512:, ten miles southwest of Memphis. Porter's men were concealed in brush and stayed low when the Federals stopped to fire prior to each charge. Porter's men held their fire until the range was very short, increasing the lethality of the volley. Clopper was in the Federal front, and out of 21 men of his advance guard, all but one were killed and wounded. The Federals made at least seven mounted charges according to Mudd, doing little but adding to the body count. A battalion of roughly 100 men of the 11th Missouri State Militia Cavalry under Major Rogers arrived and dismounted. While Clopper claimed to have driven the enemy from the field after this, Mudd indicates that the Federals instead fell back and ended the engagement leaving Porter in possession of the field until he withdrew. Clopper's reputation suffered as a result of his poor tactics. Before the final charge one company officer angrily asked, "Why don't you dismount those men and stop murdering them?"
484:, neither obeying nor protected by the rules of war). They rounded up all adult males, who were taken to the court house to swear not to divulge any information about the raiders for forty-eight hours. Porter freed all militiamen or suspected militiamen to await parole, a fact noted by champions of his character. Citizens expressed their sympathies variously; Porter gave safe passage to a physician, an admitted supporter of the Union, who was anxious to return to his seriously ill wife. A verbally abusive woman was threatened with a pistol by one of Porter's troops, perhaps as a bluff; Mudd intervened to prevent bloodshed. Porter's troops entered the courthouse and destroyed all indictments for horse-theft; the act is variously understood as simple lawlessness, intervention on behalf of criminal associates, or interference with politically motivated, fraudulent charges.
663:, Porter encountered 250 men of the First Missouri State Militia, under Lieut. Col. Alexander Woolfolk, coming up to unite with McNeil. There was a brief fight at Panther Creek, Friday, August 8. Porter was turned from his course and retreated toward the northeast, away from his intended line of march and ultimate goal. The next day, Col. James McFerran, of the First Missouri State Militia, joined Woolfolk with 250 more men and took command. He caught up with Porter at Walnut Creek, in Adair County and drove him eastward to the Chariton. At See's Ford, where he recrossed the Chariton, Porter set up an ambush on the east bank with 125 men. Porter's forces opened fire at short range. Only two Federals were killed outright and 15 wounded, but the action seemed to have caused McFerran to break off pursuit.
495:– even the sympathetic Mudd says of him "if one of his men were captured and killed he murdered the man who did it if he could catch him, or, failing him, the nearest man he could catch to the one who did it." Stacy's company was called "the chain gang" by the other members of Porter's command. Supporters of Porter attribute the murder of Aylward to Stacy (who would be mortally wounded at Vassar Hill.) However, a Union gentleman who came to inquire about Aylward and a captured officer before the discovery of the body stated that when he asked Porter about Aylward, the response was, "He is where he will never disturb anybody else."
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unified command—are unclear. Various forces with varying degrees of official relation to Porter's command are credited with capturing Paris and Canton, and with bringing in new supplies and recruits. Porter's numbers had swelled to a size likely to be unmanageable, particularly considering the lack of trained officers and that not more than a quarter of his 2000 or so troops had regulation equipment. Perhaps another quarter had squirrel-guns or shotguns, while the rest no arms at all. Porter's objective was now to get south to
Arkansas with his recruits, in order that they might be properly trained and equipped.
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639:, Porter made a serious mistake in engaging Union forces under Col. John McNeil, whom he knew to have cannon – perhaps in overconfidence, as a result of his sharpshooters' ability to pick off the Federal artillerymen at Santa Fe. Traveling light had been Porter's great advantage -- "His troops lived off the country, and every man was his own quartermaster and commissary," in contrast to the elaborate baggage and supply trains of McNeil ("History of Shelby County"). Here Porter suffered unequivocal defeat, from which he would not recover.
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conceded that Col. Porter's purpose for capturing
Memphis, MO. was to seize Dr. Wm. Aylward, a prominent Union man of the community." Aylward was captured during the day by Captain Tom Stacy's men and confined to a house. After rousing him overnight and removing him, ostensibly to see Porter, guards claimed that he escaped. However, witnesses reported hearing the sounds of a strangling, and his body was found the next day, with marks consistent with hanging or strangulation.
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the retreating Union force at Santa Fe, Mudd has him say "I can't see that anything would be accomplished by pursuing the enemy. We might give them a drive and kill a dozen of them and we might lose a man or two, and I wouldn't give them one of my men for a dozen dead federals unless to gain some particular purpose."
589:. The Union losses were 19 killed, 21 wounded. Guerrilla losses were 36-60 killed, 100 wounded. This was one of Porter's most aggressive actions, involving a daring charge and disabling the Federal artillery, until forced to retreat by the arrival of Union reinforcements and the exhaustion of his ammunition.
508:"Pierce's Mill," after a location 1.5 miles northwest of the battlefield. A detachment of three companies (C, H, I), about 300 men of Merrill's Horse, under Major John Y. Clopper, was dispatched by McNeil from Newark against Porter, and attacked him at 2 p.m. on Friday, July 18, on the south fork of the
736:'s account (118–119), Porter died an hour later. According to Mudd, however, Porter was shot from his horse with wounds to the leg and the hand while leading a charge; in this account, Porter managed to accompany the army on a difficult trek into Arkansas, arriving at Camp Sallado on January 20, and at
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Porter's character is hard to estimate: clearly he possessed considerable personal courage, but was also a prudent tactician, often declining battle when he could not choose his ground and when he thought the potential for casualties disproportionate to projected gains. Declining the option to pursue
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January 25, where he died from his wounds on
February 18, 1863. The early date is refuted by Porter's own report, dated February 3, referencing the journey after the battle, as well as eyewitness Major G.W.C. Bennett's reference to "Porter's column" on the march several days after and dozens of miles
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line, where, with a superior force, they attacked and defeated him, routing his forces and driving them southward. Losses on both sides were minor. Porter retreated rapidly, pursued by
Lipscomb, until his forces dispersed at a point about 10 miles west of Newark. Porter, with perhaps 75 men, remained
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Porter is credited variously with five and nine children, only two of whom were living at the time of Mudd's book, his daughter, Mrs. O.M. White, and his son, Joseph I. Porter of
Stuttgart, AR, who wrote: "I know but little about the war and have been trying to forget what I do know about it. I hope
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pursued Porter, who planned an ambush with perhaps 125 men according to participant Mudd (though
Federal estimates of Porter's strength ran from 400 to 600 men). The battle is called "Vassar Hill" in the History of Scotland County; Porter himself called it "Oak Ridge," and Federal forces called it
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August 1: McNeil had dispatched Lair to Newark. Porter headed westward from Midway, putting his brother Jim Porter in charge of one column, himself at the head of another, approaching the town from east and south simultaneously, and closing the trap on the completely surprised federals at 5 p.m. on
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On page 86 of "With Porter in North
Missouri", Mudd describes "One of our boys, down the line out of my sight, losing his head fired too soon and when the Federal was about to ride him down, had an empty gun in his hand. This he clubbed and striking his assailant a powerful blow on the neck, killed
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Porter quickly abandoned
Palmyra to McNeil, and another period of wandering ensued, in the general direction of his own home near Newark. There were further desertions, and a number of bands of organized rebels refused to place themselves under Porter's command, clearly indicating that he had lost
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Porter wandered around the wilderness, his desertion-diminished troops feeding off the land, although there were some new recruits as well. On Friday, September 12, Porter, with 400 men, captured
Palmyra, with 20 of its garrison, and held the place two hours, losing one man killed and one wounded.
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Union casualties were about 24 killed and mortally wounded (10 from
Merrill's Horse and 14 from the 11th MSM Cavalry), and perhaps 59 wounded (24 from Merrill's Horse, and 35 from the 11th MSM Cavalry.) Porter's loss was as little as three killed and five wounded according to Mudd, or six killed,
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Porter had strong Southern sympathies, and was subject to harassment by pro-Union neighbors, since he lived in an area where loyalties were sharply divided. His brother, James William Porter (b. 1827, m. Carolina Marshall, sister to Joseph's wife Mary Ann, 1853), was also a Confederate officer and
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on January 11, 1863, a small Federal force was encountered and defeated, although at severe loss to the Confederates, who had many valuable officers killed and mortally wounded. Among the latter was Colonel Porter, commanding a brigade, shot from his horse with wounds to the leg from an artillery
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The Federal loss in the Newark fight was 4 killed, 6 wounded, and 72 prisoners. The Confederate loss was reported at from 10 to 20 killed, and 30 severely wounded. Union soldiers were treated well, but the Union-sympathizing storekeepers had their businesses gutted, and citizens were subjected to
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in four converging columns totalling 125–169 men and captured it with little or no resistance. They first raided the Federal armory, seizing about a hundred muskets with cartridge boxes and ammunition, and several uniforms (Mudd, see below, was among those who would wear the Union uniform, as he
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A number of atrocities are attributed to him, but the partisanship of accounts makes it difficult to ascertain his responsibility for the killings of Dr. Aylward, Andrew Allsman, James Dye at Kirksville, a wounded Federal at Botts' Farm, and others, though it must be concluded that he failed to
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After his rout by McNeil at Whaley's Mill, and the dispersion of his troops at Bragg's school house, Col. Porter kept himself hidden for a few days. He abandoned the idea of raising a militarily significant force, and entered Shelby County on a line of march to the south with fewer than 100 men
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At Memphis, a key incident occurred which would darken Porter's reputation, and which his detractors see as part of a consistent behavioral pattern which put him and his men beyond the norms of warfare. According to the "History of Shelby County," which is generally sympathetic to Porter, "Most
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Despite the victory at Newark, the high casualties on the winning side, attributed to chaotic advance and undisciplined exposure of Porter's troops to hostile fire, suggest growing disorder in his ranks. From here, records of his activities—and even the degree to which he can be said to have a
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The location of Col. Porter's grave remains unknown. Oral traditions suggest that he was at some point buried on the farm of his cousin Ezekiel Porter (said to be a volunteer ambulance driver during the war), just north of Hartville, in what is now known as Porter's Cemetery, near
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away from the battle, and finally by Marmaduke's noting Porter among the wounded, in contrast to the listing of officers killed; additional near-contemporary sources also affirm Porter's survival of the journey to Arkansas. The January 11 date seems to originate with General
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One Union citizen was killed and three Federals wounded. Porter's objectives were to liberate Confederates held in the jail there, and to draw Federal forces away from the Missouri River, so as to open it to southward crossing by rebels seeking to join Confederate units.
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communicate the unacceptability of such actions to his subordinates. There is reliable eyewitness testimony to his intervening to prevent the lynching of two captured Federals in retaliation for the execution of a Confederate prisoner at the Battle of Florida.
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Porter forced a company of 75 Federals to take refuge in a brick schoolhouse; when they refused terms, he had a loaded haywagon fired and threatened to run it into the building. The Federals surrendered, were paroled and permitted to keep their sidearms.
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to get a company known to be there under Captain Bill Dunn. Union forces under Colonel Henry S. Lipscomb and others responded with a march on Colony. They overtook Porter at Cherry Grove, in the northeastern part of Schuyler County, near the
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counties, Porter approached Sulphur Springs, near Colony, in Knox County. Along his route he collected perhaps 200 recruits. From Sulphur Springs he moved north, threatened the Union Home Guards at Memphis, picked up additional recruits in
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campaigns in northern Missouri, and a figure of controversy. The main source for his history, Joseph A. Mudd (see below) is clearly an apologist; his opponents take a less charitable view of him, and his chief adversary, Union Colonel
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For a more detailed discussion of the Battle of Kirksville and the subsequent disbandment of Porter's regiment, see Louis S. Gerteis, The Civil War in Missouri-A Military History (Columbia, University of Missouri Press, 2012). pp
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with 43 mounted men, he captured four men of the Union regiment he found there. The prisoners' weapons and horses were taken, then they were paroled on their oath not to take up arms against the Confederacy until exchanged.
1050:, 1883, Chapter 12.) states "Here Emmett McDonald and Col. John M. Wymer, of St. Louis, both were killed and Col. Joe Porter mortally wounded, dying afterward, a week or so, near Little Rock". Accessed December 28, 2007.
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The Confederates carried away an elderly Union citizen named Andrew Allsman. The fate of Allsman remains something of a mystery, and there is disagreement as well about his character and his legitimacy as a target (see
716:. Through a mistake of Gen. Marmaduke, Col. Porter's command did not participate in this attack. It moved on a line far to the east. After the expedition had failed, the commands of Marmaduke and Porter united east of
527:; thence south-east into Knox County, passing through Novelty, four miles east of Locust Hill, at noon on Saturday, July 19, having fought a battle and made a march of sixty-five miles in less than twenty-four hours.
1003:, Volume XXII, Part 1, December 31, 1862--January 25, 1863.--Marmaduke's expedition into Missouri. No. 12.--Report of Maj. G. W. C. Bennett, MacDonald's Missouri Cavalry (Confederate.) Accessed December 28, 2007.
977:. (James A. Holmes University of Kansas, 1967), Ch VII specifies Porter among the 96 wounded in the engagement, in contrast with others (e.g., Col McDonald) among the 12 dead. Accessed November 13, 2007.
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three mortally wounded, and 10 wounded left on the field according to the Shelby County History. The Union dead were originally buried on the Jacob Maggard farm, which served as a temporary hospital.
413:, to raise recruits throughout northeast Missouri. His duties included the establishment of supply drops, weapons caches and a network of pro-Southern informants. As a Colonel he commanded the
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Porter's daughter O. M. White wrote that the family did not have a picture of their father, "the only one we ever had was destroyed when our home was burned by the soldiers during the war."
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abuse. Some claim this was in spite of Porter's orders, and claimed that he bore his old neighbors no malice, while others view this action as Porter's revenge for previous ill-treatment.
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in a skiff, continuing into Arkansas. Here he organized, from the men who had accompanied him and others whom he found in Arkansas, a regiment of Missouri Confederate cavalry. From
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1059:"The Rebel colonel Joseph C. Porter was also wounded and died of his wounds at Batesville Arkansas on February 18, 1863. " O.R. vol 22 pt. 1:189-91, 197, 199. cited in Eakin,
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Porter passed on to Wilsonville, in the south-east part of Adair. Here, a mass desertion took place among his discouraged troops; in a few hours, 500 had drifted away.
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342:. About 1844, Porter married Mary Ann E. Marshall (d. DeWitt, AR "about two years after the war closed," according to Porter's sister). They subsequently moved to
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Though most of his activities were guerrilla operations or harassment, a few battles were fought. On June 17, 1862, near Warren or New Market, in Warren Township,
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him." In Joseph Budd's pension records, his death is described as occurring due to "a stroke of a weapon breaking his neck". Joseph is pictured on the right.
1193:, Volume XXII, Part 1, pages 205-207 contain Porter's report. The header is: "HDQRS. PORTER'S BRIG., MISSOURI CAV., C. S. ARMY, Camp Allen, February 3, 1863."
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Branded as Rebels, a list of bushwhackers, guerrillas, partisan rangers, confederates and southern sympathizers from Missouri during the war years
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Throughout Porter's brief military career, his status as a regular army officer was not fully recognized by his adversaries, particularly Colonel
354:. Family members assert that only one photograph of Porter was known to exist, and it was destroyed when his home was burned by Union soldiers.
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July 24: Major Caldwell and 100 men of his 3rd Iowa Volunteer Cavalry pursued Porter and his 400 men into dense brush near Botts' farm, near
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claimed, for its superior comfort in the heat, a fact which would later draw friendly fire and aggravate the view of Porter's troops as
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of Porter's contributions to the battle, but does not mention Porter among the casualties he enumerates. Accessed December 28, 2007.
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1075:, ed. Michael E. Banasik (Unwritten Chapters of the War West of the River, II), Press of the Camp Pope Bookshop, p. 145, note 29
1163:
House, Grant, "Colonel Joseph C. Porter's 1862 Campaign in Northeast Missouri." M.A. thesis. Western Illinois University, 1989.
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in the Springfield campaign ("Marmaduke's First Raid") and following clearly shows he was regarded as a regular officer by the
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1063:/ compiled by Joanne Chiles Eakin & Donald R. Hale. Lee's Summit, MO : J.C. Eakin & D.R. Hale, 1993, page 353.
424:. Those serving behind Union lines were not recognized as legal combatants and were threatened with execution if captured.
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745:, who reported as fact the speculation that a burial observed by a recently paroled Lieutenant Brown was that of Porter.
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at Glasgow or Brunswick, and open a line to the Confederacy. Three miles north of Stockton (now New Cambria), in western
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in Chariton County, known to have 1,200 or 1,500 recruits; their combined forces would be able to force a passage of the
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17 (February 2000): 52–60. A tour of modern-day Northeast Missouri sites involved in Porter's campaign of 1862. Illus.
398:, September 1861. Joseph Porter had no prior military experience, but proved to be a natural leader and was elected a
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S.H. Boyd, commanding the post and district of Rolla, reports on March 6, 1863 "Col. Porter died near Batesville."
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in the vicinity of his home for some days, gathering recruits all the time, and getting ready to strike again.
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The Reluctant Cannoneer: the Diary of Robert T. McMahan of the Twenty-Fifth Independent Ohio Light Artillery
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After the fight, Porter moved westward a few miles, then south through Paulville, in the eastern part of
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remaining. He made his way safely through Monroe, Audrain, Callaway and Boone counties, and crossed the
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Up From Arkansas: Marmaduke's First Missouri Raid Including the Battles of Springfield and Hartville.
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Roth, Dave and Sallee, Scott E., "Porter's Campaign in Northeast Missouri and the Palmyra Massacre."
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July 22: Detachments of F & G Companies (60 men total) of 3rd Iowa Volunteer Cavalry under Major
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate armies
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public confidence. At Whaley's Mill, his men were definitively scattered, almost without a fight.
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At Memphis, Porter had been joined by Tom Stacy, generally regarded as a genuine
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Union Colonel John McNeil, who defeated Porter at the Battle of Kirksville.
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The same date is used in the appendix of casualties in Frederick Goman's
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858:, G.P. Putnam, 1868, page 558, from "The Fight near Memphis, Mo." in the
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of 1849, then returned to Missouri and farmed together before the war.
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At Clem's Mills, five miles west of Kirksville, Porter crossed the
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engaged Porter near Moore's Mill (now the village of Calwood) in
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Confederate Cavalry West of the River: Raiding Federal Missouri
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in March 1862, Porter returned home on the orders of General
567:. The Second Battalion suffered one killed and ten wounded.
330:, to James and Rebecca Chrisman Porter. The family moved to
394:; and they later participated in the Confederate attack on
334:, in 1828 or 1829, where Porter attended Marion College in
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J.O. Shelby, commanding the cavalry brigade at Hartville,
1140:. Washington, DC: National Publishing Co., 1909, p. 327.
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Embattled Arkansas: The Prairie Grove Campaign of 1862
1187:, Chapter 8. (1884). Shelby County Historical Society.
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Wilson's Creek National Battlefield Foundation (1999).
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July 28: Union forces under Colonel (later General )
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regiment and participated in the attack on the union
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Washington, DC: National Publishing Co., 1909. 452p.
358:Joseph's trusted subordinate, reaching the rank of
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346:, remaining there until 1857, when they moved to
708:and J. Q. A. Burbridge, to cooperate with Gen.
302:and traitor, though his service under General
940:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 98, 101
440:Moving northward through the western part of
281:(12 September 1809 – 18 February 1863) was a
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1217:People of Missouri in the American Civil War
793:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, pages 72-74
1086:reported on January 31 to General Marmaduke
670:Capture of Palmyra and the Allsman incident
974:History of Ozark County, Missouri, to 1865
378:The Porter brothers enrolled with Colonel
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953:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 114
819:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, pages 79
127:Learn how and when to remove this message
30:For other people with the same name, see
874:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 85
845:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 90
832:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 88
806:, 1909, reprint Camp Pope, 1992, page 72
720:, and started to retreat into Arkansas.
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1207:People from Jessamine County, Kentucky
915:, Broadfoot Publishing, 1998, page 124
539:encountered Porter with 300 rebels at
475:On Sunday, July 13, Porter approached
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1222:American guerrillas killed in action
989:, Volume XXII, Part 1, pages 205-207
65:adding citations to reliable sources
27:Confederate Army officer (1819–1863)
563:. Porter fled and was pursued into
405:Following his participation in the
322:James, the brother of Joseph Porter
897:The Rebellion Record, Fifth Volume
856:The Rebellion Record, Fifth Volume
551:, with 22 wounded and 2 captured.
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350:, and settled five miles east of
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762:never to read a history of it."
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1101:, Volume XXII, Part 2, p. 145).
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651:, seeking to link up with Col.
52:needs additional citations for
1169:With Porter in North Missouri.
415:1st Northeast Missouri Cavalry
259:1st Northeast Missouri Cavalry
32:Joseph Porter (disambiguation)
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1252:People from Memphis, Missouri
1137:With Porter in North Missouri
951:With Porter in North Missouri
938:With Porter in North Missouri
925:The History of Shelby Country
884:The History of Shelby Country
872:With Porter in North Missouri
843:With Porter in North Missouri
830:With Porter in North Missouri
817:With Porter in North Missouri
804:With Porter in North Missouri
791:With Porter in North Missouri
326:Joseph C. Porter was born in
191:Confederate States of America
448:, and the western border of
503:Union Col. (later General)
298:, regarded him simply as a
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1125:, Volume 22, Part 2 p. 49
1046:December 28, 2008, at the
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157:Jessamine County, Kentucky
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444:, the eastern portion of
1184:History of Shelby County
1177:Blue & Gray Magazine
1040:History of Greene County
1160:, U-TX, 1961, rpt 1992.
1113:, Vol 22, Part 1:189-91
545:Monroe County, Missouri
362:. The brothers went to
332:Marion County, Missouri
234:Confederate States Army
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577:Battle of Moore's Mill
336:Philadelphia, Missouri
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289:, a key leader in the
279:Joseph Chrisman Porter
757:Legacy and evaluation
751:Competition, Missouri
714:attack on Springfield
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18:Battle of Vassar Hill
1237:Missouri State Guard
702:Pocahontas, Arkansas
631:Battle of Kirksville
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384:Missouri State Guard
222:Missouri State Guard
173:Batesville, Arkansas
61:improve this article
725:Battle of Hartville
643:Dispersal of forces
537:Henry Clay Caldwell
510:Middle Fabius River
407:Battle of Pea Ridge
340:Presbyterian Church
911:Banasik, Michael,
653:John A. Poindexter
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561:Santa Fe, Missouri
400:lieutenant colonel
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287:American Civil War
271:American Civil War
154:September 12, 1809
76:"Joseph C. Porter"
1166:Mudd, Joseph A.,
1154:Oates, Stephen B.
949:Mudd, Joseph A.,
936:Mudd, Joseph A.,
901:Missouri Democrat
870:Mudd, Joseph A.,
860:Missouri Democrat
841:Mudd, Joseph A.,
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1227:Bushwhackers
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267:Battles/wars
168:(1863-02-18)
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59:Please help
54:verification
51:
1247:1863 deaths
1242:1809 births
583:Odon Guitar
505:John McNeil
499:Vassar Hill
493:bushwhacker
422:John McNeil
366:during the
344:Knox County
308:Confederacy
296:John McNeil
283:Confederate
1201:Categories
927:, page 744
886:, page 744
777:References
738:Batesville
732:shell. In
718:Marshfield
637:Kirksville
614:Kirksville
388:Home Guard
364:California
314:Early life
300:bushwacker
179:Allegiance
117:March 2020
87:newspapers
598:July 31.
396:Lexington
374:Civil War
368:Gold Rush
291:guerrilla
1044:Archived
555:Santa Fe
255:Commands
209:Service/
203:Missouri
963:141-143
723:At the
712:in his
541:Florida
531:Florida
471:Memphis
249:Colonel
101:scholar
593:Newark
442:Marion
392:Athens
352:Newark
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734:Oates
727:, in
691:Death
450:Lewis
360:major
108:JSTOR
94:books
464:Iowa
446:Knox
240:Rank
163:Died
151:Born
80:news
683:).
635:At
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63:by
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