
James L. Ashcraft
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Great-great grandson, Tom Ezell
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James L. Ashcraft was born in 1828 in Chester County, South Carolina, and moved with
his family to establish new farms in Arkansas around 1855, settling near present-day Rison
in Cleveland County.
James enlisted in Captain Halliday's Company D of the 26th Arkansas Infantry at
Centerville, in Bradley County on May 12, 1862 and was inducted with the company into
Confederate service at Pine Bluff. Shortly thereafter, the company was renamed, becoming
Company I of C.D. Morgan's Battalion, 26th Arkansas Infantry. Records are sketchy, since
the company was not issued and did not maintain a record book because of a shortage of
paper and stationery in the rebel army. The records reconstructed by the unit's officers
indicate that the 26th Arkansas trained at Camp Pike (present-day Camp Robinson) near
Little Rock, and was then sent to join the garrison of Fort Hindman, at Arkansas Post. The
unit moved to Bayou Miles in July, 1862, thence to Camp Crystal Hill the following month,
and in April, 1863 moved to Camp Anderson in present-day Lincoln County, where James died
in camp from disease on October 31, 1863.
James' wife, the former Sarah Jane Byrd, made the journey from the family's farm near
Rison to recover his body; although she was still pregnant with the couple's last child.
Upon arrival at Camp Anderson Sarah found that James had already been buried near the
camp, and she sadly returned home to raise their four children alone. Sarah survived until
August, 1907, and is buried at Prosperity Cemetery, near Pansy in Cleveland County, where
a memorial marker had been placed for James.
Three of James' cousins also served in the 26th Arkansas Infantry. 2nd Lieutenant William
L. and Sergeant Thomas K. Ashcraft served in Company K and Private Jonathan A. Ashcraft
served with James in Company D. The 26th Arkansas continued to serve in southern Arkansas
throughout the war, and participated in the Red River Campaign in the spring of 1864 as a
component of Colonel Lucien Gause's brigade in General Thomas J. Churchill's Arkansas
Division at the Battle of Jenkins' Ferry on April 30, 1864.
Jonathan was taken prisoner at Long Tree in Ashley County on March 29, 1864. Initially
confined at Little Rock, he was transferred to a federal prison camp at Rock Island,
Illinois, and was then forwarded to New Orleans. He was paroled at Red River Landing,
Louisiana at the end of the war.
All three cousins survived the War and returned home to Cleveland County.
James' older brother William T. Ashcraft was not as lucky, however, but was killed at the
Battle of Pine Bluff on October 25, 1863.
Research done by Tom Ezell and his great-uncle Bill Ashcraft. Tom, the great-great
grandson of James L. Ashcraft, is a former Army officer and currently a waste programs
manager for the Arkansas Dept. of Pollution Control & Ecology. His e-mail address is tomezell@aristotle.net.
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