The Story of Cole Younger (Civil War Memoir). Thomas Coleman Younger

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The Story of Cole Younger (Civil War Memoir) - Thomas Coleman Younger


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and taken prisoner, while they had eighteen killed and twenty-nine wounded. We did not stop till we got to the timber, but there was really no pursuit. The audacity of the thing had given the troops a taste of something new.

      They kept Hoy at Leavenworth for several months and then hanged him. This was the inevitable end of a “guerrilla” when taken prisoner.

      Chapter V

       Vengeance Indeed

       Table of Contents

      Among the Jackson county folks who insisted on their right to shelter their friends was an old man named Blythe.

      Col. Peabody at Independence had sent out a scouting party to find me or any one else of the company they could “beat up.” Blythe was not at home when they came but his son, aged twelve, was. They took him to the barn and tried to find out where we were, but the little fellow baffled them until he thought he saw a chance to break through the guard, and started for the house.

      He reached it safely, seized a pistol, and made for the woods followed by a hail of bullets. They dropped him in his tracks, but, game to the last, he rolled over as he fell, shot one of his pursuers dead, mortally wounded a second, and badly hurt a third.

      They put seventeen bullets in him before he could shoot a fourth time.

      A negro servant who had witnessed the seizure of his young master, had fled for the timber, and came upon a party of a dozen of us, including Quantrell and myself. As he quickly told us the story, we made our plans, and ambushed at the “Blue Cut,” a deep pass on the road the soldiers must take back to Independence. The banks are about thirty feet high, and the cut about fifty yards wide.

      Not a shot was to be fired until the entire command was in the cut.

      Thirty-eight had started to “round up” Cole Younger that morning; seventeen of them lay dead in the cut that night and the rest of them had a lively chase into Independence.

      To this day old residents know the Blue Cut as “the slaughter-pen.”

      Early in May, 1862, Quantrell's men were disbanded for a month. Horses were needed, and ammunition. There were plenty of horses in Missouri, but the ammunition presented more of a problem.

      Capt. Quantrell, George Todd and myself, attired as Union officers, went to Hamilton, a small town on the Hannibal and St. Joseph Railroad, undetected by the company of the Seventh United States Cavalry in camp there, although we put up at the principal hotel. Todd passed as a major in the Sixth Missouri Cavalry, Quantrell a major in the Ninth, and I a captain in an Illinois regiment. At Hannibal there was a regiment of Federal soldiers. The commander talked very freely with us about Quantrell, Todd, Haller, Younger, Blunt, Pool and other guerrillas of whom he had heard.

      While in Hannibal we bought 50,000 revolver caps and such other ammunition as we needed. From there we went to St. Joseph, which was under command of Col. Harrison B. Branch.

      “Too many majors traveling together are like too many roses in a bouquet,” suggested Todd. “The other flowers have no show.”

      He reduced himself to captain and I to lieutenant.

      Our disguise was undiscovered. Col. Branch entertained us at his headquarters most hospitably.

      “I hope you may kill a guerrilla with every bullet I have sold you,” said one merchant to me. “I think if ever there was a set of devils let loose, it is Quantrell, Todd, Cole Younger and Dave Pool.”

      From St. Joseph we went to Kansas City in a hack, sending Todd into Jackson county with the ammunition. When within three miles of Kansas City the hack was halted by a picket on outpost duty, and while the driver argued with the guard, Quantrell and I slipped out on the other side of the hack and made our way to William Bledsoe's farm, where we were in friendly hands.

      Chapter VI

       In the Enemy's Lines

       Table of Contents

      Col. Buell, whose garrison of 600 held Independence, had ordered that every male citizen of Jackson county between 18 and 45 years of age should fight against the South.

      Col. Upton Hays, who was in Jackson county in July and August, 1862, recruiting a regiment for the Confederate army, decided that it was the time to strike a decisive blow for the dislodging of Buell. In reconnoitering the vicinity he took with him Dick Yager, Boone Muir and myself, all of whom had seen service with Capt. Quantrell.

      It was finally decided to make the attack August 11th. Colonel Hays wanted accurate information about the state of things inside town.

      “Leave that to me,” said I.

      Three days remained before the battle.

      Next morning there rode up to the picket line at Independence an old apple-woman, whose gray hair and much of her face was nearly hidden by an old-fashioned and faded sun-bonnet. Spectacles half hid her eyes and a basket on her arm was laden with beets, beans and apples.

      The left rein was leather but a rope replaced the right.

      “Good morning, grandmother,” bantered the first picket. “Does the rebel crop need any rain out in your country?”

      The sergeant at the reserve post seized her bridle, and looking up said:

      “Were you younger and prettier, I might kiss you.”

      “Were I younger and prettier, I might box your ears for your impudence.”

      “Oh, ho! You old she-wolf, what claws you have for scratching!” he retorted, and reached for her hand.

      The quick move she made started the horse suddenly, or he might have been surprised to feel that hand.

      But the horse was better than apple-women usually ride, and that aroused some suspicion at Col. Buell's headquarters, so that the ride out was interrupted by a mounted picket who galloped alongside and again her bridle was seized.

      The sergeant and eight men of the guard were perhaps thirty paces back.

      “What will you have?” asked the apple-woman. “I am but a poor lone woman going peaceably to my home.”

      “Didn't you hear the sergeant call for you, d — n you?” answered the sentinel.

      A spurred boot under the ragged skirt pierced the horse's flank; the hand that came from the apple basket fired the cocked pistol almost before the sentry knew it, and the picket fell dead.

      The reserve stood as if stupefied.

      That night I gave Quantrell, for Col. Hays, a plan showing the condition of affairs in Independence.

      The morning of the 11th the attack was made and Col. Buell, his force shot to pieces, surrendered.

      The apple-woman's expedition had been a success.

      Chapter VII

       Lone Jack

       Table of Contents

      It was in August, 1862, nearly a year after the party at Col. Mockbee's, that I was formally enrolled in the army of the Confederate States of America by Col. Gideon W. Thompson. I was eighteen, and for some little time had been assisting Col. Hays in recruiting a regiment around my old home.

      It was within a day or two after the surrender of Buell at Independence that I was elected as first lieutenant in Capt. Jarrette's company in Col. Upton B. Hays' regiment, which was a part of the brigade of Gen. Joseph O. Shelby.

      We took the oath, perhaps 300 of us, down on Luther Mason's


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