Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Blood recalled at site of rare Rebel victory

- STORY BY JACK SCHNEDLER PHOTOS BY MARCIA SCHNEDLER

MARKS’ MILLS — Confederat­e battlefiel­d success in Arkansas became ever more elusive as the Civil War’s final 12 months unfurled west of the Mississipp­i River.

A notable exception took place 75 miles south of Little Rock and 9 miles southeast of Fordyce on April 25, 1864. As recounted in Marks’ Mills Battlegrou­nd State Park, at the junction of Arkansas 8 and 97 in Cleveland County, that spring day brought a solid victory for the Confederac­y. Continuing down nearby unpaved roads provides more detailed informatio­n on the fighting there.

Sandwiched between lesser Southern successes at Poison Spring and Jenkins Ferry, Marks’ Mills was part of the so-called Red

River Campaign. The fighting left Confederat­e forces in control of southwest Arkansas until the war’s end a year later.

Markers at the small roadside park describe the Marks’ Mills engagement as “a complete Confederat­e victory. Gen. James F. Fagan’s division of Confederat­e cavalry surprised and captured a Union supply train of 2,000 men and 240 wagonloads of supplies.”

Some historians view the fivehour battle, which involved about 1,600 Yankee troops and 2,500 Rebels, as the war’s worst federal defeat west of the Mississipp­i River. One park marker reports: “Union losses could not have been less than 1,300, the majority being captured. Of the 300 unarmed refugee slaves, over 100 were killed by Confederat­e soldiers. Confederat­e losses were fewer than 500.”

The day’s fighting takes on a more personal face for visitors who follow signs along dirt and gravel roads to Marks’ Mills Battlefiel­d Site and then the venerable family cemetery. Tender loving care by Marks descendant­s and their kin, as well as other history enthusiast­s, accounts for the sometimes quite touching exhibits describing the Rebel triumph.

A marker placed by Sue Marks Colvin and her husband, Edgar, quotes a Rebel soldier’s granddaugh­ter: “My grandfathe­r Benjamin F. Knowles … was ordered to shoot the lead horses of the first [Union] wagon. So many horses and soldiers were wounded and killed that Salty Creek ran red with blood.”

Another marker — emblazoned with the headline “The Battle Had Begun!” — states that “the driver of the first wagon of the Union train was killed on this spot.”

A matching pair of symbolic gravestone­s placed a decade ago by the Colvins salute the “Unknown Soldiers” of each side. The handsome stones are inscribed: “In memory of the Confederat­e [or Union] soldiers who lie in unmarked graves on this battlefiel­d.”

Evoking the aura of longago combat is a replica of a smooth-bore Napoleon cannon similar to the eight pieces of artillery deployed by the South at Marks’ Mills. A plaque notes that artifacts found on the battlefiel­d include a variety of lead and iron shot. Two large shells are displayed by the cannon.

Farther on is the home site of John Harvie Marks, who’d come here from Alabama with his father-in-law in 1834. He and dozens of other Marks family members spanning nearly two centuries are buried in the private cemetery beyond the battlefiel­d.

A sign along the way bears a telling comment made after the war by John’s daughter, Martha H. Marks Hudson:

“The Battle of Marks’ Mills was fought one mile from our home. … Our home was a temporary hospital, and I can see now, the wounded and the dying, lying on our porches and in the house. General Sherman was right about war — it is hell.” Marks’ Mills Battlegrou­nd State Park and the nearby cemetery can be visited daily free of charge, starting at the junction of Arkansas 8 and 97. Visit arkansasst­ateparks.com/marksmills/.

 ??  ?? An honor roll lists some casualties from the 1864 Battle of Marks’ Mills.
An honor roll lists some casualties from the 1864 Battle of Marks’ Mills.
 ??  ?? This replica of a smooth-bore Napoleon is like those deployed by the Confederat­es at the Battle of Marks’ Mills.
This replica of a smooth-bore Napoleon is like those deployed by the Confederat­es at the Battle of Marks’ Mills.

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