Private John J. Williams |
Note: Adapted from a post on this date in 2019.
No one wants to be the last
person killed in a war. Particularly a
war that has essentially been over for more than a month. A war in which 144,000 Union soldiers were killed in combat (total deaths over 300,000) as
were 72,500 Confederates (total dead
260,000.)But that’s what happened to Private
John J. Williams of the 34th Indiana
Volunteer Infantry on May 13, 1865.
The Battle of Palmito Ranch near Brownsville,
Texas was a needles waste of life that resulted in a fruitless Confederate victory. Despite the surrender of Robert E. Lee on April 9, the Confederate Trans-Mississippi District, which included Texas, had refused to
surrender. Skirmishing continued near
the Mexican border as Federal troops
tried to disrupt continued contraband trade.
At one point the Union held all of the Texas ports to
prevent oceanic trade and had strong garrisons along the Rio Grande in Eastern
Texas. But troops and naval units had
been transferred to the Eastern theater to wrap up the war there leaving
coastal defenses only on Matagorda
Peninsula and on the northern tip of Brazos
Island at Brazos Santiago Depot
near Confederate Fort Brown outside
Brownsville.
After word reached the area of
the fall of the Confederate government, a local gentlemen’s agreement was reached to suspend offensive operations
to avoid unnecessary loss of life.
But for unknown reasons Union
Col. Theodore H. Barrett decided to
move against Ft. Brown. Barrett orderd Lt. Col David Branson to move out the on the evening of May 11. Branson commanded 250 men of the 62nd U.S. Colored Troops (U.S.C.T.) Infantry and 50 men of the 2nd Texas Volunteer Cavalry,
a unit made up of Texas Unionists who were fighting that day dismounted.
The operation went awry from the
beginning. Foul weather prevented a
planned crossing to the mainland at Point
Isobel. After hours of delay Branson
finally got his troops ashore at Boca
Chica. Around 2 A.M. May 12 his
troops surrounded a Confederate camp on the White Ranch but found it empty.
Branson decided to let his exhausted men sleep but ordered them to
conceal themselves in brush and hollows on the ranch to avoid detection from
Rebel scouts. But Mexicans, whose income was tied heavily to the contraband trade,
spied the Federal movements and alerted Ft. Brown. Made aware that he had been
spotted, Branson the moved out at 8:30 to attack a Rebel camp and supply depot
at Palmito Ranch. Along the way they
skirmished with out numbered Confederate cavalry before dispersing them and
occupying the camp after a short fight.
Branson decided to rest and feed
his men while beginning to destroy supplies.
Around 3 A.M. the following morning the full force of Capt. W. N. Robinson's 190 man company
of the Lt.
Col. George H. Gidding’s Texas
Cavalry Battalion re-appeared.
Alarmed, Branson ordered a fall back under pressure to White’s Ranch and
sent word to Col. Barrett for reinforcements.
Barrett arrived early on the 13th
with 200 men from the 34th Indiana and assumed command. He ordered his combined force of about 500
men to advance again on Palmito Ranch.
After a “sharp engagement” with the Cavalry in the thickets along the
Rio Grande, Robinson’s Rebel troops again fell back until they were reinforced
by 300 hundred men from Ft. Brown under the command of Col. John
Salmon (Rip) Ford including men of his
own Second Texas Cavalry,
Col. Santos Benavides' Texas Cavalry Regiment, additional companies from Giddings's
battalion, and a six-gun battery of field artillery under the command of Capt. O. G. Jones.
With a significant cavalry force
and artillery, Ford caught the exposed union infantry in the open at Palmito
Ranch. The Confederates opened with an
artillery barrage at 4 PM. Union forces
were flanked by Robinson attacking from the left by the river and by two other
companies of Gidding’s Battalion on the right. Then the rest of Ford’s cavalry charged the
center, breaking the Union line and sending them into a route.
Panicked,
Barrett ordered 46 Indiana men to form a screen to cover his “retreat” they were quickly overwhelmed and killed or captures. It looked like the Cavalry might cut through
the main force until a second line of 140 men of the 62nd Colored running from the Rio Grande to three-quarters
of a mile inland did the slow the Confederate attack enough to allow the Union
forces to get away to the coast where they were reinforced from Brazos Santiago
and put under the protection from guns on Navy costal patrol boats.
Ford told his troops, “Boys, we
have done finely. We will let well enough alone, and retire.” The final running fight lasted a little over four
hours.
The Federals forces lost 111 men
and four officers captured, 4 killed including the unfortunate Pvt. Williams,
and 30 wounded. The Confederates
reported a less than a dozen wounded and three captured.
On May 26 Rebel forces in Texas
surrendered and Col. Barrett soon after took command of Ft. Brown. Major
General Kirby Smith, commander of the Trans-Mississippi District became the
last major commander to formally surrender on June 2.
Smith, Ford, and most of the
other senior commanders in that district and in Texas soon crossed into Mexico
on a promise of land grants from Emperor
Maximilian and
to assist French troops should the
massive Army under General Philip
Sheridan that was posted to the border attempt to intervene directly in the
brewing Mexican civil war.
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