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Death
of Gen. Felix K. Zollicoffer
Compiled by
Geoffrey R. Walden
(From the "Battle of Mill Springs / Fishing Creek" web page,
http://www.geocities.com/Pentagon/Quarters/1864/Default.htm)
"An
awful lot of lies circulate nowadays about the Civil War, and it is so
long ago there is hardly anybody to contradict them." (Col. G.
Moxley Sorrell, C.S.A., in B. I. Wiley, ed., "Recollections of a
Confederate Staff Officer," Jackson, TN, 1958, p. 106)
Few
aspects of the battle of Mill Springs are as surrounded by controversy
as the death of Gen. Felix Kirk Zollicoffer, CSA. Ignoring the
embellishments and the whys-and-wherefores, what seems clear is that
Zollicoffer mistook Union troops for his own units (quite understandable
in the confusion of that dark misty morning), and he approached the
Union lines by mistake. He wished to order them to cease firing on their
own men, since he thought they were all Confederates. Whatever the
cause, it is evident that Zollicoffer did not recognize the Union
officer to whom he spoke as an enemy; neither did this officer recognize
Zollicoffer as a Confederate. Or possibly, Zollicoffer did recognize the
enemy and realized his mistake, and attempted to bluff his way out. Only
as they parted, and one of Zollicoffer’s staff rode out of the woods
to warn his commander (meanwhile firing at the Federals), did both
parties realize the truth. In the ensuing exchange of fire, Zollicoffer
was shot dead from his horse.

The death of Gen.
Zollicoffer was a favorite subject for artists, but most renditions were
somewhat fanciful. Probably the most accurate was this engraving by Walton
Taber, based on a sketch by A. E. Mathews, 31st Ohio Infantry. Taber's
version fits the details in most of the eyewitness accounts. (Other
versions appear below.)
(Battles & Leaders of the Civil War, Volume 1, page 546)
There the
controversy begins … Who, exactly, killed Zollicoffer? He was
one of the first Confederate generals to fall in battle (even today you
can read sources that say he was the first,
but this is not true), and there was some posturing by several different
sources to claim "credit" for his death. It is clear that the
Union officer to whom he spoke, Col. Speed S. Fry of the 4th Kentucky
Infantry, fired at Zollicoffer after his aide opened fire, but it is
also clear that several Union soldiers who were nearby also fired at
Zollicoffer and his aide. In their hasty movement to the battle area
there had been some mixing of the Federal units, and men from Fry’s
own 4th Kentucky Infantry, as well as the 1st Kentucky Cavalry and 10th
Indiana Infantry were all at the scene. Fry himself made no special
claim that his shot killed Zollicoffer, but he was given
"credit" by most period accounts.
Controversy
also surrounds the treatment of Zollicoffer’s body after his death. He
fell in or near the Mill Springs Road, between the lines (but closer to
the Federals). At some point his body was moved out of the road, to the
vicinity of an oak tree nearby. After the Confederate retreat the body
was recognized by Federal soldiers, and numerous period accounts attest
that they immediately took souvenirs from the body: pieces of clothing,
buttons, even locks of hair. This treatment was vehemently denied by
some Northern newspaper accounts, but there can be no doubt that it
happened. However, as soon as Federal officers arrived on the scene, the
body was protected, and was later cleaned, embalmed, and treated with
honor. Zollicoffer’s corpse was eventually allowed to pass through the
lines for burial in Nashville.
The following accounts
are given here to present the best and most varied period views. One
must exercise caution in reading these; always bear in mind the biases
of the writers, and consider their purpose for writing. The period
newspaper accounts must receive special scrutiny, as these often
contained absolutely outlandish details, even to the point of claiming
that Zollicoffer "cut the head of the Lincoln Colonel from his
shoulders" (Bowling Green Courier, quoted in the Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 11 February 1862), or that Fry and Zollicoffer
were personal friends, and even purporting to report Zollicoffer’s
last words (ibid., 27 January 1862). Very little in these reports
can be taken as fact without ample corroborating evidence.
There is even an
obscure and difficult source claiming that a local civilian killed
Zollicoffer with his squirrel rifle, after he had accidentally wandered
into the midst of the battle! Such claims as these stray very far
indeed from the path laid out by the eyewitnesses themselves, and
provide ample proof of a favorite post-war saying of Col. G. Moxley
Sorrel, CSA: "An awful lot of lies circulate nowadays about the
Civil War, and it is so long ago there is hardly anybody to contradict
them."
The dearth of actual
Confederate first-hand accounts is interesting (in contrast to the many
such Federal accounts), but can be explained by the terrain and
vegetation. Except where cleared for fields, the battle area was heavily
wooded. Even in the winter, these woods can mask vision beyond a few
yards. Also, Zollicoffer and his staff rode up out of low ground,
through such woods, toward higher ground. It is likely that few
Confederates other than the staff officers actually witnessed
Zollicoffer's death or body, and two of the staff witnesses were
reportedly killed during the exchange of fire. News of the general's
death can only have reached the main Confederate lines as a vague but
terribly true rumor. Later published Southern versions of the event were
likely pieced together from several sources. Thus, some Southern
writings hold that Zollicoffer never realized Fry and the Federals
around him were enemies, while others maintain that he knew his mistake,
and was trying to brazen his way to escape.
These accounts are
arranged in four general sections, viz., period accounts written shortly
after the battle; other accounts by participants in the battle, but
written later (see Part
2 for these and following); Col. Speed S. Fry's own accounts (an
important section); and other accounts, not necessarily by battle
participants, but considered worthy of inclusion by containing details
not found elsewhere. There is admittedly a great deal of
information presented here. For those not wishing to peruse this
entire compilation, the following accounts are probably the most
important and/or enlightening:
Letter
from Chaplain Lemuel Drake, 31st Ohio Infantry, January 21, 1862
Letter
from the 10th Indiana Infantry, February 7, 1862
Narrative
of Humphrey Hyde, 1st Kentucky Cavalry
Narrative
of Chaplain William Honnell, 1st Kentucky Cavalry
Col.
Fry's own accounts
Narrative
by William Preston Johnston (claims Zollicoffer was near-sighted, and
thus did not recognize Fry)
Period
Accounts
Gen.
Zollicoffer was killed in the early part of the battle by Col. Fry in the
following manner: The morning was wet & a little foggy and it so
happened that Gen. Zollicoffer and Col. Fry got close together. In fact, their
horses were so near to each other that the riders could have shaken hands, if
they had been so disposed. Neither of them was acquainted with or knew the
other. Zollicoffer said to Col. Fry, "We must try and not let our men be
cut up more than can possibly be helped." Col. Fry, supposing that
Zollicoffer was one of our own men, remarked, "certainly, we must prevent
it as much as possible." They then separated, and when Zollicoffer had got
some distance from Fry, some one from the enemy's ranks fired at Fry and shot
his horse. Fry then saw that Zollicoffer was a Rebel, and fired at him with his
pistol, shooting him through the heart. Zollicoffer dropped the reins of his
bridle, threw up both hands, clasped his breast, looked around, and at that
instant a private soldier shot him in the side, and he immediately fell dead
from his horse ...
Chap.
Lemuel Drake, 31st Ohio Infantry, in a letter
dated "Camp near Somerset, Jan. 21st 1862" This is an
important early letter, written just two days after the battle. This
letter is perhaps the earliest instance of the detailed story of
Zollicoffer's death … his chance meeting with Fry … neither
recognizing the other as the enemy … their ensuing conversation …
the shot from the Confederates that wounded Fry's horse, and his
subsequent firing on Zollicoffer, supported by his men. All of these
details have become a part of the history of the battle, perhaps stated
here, in this letter, for the very first time. Drake was emphatic that
Fry's shot mortally wounded Zollicoffer, showing that the credit for
killing Zollicoffer was given to Fry from the beginning. (courtesy
Jo An Sheely)
Gen Zollicoffer
was killed, said to be by Col. Fry.
Lt.Col.
Moscow Carter, 20th Tennessee Infantry, diary
entry dated January 19, 1862. Lt.Col. Carter had been captured during the
battle, and was a prisoner when this diary entry was made.
Gen.
Zollicoffer was certainly killed in the action. he fell pierced
with a ball through his left brest. They got his sword and watch
& many other articles.
Lt.
Oliver Eckels, Co. D, 31st Ohio Infantry, in a letter
dated January 19, 1862; Perry County Weekly, New Lexington, Ohio,
January 29, 1862; transcribed by Jo An Sheely; used by permission.
Several
claim the honor of having killed the distinguished secessionist, but it
is generally conceded that Col. Fry of the 4th Kentucky put an end to
his career of mischief by shooting him through the heart with his
revolver.
Letter
from the 10th Indiana Infantry, January 21, 1862, in the Lafayette, IN,
Daily Journal, 29 January 1862.
Col. Fry
of the 4th Kentucky met him [Zollicoffer] face to face, knew him and
shot him through the breast.
Sgt.
Samuel McIlvaine, 10th Indiana Infantry, in a letter
dated "Gen. Zollicoffer’s Camp," January 21, 1862.
Zollicoffer
was killed in the first engagement by Col. Fry of 4th Ky. --
Lt.
Green Clay, aide to Gen. Schoepf, in a letter dated "Nicholasville,
Wednesday 22" [Jan.], in "Postscript to the Battle of Mill
Springs," The Filson Club Historical Quarterly, Vol. 30, No. 2,
April 1956, pp. 103-114.
The day of
the fight I saw the body of Zolicoffer laying by the side of the rode in
the mud. Col. Fry of the fourth Kentucky Reg. shot him with a revolver.
Pvt.
James Baker, Standart's Btty. B, 1st Ohio Lt. Artillery, in a letter
dated "Summerset, Jan. 23"
The most
important event of the day was the death of Confederate General
Zollicoffer. Colonel Fry charged up a hill with the 4th Kentucky upon a
mounted group of officers of the 15th Mississippi. General Zollicoffer,
evidently mistaking Colonel Fry for an officer of his own staff, rode up
to him with an aid and said: "We must not fire on our own
men," and nodding his head to the left said, "Those are our
men." Colonel Fry replied "Of course not" and he started
to move back towards his regiment. Turning, he saw another mounted man
emerging from the trees who fired and wounded Fry's horse. Fry at once
fired upon the man as did several members of the 4th Kentucky. The shots
were fatal. General Zollicoffer and Lt. Peyton both fell. A pistol shot
and two musket balls ended the life of Zollicoffer. The Confederate
General was wearing a white rain coat over his uniform and, it is said,
had his beard shaved off the previous evening in order to be less
conspicuous.
Calvin
Greenwood, 2nd Tennessee Infantry USA, in a letter from Beech Grove,
January 21, 1862, quoted in an undated newspaper clipping by O'Leary
Meece, Somerset Commonwealth Journal, in the files of the Mill Springs
Battlefield Assn. (Obviously, some of Greenwood's account was
drawn from what he had read in newspapers.)
i suppose
you have heard of our late battle in which the noted rebel General
Zolicoffer was shot through the heart and left on the field. ...
i was within rods of Zolicoffer when he fell and cut three
buttons off from his coat.
Pvt.
Thomas Potter, Standart's Btty. B, 1st Ohio Light Artillery, in a letter
dated "Somerset, Ky., January 24, 1862"
General
Zollicoffer was killed by Colonel Fry, of Kentucky, and his body found
in a wagon.
"The
Union Victory at Somerset, Kentucky," Harper’s Weekly, Vol. 6,
No. 267, February 8, 1862, p. 82.
They met
the enemy lying in ambush, just at the dawning of the day, when Gen.
Zollicoffer who was in the front gave the order for an attack.
Col. Staunton cried out "for God's sake fire -- they are our
friends." The Shoepfites hallowing lustily for Jeff. Davis.
Simultaneously the enemy fired, shooting Gen. Zollicoffer in the heart
and killing him instantly. He spoke but twice -- his last words
were, "Go on, go oon, my brave boys! I am killed!"
Memphis
Daily Avalanche, January 28, 1862, p. 2, quoting the Knoxville
Register, January 25, 1862.
Gen.
Zollicoffer riding forward towards the enemy, was shot and fell mortally
wounded, throwing the regiment immediately around him into some
confusion, which, as is always the case with imperfectly drilled troops,
was difficult to suppress. The gallant Zollicoffer, in the very
hour of death, did not forget his duty to his command, and was heard to
utter as he fell from his horse, "I was mistaken; they are the
enemy; charge them."
Memphis
Daily Avalanche, January 30, 1862, p. 2, quoting the Knoxville Register,
January 27, 1862.
You
have seen it reported in the papers that Colonel Fry and Zollicoffer had
some conversation, and that Fry shot Z. This is a great hoax.
Zollicoffer was shot three times; the ball that killed him was
from an Enfield rifle, and entered his heart. The shot
was fired by Corporal James Swan, of Company H [10th Indiana Infantry],
who is a dead shot ...
Anonymous
letter from the "Tenth Regiment Indiana Foot Volunteers,"
dated February 7, 1862, in "Harper's Weekly," Vol. 6, No. 271,
March 8, 1862, pp. 150-151.
Gen.
Zollicoffer advanced to within a short distance of an Ohio regiment,
which had taken a position at a point unknown to him, and which he
supposed to be one of his own regiments. The first intimation he had of
his dangerous position was received when it was too late.
"There’s old Zollicoffer," cried out several of the regiment
in front of him. "Kill him!" and in an instant their pieces
were leveled at his person. At that moment Henry M. Fogg, aide to Gen.
Zollicoffer, drew his own revolver, and fired, killing the person who
had first recognized Gen. Z. With the most perfect coolness, Gen.
Z. approached to the head of the enemy, and, drawing his sabre cut the
head of the Lincoln Colonel from his shoulders. As soon as this was
done, twenty bullets pierced the body of our gallant leader, and Gen.
Zollicoffer fell from his horse a mangled corpse.
Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 11 February 1862, quoting the Bowling Green Courier.
The rebel General had but one wound, the fatal one in his breast, and
his features, after he had been washed, were calm and life-like.
Zollicoffer's entire uniform was taken off his body in small pieces for
trophies. ... In the heat of the melee he shot at Col. Fry
twice, and wounded his horse, when the Col. drew his pistol and mortally
wounded the rebel leader.
Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 24 January 1862.
Zollicoffer was shot through the heart, at the head of his staff, by
Col. Fry of the 4th Kentucky.
It appears Zollicoffer lost his way in the bushes, and suddenly emerged
before Col. Fry, who was accompanied by some staff officers. The two
parties mistook each other for friends, and approached within a few
yards of each other, when, finding their mutual mistake, both halted and
prepared for a hand to hand conflict. One of General Zollicoffer’s
aids shot at Colonel Fry, but only brought his horse down.
The federal Col. immediately drew his revolver and brought Zollicoffer
from his horse at the first fire.
Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 25 January 1862.
I visited
the tent where Zollicoffer's dead body lay. The soldiers divided
his garments among them as trophies, and even plucked his hair from his
head, until orders were imperatively given not to do so any more.
But his pants and the fine buckskin shirt, is no doubt scatered all over
the different States of the North as some 4 or 5 different states were
here represented.
Capt.
John W. Free, Co. A, 31st Ohio Infantry, in a letter
dated "Camp near Somerset, Ky., January 26, 1862"; Perry
County Weekly, New Lexington, Ohio, February 5, 1862 (transcribed by Jo
An Sheely; used by permission)
Several
trophies have been received by our citizens from their soldier friends
in the 10th regiment. Lieut. Johnson has sent to his brother,
several small articles found in Zollicoffer's camp; ...
Lieut. Johnson also sent some bits of paper stained with the blood of
the dead Zollicoffer. Other parties in this city have received
fragments of the rebel general's uniform, &c., &c.
Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 28 January 1862.
The body
of old Zolly, after being stripped of every vestige of clothing, and
almost every hair of his head, has been taken to Nashville via
Louisville.
W.R.
Ellis, of Indiana, in a letter dated Jan. 27, 1862, in the Lafayette,
IN, Daily Journal, 1 February 1862.
Zollicoffer's brigade pushed ahead, and drove the Federals some distance
through the woods, and were endeavoring to force their way to the summit
of a hill which fully commanded the whole field. The Federals fought
desperately for this position, but scarcely any thing could withstand
the dashing onset of our troops. Misinformed as to their true position
and number, Zollicoffer was rapidly advancing up-hill, but unexpectedly
rode up to an Indiana regiment, mistaking it for one of his own. Not
being able to retreat, he determined to sell his life dearly, so rode
forward with his staff, and began pistolling right and left at the
officers, but soon fell, mortally wounded, and with him most of his
staff.
Letter
from a "young artillery officer," dated Murfreesboro, Tenn.,
Feb. 20th, 1862, in "An English Combatant, Battle-Fields of the
South," New York, 1864, pp. 127-128 (I am indebted to Dave Hunter
for sending me a copy of this very obscure source).
Last evening we had a conversation with a reliable gentleman who arrived
directly from Somerset, by way of Lexington, and from him we gather the
following particulars of Gen. Zollicoffer, the leader of the rebel
forces at Mill Springs, Kentucky, on Sunday last. Our informant obtained
the particulars from Col. Fry, of the 4th Kentucky regiment, who killed
Zollicoffer. Col. Fry was laying in ambush with a squad of his regiment,
when Zollicoffer approached at the head of a detachment of his troops,
which detachment was marching rapidly in advance of the main Confederate
forces. When the General with his advance had arrived in twenty feet of
the ambush where Fry and his men were concealed, the Col. sprang forward
and drew his navy revolver and presented it at the rebel General. We may
add here, parenthetically, that Col. Fry who hails from Lexington, and
Gen. Zollicoffer were for many years personal friends, and in their
youthful days, associates in the same school.
Upon discovering Col. Fry across his path, he threw up both hands and
exclaimed, "Hold, Fry; you would not shoot your old friend would
you!" Then placing his right hand on his pistol and pointing back
with his hand toward his command exclaimed: "Look! there are all
your friends;" which remark was evidently intended to draw Fry's
attention away from him, while he would improve the occasion of shooting
Fry dead in his tracks. But the brave Col. did not heed the remark, but
said, "I will attend to you first," and pulling the trigger,
Zollicoffer fell with a ball pierced through his breast. His last words
were, "I am killed, all’s well," and with a groan expired.
"The
Death of General Zollicoffer," Lafayette, IN, Daily Journal, 27
January 1862.
The late battle of Mill Springs gave some of Graham's squadron an
opportunity to look slightly into "Dixie," and to there behold
some of its deluded soldiers, who profess to be fighting for their
rights. The bodies of Gen. Zollicoffer and Peyton reached this point,
per Railroad, on the 30th, encased in splendid coffins, labeled and
directed to the care of Gen. McCook, for the same to forward under an
escort of flag of truce to some place. Early on the morning of the 31st
two ambulances, with four horses attached to each, moved from
headquarters with the mortal remains of Zollicoffer and Peyton. The
procession was headed by Gens. Johnson and Negley, of this division of
the army, with a host of Colonels and Orderlies of the two staffs, and
one of Frank Leslie's artists. Then followed the ambulances, and in the
rear twenty-five of Graham's Cavalry, your humble servant one of the
number. We crossed Green River in safety on the pontoon bridge, took the
Glasgow road as far as Horse Cave, a small village, situated on the
Railroad, which has lost most of its houses by the lighted torch of the
infuriated "secesh," who have to let go and give back as our
army increases or advances. This place is noted for the great cave here,
from which it derives its name. We had no opportunity to examine the
cave only as we passed by near its mouth-we could see far into it. From
this point we turned to our left, and took the Louisville and Nashville
pike-a good road-but every place where timber has stood upon its borders
it has been felled across it to obstruct our march. ...
At 3 o'clock the white flag appeared in sight from the south, in its
front General Hindman, Col Hawthorn, with a host of Majors and
Orderlies, followed close in their rear by fifty Texas Rangers, all
mounted. Their officers dismounted and advanced, as did ours, of the
same rank, and moved together to the hotel for consultation, &c.
...
The charges that had been committed to our hands were delivered to the
Confederate officers, and we parted with the rangers by inviting them to
our quarters at any time most convenient to them. The same compliment
was tendered to us.
Letter
in the Indianapolis Daily Journal, 6 February 1862, by Pvt. Mastin
Dashiell, 3rd Indiana Cavalry.

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