El Dorado News-Times

Patrick Cleburne conclusion

- Ken Bridges (Dr. Ken Bridges is an author and history professor at South Arkansas Community College).

Patrick Cleburne had emerged from the ruins of a childhood that saw the death of both parents and the misery of the Irish Potato Famine to a new life of hope and relative prosperity in Helena, by the 1850s. He had establishe­d himself as an attorney and as a pillar of the community. The Civil War, however, would take it all from him.

In a reorganiza­tion of Confederat­e forces in Arkansas, Cleburne was promoted to brigadier general in early 1862. Like many Arkansas volunteers, Cleburne spent most of the war east of the Mississipp­i River. He found himself in the midst of some of the bloodiest fights in the western theater in 1862.

He was wounded in August 1862, at Richmond, Kentucky, when shrapnel hit him in the mouth, knocking out several teeth. Two months later at the Battle of Perryville in central Kentucky, he was twice wounded in battle but kept trying to rally his troops through the entire ordeal. With the Confederat­e loss, Confederat­es were unable to help Kentucky secessioni­sts wrest the state away from the Union. Neverthele­ss, Cleburne impressed his superiors with his tenacity in the battlefiel­d and was promoted to major general two months later.

At the Battle of Chattanoog­a in November 1863, Cleburne managed to deflect every Union attack thrown at his division, but the remaining Confederat­e troops were forced to fall back, allowing the Union a clear shot to take Atlanta. By January 1864, Cleburne somberly assessed the state of the Confederat­e army. With battlefiel­d losses and desertions mounting, numbers for Confederat­e forces were dropping to critically low levels, and the South was running out of fighting-age men to replace them. Cleburne openly proposed that the South should start arming slaves in exchange for their freedom to solve their immediate manpower shortages.

Confederat­e officials and senior officers howled their disapprova­l at the idea of arming slaves. They were aghast as Cleburne’s depiction of slavery as “a continued embarrassm­ent.” However, Gen. Robert E. Lee approved of the idea, but even he was unable to gain any support for the proposal until the very end of the war. Only in early 1865 as defeat was inevitable did a desperate Virginia Legislatur­e agree to the plan while most of the remaining Confederat­e states attempted to negotiate a surrender, Arkansas included.

Cleburne’s reputation fell in the eyes of the Confederat­e government in the aftermath, yet he fought in several battles in 1864, trying to prevent the capture of Atlanta by the U. S. Army. After the fall of Atlanta, Confederat­e generals decided on a last-ditch, desperate offensive into central Tennessee to draw Union forces out of Georgia.

On Nov. 30, Confederat­e forces met Union defenders at the Battle of Franklin, just west of Nashville. A bitter firefight broke out as Confederat­es rushed toward Union lines. Noting the situation, he was reported to have said, “If we are to die, let us die like men.” Cleburne led his troops against the wall of Union defenders and had a horse shot out from under him. A second horse was shot just as he started to mount it. Instead, he charged forward, running toward Union troops, sword in hand, when he was cut down by bullet fire. He collapsed, dead at age 36. Nearly 10,000 troops were killed or wounded in the Confederat­e loss.

He was engaged to be married to a young woman in Alabama. The wedding was supposedly planned as soon as Cleburne was to take leave from the front lines. The wedding, and the life of happiness he had dreamed of, was not to be.

In death, he received many honors that escaped him in life. In 1883, Cleburne County was named in northern Arkansas in his memory, the last of the state’s counties to be formed. After the war, Texas settlers founded the city of Cleburne, with Cleburne State Park opening in 1938. In Franklin, the battlefiel­d had been neglected for decades afterward, with large parts eventually paved over or destroyed. In fact, a Pizza Hut had been placed at one part of the battlefiel­d before the site was restored and christened Cleburne Park in 2005.

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