. The civil war on the border; . t. M. M. Haydens Third Iowa Battery Total casualties, Fourth DivisionUnassigned : Third Iowa Cavalry, Col. CyrusBussey Major W. D. Bowens Battalion,Missouri Cavalry Twenty-fourth Missouri, Major EliWeston Total casualties, Killed. o o B W 43 7 209 45 Wound-ed. O W 2622 32 5 112 55 17 2 14 271 Missing. m O d s II vufcjOtut) < 322642II 144 66 176 344 1 1 I 17 4 135 3 160 14 3 44 6 46 113 3 2 12 17 4 34 5 171 1 3 218 2 11 6 64 1 9 93 9 4 32 13 58 2 2 15 3 22 7 90 27 473 8 77 682 24 1 16 9 50 1 1 2 2 6 3 1 15 7 26 28 3 33 18 82 278 THE CIVIL WAR ON


. The civil war on the border; . t. M. M. Haydens Third Iowa Battery Total casualties, Fourth DivisionUnassigned : Third Iowa Cavalry, Col. CyrusBussey Major W. D. Bowens Battalion,Missouri Cavalry Twenty-fourth Missouri, Major EliWeston Total casualties, Killed. o o B W 43 7 209 45 Wound-ed. O W 2622 32 5 112 55 17 2 14 271 Missing. m O d s II vufcjOtut) < 322642II 144 66 176 344 1 1 I 17 4 135 3 160 14 3 44 6 46 113 3 2 12 17 4 34 5 171 1 3 218 2 11 6 64 1 9 93 9 4 32 13 58 2 2 15 3 22 7 90 27 473 8 77 682 24 1 16 9 50 1 1 2 2 6 3 1 15 7 26 28 3 33 18 82 278 THE CIVIL WAR ON THE BORDER, Killed. Wound-ed. Missing. u B a a bfl Command. t/! u S s aH bfl V n3 M £ 4-1 < O o O 2 Recapitulation : First Division, Col. P. J. Osterhaus ii 4 QO 2 49 156 Second Division, Gen. A. n 21 3 QO I 42 160 Third Division, Col. Jeff. C. Davis. 3 45 14 271 — 11 344 Fourth Division, Col. E. A. Carr .. 7 go 27 473 8 77 682 28 3 33 — 18 82 13 195 5i 957 11 197 1,424. p (/^^2^ VP^f^*^ ^^y)V s5Llb^ Qtjw^T1JI |L, ^Rkf^&^r§v CHAPTER XX. SKIRMISHES AT NEOSHO. In sending the army under General Curtis againstGeneral Price at Springfield, General Halleck expectedGeneral Hunter, commanding Department of Kansas, toco-operate with him by throwing forward the troops thathad been concentrated at Fort Scott. When the severaldivisions of the Army of the Southwest under GeneralCurtis formed a junction at Lebanon, fifty-six miles north-east of Springfield, on the 6th of February, there wereprobably not less than five thousand troops in and aroundFort Scott that could have moved south down the line ofMissouri and Kansas towards Northwestern Arkansas, tothreaten Prices rear and flank, or that could have beenmoved in the direction of Springfield to form a junctionwith General Curtis, and thus form the right wing of thecombined Federal forces to operate against the Confeder-ate army. Fort Scott is one hundred miles northwest ofSpringfield, and was in no danger of


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