Recovered round from Colt revolving rifle (Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park) |
Colt revolving rifle (center) -- Hmagg, Wikipedia |
The Colt Model 1855 was used by two flanking companies of the 37th Illinois Infantry
at the Battle of Prairie Grove on Dec. 7, 1862. The design was similar to Colt
revolvers – with a rotating cylinder – and the weapon became a repeating rifle
by adding a stock and barrel.
While it had mixed success during the war, the rare rifle was largely effective at Prairie Grove and two other prominent battles.
Experts said
the location of seven recently recovered Colt bullets may alter maps of the
precise position where the regiment fought during a Federal charge on
Confederate artillery and infantry at the Archibald Borden house. Its
commander, Lt. Col. John Black, would receive a Medal of Honor for his
leadership during the battle.
(Arkansas Archeological Survey) |
The four
acres being studied in front of the Borden house are believed to never have been
touched by metal detectors before. Mike Evans, station assistant with the
survey, said he has worked many sites, but never with this many concentrated
artifacts. “This area was wooded and fairly
inaccessible. We wanted to take a look at the heart of the battle.”
“This is as central to that battle as you can get,” he told the Picket
this week. The slope in front of the house, an orchard and other parts of the
farm were the scene of two assaults each by Federal and Confederate troops.
The survey found numerous bullets, artillery shell fragments, friction primers,
casings and canister. Interestingly, few personal items, such as buttons or
insignia, were recovered.
“It is rich. It looks pretty thick,” Evans said of the artifacts, which
he expects to number 1,000 when the crew eventually can return to the park to
complete the survey. “And you are seeing little clusters. You are seeing a hot
spot down the hill.”
(Note: Officials
with the park and survey, which are partnering in the survey, emphasize that metal
detecting and removal of artifacts from Prairie Grove by the public is
prohibited.)
Confederate
troops under Maj. Gen. Thomas Hindman squared off against the men of Union
Brig. Gens. James Blunt and Francis Herron at Prairie Grove. While the fighting
ended in somewhat of a draw, the Rebels withdrew from the field, giving the
Union a strategic victory. Northwest Arkansas and Missouri would remain under
Federal control for the rest of the conflict.
Casualties totaled about 2,700.
Park wanted terrain to look like 1862
Sampling of items from Prairie Grove (Arkansas Archeological Survey/AAS) |
Bormann fuse for artillery (Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park) |
The growth “had not allowed anyone to get in there with a metal
detector. All of those artifacts were there in pristine condition waiting to
tell a story,” he said. The
park for years had wanted to do the clearing project, and the interpreter got
the ball rolling last year.
Official reports and soldier accounts showed the modern terrain was not accurate to the battle.
“That
hillside was very open and the Borden family had taken a lot of time clearing
the underbrush,” said Mulheran. “We wanted to get back to that landscape.”
Minie ball with impact damage, dropped.58-caliber and Enfield round (Prairie Grove BSP) |
They rushed to a neighbor’s resident, where the families huddled in a
cellar. The Bordens emerged
after the fighting to find their home burned by Federal troops. Caldonia Borden Brandenburg years later spoke of the loss of livestock and stored food.
“All of the
kinfolks and neighbors gave us food, clothing and bedding and household goods
that they could spare, to help us get started again,” she said. “As soon as it
was safe for us kids to go on the battle fields, we went and picked up clothes,
canteens, blankets and anything we found to use. We had to put everything in
boiling water to kill the “grey backs” [body lice] …”
Around 1870,
the Borden family rebuilt the distinctive yellow home on the same site. They
eventually moved west, Mulheran said, and others farmed the land until the
1940s or 1950s. The house eventually fell into disrepair. “There were trees growing out of the porch.”
Borden house in 1976 (Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park) |
Volunteers
and a Bobcat with a mulching attachment have removed the undergrowth and the
park will continue tree thinning and grooming this summer.
“It has come a long way in the time I have been here,” said Mulheran. “People
can (now) see it just as the soldiers saw it.”
Some items came from filming of miniseries
Complicating
the archaeological dig has been the presence of artillery and long gun
components associated with Civil War reenactors who took part in events at the
state park over the years.
Officials believe
some of the recovered items date back to the filming of the 1982 television
miniseries, “The Blue and the Gray,” which starred Stacy Keach and Gregory Peck
and was based on Bruce Catton’s book.
Co-producer
Harry Thomason spoke with The New York Times about why filming was done in the
region.
''We are being extremely accurate in the spirit of this production,'' he
told the newspaper. ''If purists want to say we should have filmed this picture
exactly where the actual events happened, they have not visited many of those
places lately. Some don't even exist anymore, and many have been overrun with
commercialism. Most of the actual battlefields are covered with monuments and
statues. We had 21 critical location scenes for this picture. We looked all
over the country, and this 90-mile strip of western Arkansas met our
requirements better than anywhere else.''
Evans, with
the Arkansas Archeological Survey, says some of the artillery friction primers
may be associated with reenactors.
But numerous
items come from the period: Minie balls, grapeshot, Bormann fuses, exploded
artillery, .69-caliber round balls, the tip of a bayonet scabbard and a piece
of brass sash buckle, among them.
Much of the
recovered debris is from Union guns fired from the valley toward Confederate
artillery. “The hill was catching all that stuff,”
Evans told the Picket.
The ridge
where the Borden home sat was the highest terrain on the battle and was an
obvious place for the Confederates to place a large part of their artillery, as
was done by Capt. William Blocher’s Arkansas battery. It provided a good view
of a wide valley and Fayetteville-Cane Hill Road below. Gunners trained their
weapons on a ford on the Illinois River.
Federal guns
opened up below the Borden house, allowing for the Federal assaults. The 37th
Illinois – the only veteran unit in the assaults -- took part in the second wave.
Lt. Col. John Black |
Although the
regiment became surrounded, Mulheran told the Picket, their experience and the
five-shot Colt revolving rifle somewhat evened the circumstances. Eventually,
they were forced to withdraw to the valley, where they fought off a determined
Confederate counterattack and protected artillery.
Decades
later, Black received the Medal Honor for extraordinary heroism: “Lieutenant
Colonel Black gallantly charged the position of the enemy at the head of his
regiment, after two other regiments had been repulsed and driven down the hill,
and captured a battery; was severely wounded,” read the citation.
Black and his
brother, Capt. William Black (for heroism at Pea Ridge), were among the few
siblings to receive the Medal of Honor.
The 37th
had about 15% of its men killed or wounded at Prairie Grove.
A flawed weapon had its moments
The Colt
revolving rifles did find success, and when used by experienced troops, they
could result in a higher rate of fire.
Enfield bullet, blank from miniseries, fired Minie ball (AAS) |
Carl Drexler, assistant research professor and station archeologist with the Arkansas Archeological Survey, said the 37th Illinois was issued about 200 of the revolving rifles prior to Pea Ridge (about 18,000 were manufactured until 1862).
Companies A and K had them, as did several Confederate
regiments. But those Southern units went east of the Mississippi River before Prairie
Grove.
Drexler provided this summary of the weapon by email:
“As far as their efficacy
and importance, it was a bit of a mixed bag. The idea behind them was to
increase the individual firepower of a common soldier. The .56-caliber version
(most often carried in the West) used a 5-shot cylinder that could be swapped
out when empty, which made any unit armed with them a formidable opponent.
Also, unlike other multi-shot weapons of the period, they did not use metallic
cartridges, meaning they were usable by Confederates or anyone with a bullet
mold. That was the good.
Jessica Kowalski at work (Ark. Archeological Survey) |
More work and research lie ahead
Mulheran
and Evans say the discovery of the Colt rounds may put the regiment in a
slightly different position than believed, perhaps a couple hundred yards away.
“By tracing where these bullets landed we can document the movement of
this regiment,” Mulheran said.
Borden house is at right center (Arkansas State Parks) |
More excavations and analysis are required for any new conclusions to be made.
A Facebook post from Prairie
Grove Battlefield State Park summarizes what can be gleaned by such research.
“Battlefield
archaeology is an important science that allows researchers to gain a better
understanding of what happened during the Battle of Prairie Grove. The evidence
can provide new details on how we interpret the battle and completely change
the current perception of events. We look forward to seeing the results of this
survey.”
Before and after of hillside (Prairie Grove Battlefield State Park |
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