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Jacksonville
The Remarkable Reed's Bridge
(from
Reed’s Bridge Battlefield Preservation Society)
The war in Arkansas
to 1863
Arkansas seceded from the Union
on May 6, 1861 and over the next year mustered thousands of soldiers
into the Confederate ranks. Secession was favored by a majority of
residents in Arkansas
but there were also strong pockets of Union sympathizers in the state’s
mountainous regions. Only small skirmishes took place in the state until
early 1862. In March, Union forces under the command of Major General
Samuel Curtis engaged the
army of Confederate Major General Earl
Van Dorn at Pea Ridge in northwest
Arkansas. After two days of fighting,
Van Dorn’s army was defeated and most of his army was then
transferred east across the Mississippi River.
After capturing Memphis in
June, Union troops descended the Mississippi River and
occupied
Helena.
Over the next six months, control of Northwest Arkansas continued to be
the main focus of Union
and Confederate forces. In December, a Confederate army of 11,000 men
under Major General Thomas
Hindman
attacked Union forces commanded by Brigadier Generals James Blunt and
Francis Herron
at Prairie Grove. Fighting all day on December 7th, Hindman
was initially successful but strong Union counterattacks drove him from
the field. In January of 1863, a strong Confederate position at Arkansas
Post on the Arkansas River was forced
to surrender to a much larger Union army.
Following
the surrender of Arkansas Post, hostilities in the state were relatively
quiet as Union forces in the west planned the capture of
Vicksburg,
Mississippi. The
Vicksburg campaign in the summer of 1863 resulted
in a siege of the surrounded Confederate army in the city in
June. Seeking to help raise the siege, a Confederate
army under Major Generals Sterling Price and
Theophilus Holmes
marched to attack
Helena. Price and
Holmes planned their assault to begin on the morning of July 4th.
Strongly fortified, the Union troops at
Helena
repulsed the Confederate charges and inflicted over 1,700 casualties.
The same day, the Confederate army of some 30,000 soldiers surrendered
at Vicksburg.
With the capture of this Confederate army, the Union high command then
turned its attention to invading central Arkansas
and capturing the capital of
Little Rock.
The Little Rock
Campaign of 1863
In July of 1863, the Union Army under General
Ulysses S.
Grant captured the Confederate
stronghold of Vicksburg,
Mississippi. With the surrender of
Vicksburg, Union forces were then poised to invade the
interior of Arkansas and capture its
capital city, Little Rock.
By the end of the month, Maj. Gen.
Frederick Steele
had arrived at Helena
to take command of all Federal forces in
Arkansas.
Steele and his officers then planned a campaign to
move into the interior of the state and strike at
Little Rock. In
Little Rock, responsibility for the defense of
the city had passed to Maj. Gen. Sterling Price. Price commanded a small
army of eight thousand men present for duty. Price pronounced his troops
to be "in excellent condition, full of enthusiasm and eager to meet the
enemy," but he confessed in a letter to Lt.
General Kirby
Smith
that he "did not believe it would be possible for us to hold it [Little
Rock] with the forces then under my command."
Despite his misgivings, Price
set about devising a plan for the capital's defense. He ordered the
cavalry of Brig. Gen. John
Marmaduke and
Brig. Gen. Lucius
M.
Walker to observe
and harass enemy movements and began the construction of a defensive
position composed of rifle pits and redoubts on the north side of the
Arkansas River about two-and-a-half miles
downstream from the city. This position faced eastward and was bounded
by a cypress swamp on the left and the river on the right. Price
believed that his only chance of successfully defending
Little Rock lay in the possibility that the Union
commander would launch a straight frontal assault against this fortified
position.
On August 10th and 11th, Major General
Steele sent six thousand infantry, backed by
sixteen pieces of artillery, west from
Helena toward Clarendon
on the White River. There he would
rendezvous with a like number of cavalry moving south from
Missouri under Brig.
Gen. John
Davidson. Davidson
reached Clarendon on August 8th. On August
23rd, Price ordered Marmaduke to join forces
with Walker
at Brownsville
along the major overland approach to
Little Rock. Since
Walker
was the senior officer, he was Marmaduke's superior, however, the two
officers had been feuding since an earlier engagement at
Helena.
At sunrise
on August 25th, advance elements of Davidson's
cavalry collided with Marmaduke's thirteen hundred horsemen near
Brownsville. Outnumbered four to one in men and
eight to one in artillery, Marmaduke could not hope to defeat the
Federals, but the Missourian gave ground grudgingly before retiring from
the field. He formed a new battle line six miles west of the town, and
there he temporarily halted the Union advance. On August 26th,
Price ordered Walker
and Marmaduke to withdraw to Bayou Meto, a sluggish stream running east
of the capital, and to "hold it as long as possible." Their combined
forces took up positions at Reed's Bridge on Bayou Meto, approximately
twelve miles northeast of Little Rock
(near present-day Jacksonville).
The battle of REED’S Bridge
After fighting a running battle at
Brownsville on August 25th, a force of the First
Iowa Cavalry and Third Missouri Cavalry (U.S.) and sections of
Lovejoy’s and Clarkson’s batteries drove up the
Little Rock Road
to feel out the Rebel positions at Bayou Meto. “The enemy were found
posted in force at a position about 9 miles beyond
Brownsville, estimated by Colonel
Glover, commanding, at 6,000 strong,”
Brig. Gen. John
Wynn Davidson
reported. Glover’s advance
skirmishers made first contact, locating Rebel pickets about six miles
from Brownsville
and driving them back some two miles to entrenched positions about two
miles east of Bayou Meto. “After a considerable artillery duel, I
ordered Lovejoy to advance his section, in doing of which he had one
cannoneer pierced through with solid shot and killed instantly, so well
did the enemy have the range of the road,” Col. J.M. Glover reported. A
swift reconnaissance by Glover
led him to conclude that the Confederate position was more than he
wanted to tackle with the force at hand, and the Yankees fell back to
Brownsville. In addition to the Yankee
artilleryman, the engagement claimed the lives of three Confederates.
On August 27th, Davidson
returned in force to confront the Confederate horsemen at Bayou Meto.
John Edwards of
Brig. Gen. Jo
Shelby’s command succinctly described the
bayou and its importance: “The Bayou Metre [sic] was a low, sluggish
stream, with a miry bed, abrupt banks, and its sides fringed with a
heavy growth of timber. It was difficult to cross, and presented the
only water at which a command could conveniently camp after leaving
Bayou Two Prairie.” It was here that Brig.
Gen. Lucius
M.
Walker’s horsemen would make a
stand and here that Davidson’s thirsty troops
would face their first serious combat of the campaign.
Glover’s troops again had the advance,
and with a battalion of the Tenth Illinois Cavalry leading as
skirmishers they began to move forward on the road to the Bayou Meto
bridge. They first encountered Marmaduke’s horsemen some five miles east
of the bridge, and after “a brisk fire” the Rebels fell back about two
miles. The Tenth Illinois again hit the Confederate lines at this new
position, losing a lieutenant to Southern marksmen.
Davidson then ordered Glover’s
entire brigade into action.
Glover placed his artillery in the
center, on the road. Two battalions of the Third Missouri Cavalry (U.S.)
climbed from their horses to the right of the road to fight as infantry;
six squadrons of the Tenth Illinois covered their right flank. A third
battalion of the Third Missouri, joined by foot soldiers of the
Thirty-second Iowa infantry, comprised
Glover’s left. “In this order, with a heavy line of
skirmishers in front, the brigade moved forward,” the Union commander
reported.
Facing the approaching Yankee cavalry, Brig. Gen.
John S.
Marmaduke placed
Shelby’s Iron Brigade under
B.
Frank Gordon
as his forward line of troops at the McCraw House on the
Military Road north of Bayou Meto.
Marmaduke’s Brigade, under Col. William
L. Jeffers, was formed below
the bridge, along with Col.
Archibald Dobbin’s
Arkansas
regiment. The Confederates would contest the advancing Unionists above
the bridge, but braced for a heated defense from behind the natural
rampart of Bayou Meto.
The
Rebels’ first line of defense consisted of some 125 dismounted troopers
of
Shelby’s
Brigade under
Gordon, detailed to
Marmaduke that morning to serve as skirmishers and accompanied by the
“little teaser” prairie guns of
Bell’s
battery. These troops watched the approaching Yankees as “they pushed
forward their columns impetuously until, coming upon the main body of
our skirmishers, a roar of musketry sent death crippling through their
ranks, completely breaking up their lines for the time in dismay and
confusion.”

THE
HISTORIC REED’S BRIDGE BATTLEFIELD
(from
Reed’s Bridge Battlefield Preservation Society)
THE
MILITARY ROAD
AND THE CROSSING OF THE BAYOU METO
The area around the Bayou Meto was occupied by Native Americans until
the early 19th century when the
Arkansas Territory
was formed in 1819. The Southwest Trail, a Native American path, crossed
into the northeast section of the Arkansas Territory at the Current
River and then extended southwest through what is now Pulaski County to
the site of Little Rock. The Southwest Trail crossed the Bayou Meto just
southwest of the future site of
Jacksonville. As
Arkansas
was settled after 1819, this crossing became the center for a network of
roads.
During the winter of 1820-1821, the Gray
family from Tennessee
settled in the area and began clearing the land for cultivation. Led by
Jacob Gray
Sr., the family
consisted of four daughters and three sons. One son,
Samson Gray,
became prominent in the community and he built a log building to serve
as his residence near the Southwest Trail. Known as the Samson Gray
House, this building stood until the mid-20th century. When
Pulaski County
was subdivided into townships this area was named
Gray Township
in recognition of the Gray
family.
In 1824, the United States Congress approved a survey for a road
connecting Memphis,
Tennessee
with Little Rock.
The road was designed
to be part of the military road system assisting the federal government
in removing Native Americans living east of the Mississippi River to
lands west of Fort Smith.
The following year a commission was
appointed to survey the route and formulate plans for hiring contractors
to build the roadbed and bridges. The roadbed was designed to extend
northeast from Little Rock,
cross the Bayou Meto and continue northeast passing in front of the log
dwelling of Samson
Gray.
Samson Gray
formed a partnership with two other nearby residents and submitted a bid
for the construction of the
Bayou
Meto Bridge
of 130’ in length for a cost of $710. This partnership also offered bids
for the construction of several sections of the roadbed as well.
Gray’s
partnership received the contract to build the bridge and sections of
the road which became known as the “Military
Road.” In
November of 1827,
Lt. Charles
Thomas,
assistant quartermaster and supervisor for building the road, reported
that “Gray
and company have opened twelve miles of the road and are now at work on
the
Bayou Meto
Bridge.”
The bridge appears to have been completed by August of 1828 when it was
reported that the first mail from
Memphis
was transported along the completed
Military Road.
The
Military Road attracted hundreds of settlers
to the state in the late 1820s and early 1830s and
Samson Gray
operated a prosperous stagecoach stop and public house at his residence
facing the road.
John
H. Reed
and Reed’s Bridge
Reed’s Bridge
received its name from its association with
John
H. Reed
and his wife
Fredericka
Reed. Following the rebuilding of
the bridge in 1838, John
H. Reed purchased the
charter from Thomas
W. Gray
and began its operation. Reed came to
Pulaski County
from St. Louis
in 1833 and served as a clerk to the Army during the Native American
removal. While living in Little Rock,
Reed
met Fredericka
Held, a native of
Germany, and they were married on
October 16, 1834. After his tenure as an Army clerk ended,
Reed entered the newspaper business and became
co-editor of the
Little Rock Times.
Reed retired from the newspaper business in 1838 and he then
purchased the charter to operate the
Bayou Meto
Bridge.
Reed
operated the bridge along with a relative,
Milton
J. Reed,
during the early 1840s. John
H. Reed and his family
resided in the Samson
Gray house at this time just to the
north of the bridge.
John
H. Reed
died on December 15, 1845 and was survived by his wife Fredericka and
their four children. Milton Reed sold his interest in the bridge and
several tracts of land to Fredericka Reed in February of 1847 and the
deed included “certain structures, buildings, and bridge known as Reed’s
Bridge, across the Bayou Meto, about twelve miles from Little Rock and
on the road hence to Memphis, Tennessee.”
After 1847 the toll
bridge across the Bayou Meto was owned and operated by
Fredericka Reed.
In August of 1858, an attorney employed by
Mrs. Reed
negotiated an extension of her charter by another ten years. He later
wrote to her that “I succeed after much trouble in obtaining a charter
for ten years, but the court made a reduction in the tolls though it is
still a valuable privilege and will be worth at least $1,000 per annum
to you.” In 1860, she was listed in the
US
census as owning $25,000 worth of real estate and $800 in personal
property.
Fredericka
Reed
was the operator of the bridge when it was the scene of fighting on
August 26th and 27th
of 1863. During the battle, Confederate engineers tarred the bridge and
set it on fire to keep the crossing out of the hands of the approaching
Union forces. After the destruction of the bridge,
Mrs. Reed
and her daughter Jane may have
operated a ferry at this site before the bridge was rebuilt.
In the years following the Civil War,
Fredericka
Reed began to sell her property in
the Gray
Township. In 1867,
James
H. Fleming
and Thomas
Holland renewed the charter for Reed’s Bridge
which continued to be a toll bridge although it was free and open to the
citizens of the Gray, Bayou
Meto and other neighboring townships.
Mrs.
Reed moved into
Little Rock to live with her daughter
Jane and her family and died on November 27, 1891.
The Bayou
Meto Bridge
and the Trail of Tears
The passage of the Indian Removal Act of 1830 resulted in the removal of
the majority of Native Americans residing east of the
Mississippi River. Thousands of Choctaw, Chickasaw, Creek,
Seminole, and Cherokee passed through Arkansas
on their way to the Indian Territory in present day
Oklahoma. The
Military Road
was one of the primary routes used by the tribes as they moved west. The
first of these groups was a party of Choctaw who crossed the
Bayou
Meto Bridge
in December of 1831 on there way to
Little Rock. The task of provisioning the tribes
resulted in contracts between the Army and farmers and merchants along
the route. Samson
Gray
was active in these business arrangements and provided produce and
livestock for use by the Army and the transport of the tribes.
Gray
also was paid to maintain and repair the bridge during its heavy use by
the emigrating tribes.
Samson
Gray
died in November of 1834 and over the next several years the bridge
gradually deteriorated. In July of 1838, a petition signed by 100 county
residents stated that the
Bayou Meto
Bridge was in a “very decayed and
dilapidated condition, so as to be almost impassable…”
Thomas
W. Gray, a
brother of Samson
Gray, was granted a charter to
rebuild the bridge and operate it as a toll bridge. Tolls were fixed by
the court such as fifty cents for the passage of a wagon pulled by two
horses, three cents for each pedestrian user, and two cents for each
head of pig or sheep. Following the rebuilding of the bridge,
Gray
transferred the charter of the toll bridge to
John H.
Reed on October 30, 1838 for $1,000.
Reed
was the operator of the bridge when the
John
Bell detachment of the Cherokee
crossed the Bayou Meto in December of 1838. During the early 19th
century, the Cherokee Nation resisted emigration west but the tribe was
finally forced to leave their homeland in 1838. Some 17,000 Cherokee
were moved into emigration depots in Tennessee
and Alabama
during the summer and divided into various detachments for the journey
west. One of these detachments was led by
John
Bell and his detachment consisted
of Cherokee who had supported the signing of the treaty selling their
land to the federal government. Known as “Treaty” Cherokee, members of
the John
Bell
detachment traveled with a military escort to protect them from
reprisals by “anti-treaty” Cherokee.
The
John
Bell
detachment consisting of some 660 Cherokee left their emigration depot
in
Tennessee on
October 11th.
Traveling across the southern section of the state, the detachment
reached
Memphis on
November 22nd.
After crossing the Mississippi River the detachment marched west on the
Military Road
and entered
Pulaski County
on December 12th.
The
John Bell
detachment crossed the
Bayou
Meto Bridge
on either December 13th
or 14th
and it is possible that they camped in the general vicinity of the
bridge as they made their crossing. The
John Bell
detachment was the last large party of Native Americans who used the
Bayou
Meto Bridge
during the Trail of Tears.
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