| Battle of Paris | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part ofAmerican Civil War | |||||||
The Battle of Paris byFrederick Ruple c.1925 | |||||||
| |||||||
| Belligerents | |||||||
| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
| Companies A, B, C, & D of the5th Iowa Cavalry Regiment Battery I of the1st Missouri Light Artillery Regiment | King's 1st Kentucky Battalion Stack's Company of Tennessee Cavalry McCutchan's Company of Tennessee Cavalry | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 4 Companies ofCavalry (roughly 250 men) 1Artillery Battery | 450-500 (Union estimates) | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
| |||||||
![]() | |||||||
TheBattle of Paris, also known as theExpedition to Paris, was a battle fought on March 11, 1862, in theWestern Theater of the American Civil War. The battle took place near modern-dayParis, Tennessee located inHenry County.
The battle although brief, was a bloody engagement for the defending Confederate elements of Colonel Henry Clay King's 1st Kentucky Cavalry Battalion.
With theUnion Army's victories at bothBattle of Fort Donelson and theBattle of Fort Henry in early February 1862, Union troops began to advance deeper into northwestern Tennessee. On March 11, 1862, Major GeneralUlysses S. Grant dispatched a small cavalry battalion in the direction ofParis, Tennessee under the command of Captain John Thorn Croft of Company B of the5th Iowa Cavalry Regiment to performreconnaissance.[1] Company B was primarily made up of volunteers fromNebraska Territory and had previously been known as "Patrick's 1st Battalion of Nebraska Cavalry" under Captain Matthewson T. Patrick before being combined with several Iowa, Minnesota, and Nebraska units and dubbed the "5th Iowa".[2][3] Croft's detachment consisted of the 1st Battalion (companies A, B, C, and D) of the 5th Iowa Cavalry and Battery I (Company I) or "Buel's Independent Battery" of the1st Missouri Light Artillery Regiment under the command of First Lieutenant Charles H. Thurber.[4][5] Previous to Croft, the 1st Battalion of the 5th Iowa was commanded by Major William Kelsay, who died oftyphoid fever on February 28, 1862, and was buried with military honors atFort Heiman.[6]
Confederate forces that had been encamped in and around Paris were under the command of ColonelHenry Clay King (1831–1903) of the 1st Kentucky Cavalry Battalion, also called "King's" Kentucky Cavalry Battalion. Other units under King's command were Captain Stack's company of Tennessee Cavalry (unattached) and Captain McCutchan's company of Tennessee Cavalry (unattached).
Confederate forces were massed in and around the city of Paris because Paris was vital to the Confederate communication lines and road networks to other nearby communities such asDresden andComo. Paris was also a vital transportation and communication link between Confederate Forts Henry and Donelson and the command center located inColumbus, Kentucky.[7] According toTennessee Civil War Trials when Fort Henry and Fort Donelson fell in quick succession "Federal command sent their main force down the rivers towards Shiloh and Nashville but left a smaller contingent in Paris to save Unionist citizens in the area fromConfederate Conscription".[7]
On the morning of March 11, 1862 around 11:00am while the reconnaissance force of the 5th Iowa advanced towards Paris two mounted Confederatepickets were spotted by the battalion several miles near the outskirts of Paris. Captain Bullis of the 1st Missouri Light Artillery arrived with his battery and Captain Croft moved forward without waiting for the arrival of the other two battalions of the 5th Iowa.[6] It was not until 5:00pm that the 1st Battalion under Croft reached Paris and proceeded with an attack on the Confederate pickets.[6]
Captain Croft instructed Lieutenant Frederick A. Williams of Company A fromWhitestown, Indiana, and a detail of 20 men to continue on to Paris and secure the road for the rest of the battalion.[8] Within 300 yards of the town, Lieutenant Williams wasambushed by an outlying picket which surrounded him and he was forced to surrender.[5] Thurber's battery fired upon Confederate positions with bothround shot andcanister shot causing fires to break out in the Confederate encampment inside Paris according to Thurber's report.[5] According to the bookThe Roster and Record of Iowa Soldiers in the War of the Rebellion the battle is described as the following:
"After a few rounds had been fired, Captain Lower, with Companies A and B, made a charge upon the enemy's line but encountered fallen timber, behind which the enemy was posted, and was compelled to fall back under a severe fire and rejoin the main force. The guns were then all placed in position, and, after a heavy and rapid fire had for some time been directed against the enemy's position, his line was seen to waiver and give way".[6]
Croft's detachment soon learned that King's 1st Kentucky Cavalry Battalion were soon to be reinforced with infantry and was hence compelled to withdrawal from Paris back to Fort Heiman. The next day Croft met with Lieutenant Colonel Patrick, who had crossed the river the day before with the 2nd and 3rd Battalions, about three miles from Fort Heiman.[9] Although much of the Confederate camp was decimated the skirmish is considered a Confederate victory.
Although a short skirmish there is an estimated loss of around 38 soldiers total who were killed or wounded and captured. The Historical Marker Databased for Paris in henry County, Tennessee states that there were 20 Confederates and 60 to 80 Federals (Union) soldiers killed or wounded before the Federals withdrew.[10] Union losses however, were only reported as minor in theafter action report with 4 killed, 5 wounded, and 1 captured.[11]Ulysses S. Grant's official report likewise states "4 men killed and 5 men wounded. We have taken 8 prisoners".[12]
Acommemorative plaque marking the site of the battle exists in Paris, Tennessee today. The marker itself was erected by theTennessee Historical Commission (Marker Number 4A 29).[10]