The Collapse of Price''s Raid: The Beginning of the End in Civil War Missouri
English
By (author): Mark A. Lause
The success of the Confederates would be measured by how long they could avoid returning south to spend a hungry winter among the picked-over fields of southwestern Arkansas and northeastern Texas. As Price moved from Pilot Knob to Boonville, the Raid brutalised and alienated the people it supposedly wished to liberate. With Union cavalry pushing out of Jefferson City, the Confederates took Boonville, Glasgow, and Sedalia in their stride, and fostered a wave of attacks across northern Missouri by guerrillas and organisations of new recruits. With the Missouri River to their north and the ravaged farmlands to their south, Prices men continued west.
At Lexington, Confederates began encountering a second Federal army newly raised in Kansas under General Samuel R. Curtis. A running battle from the Little Blue through Independence to the Big Blue marked the first of three days of battle in the area of Kansas City, as the two Federal armies squeezed the Confederate forces between them. Despite a self-congratulatory victory, Union forces failed to capture the very vulnerable army of Price, which escaped down the Kansas line.
The follow-up to Prices Lost Campaign: The 1864 Invasion of Missouri, Lauses The Collapse of Prices Raid is a must-have for any reader interested in the Civil War or in Missouri state history. See more