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Civil War Round Table of Arkansas

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Pea Ridge National Military Park

Civil War Site

Pea Ridge, Benton County, Arkansas

 
 

Telegraph Road

In 1858, this road became part of the Butterfield Overland Mail route to California.  In 1860, a telegraph wire was strung along it.

Cherokee Trail of Tears - Land Route

This road saw thousands of Cherokees and other American Indians forcibly relocated from their homes in Georgia and the Carolinas to Indian Territory in present day Oklahoma.

Curtis Head Quarters - Stop 1 on auto tour.

In early March 1862, these now quiet field bustled with the clamor and constant motion of an army headquarters in time of battle. Soldiers drilled, cleaned guns, and checked ammunition. Scouts and couriers rode in to report. Officers convened for councils of war. Mules brayed and teamsters swore. Teams pulling wagons and artillery rattled by.

Here across the road from Samuel Pratt's store, decisions were made that would determine the fate of two armies- and the state of Missouri. A temporary city of soldiers covered the field before you and the surrounding area. Here you would have seen the nerve center of the Union army during the two-day fight for Pea Ridge.

The Enemy is Behind Us!

It was still below freezing at 10:30 a.m. March 7, 1862, when an alarmed messenger thundered into Union headquarters. The news he carried was startling: Confederates were moving down the Telegraph Road a mile north of Elkhorn Tavern. All of General Curtis's careful troop positioning for a battle at Little Sugar Creek-to the south- was now useless.

As gunfire from the far side of Elkhorn Mountain and the fields north of Leetown grew louder, Curtis had to move his remaining troops to prepare for the Confederate attack. Blue-coated regiments reversed direction and rushed past their vulnerable supply wagons to confront the enemy. 

A Village Full of Wounded Men

Entering a little clearing, we discovered the yellow hospital flags fluttering from the gables of every house in the hamlet of Leetown, and the surgeons busy with sad, yet humane task that was theirs to perform.

Lyman G. Bennett, 36th Illinois Infantry Regiment

The quarter-mile-long trail you see ahead leads to the site of Leetown, Arkansas. Today the woods and meadows of Pea Ridge battlefield appear to be an uninhabited wilderness. During the Civil War, this whole area was a patchwork quilt of working farms and woodlots. Leetown was made up of a dozen or so log-and-frame homes and buildings.

As intense fighting raged nearby in Oberson's cornfield and Morgan's Woods, stretcher bearers carried the wounded of both armies to Leetown, the closest place offering shelter from the winter weather. All the space in the houses were taken over by injured and dying soldiers. Yellow flags guided the walking wounded to medical attention.

1862 Harper's Weekly magazine illustration. There is no Civil War-era drawing of Leetown known to exist. There are no structures remaining today.

 

Pea Ridge Virtual Tour 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7