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{"id":183,"date":"2021-01-16T16:00:24","date_gmt":"2021-01-16T20:00:24","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/?p=183"},"modified":"2021-01-16T16:29:44","modified_gmt":"2021-01-16T20:29:44","slug":"the-battle-at-bayou-cache-hills-plantation-and-historical-accuracy","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/?p=183","title":{"rendered":"The Battle at Bayou Cache (Hill’s Plantation) and Historical Accuracy"},"content":{"rendered":"\n
\"\"<\/figure><\/div>\n\n\n\n

BY CHRISTOPHER WEHNER<\/p>\n\n\n\n

<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The last week of June 1862 found Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis\u2019s Army of the Southwest in serious trouble.  Reinforcements he had requested failed to materialize.  His supply line was over 300 miles long from Rolla to Batesville, rendering it untenable.  His men were on half-rations and his meager cavalry force was breaking down from a lack of forage.  Having scratched his plan to take Little Rock, Curtis concentrated his army, cut lose from his supply line, and headed down the White River in eastern Arkansas in hopes of reaching Helena and fresh supplies.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

On the afternoon of July 6, 1862, Curtis\u2019s army came to an abrupt halt on Clarendon Road northwest of Hill\u2019s Plantation where fallen trees in front of James\u2019s Ferry blocked their advance. Curtis had taken his army on a forced march through a tempest wasteland infested with the enemy.  He was not just short on supplies and isolated in enemy country, but had cut himself lose from his line of communication. He risked getting bogged down and possibly surrounded, which could have had disastrous results for his already hungry and weary army.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In June Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman issued Order No. 17 calling for irregular militia units to be formed in order to swarm the invaders and drive them out. As a result the White River region was infested with bushwhackers and guerrillas. If Curtis could be delayed long enough there, Hindman might be able concentrate his forces and hit the Federals while they were in a vulnerable position.  To do so, he ordered Gen. Albert Rust and his force of about 5,000 men to move as rapidly as possible to Cache River and halt the Federals there. Locals were called upon to spoil water wells with animal carcasses, block roadways with fallen trees, and harass the Federals as much as possible. \u201cHold the line at Cache River,\u201d Hindman ordered, and Curtis\u2019s army would disintegrate from want of supplies in a matter of days.[1]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Sometimes desperate Federals soldiers wandered carelessly from camp in search of food, only to be captured, tortured and sometimes killed by bushwhackers. Comrades discovered their mangled bodies tied to trees riddled with bullets.  The Army of the Southwest attempted foraging but the land was barren.  \u201cWomen and children are houseless,\u201d wrote a soldier with the Second Wisconsin Cavalry, \u201cwith little to eat or wear.\u201d There was nothing for \u201cman or brute in the country passed over by my army,\u201d noted Curtis.[2]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

At James\u2019s Ferry the Cache River was a swampy bayou choked by cypress trees making it impossible to circumvent the obstacle of fallen trees. Curtis\u2019s army would have to cut its way through the barricade. It was late in the afternoon and the path not yet cleared, forcing Curtis to camp along the road for the night and in the morning send out pioneers to the other side to finish the job.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The next morning Col. Charles E. Hovey (Second Brigade commander and Colonel of the 33rd Illinois) was ordered by Brig. Gen. Frederick Steele (whose division was at the front) to cross the Cache River, secure a defensive perimeter, and clear the surrounding woods of \u201cguerrillas.\u201d Steele\u2019s instructions gave no indication for how far they were to push out in their sweep.[3]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

About 6:00 a.m. Hovey took the pioneers, four companies of the 11th Wisconsin, four companies of the 33rd Illinois, and a contingent of 1st Indiana Cavalry with a small steel gun to the other side of the river.  The pioneers immediately began to clear the debris on the eastern side of James\u2019s Ferry.  While Hovey oversaw the work he sent Col. Charles L. Harris of the 11th Wisconsin down Clarendon Road towards Cotton Plant in reconnaissance with most of the men. Before noon Colonel Harris and elements of the 11th Wisconsin encountered advanced guards from William H. Parson\u2019s Texas Rangers near Hill\u2019s Plantation. Thirty minutes to an hour later, at least a full regiment of Confederate cavalry converged in force and nearly overtook Harris and his seriously outnumbered reconnaissance party.[4]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The above events are about the only conclusive and fairly indisputable ones of the battle at Cache River. Beyond them lie nothing but conflicting or missing reports, and confusion.  One of the main reasons for the disparity is the absence of a Confederate report. We have individual remembrances from surviving soldiers, but no report from Gen. Rust who commanded the Confederate forces. On the Federal side there are several reports, but the two most important ones by Hovey and Lieu. Col. William F. Wood (1st Indiana Cavalry) are in conflict.  Colonel Harris of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin was wounded and did not file a report, or no report survived.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

By and large battle summaries for Bayou Cache go as follows:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Union Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis moved on Helena, Arkansas, in search of supplies to replace those that had been promised but never delivered by the Navy. The Confederates under Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman attempted to prevent this change of supply base by continually skirmishing with the Union troops. The Confederates made a stand at the Cache River on July 7, 1862. As Union Col. C.L. Harris moved forward with elements of the 11th Wisconsin, 33rd Illinois, and the 1st Indiana Cavalry, moved forward, he blundered into an ambuscade.<\/strong> [My emphasis] The fighting became more general, and the Confederates, with a frontal attack, forced the Union to retreat about a quarter of a mile. The next Confederate attack, however, was stopped. With reinforcements, the Federals pursued the retreating Confederates and turned the retreat into a rout as the day progressed. [5]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The highlighted section points out the focus this paper. There are only two significant articles written about the battle.  The first, appearing in 1989 by Glenn T. Nelson and John D. Squier, \u201cThe Confederate Defense of Northeast Arkansas and the Battle of Cotton Plant, Arkansas, July 7, 1862,\u201d Woodruff County (Ark.) Historical Society publication, Rivers & Roads & Points in Between<\/em>.  The other is by historian William L. Shea, \u201cThe Confederate Defeat at Cache River,\u201d which appeared in The Arkansas Historical Quarterly<\/em>, summer of 1993.  Though useful, Nelson and Squier\u2019s article focused almost solely on the events of the day from a Confederate standpoint.  Shea\u2019s investigation sought to bring everything together.  However, Shea essentially followed the battle narrative of the 33rd Illinois and as a result does a serious injustice to the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin and 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

*   *   *   *   *<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Lets first review the events of the day from the perspective of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois, a viewpoint that today dominates the battle description.  The main sources used by Shea and other historians are Hovey\u2019s official report, a St. Louis Democrat<\/em> article by a correspondent name \u201cFayel,\u201d[6]<\/a> and Isaac H. Elliott and Virgil G. Way\u2019s History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em>, (1902).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Pursuant to orders, Hovey instructed Harris to take parts of eight companies (less than 400 men) and the canon in reconnaissance down Clarendon Road towards the town of Cotton Plant, about 6 miles to the southeast. After about four miles Harris\u2019s skirmishers encountered a small group of Confederate cavalry at Hill\u2019s Plantation at the junction of two roads: one heading southeast to Cotton Plant and the other southwest to Des Arc.  According to Hovey, Harris then continued a \u201cshort distance\u201d down the southeast road when he, having left James\u2019s Ferry some time before, overcame Harris and ordered him to \u201chasten down the Des Arc road, and, if possible, rescue a prisoner just captured.\u201d  Hovey kept at least one company with him and sent Harris on his way.[7]<\/a>  This required Harris to turn his column around and hustle back to the fork and continue southwest towards Des Arc. There, according to Fayel and Hovey, Harris and his men passed a cornfield on their left and woods on their right and at a turn in the road they \u201cfell into an ambush\u201d at the end of a clearing.[8]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Fayel stated, \u201cTexan regiments of cavalry\u2026[were] drawn up on their right ready to receive them.\u201d Being severely outnumbered, and taking a heavy fire, Harris\u2019s men withdrew and the result was a retreat that was \u201ctemporarily\u2026 [in] panic.\u201d During this time the canon, now under the command of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois, and positioned along the road, became threatened during the frantic retreat of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin. However, the gun was saved by the heroic acts of the Illinois soldiers led by a Captain L.H. Potter.[9]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Elliott and Way in their History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em> described the events without mentioning any hasty retreat. \u201cThe Wisconsin men at once savagely opened the fight, but the enemy swarmed upon them from everywhere and they were forced slowly back.\u201d  What is also interesting, yet ignored by historians, is that Elliott and Way make no mention of an ambush.[10]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

In Hovey\u2019s official report he stated that after a charge by the Texas Rangers the retreating men of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin \u201cfell into some little confusion.\u201d [11]<\/a> He noted his arrival on the scene was shortly after this event. But he does not mention how much time had transpired since the opening volleys of the fight or how many charges by the cavalry had taken place.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

At some point Hovey took command as Harris was wounded and \u201cthough fainting, fought.\u201d  A heavy fire from the 33rd Illinois greeted another charge by the Rangers and the result found the field littered with Confederate bodies.   Hovey then ordered the men back to the cornfield where a fence rail would provide some cover.   Hovey next discovered that the enemy was trying to get to his rear, but his men countered. There was another attempt to turn his left flank, but that was saved by one of his 33rd<\/sup> Illinois companies.[12]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Interestingly, Elliott and Way mention several charges, \u201cagain and again\u201d by the Rangers before Hovey\u2019s arrival. \u201cOur troops had been forced back to the corner of the [corn] field where most of the 33rd<\/sup> had taken shelter behind the rail fence,\u201d they documented,  \u201cAbout this time Col Hovey joined us and greatly restored the confidence of the troops\u2026\u201d According to Elliott and Way  the retreat happened before Hovey was even on the field, yet Hovey takes the credit.[13]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

            Hovey did note, \u201cNo men could behave more handsomely than did the Eleventh Wisconsin on my right.\u201d  Yet he offers no detail or description, no justification.  However, almost nothing in his report noted any of the activity on his right, except when presumably the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin in their hasty retreat luckily thwarted an enveloping movement by a column of Rangers trying to cut them off from Clarendon Road.[14]<\/a>  Thus suggesting that they did something only by accident.  The reason for Hovey\u2019s lack of information concerning his right was because Harris was in command there. The size of the battlefield was potentially hundreds of yards in length.[15]<\/a> In finishing up his report Hovey states:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

I heard a shout in the rear, and before fully comprehending what it meant Lieutenant-Colonel Wood, of the First Indiana Cavalry, with one battalion and two more steel guns, came cantering up. It was the work of a moment for Lieutenant Baker to unlimber his pieces and get in position. The woods were now alive with shot and shell. The retreat became a rout. Our cavalry, led by Major Clendenning, charged vigorously, and the day was ours.[16]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

On the surface, it appears the evidence is strong. Case closed. The 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin, in their haste to execute Hovey\u2019s order to rescue captured comrades, blundered into an ambush. Their panic stricken retreat nearly cost them the battle.  Hovey and his Illinois troops saved the day.  Hovey was in charge of the expedition, he was present for a significant amount of the fighting, his report is accurate, and Fayel was an unbiased observer.  Hovey was later recommended for promotion within the year to the rank of general for his performance at the Battle of Bayou Cache.  It should be noted that historian William L. Shea largely supports Hovey and Fayel\u2019s battle description.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

However, three problems arise: 1) Hovey was not there for perhaps as much as the first 20 minutes of the fight; 2) his accounts were contested by both Col. Wood and members of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin; and finally, 3) as for Fayel, he was not present during the battle. His entire report was based on interviews.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

In his St. Louis Democrat<\/em> report, Fayel followed the same narrative as Hovey\u2019s official report, but with a little more detail.  His article closely followed the events taking place on Hovey\u2019s left where the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois was positioned.  Suggesting that his primary interview subjects were members of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois.  However, Fayel did mention some details Hovey left out, which brings us to the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry and their side of the story. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

In his official report Wood\u2019s description of his arrival mirrors that of Fayel, both contradicting Hovey (quoted above), Fayel wrote:<\/p>\n\n\n\n

The arrival of this reinforcement [Col. Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry] proved extremely opportune. Col Hovey was posted about 150 yards from Col. Hill\u2019s house, on the Des Arc road, and the army were not in view.[17]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

This is an interesting comment, as according to Fayel, Hovey was not with his men at this point.  After about an hour of fighting Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry appeared and were enthusiastically welcomed by Hovey and his beleaguered group of fighters.  \u201cThere comes Col. Wood,\u201d said Hovey, \u201cwe are all right now, boys.\u201d Wood approached Hovey who instructed his cavalry to \u201cpitch into \u2018em,\u201d and with that they were off towards the Rangers. By this time both sides were spent.  The Confederates could be heard in the distance, but it was not know what they were doing.  The Indiana cavalry rushed them and after about 20 minutes of fighting sent the remaining Confederates fleeing from the field. It was truly a rout at this point.  Meanwhile, exhausted Federal infantry prayed that the charging was over. Both sides were battered and the field was littered with the dead and dying.  \u201cBowels and brains were scattered on the ground,\u201d wrote Fayel when he observed the battlefield hours later, \u201cand the blood besmeared the bushes in the vicinity.\u201d[18]<\/a> <\/p>\n\n\n\n

But Hovey makes little mention of Wood\u2019s efforts and even downplays his involvement, stating simply, \u201cOur cavalry, led by Major Clendenning [not even mentioning Wood], charged vigorously, and the day was ours.\u201d Col. Wood stated in his report that when he arrived the infantry near Hovey were \u201cstanding in groups\u201d near the woods.  That Hovey was at this time \u201c150 yards from Hill\u2019s house\u201d and not personally engaged in the fighting. When he approached Hovey, who seemed panicked, he was instructed to \u201cpitch into them.\u201d This Wood did as Fayel noted.  Clendenning was a member of the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry and was later instructed by Wood to lead a critical charge that helped send the Confederates fleeing from the field in utter disorder.  Wood contended that the Rangers were on their way back for yet another charge when he encountered them.[19]<\/a>  Hovey denied this and also denied ordering Wood to attack (he declared that the battle was essentially over), and accused Wood of making a reckless charge that only served to \u201csacrifice life unnecessarily.\u201d[20]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The men of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin in correspondences and letters home repeatedly praised Col. Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry.  They described Wood and his cavalry as \u201cgallant\u201d and arriving \u201cjust in time.\u201d[21]<\/a> One soldier of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin recalled that just before the arrival of the cavalry the \u201cRangers had the advantage.  If they had charged [once more] at this juncture, they could have cut our small force to pieces.\u201d[22]<\/a>  Other 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin reports deny that the situation was dire.  What we have to remember is the physical effort displayed by all of the Federal troops during this battle.  The days leading up to the fight consisted of exhausting marches.  The men were on half-rations, some less, and with only putrid water to be found causing some soldiers to expire on a daily basis from sickness, fatigue and exposure.  Confederate Gen. Hindman ordered a scorched earth policy as Curtis\u2019s Army of the Southwest desperately and cautiously moved toward Clarendon and the hope of fresh supplies. Even before the battle started, Curtis\u2019s infantry was in a weakened state. The two hours of fighting, along with the day\u2019s march, must have rendered the men near exhaustion by the time Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry arrived. They had little fight left in them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Just days after the battle the officers of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin wrote home to the Governor of Wisconsin and briefly described the events. In it they reported that the \u201centire command of Col. Hovey seemed in imminent danger\u201d until the Indiana Cavalry arrived and charged the enemy, resulting in the scattering of the rebels and at that point the \u201cwork was done.\u201d[23]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Wood wanted a court of inquiry to be formed as Hovey continued to contest and underscore the exploits of his men, however, both Steele and Curtis denied it.  It should be noted that the 1st<\/sup> Indiana lost only one man killed and 9 wounded during the supposed reckless charge. In refusing Wood\u2019s request, Gen. Curtis stated later, \u201ccolonel [Hovey], so far as relates to the order of Colonel Wood does great injustice to superiors as well as himself.\u201d[24]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

*   *   *   *   *<\/p>\n\n\n\n

This leads us to the narrative of the day\u2019s events as remembered by members of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin.  I have purposely only focused on the major events that are in question, and will now go into more depth using primarily the documents left behind by the Badger troops.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Harris trusted Company D[25]<\/a> the most. Known as the Richland County \u201cPloughboys,\u201d they were made up entirely of wheat farmers and pioneers. Their charismatic and dashing Capt. Jesse S. Miller led them. Throughout his campaigns Harris consistently placed the fearsome Ploughboys in the advance as guards or skirmishers.  On this day he did no different.  As Company D approached the fork in the road near Hill\u2019s Plantation they encountered six unknown cavalry soldiers[26]<\/a> who they immediately fired on and dispersed. Though they failed to unhorse a man, they did shoot a \u201cheavy shotgun out of the hands of one of them.\u201d [27]<\/a> They continued on to the fork, made a brief stop where the men drank from a fresh well and some cooked a quick breakfast at Hill\u2019s house (no doubt confiscating items to eat).  Based on the conditions of their prior marching, it seems reasonable that they would stop for a moment.  They then continued down the southeast road towards Cotton Plant, but before doing so Harris ordered the \u201creconnoitering [of] the woods [that surrounded the road] for some distance around.\u201d[28]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

After proceeding about a mile Harris halted his column.  \u201cOfficers consulted and we started [back] in the direction of camp,\u201d wrote a soldier who was with Harris. About this time, Hovey, having just left Hill\u2019s house, \u201ccame dashing down the road at full speed\u201d and informed Harris that \u201cthe secesh had come up to the house and taken two of our boys prisoner.\u201d Hovey in his official report documented this event. [29]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

            Hovey\u2019s order is a very important aspect of this battle.   Historian William L. Shea downplayed it suggesting that Hovey would not have given such an instruction.  Instead, Shea surmised that Hovey called for Harris to \u201cturn back and drive the rebels away from the army\u2019s line of advance.\u201d Which suggests that Harris and the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin were not heading the right direction. Shea also reported that, \u201cnone of the Wisconsin soldiers mentioned such an incident.\u201d  Which is incorrect (noted above) as there were two men captured by the Texans and in need of rescue.[30]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

*   *   *   *   *<\/p>\n\n\n\n

\u201cTwo of our orderly sergeants were captured by the Rebels,\u201d wrote Henry Twining after the battle. The Rebels had \u201clash[ed] them to a tree\u201d and executed them with a \u201csavage barbarity,\u201d he wrote. Both bodies were riddled with bullets, one with 13 and the other sixteen. In another incident, a soldier from the 2nd<\/sup> Wisconsin Cavalry was captured and dragged into the woods where the enemy reportedly \u201ccut off his nose, gashed his check, and then cut his throat in three places.\u201d Miraculously, he managed to get away and survived.[31]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Incidents such as these certainly would have made Hovey sensitive to the treatment Federal soldiers received once captured.  By his own instruction, Hovey sent his entire reconnaissance party hastily down an unknown road, surrounded by cypress woods and swamps, in an area crawling with enemy cavalry and even more worrisome, bushwhackers. In his report Hovey admitted to telling Harris to \u201chasten\u201d down the Des Arc Road.  Harris was every bit the obedient soldier and would have executed this order without question.  Though Hovey clearly had good intentions, his order is questionable, yet thus far historians have ignored this.[32]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

*   *   *   *   *<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Harris \u201cimmediately detached\u201d Company I, led by Lieut. Chesebro, \u201caround the woods\u201d behind Hill\u2019s house, \u201cwith instructions to follow the road running south\u201d in hopes of intercepting the bushwhackers.  This is an important instruction by Harris that historians have missed.  This would allow Chesebro and company to observe the advanced guard of cavalry moving up Des Arc Road. (See map.) Meanwhile, Harris moved out with the rest of the main column.  He returned to Hill\u2019s house and continued down the southwest road.  Hovey does not tell us what he is doing or where he goes while Harris heads down Des Arc Road.  When Chesebro arrived near the cornfield, where it bordered the woods, \u201cthe enemy was seen coming north\u201d up the Des Arc Road.[33]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

As Company I approached the road, \u201crebel cavalry could be seen in front and on our right and left in the brush.\u201d   Harris sent Company\u2019s D and I forward as skirmishers to disperse the enemy.  Company I spread out across the road and along the cornfield at the southwest corner, just behind Company D; Harris and his adjutant (David Lincoln) road on horseback between the skirmishers and the main column.  Along with them were six men from the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry manning the small steel gun commanded by Lieut. C. A. Denneman. At this time a quick exchange of gunfire sent the Confederates reeling back after suffering casualties.[34]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

A young Texas farmer, David Carey Nance, was with the leading elements of William H. Parson\u2019s Texas Rangers who the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin just ran into.  According to Nance, an advanced skirmish guard, the closest support was another guard of about 50 cavalrymen several hundred yards behind them. Nance and about twenty other men were surprised to run into the Wisconsin skirmishers (Company D) and as a result suffered casualties.  Nance himself was hit several times by extremely accurate fire and miraculously managed to survive\u2014he was later captured, but managed to escape.  There was an initial clash and then the two groups drifted apart. Nance makes no note of an ambush in waiting for the Eleventh. They were just as surprised as the Federals.[35]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Scouts galloped back to inform the 12th<\/sup> Texas Cavalry, about a half-mile away, that their advance guard had encountered the enemy. With this information they were on the move towards the field. Behind them were the 17th <\/sup>and then the 16th<\/sup> Texas Cavalry, along with some Arkansas infantry; all were now in haste to the battlefield.[36]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Harris reformed his line, leaving the two companies of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois back in reserve, and pushed on another couple hundred yards to the bend in the road.  Contrary to Shea, who wrote that the canon was placed back off the road, Harris kept the small steel canon and its Indiana crew with him positioned in back of and between Companies D and I, who were staggered off the road on the right and left. This was a mistake and nearly resulted in the capture of the canon. Harris should have held the gun back with the main force as Shea presumed.[37]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

As they approach the bend in the road they were met by a \u201cvolley\u201d of fire that injured several men.  Shea wrote that \u201ca number of Wisconsin soldiers were killed\u201d during this initial volley. The 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin suffered 44 casualties during the battle; eight of them fatalities, but reports from their members deny that anyone was killed during the initial volley. Fayel wrote that \u201cfive of our men\u201d were killed and that Harris was wounded.  Surgeon Henry P. Strong of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin, who was positioned just behind Harris, contradicted this stating, \u201cI am quite certain that none [of the men] were killed until some time later.\u201d[38]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The initial volley was most likely the 50-member advanced guard combined with the survivors of the advanced skirmish line.  The terrain was not easy for cavalry to maneuver in and it seems unlikely that in a matter of minutes the 12th<\/sup> Texas Cavalry could have dashed to the front and deployed in full force in an ambush without being detected. As Shea noted in his article, the battle was a \u201cmeeting engagement\u201d and not an ambush.  The 60 or so Rangers poured significant fire into the skirmishers of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin and probably wounded many.  But their fire was ineffective as they lacked proper weapons.  Most of the Texans were armed with only what they brought from home; some with squirrel rifles and single barrel shotguns.  Even with such poor weapons, had there been 1000 or so cavalry waiting in an ambush, as Hovey claimed in his official report, the unsuspecting 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin would have been decimated despite the \u201cpoor quality of Confederate arms and the cover provided by the dense woods.\u201d  It would have been more than the reported dozen or so wounded and killed in this opening salvo.[39]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The woods indeed came \u201calive\u201d as buckshot sprayed everywhere.  It would have been immediately obvious to Harris and his men that they had encountered more than a half-dozen scouts. Several of his men were injured. Harris ordered the men down and the canon to fire away, \u201cbut it was not sufficient.\u201d  Still the firing continued.  Companies G and H moved forward to join the others in a skirmish line. With the additional men and superior firepower they held their ground as \u201ceach man in the advance fired from five to twenty rounds,\u201d reported a witness.  In order to fire twenty rounds, they would have needed a minimum of 10 minutes, or an average of 2 shots per minute.[40]<\/a>  Fire from all around them quickly began to intensify as more and more of Parson\u2019s 12th<\/sup> Texas Cavalry flowed in.  At some point, suspecting that they were now out-numbered, Harris ordered his men to fasten bayonets, which later prove to be a wise decision.[41]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Surgeon Strong was soon busy attending to the wounded. He glanced up and saw \u201cCol Harris and Adjutant Lincoln\u201d on horseback directing the men and firing their revolvers.  At this time a wounded Ranger was brought to him and revealed that elements of two Texas cavalry regiments were quickly filling the surrounding woods.[42]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

A soldier in Company D noted that, \u201cwe soon found about 1200 coming on us all mounted.\u201d   From out of the woods charged Parson\u2019s 12th<\/sup> Cavalry, \u201cshouting like a thousand devils.\u201d   It was here that Company\u2019s D and I, in the main path, suffered most of the casualties. Though out-numbered the extended skirmish line \u201crepulsed [Strong\u2019s emphasis] at the point of the bayonet\u201d the charge. The dense forest was now filled with smoke and crackling gunfire.  The 1st<\/sup> Indiana crew protecting the canon was decimated, four out of its six crew wounded. At this point, having taken heavy casualties and fearing they were going to be overrun, Captain Harris ordered his men to fall back.  They were more than ready to comply and the result was a \u201ctemporarily panic.\u201d As the frightened men began to run, the entire line retreated hastily.  Harris, still on his horse and not wounded, turned his horse around and overtook the fleeing men, where he \u201cordered a halt.\u201d  He called out to his men, \u201cDon\u2019t never show your faces again if you run.\u201d  Calling on their honor the men rallied and an orderly retreat was commenced as the Rangers pressed them.  Within moments of restoring order Harris was wounded in three places as the Texans perhaps charged again, this time forcing the men of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin back even faster.[43]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The 33rd<\/sup> Illinois was not standing idly bye for the 10-20 minutes since the opening shots.  Capt. Potter and at least one company, hearing the opening shots, moved out and \u201cjoined their Wisconsin comrades,\u201d who were moving back under the pressure of mounted and dismounted cavalry.  \u201cThe little field piece\u2026was ripping canister into the advancing column,\u201d but still they were forced back. At about this point the 1st<\/sup> Indiana crew and its steel canon were in dire shape.  Seeing that they required help, Potter and his company aided Lieut. Denneman and his battered unit, even staving off a Confederate attempt to capture the gun.[44]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Hovey neither was idle, but he was also not present during those opening minutes of fighting.  Elliott and Way in their regimental history of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois mentioned several charges taking place before Hovey reached the field.  It\u2019s hard to imagine what it would have been like to be there amongst the horrific confusion.  Likely one charge became two in the memories of some, or two become one.  So what charge did Hovey witness as he arrived on the field is ultimately unknown. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

We do know from 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin correspondences that Mrs. Hill was home and that Federal troops searched the grounds and confiscated numerous items. It was also mentioned by one soldier that some Negroes had tipped Hovey of the two captured Federal soldiers that resulted in his order for Harris to hasten down the road.  It would not have taken Hovey 20 minutes to cover a half-mile.  So the issue is when did he first become aware of the firing?  Hovey could have been in the house speaking with Mrs. Hill and simply did not hear the opening gunfire until the canon started.[45]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Hovey probably reached the field at the end of a second charge that sent everyone in flight including the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois troops. Hovey witnessed it from a distance as he arrived. Surgeon Strong, who was now well behind the action, mentioned \u201ca moment\u2019s conversation with him [Hovey]\u201d as he reached the ground.  James  N. Butler was a member of Company E in the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois and was positioned at the edge of the woods near the road with the other Illinois companies.  Behind them was the cornfield contained by a wooded fence. He describes the retreat during the second cavalry charge,  \u201cWe were not in the thickest of the fight, but we were in the thickest of the run,\u201d he recalled. As the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin retreated in haste, the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois did so as well.  Men fled down the road, some crawled over the fence and into the corn field, \u201cthe pursuing cavalry seemed to be moving at a snail\u2019s pace in comparison,\u201d he wrote.  How far the men fled is not clear, but most likely not far.  \u201cSome of us wouldn\u2019t have stopped until we crossed the Arkansas line,\u201d he continued, \u201cif it had not been for Col Hovey.\u201d Hovey was probably still at Hill\u2019s house when he heard the frantic retreat and crackling gunfire echo through the woods along the road.  He quickly gathered up the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois men with him at the house, mounted his horse, and dashed down the road to the cornfield, which was no more than half a mile away.[46]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Hovey reported seeing Capt. Potter severely wounded while trying to help with the gun. The charging Rangers forced him and his men off the gun. But they rallied, aided by Lieut. Denneman who was never far from his post, and retook it before the Texans could haul it away.  At this point Hovey took command of his men and ordered the canon to the rear.  As Harris and Hovey frantically reformed their line, one company of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois commanded by Capt. Isaac H. Elloitt (who would eventually become a general) repositioned itself on an angle off the cornfield and in excellent position to receive the Rangers as they charged.  According to Strong, it was Elloitt and his company that played a key role in resisting the second charge while Harris regrouped his men. Hovey most likely ordered them to position.[47]<\/a> <\/p>\n\n\n\n

There can be no question that as Hovey arrived the situation was in a state of panic.  As the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin frantically re-organized, Hovey sent one Wisconsin company (it\u2019s unknown which one) back with the canon to Hill\u2019s house.  The assault that Hovey witnessed as he arrived was estimated to contain \u201cbetween 1500 and 2,000\u201d Rangers according to Private McCarthy of Company D who was wounded during the fight.  Hovey joined his men in repulsing the attack; even taking a bullet to the chest that luckily did not seriously injure him.  Shea contends that after arriving on the field \u201cHovey relieved the reeling Harris and sent him to the rear for medical attention,\u201d which does not appear to be the case as several members of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin mentioned Harris\u2019 presence on the field until the battle\u2019s end. Also, Shea offers no supporting evidence for his claim, whereas surgeon Strong noted Harris was involved in the fight up to the end and made no mention of him leaving the action.[48]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

At this point, until the arrival of Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry, Hovey\u2019s report stands alone.  Surgeon Strong of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin was busy with the wounded, McCarthy was one of them, and the other correspondents and reports were either secondhand or unconfirmed witnesses.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

After a third possibly fourth charge, Hovey was forced to take defensive actions to avoid being flanked. The Rangers again sent a column around the field in an effort to cut the small reconnaissance party off from its communications and support.  This was thwarted by Hovey\u2019s order that sent a company of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin back to Hill\u2019s house, which might have been mistaken as reinforcements and sent the Texans back from where they came.[49]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

Hovey next reorganized his line and reported actually advancing upon the enemy, which Surgeon Strong supports stating in his correspondence, \u201c[Hovey] advanced down the road….\u201d Shortly after this time Wood and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana arrived.[50]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

When Hovey arrived on the field he immediately sent messengers back to James\u2019s Ferry requesting support. While on their way back they ran into Col. Wood, who dashed off towards the fighting.  Gen. Steel received the message about 30 minutes later, took immediate action, and sent up reinforcements.[51]<\/a><\/p>\n\n\n\n

The Battle at Bayou Cache was a complete Federal victory.  The deciding factors involved: superior firepower, a little luck, and most importantly superior leadership on the field in the form of Harris and Hovey, as well as other officers. They fought heroically and their men followed their example.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

Did Harris \u201cblunder\u201d into an ambush?  There is enough evidence to cast doubt on such a description.  If there was culpability, it would lie with Hovey\u2019s order that sent Harris hastily down Des Arc Road in pursuit of captured comrades.  An honorable order, but placing his entire command at risk for one or two men was irresponsible, costly, and nearly disastrous.  Harris and the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin and the 1st<\/sup> Indiana Cavalry should be commended and given more respect than the official records, and unfortunately historians, have given them.<\/p>\n\n\n\n


\n\n\n\n

[1]<\/a> The War of the Rebellion: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies<\/em> (Washington, D.C.: United States War Department, 1886) Series 1, Vol. 13, 36-37, 835 (cited hereafter as ORA<\/em>).<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[2]<\/a> Correspondence to Janesville Daily Gazette<\/em>, July 30, 1862; Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: August 9, 1862 correspondence from St. Louis; ORA,<\/em> 363 \u2013 364.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[3]<\/a> Ibid., 141<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[4]<\/a> Curtis wrote in his journal that it was around 10 a.m. that the booming of canon was heard. (Shea, 147).  Members of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin report various times ranging from 10 a.m. to noon as the start time of the battle.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[5]<\/a> Online source: http:\/\/www.cr.nps.gov\/hps\/abpp\/battles\/ar003.htm<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[6]<\/a> William Fayel was a Civil War journalist who accompanied the Army of the Southwest in Arkansas. See footnote at the bottom of page 140, The Arkansas Historical Quarterly<\/em>, Vol. LII, No. II, Summer 1993.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[7]<\/a> It has been generally accepted that Hovey kept one of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin companies with him at Hill\u2019s house.  Members of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin always contended that Hovey kept one of the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois with him, which makes more sense. <\/p>\n\n\n\n

[8]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 143.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[9]<\/a> St. Louis Democrat<\/em>, July 17, 1962.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[10]<\/a> Isaac H. Elliott and Virgil G.  Way, History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em> (Gibson City, Ill.: Gibson Courier Press, 1902), 28.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[11]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 143.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[12]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[13]<\/a> Elliott and Way, History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em>, 28.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[14]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[15]<\/a> The size of the cornfield was estimated by one of the men from the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin to be about 200 acres.  Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: July 28, 1862 correspondence.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[16]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 143.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[17]<\/a> St. Louis Democrat<\/em>, July 17, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[18]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[19]<\/a> The confusion here was probably the arrival of elements of the 15th<\/sup> Texas Cavalry, who indeed might have been game for an attck.. See, \u201cThe Confederate Defeat at Cache River,\u201d The Arkansas Historical Quarterly<\/em>, Vol. LII, No. II, Summer 1993, 150.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[20]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 146-149, 151.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[21]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: July 16, 23, 1862, correspondences.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[22]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[23]<\/a> Letter from 11th Wisconsin to the Governor, July 10, 1862.  Wisconsin Adjutant General’s Office: Records of Civil War Regiments, Correspondences, 1861-1865, box 56, folder 2.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[24]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 148-151.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[25]<\/a> The other companies from the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin: I, H, and G.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[26]<\/a> We do not know whether these men were some of the guerrillas Hindman called on, or if they were scouts or Texas Rangers.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[27]<\/a> Henry P. Strong Papers, \u201cPatriot War Correspondence,\u201d July 23, 1862 of the 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[28]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: July 28, 1862, correspondence by \u201cThe Chip;\u201d Henry P. Strong \u201cPatriot War Correspondence,\u201d July 23, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[29]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: July 16, 18, 1862 correspondences, one by Company D member, C. McCarthy, who was wounded during the engagement.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[30]<\/a> Shea, 135; see footnote 28 for 11th<\/sup> Wisconsin soldier quote concerning Hovey\u2019s order.  See also Henry P. Strong Papers, \u201cPatriot War Correspondence,\u201d July 23, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[31]<\/a> Henry Twining correspondence to Janesville Daily Gazette<\/em>, July 25, 1862; Correspondence to the Wisconsin State Journal<\/em>, \u201cThe War in Arkansas\u201d, August 25, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[32]<\/a> ORA<\/em>, 143<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[33]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: July 16, 1862, McCarthy correspondence and July 28 correspondence by \u201cThe Chip,\u201d and July 16 correspondence by \u201cRalph.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[34]<\/a> Ibid.; ORA<\/em>, 147; Elliott and Way, History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em>, 28; Henry P. Strong correspondence to the Missouri Democrat<\/em>, dated July 21, 1862, Henry P. Strong papers, WSHA.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[35]<\/a> B. P. Gallaway, The Ragged Rebel: A Common Soldier in W.H. Parson\u2019s Texas Cavalry<\/em> (Austin: University of Texas Press, 1988), 46-47.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[36]<\/a> Nelson and Squier, \u201cThe Confederate Defense of Northeast Arkansas and the Battle of Cotton Plant, Arkansas, July 7, 1862,\u201d Woodruff County (Ark.) Historical Society publication, Rivers & Roads & Points in Between<\/em> 16 (Spring, 1989), 14.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[37]<\/a> This is also confirmed by the 33rd<\/sup> Illinois, Elliott and Way, History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em>, 28. See also, Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4: July 23, 1862 correspondent from \u201cMonterey.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[38]<\/a> St. Louis Daily Democrat<\/em>, July 17, 1862; Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[39]<\/a> Gallaway, The Ragged Rebel: A Common Soldier in W.H. Parson\u2019s Texas Cavalry<\/em>, 46-47; Nelson and Squier, 14; ORA<\/em>, 143-144; Shea, 138-139,148<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[40]<\/a> Two to three shots per minute would be the exception, especially when under fire.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[41]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: Correspondences by \u201cMonterey,\u201d \u201cThe Chip;\u201d and \u201cRalph;\u201d Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July, 1862;<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[42]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Correspondences by \u201cMonterey,\u201d which is one of Strong\u2019s pseudonyms.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[43]<\/a> Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July, 1862; Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: Correspondences by \u201cMonterey,\u201d \u201cThe Chip;\u201d and \u201cRalph.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[44]<\/a> Elliott and Way, History of the Thirty-Third Regiment Illinois Veteran Volunteer Infantry of the Civil War<\/em>, 28, 131.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[45]<\/a> Ibid.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[46]<\/a> Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July, 1862;<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[47]<\/a> Ibid.; ORA,<\/em> 144; Quiner Papers, Reel 1, Vol. 4 and Reel 2, Vol. 5: Correspondences by \u201cMonterey;\u201d Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July, 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[48]<\/a> Quiner Papers, Correspondences by C McCarthy, July 18, 1862; Elliott and Way, 28;  Nelson and Squier, 17.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[49]<\/a> ORA<\/em>,144.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[50]<\/a> Correspondence to \u201cThe Republican,\u201d Henry P. Strong Letters, July 1862.<\/p>\n\n\n\n

[51]<\/a> Shea 146-147.<\/p>\n","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"

The last week of June 1862 found Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis\u2019s Army of the Southwest in serious trouble. Reinforcements he had requested failed to materialize. His supply line was over 300 miles long from Rolla to Batesville, rendering it untenable. His men were on half-rations and his meager cavalry force was breaking down from a lack of forage. Having scratched his plan to take Little Rock, Curtis concentrated his army, cut lose from his supply line, and headed down the White River in eastern Arkansas in hopes of reaching Helena and fresh supplies.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

On the afternoon of July 6, 1862, Curtis\u2019s army came to an abrupt halt on Clarendon Road northwest of Hill\u2019s Plantation where fallen trees in front of James\u2019s Ferry blocked their advance. Curtis had taken his army on a forced march through a tempest wasteland infested with the enemy.  He was not just short on supplies and isolated in enemy country, but had cut himself lose from his line of communication. He risked getting bogged down and possibly surrounded, which could have had disastrous results for his already hungry and weary army.<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

<\/p>\n

In June Confederate Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman issued Order No. 17 calling for irregular militia units to be formed in order to swarm the invaders and drive them out. As a result the White River region was infested with bushwhackers and guerrillas. If Curtis could be delayed long enough there, Hindman might be able concentrate his forces and hit the Federals while they were in a vulnerable position.  To do so, he ordered Gen. Albert Rust and his force of about 5,000 men to move as rapidly as possible to Cache River and halt the Federals there. Locals were called upon to spoil water wells with animal carcasses, block roadways with fallen trees, and harass the Federals as much as possible. \u201cHold the line at Cache River,\u201d Hindman ordered, and Curtis\u2019s army would disintegrate from want of supplies in a matter of days. Continue reading →<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":1,"featured_media":186,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":[],"categories":[7,21],"tags":[],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/183"}],"collection":[{"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/users\/1"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcomments&post=183"}],"version-history":[{"count":8,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/183\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":195,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/posts\/183\/revisions\/195"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=\/wp\/v2\/media\/186"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fmedia&parent=183"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Fcategories&post=183"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"http:\/\/11wisconsinregiment.soldierstudies.org\/index.php?rest_route=%2Fwp%2Fv2%2Ftags&post=183"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}