual battle argues against this. (Note
20)
16th Alabama
Infantry
 |
Company
B, "Mountain Rangers" --
"Our readers will remember the confederate flag
captured on the battle field where Zollicoffer fell, which
was inscribed: ‘Presented to the Mountain Rangers, Captain
F. A. Ashton, by Mrs. Chardavoyne.’ This trophy was
secured by Captain Marsh B. Taylor, of Co. A [H], 10th
Indiana regiment, in the very wildest fight, and the brave
captain deserves every honor for the brave deed. … the
Gen. commanding has sent it on with other articles to the
city of Washington."
(from the Louisville Journal, quoted in the Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 10 February 1862, courtesy Mark Jaeger)
Left:
Flag of the "Mountain Rangers," Co. B, 16th
Alabama Infantry, sketched as part of a display of captured
flags at the War Department, February 1862.
New York Illustrated News, 15 March 1862, p. 300 (Note
21)
|
Letter from Lt. Green
Clay, USA, aide to Gen. Schoepf, 22 January 1862 -- "I am on my
way to Louisville by order -- I have in my possession the enemy's flag
captured -- which is to be presented to Gen. Buel [sic] --."
Louisville press dispatch, quoted in Decennial Record, Class of 1859,
Yale College (The College Courant Print, 1870) -- "Clay -- Green
Clay, of Bourbon County, Ky., aid to Gen. Schoepf, has just arrived,
bringing a splendid silk rebel flag, bearing the inscription:
'Presented to the Mountain Rangers, Captain Ashford, by Mrs. W. D.
Chanderoyne.'"
Capt. Frederic A.
Ashford commanded Co. B, 16th Alabama Infantry, which company was
called the Mountain Rangers. The Chardavoyne (correct spelling) family
was prominent in Courtland, Alabama (Capt. Ashford’s home). The
present location of this flag is unknown. (Note
4)
Unidentified company
from Marion County; possibly Company G, the "Marion
Guards" -- A soldier of the 10th Indiana Infantry
wrote home that he had "captured a splendid banner belonging to
the Marion county 'Alabama Guards.' I will present it to old
Tippecanoe county--together with another one captured by Johnny
Mackessey of our company" [Co. E]. Two companies of the
16th Alabama Infantry -- G and K -- were from
Marion County, but I have been unable to identify the "Alabama
Guards." Present location unknown. (from the
Logansport, IN, Weekly Journal, 1 February 1862, courtesy Mark Jaeger)
15th
Mississippi Infantry
Company A, "Long
Creek Rifles." The company had a "beautiful silk flag"
which had been presented by the citizens of Bluff Springs, Attala
County, Mississippi. This flag was lost at Mill Springs (it may be one
of the unidentified captured flags described below, perhaps W.D. 50;
the source implies the flag was left in Beech Grove during the retreat
across the river). (Note
18)
 |
Company
D, "Wigfall Rifles." War Dept. Capture No. 23.
Captured by Co. F, 9th Ohio Vols. at the battle of Mill
Spring [sic]. Inscribed "Wigfall Rifles; Jeff. Davis
and the Southern Confederacy." Displayed at the New
York Metropolitan Fair, 1864. Returned to Mississippi by the
U.S. War Dept., 25 March 1905. Present location unknown. (Notes
5, 6, 7, 8)
Left:
Flag of the "Wigfall Rifles," Co. D, 15th
Mississippi Infantry, sketched as part of a display of
captured flags at the War Department, February 1862.
New York Illustrated News, 15 March 1862, p. 300 (Note
21)
|
Company F,
"Water Valley Rifles." Presented by Miss Althea Dawson (and
ten other young ladies) to Lt. R. A. Bankhead in May 1861. Described
as a "beautiful bunting flag, with the name of the company, and
the inscription ‘Our Country, Our Home’ on it." Apparently
not captured during the battle; subsequent fate unknown. (Note
9)
Company G,
"Grenada Rifles." Presented by Miss Mollie Granberry to
Capt. W. S. Statham in April 1861. Inscribed "Pro Juribus et
Forcis." Carried in the battle by Ensign John Goodrich, who was
wounded in the thigh, and by Ned McDaniel, who was shot in both arms.
Found in the abandoned Confederate camp at Mill Springs, 20 January
1862, by Capt. Benjamin Gregory, Co. F, 10th Indiana Infantry.
Returned to Mississippi, to the Dixie Chapter of the United Daughters
of the Confederacy (Mrs. J. W. Buchanan, President), on 25 October
1899. Present location unknown. (Notes
5, 6, 10, 16)
Company H, "Yalobusha
Rifles." War Dept. Capture No. 16. Presented by the ladies of
Coffeeville, Mississippi, in May 1861. Confederate First National
style. Used as the regimental color. Several color bearers were shot
during the battle, before the flag was lost. (One account says the
flag was placed on a cabin at the right of the regimental line as
identification, and mistakenly left there when the regiment advanced.)
Captured by Corp. Albert Esson, Co. G, 2nd Minnesota Infantry.
Returned to Mississippi by the U.S. War Dept., 25 March 1905.
Mississippi State Museum, Jackson, cat. no. 68.54. (Notes
5, 6, 7, 12, 13, 15)

Co.
H, 15th Mississippi Infantry, "Yalobusha Rifles"
Company K, "Oktibbeha
Plowboys." First National style; six-pointed stars; reverse
center bar has inscription "OKTIBBEHA! PLOW-BOYS!! / VICTORY OR
DEATH!!" Not captured, but passed down through the family of the
original color-bearer. It must be noted that the "Oktibbeha
Plowboys," first Co. K, 15th Mississippi, was discharged on
account of measles a few weeks after mustering in April 1861, and the
Co. K designation was taken by the "Choctaw Grays." It is
therefore unclear whether this flag was carried as late as the Fishing
Creek campaign. (Note
11)

Co.
K, 15th Mississippi Infantry, "Oktibbeha Plowboys"
courtesy Pioneer Village, Farmington, Utah
photo by Howard Freed
Unidentified company.
War Dept. Capture No. 28. Captured at the battle of Logan's
Crossroads, Kentucky, by Co. E, 2nd Minnesota Vols. First National
style. Returned to Mississippi by the U.S. War Dept., 26 April 1905.
Mississippi State Museum, Jackson, cat. no. 60.252. (Notes
5, 6, 7, 13)

Unidentified
15th Mississippi Infantry flag, W.D. 28
Mississippi State Museum, courtesy Joe Fleming
Unidentified company,
possibly from Holly Springs. Captured by John Chavers, Daniel O. Neal,
Will Olive, and John Perkins, Company A, 10th Indiana Infantry, during
a Confederate charge at Mill Springs. One report states that
"the color bearer had been killed, leaving his flag, partly torn
from the staff, hanging in some bushes. Neal rushed forward and
cut the flag from the staff. All around the spot on which this capture
was made, was strewn dead and wounded men. The flag shows several
bullet holes, blood-stains and other battle-marks." First
National style of wool or cotton bunting, having a light canton with
15 painted stars (in common with some other early Mississippi flags,
it appears the canton may have originally been blue, but has now
faded, and the stars were originally painted, perhaps in silver, which
has oxidized to a bluish tinge). Incorrectly identified as
the flag of the Yalobusha Rifles. This flag was to be returned to
Mississippi in 1900, but it was retained by John Chavers (the last
survivor of its captors), and is in possession of Chavers' descendants
in Indiana today. (Note
12)

Unidentified
15th Mississippi Infantry flag
Confederate Veteran, 1900
Unidentified
company.
"Taken from the 'Mississippi Tigers,' at the Somerset fight, by
Company I of the gallant 10th [Indiana], and by them since presented
to Lieutenant Colonel W. C. Kise. The Colonel sends it home to
his family at Lebanon [Indiana]. ... The flag has the
regular red, white and red bars, and the ensign of blue, with thirteen
stars. Upon the white bar is inscribed the words, 'Presented to
the Consacqua [? - unclear] Volunteers by the Ladies of the Valley,'
while the ensign contains the words 'Liberty or
Death.'" There was no such company name in the 15th
Mississippi Infantry, and I have been unable to identify this name as
a Mississippi location. The reported post-battle location of
this flag is similar to the flag described and shown just above, but
the description is different (the flag above has fifteen stars, and no
visible inscriptions). (from the Indianapolis Daily Journal,
4 February 1862, courtesy Mark Jaeger)
Recent research by Greg Biggs, Mark Jaeger, Ken
Legendre, and Geoff Walden indicates this may actually have been a
flag of the 19th Tennessee Infantry. The Athens, TN, Post
newspaper of 25 May 1861 recorded the presentation of a flag to the
Conasauga Volunteers, Capt. D.A. Cobb, presented by Mrs. E.A.
Kimbrough, and inscribed LIBERTY OR DEATH. The regiment was not named,
but the company was from McMinn County, and there is a Conasauga
Valley in McMinn County. However, there is a village named Conasauga
in Polk County, east of Chattanooga. Co. F of the 19th Tennessee Inf.
was from Polk County, and Co. H was from McMinn County. However, Co. B
of the 29th Tennessee Infantry was also from Polk County, and also
engaged at Fishing Creek. Pending further research, it appears that
any one of these companies may have been the "Conasauga
Volunteers" - more likely the 19th Tennessee company from McMinn
County, as there is a Conasauga Valley in McMinn County, and the flag
was recorded as having been presented by the "Ladies of the
Valley."
Unidentified
company. "The 2nd Minnesota captured a banner from a
Mississippi regiment, on which was inscribed 'Mississippi
Butchers.'" This description was possibly a bit of literary
license on the part of a newspaper reporter. (from the
Lafayette, IN, Daily Journal, 25 January 1862, courtesy Mark Jaeger)
19th
Tennessee Infantry -- See discussion
under Unidentified Mississippi Company, just above. The flag of the
"Conasauga Volunteers" captured by the 10th Indiana Infantry
may have belonged to Co. H or Co. F of the 19th Tennessee Infantry.
20th
Tennessee Infantry -- Was presented a flag made by the ladies of
Nashville, in July or August 1861. This flag was carried at Mill
Springs by color-bearer J. E. Patterson of Co. C, who "fell
almost mortally wounded at Fishing Creek, with his face to the foe and
his colors to the breeze." This flag continued in service through
the battle of Murfreesboro. (Note
17)
28th Tennessee
Infantry -- Upon its formation in 1861, Company F was presented with a
"beautiful silk ‘Battle Flag’" by the ladies of Mt.
Juliet, Tennessee. (Note
14)
Unidentified unit(s),
captured at Mill Springs
 |
War
Dept. Capture No. 25. Taken at Mill Spring, Ky,
by Capt. G.H. Davidson of the 12th Regt. Kentucky
Volunteers. This silk First National flag has eight
stars in the canton, with the following inscriptions on the
white bar of the field: (obverse) WE CHOOSE OUR OWN
INSTITUTIONS, (reverse) WE COLLECT OUR OWN REVENUE.
Now in the collections of the Museum of the Confederacy,
Richmond, Virginia. (Notes
7, 21)
Left:
War Dept. captured flag No. 25, sketched as part of a
display of captured flags at the War Department, February
1862.
New York Illustrated News, 15 March 1862, p. 300 (Note
21)
|
War Dept. Capture No. 48. First National style. Captured at the battle
of Logan Field [sic] near Fishing Creek, Ky. by Robert E. Bailey, Co.
B, 2nd Minnesota Vols. [listed as 10th Minn. in the W.D. list, 6th
Minn. in the 1864 Metropolitan Fair list; the linen panel with capture
history, attached to flag, states the 2nd, and the Minnesota regiment
present was the 2nd.] Displayed at the New York Metropolitan Fair,
1864. Now in the collections of the Museum of the Confederacy,
Richmond, Virginia. (Notes
7, 8)

War
Department captured flags Nos. 48 (left) and 28 (right)
(An unassociated Virginia state flag is seen in the center.)
New York Illustrated News, 15 March 1862, p. 300 (Note
21)
War Dept. Capture No. 49. First National style.
Remains of an inscription on the heading state that this flag was
"captured at Logan's Field." The War Dept. listing
shows this as a flag of the 18th Virginia Infantry captured at
Gettysburg, but this was obviously an error. Museum of the
Confederacy. (Notes
7, 22)
War
Dept. Capture No. 50. First National style. Captured in
Zollicoffer's intrenchments, 19 January 1862, by Co. A, 2nd Minnesota
Vols. Displayed at the New York Metropolitan Fair, 1864. Unusual star
design in canton -- 10 stars form a circle, with 5 others at 2, 4, 6,
and 8 o’clock positions (the one at 10 o’clock is missing),
forming an inverted star pattern in the whole. Museum of the
Confederacy. (Notes
7, 8)

Back to History Index
NOTES
1. OR I, Vol. 7, p.
92; James Birney Shaw, History of the Tenth Indiana Volunteer
Infantry. Lafayette, IN, priv. publ., 1912, pp. 131-132;
Lafayette, IN, Daily Journal, 5 February 1862.
2. Carl Frederick
Wittke, The Ninth Ohio Volunteers. Columbus: F. J. Herr,
1926, p. 15.
3. Sgt. E. Tarrant, The
Wild Riders of the First Kentucky Cavalry. Priv. Publ., 1894, p.
66; Union Soldiers & Sailors Monument Assn., The Union
Regiments of Kentucky. Louisville: Courier-Journal Job Printing
Co., 1897, p. 306; J. W. Bishop, The Mill Springs Campaign.
St. Paul, MN: St. Paul Book and Stationery Co., 1890, p. 74; Thomas W.
Fugate, "Kentucky Colors," Military Collector and
Historian, Vol. 43, No. 1 (Spring 1991), pp. 17-23; when the 1st
Kentucky Cavalry was issued a flag on 25 February 1862, the
requisition form noted that the regiment was "destitute of the
above mentioned articles;" the first receipt of flags ordered by
the state for its units was 23 January 1862, following the battle
(regimental records in the Kentucky Military History Museum, courtesy
Tom Fugate, curator).
4. Cassius M. Clay,
"Postscript to the Battle of Mill Springs," The Filson
Club Historical Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 2 (April 1956), pp. 109
and 114 (n. 9); Lafayette, IN, Daily Journal, 10 February
1862; Broadfoot Publishing Co., Roster of Confederate Soldiers.
Wilmington, NC, 1994-1997; "Personal Recollections of Andrew
Malone Hill," Alabama Historical Quarterly, Vol. 20
(Spring 1958), p. 86.
5. Ron Field,
"Flags of the Confederacy, No. 13; The Flags of Mississippi, Part
Two: First Nationals," Journal of the Confederate Historical
Society of Great Britain, Vol. 15, No. 4 (1987), pp. 108-113.
6. Howard M. Madaus
and Robert D. Needham, The Battle Flags of the Confederate Army of
Tennessee. Milwaukee Public Museum, 1976, p. 131 (n. 18).
7. U.S. Adjutant
General’s Office, "Record of Rebel Flags Captured by Union
Troops Since April 19, 1861" (National Archives Record Group 94).
8. U.S. Sanitary
Commission, Catalogue of the Museum of Flags, Trophies and Relics
… to be Exhibited at New York, April 4, 1864. New York: Charles
O. Jones, 1864, pp. 13-14.
9. "Flag
Presentation to Water Valley Rifles," Water Valley Progress,
3 June 1911 (reproduced in Yalobusha County History, by the
Heritage Committee of the Yalobusha Historical Society (Dallas, TX,
1982), p. C-30). A post-war account by a local boy who witnessed the
battle says that the flag of Company F was captured after the
color-bearer was killed, and was located in Louisville, Kentucky, some
years after the war, but the owners would not return it to the
Mississippi veterans. This statement must be suspect (along with many
others in this account), but there is always the possibility that the
Water Valley Rifles flag exists in a private collection somewhere.
(John W. Simpson, "A Boy's Story of the Battle of Fishing Creek
and other Incidents of the Civil War," Bronston, KY, undated
manuscript in possession of Duke Turpin, Nancy, KY; partially
published as "A Boy's Story of the Battle of Mill Springs," Confederate
Veteran, Vol. 18 (July 1910), pp. 335-336).
10. "About a
Mississippi Flag," Confederate Veteran, Vol. 8, No. 2
(February 1900), p. 67; "Flag of the Grenada Rifles," Confederate
Veteran, Vol. 9, No 9 (September 1901), p. 400; J. C. Hathorn, A
History of Grenada County, p. 78; "The Grenada Rifles
Flag," The Sentinel, Grenada, MS, 28 October 1899;
"A
Confederate Flag - The Grenada Banner Returned to Its Original
Owners," The Weekly Patriot, Lebanon, IN, 26 October
1899; "Flag of the Grenada Rifles," The Weekly Pioneer,
Lebanon, IN, 9 November 1899 (courtesy Mark Jaeger).
11. Information and
photo courtesy Howard Freed, Pioneer Village, Box 696, Farmington, UT
84025. J. C. Rietti, Military Annals of Mississippi, Vol. 1.
Jackson, MS, n.d., p. 187.
12. "About a
Mississippi Flag," Confederate Veteran, Vol. 8. No. 2
(February 1900), p. 67; "Flags to be Returned," Confederate
Veteran, Vol. 8, No. 9 (September 1900), p. 393; Ralph W. Stark,
"Boone County Soldiers Captured Confederate Flag," Boone
Magazine, Vol. 6, No. 4 (February 1979), pp. 10-11; "Relic
of 1862," Lebanon, IN, Weekly Pioneer, 6 June 1898;
"Another Rebel Flag," Lebanon, IN, Weekly Patriot,
16 November 1899; correspondence with Mark Jaeger, 10th
Indiana Infantry Homepage, August 1998.
13. Dunbar Rowland,
"Fourth Annual Report of the Director of the Department of
Archives and History." Jackson, MS, 1905, pp. 21-22.
14. "Diary
of Lt. Spencer Talley"
15. Letter of Capt.
Francis M. Aldridge, Co. H, 15th Miss. Inf., 30 January 1862, Francis
Marion Aldridge Papers, Mississippi Department of Archives and
History.
16. James R. Binford,
"Recollections of the Fifteenth Regiment of Mississippi Infantry,
C.S.A.," in the Henry Patrick Papers, Z215 Vol. 5, Mississippi
Department of Archives and History, pp. 15, 16.
17. John B. Lindsley,
The Military Annals of Tennessee, Confederate, Vol. 1.
Nashville, 1886, p. 384; W. J. McMurray, M.D., History of the
Twentieth Tennessee Regiment Volunteer Infantry, C.S.A.
Nashville, 1904, p. 190.
18. F. M. Glass, Long
Creek Rifles: A Brief History. Sallis, MS, 1910.
19. The
Flags of the Confederate Armies. Returned to the Men Who Bore Them by
the United States Government. St. Louis: Charles E. Ware,
1905 (a paperback booklet, showing color drawings of the captured
battle flags returned to the South in March and April 1905, which was
printed for and presented to the United Confederate Veterans at their
reunion in Louisville, Kentucky, June 1905). The entry for
this flag shows no capture history, and it must have been mistakenly
stored in Washington among the Confederate flags.
20. In addition
to those flags described here, there is a flag in the Maine Historical
Society that may be an early-war flag of the 15th Mississippi
Infantry. It was carried by Capt. William Collins, one-time
company commander of the "Quitman Rifles," Co. C, when he
was arrested trying to rob a bank in Calais, Maine, in July
1864. It is a large blue silk banner with eleven stars and a
gold painted inscription: THE CONFEDERACY FOR EVER, TO DEFEND HER
RIGHTS. FROM HOME AND FRIENDS WE'LL SEVER, Although museum
records identify this flag to the Quitman Rifles and the 15th
Mississippi, this identification is somewhat
problematical. (See -- Official Records, Ser.
III, Vol. 4, p. 531; Mason Philip Smith, "Confederate Raid on
Calais," Down East Magazine, October 1966, pp. 30-32,
43-49; Mason Philip Smith, Confederates Down East (1985), p.
69; info courtesy Joyce Butler, Maine Historical Society, and Paul
Hightower, 15th
Mississippi Infantry page)
21. The
captured flags were presented to Congress in the House of
Representatives on 22 February 1862 (see Official Records,
Ser. III, Vol. 1, p. 892). Along with the woodcut that appeared
in the New York Illustrated News was a detailed description of each
flag and its capture history, as far as was known.
22. Information
provided by Howard M. Madaus.
All text contents
copyright © 1998-2000, Geoffrey R. Walden; all rights reserved.
|