Battle of Round Mountain
Battle of Round Mountain | |||||||
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Part of American Civil War | |||||||
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Belligerents | |||||||
Loyal Indians |
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Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Opothleyahola | Douglas H. Cooper | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
1,400 men | |||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
110 casualties and fatalities |
6 fatalities 4 casualties 1 missing |
The Battle of Round Mountain (also known as Round Mountains) No primary source documents report the engagement as having occurred at a place named "Round Mountains". The name originates from a single writer who noticed a curl at the end of Mountain on the report and changed 'mountain' to its plural. This distinction supports the Yale site as to where the battle was fought because that location has two twin mounds. November 19, 1861(The location mentioned has never been shown as being the actual location of the engagement, and is disputed by many historians.)[citation needed]
Col. Douglas H. Cooper, Confederate commander of the Indian Department, was unable to reconcile differences with Chief Opothleyahola, commander of a band of Unionist Creeks and Seminoles. Cooper set out on November 15, 1861, with about 1,400 men to either compel Opothleyahola 's submission or “drive him and his party from the country.” {{citation}}
: Empty citation (help) Cooper's force rode up the Deep Fork of the Canadian River to find Chief Opothleyahola’s camp deserted. On November 19, Cooper learned from captured prisoners that part of Opothleyahola’s band was erecting a fort at the Red Fork of the Arkansas River.
Cooper’s men arrived there around 4:00 p.m. Charging cavalry discovered that Opothleyahola’s followers had recently abandoned their camp. The Confederates located and followed stragglers; the 4th Texas blundered into Opothleyahola’s warriors on the tree line at the foot of the Round Mountains. The Federal response chased the Confederate cavalry back to Cooper’s main force. Darkness prevented Cooper's counterattack until the main enemy force was within 60 yards. After a short fight, Opothleyahola’s men set fire to the prairie grass and retreated.
The following morning, Cooper advanced on Opothleyahola’s new camp but found that the Federal forces had fled. The Confederates claimed victory because Chief Opothleyahola had left the area.
This was the first of three encounters between Opothleyahola’s Union bands and Confederate troops. The chief was forced to flee to Kansas at the end of the year.
The Confederate loss in the engagement was 1 captain and 5 men killed, 3 severely and 1 slightly wounded, and 1 missing. Opothleyahola lost about 110 killed and wounded.[citation needed]
Order of Battle
Cooper's Brigade - Col. Douglas Hancock Cooper
- 6 companies, 1st Regiment Choctaw-Chickasaw Mounted Rifles - Maj. Mitchell Laflore
- Detachment, 1st Creek Mounted Rifles - Col. Daniel N. McIntosh
- Detachment, 2nd Creek Mounted Rifles - Lt. Col. Chilly McIntosh
- Detachment, Seminole Indians - Maj. John Jumper
- Detachment, 9th Texas Cavalry - Lt. Col. William Quayle
Creek and Seminole Indians - Chief Opothleyahola
- Lockapoka Creeks
- Muscogee Creeks
- Seminoles - Halleck Tustenuggee, Billy Bowlegs
References
- CWSAC Battle Summary
- Debo, Angie. "The Site of the Battle of Round Mountain, 1861," Chronicles of Oklahoma, Vol. XXVII, No. 2 (Summer, 1949), pp. 187-206.
- DeMoss, Robert W. State of thieves: Detailing the truth of the first battles of the Civil War in Indian Territory. [Cleveland, Okla.] : R.W. DeMoss, 2004.
- O'Brien, William M. A time of decision: the Indian Territory in the first year of the Civil War, August, 1861 through early 1862. Jenks, OK : The Author, 1997.
- U.S. War Department, The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 70 volumes in 4 series. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1880-1901. Series 1, Volume 8, Part 1, pages 5-10.
- White, Christine Schultz and White, Benton R., Now The Wolf Has Come: The Creek Nation in the Civil War, Texas A & M University Press, 1996. ISBN 0-89096-689-3.
- Wright, Muriel H. "General Douglas H. Cooper, C.S.A.," Chronicles of Oklahoma, vol. XXXII, No. 2 (Summer, 1954), pp. 142-184.