Battle Of Palmito Ranch "The Last Battle Of The War" May 12 - 13, 1865

    The war was ending quietly in the far south of Texas. A month had passed since Lee's surrender in Virginia, and anticipating the end of the war, the Union and Confederate forces around Brownsville observed an informal truce. Then the inexperienced Col. Theodore H. Barrett arrived at Brazos Santiago Post to take command of the Union forces in the area. Barrett had direct orders not to initiate any military action, but his ambition would not allow the war to end before he gained his share of the glory.

    On May 12, Barrett led a mixed force of 800 black and white Union infantry and cavalry in attacking a Confederate outpost on the banks of the Rio Grande at Palmito Ranch, 12 miles from Brownsville, and captured the place. The Confederate troops, who had done nothing to break the unofficial truce or provoke a battle, consisted of about 350 ragtag cavalrymen called the Cavalry of the West, under the command of former Texas Ranger Col. John S. "Rip" (for Rest In Peace) Ford. Ford counterattacked and forced the blue troops back out of the Confederate camp. The next morning Barrett returned and again attacked and took the camp at Palmito Ranch. In midafternoon, Ford and his determined troopers counterattacked Barrett's soldiers again, and again forced them to with draw. This time Ford's men pursued the disorganized retreat back toward Brazos Island and took many prisoners. Ford called off the pursuit when his horses got tired. The Confederates suffered only five minor wounds in the skirmish at Palmito Ranch, while 30 Union soldiers were killed or wounded and another 113 were captured.

    The last fighting by land forces of any size during the war, Palmito Ranch was a Confederate victory. Its outcome had absolutely no bearing on the war and was a useless waste of life. Regardless of which side had won or whether the engagement was even fought, the war was ending all the same.

    Fascinating Fact: By June 1864 Colonel Ford had collected his "Cavalry of the West," a motley assortment of 1,300 troopers, including old men and boys ineligible for Confederate conscription, Hispanics, deserters, outlaws, and mercenaries. In order to avoid a formal surrender, Col. Ford disbanded his Cavalry of the West 13 days after his victory at Palmito Ranch.

    CONFEDERATE FORCES

    Cavalry Of The West

    COLONEL JOHN SALMON "RIP" FORD

    Anderson's Texas Cavalry Battalion - Captain D. W. Wilson
    Gibson's Cavalry Company --- Captain Gibson
    Cocke's Cavalry Company --- Captain Coke
    Gidding's Texas Cavalry Battalion - Captain Robbins
    (Composition Unknown)
    Artillery - Captain O. G. Jones
    1 Section --- Lieutenant M. S. Smith
    1 Section --- Lieutenant William Gregory
    1 Section (in reserve)
    French Volunteer Cannoneers



    The following information was taken from "The New Handbook of Texas," published in 1996 by the Texas State Historical Society. This six volume edition is located in all San Antonio libraries and most major libraries throughout Texas.  

    PALMITO RANCH, BATTLE OF. On May 13, 1865, more than a month after the surrender of Gen. Robert E. Lee, the last land action of the Civil War took place at Palmito Ranch near Brownsville. Early in the war the Union army had briefly occupied Brownsville but had been unable to hold the city. They established a base at Brazos Santiago on Brazos Island from which to blockade the Rio Grande and Brownsville. They were, however, unable to blockade the Mexican (and technically neutral) port of Bagdad, just below the river. The Confederates landed supplies at Bagdad and then transported them twenty-five miles inland to Matamoros to be shipped across the Rio Grande into Brownsville.

    In February 1865 the Union commander at Brazos Island, Col. Theodore H. Barrett, reported to his superiors that his base was secure from attack and that with permission he could take Brownsville. The superiors refused to sanction the attack. Instead, Maj. Gen. Lewis Wallace sought and received Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's permission to meet the Confederate commanders of the Brownsville area, Brig. Gen. James E. Slaughter, commander of the Western Sub-District of Texas, and Col. John Salmon (Rip) Ford,qv commander of the southern division of Slaughter's command, at Port Isabel on March 11, 1865, in hopes of arranging a separate peace. Wallace promised no retaliation against former Confederates so long as they took an oath of allegiance to the United States. Anyone who preferred to leave the country would be given time to gather up property and family before doing so. An informal truce was arranged while Ford and Slaughter sent Wallace's proposals up the chain of command, and Wallace informed Grant that the rebels in Texas would soon be surrendering. Slaughter's superior in Houston, however, Maj. Gen. John G. Walker,qv denounced Wallace's terms and wrote a stinging letter to Slaughter for having listened to them in the first place. The commander of the Confederate Trans-Mississippi Department, Lt. Gen. Edmund Kirby Smith,qv was not ready to abandon the cause either. On May 9, 1865, he told the governors of the western Confederate states that despite Lee's surrender, his own army remained, and he proposed to continue the fight.

    The Confederates in Texas were aware of the fate of the Confederacy's eastern armies. On May 1, 1865, a passenger on a steamer heading up the Rio Grande towards Brownsville tossed a copy of the New Orleans Times to some Confederates at Palmito Ranch. The paper contained the news of Lee's surrender, Lincoln's death, and the surrender negotiations between Johnston and Sherman. Within the next ten days several hundred rebels left the army and went home. Those who remained were as resolute as their commanders to continue the fight in Texas. The federals, meanwhile, had received an erroneous report that the southerners were preparing to evacuate Brownsville and move east of Corpus Christi. In light of this intelligence Colonel Barrett ordered 250 men of the Sixty-second United States Colored Infantry and fifty men of the Second Texas United States Cavalry (dismounted) to cross to the mainland from Brazos Island at Boca Chica Pass to occupy Brownsville. Carrying five days' rations and 100 rounds of ammunition per man, the Union troops crossed over to the coast at 9:30 P.M. on May 11, 1865. Under the command of Lt. Col. David Branson, this detachment marched all night and reached White's Ranch at daybreak. There Branson's men halted and tried to conceal themselves in a thicket along the Rio Grande. The camp was spotted by "civilians" (probably Confederate soldiers) on the Mexican side of the river. Realizing that any hope of surprising the Confederates was lost, Branson immediately resumed his march toward Brownsville.

    At Palmito Ranch the federals encountered Capt. George Roberson's 190-man company of Lt. Col. George H. Giddings'sqv Texas Cavalry Battalion, which skirmished briefly with the Union force before retiring. The federals, too, fell back to a hill overlooking the ranch to rest and cook dinner. Camping for the night, the Union troops remained undisturbed until 3:00 A.M., when Roberson's company reappeared. Colonel Ford, at Fort Brown, had ordered Roberson to maintain contact with Branson's column and promised to reinforce him as soon as possible. Under pressure from Roberson, the federals fell back to White's Ranch, from where Branson sent a courier to Brazos Santiago asking Colonel Barrett for reinforcements. Barrett himself arrived at 5:00 A.M. on May 13, 1865, with 200 men of the Thirty-fourth Indiana Infantry, bringing the Union strength up to 500 officers and men. Under Barrett's command the column moved on Palmito Ranch once more, and a "sharp engagement" took place in a thicket along the riverbank between Barrett's 500 troops and Roberson's 190 Confederates. The outnumbered but persistent southerners were soon pushed back across an open prairie and beyond sight, while the exhausted federals paused on a small hill about a mile west of Palmito Ranch. At three that afternoon, Colonel Ford arrived to reinforce Roberson with 300 men from his own Second Texas Cavalry, Col. Santos Benavides'sqv Texas Cavalry Regiment, and additional companies from Giddings's battalion, as well as a six-gun battery of field artillery under the command of Capt. O. G. Jones.

    With mounted cavalry and artillery, Ford had the perfect force to deal with Barrett's infantry on the flat, open land around Palmito Ranch. Hidden by a group of small trees, Ford's men formed their line of battle. At 4:00 P.M. Jones's guns began to fire. After a brief bombardment, Roberson's men attacked the Union left near the river, while two other companies of Giddings's battalion struck its right. At the same time, the rest of Ford's men charged the enemy center. The southern assault came as a great surprise, and the Union line rapidly fell apart. Barrett later reported that "Having no artillery to oppose the enemy's six twelve-pounder field pieces our position became untenable. We therefore fell back fighting." Ford remembered it differently when he wrote in his memoirs that Barrett "seemed to have lost his presence of mind" and to have led his troops off the field in a "rather confused manner." Forty-six men of the Thirty-fourth Indiana were put out as skirmishers and left to be captured as the federals fell back toward Brazos Island. Only by deploying 140 men of the Sixty-second Colored in a line running from the Rio Grande to three-quarters of a mile inland did the Union troops slow the Confederate attack enough to allow the northerners to get away. Ford wrote that the battle from its beginning had been "a run," and demonstrated "how fast demoralized men could get over ground." The Confederates chased the federals for seven miles to Brazos Island. There the routed Union troops were met by reinforcements, and Ford's men ceased their attack. "Boys, we have done finely," said Ford. "We will let well enough alone, and retire." The action had lasted a total of four hours. Confederate casualties were a few dozen wounded. The federals lost 111 men and four officers captured, and thirty men wounded or killed. Ironically, at the same time as the battle of Palmito Ranch, the Confederate governors of Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, and Texas were authorizing Kirby Smith to disband his armies and end the war. A few days later federal officers from Brazos Santiago visited Brownsville to arrange a truce with General Slaughter and Colonel Ford.

    BIBLIOGRAPHY: John S. Ford, Memoirs (MS, John Salmon Ford Papers, Barker Texas History Center, University of Texas at Austin). History of Brownsville (Brownsville Historical Association, 1980). The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies (Washington: GPO, 1880-1901).

    Jeffrey William Hunt

    THE CAVALRY OF THE WEST AND THE WAR ON THE BORDER OF MEXICO
    THE BATTLE OF PALMITTO HILL
    On March 6, 1865, the Union soldier-politician Lew Wallace, the later author of Ben-Hur, appeared at Brazos de Santiago. General Wallace came to try to make a truce on the Rio Grande, with Lincoln's approval. Wallace had concocted a fantastic scheme of getting the Confederates to surrender and reenter the Union, and then joining their army with Juarez in Mexico. Together, this force would drive the French and Imperialists out. The Rio Grande still inspired wild dreams.

    -- from "The Cavalry of the West," in Lone Star, by T.R. Fehrenbach ( Collier Books, 1968 ).

    "On March 11, Wallace met General James Slaughter and Colonel John S. Ford under a flag [of truce] at Point Isabel", writes the historian Fehrenbach. He recounts the confused and bloody situation in Mexico in 1864 and '65, as French, Belgian and Austrian troops sought to prop up the tottering monarchy of Maximillian, an Archduke of the Austro-Hungarian empire. Revolutionaries led by Benito Juarez had previously fought the French troops to a standstill, memorialized forever by their famous victory of "Cinco de Mayo," or the 5th of May, 1863.
    By the beginning of 1865, however, revolutionary resistance in northern Mexico had collapsed and General Tomas Mejia, an Indian loyal to Maximillian and the Imperialist cause, had occupied Matamoros with a strong army. Federal forces occupying Brownsville, Texas, had abandoned the town after a stinging defeat in the summer of 1864, and Confederate forces under Ford and Slaughter had made it over into the regional headquarters.
    In that time, the porous border between Imperial Mexico and Confederate Texas had become a smugglers' paradise. Matamoros enjoyed the economic boom: "Brownsville swelled to about 25,000 and Matamors to 40,000 [people]," with another 15,000 people creating Bagdad on the Rio at Brazos de Santiago, according to Fehrenbach.
    Cotton from Texas and Louisiana moved across the border easily, and both foreign and Mexican merchants snapped it up quickly for resale at enormous profits. A stage coach line operated ten coaches per day between Brownsville and the two Mexican centers and the good citizens of Matamoros built a brand-new opera house there.
    "The population was polyglot," writes Fehrenbach, "with peddlers, merchants, deserters, gamblers, swindlers, undercover agents, and whores from a dozen nations.
    "Common laborers earned $ 5 to $ 10 daily, paid in good silver, when hourly rates were then an unprecedented 20 cents in St. Louis. Lightermen could make $ 40 a day. There is no record of how much prostitution and swindling paid. But millions in gold passed through all three towns."
    War-fighting sputtered to a halt on both sides of the border in a kind of interregnum. Lew Wallace negotiated in good faith with the Confederates Slaughter and Ford, but die-hards like Major General J. G. Walker refused to consider an honorable surrender and "an honorable peace and reentry" of Texas into the Union. The situation remained in limbo with no new fighting until the arrival of "a new officer, Colonel Theodore H. Barrett of the 62nd Infantry," with a Negro regiment. Barrett was put in command at Brazos de Santiago and assumed control of the 34th Indiana and New York's Morton Rifles. He also had a small detachment of Unionist Texas cavalry, under Jack Haynes of Brownsville. "Barrett was a politically appointed officer," writes Fehrenbach, "who had so far seen no combat service." Like "hundreds of other Northern officers", Barrett wanted to establish something for himself in the way of a combat reputation before the War Between The States sputtered out.
    Acting against the orders of his department commanders and against the "vehement protests of Lieutenant Colonel Branson of the 34th Indiana, Barrett decided to do great things." In mid-May of 1865 he moved against Confederate forces positioned at Palmitto Hill ( near Brownsville ), and engaged Giddings' regulars there. On the following day, May 13th, with the New York Rifles and the Indiana volunteers having made a forced march in sweltering heat, Barrett's command crashed into Giddings' Confederate regulars and the irregular Cavalry of the West, under John S. Ford.
    Ford was not actually an enrolled officer of the Confederate armed forces, but he was a singularly well-loved and respected combat commander, a veteran of the War with Mexico. The ranks of his cavalry units were filled with fifteen year-old boys from frontier farms and saddle-wise cowboys who were too old to be conscripted. They were all used to the sweltering climate of southern Texas and some of the proudest and finest horsemen in the world. And they often fought "Comanche-style," in small groups, with extraordinary courage and daring.
    Together with the Fourth Arizona Cavalry, Ford's Cavalry of the West counter-attacked the exhausted New Yorkers and the 34th Indiana and routed them completely. Barrett tried to manage a fighting retreat with his regiment, but as Fehrenbach puts it, "there was nothing more frightening to scattered men on foot than to be overtaken by a thundering cavalry charge."
    By the time the federal forces had retraced the seven miles back to Brazos de Santiago, Barrett's combined command had lost 111 men and officers as prisoners and another 220 had been killed or wounded. The 34th Indiana was shattered, reduced to eighty men out of its original 300, and the regimental colors had been captured. The Texas Unionists and southern renegades fought to the death although Jack Haynes was himself captured.
    "A few days after the battle," says Fehrenbach, "General E. B. Brown of the Union Army sent Colonel Ford a flag of truce and a message. Ford was informed that General Robert E. Lee had surrendered at Appomattox more than a month before. Ford cursed violently for a spell, and then began to laugh. He agreed, not to a surrender but to an exchange of courtesies."
    Fehrenbach notes that General Slaughter, "in command, was intransigent. Slaughter refused to surrender; he wanted to take the command south and formally join the Mexican Imperialists, in the hope that the Confederacy would rise again under French aegis. Ford and the majority of the Cavalry of the West were not interested."
    Having only recently acquired some good French cannons, Slaughter now determined to sell his artillery to the Imperialist General Mejia -- for 20,000 silver pesos. Whether he wanted to keep the money for himself or just to keep it under his control, "Ford insisted that the Confederacy was dead and that former Confederate property rightfully belonged to the troops. In this, the entire Texan army agreed with him."

    THE CAVALRY OF THE WEST DISSOLVED ~ May 26, 1865

    Slaughter, a desk-bound general, had no friends and no sense of camaraderie with the boys and grey-beards of The Cavalry of the West. "Ford now arrested General Slaughter at pistol-point. The silver was confiscated and distributed among the Cavalry for back-pay", says Fehrenbach. Seeing that his situation was hopeless, Slaughter "then signed over his command to Ford on May 26, 1865."
    As many of the men and boys of The Cavalry of the West as were still present on that day were paid off, the first time in their entire service to the Confederacy as Texan volunteers that they had ever been paid. "Ford took $ 4000 for himself; this was, however, less than his arrears."
    The Cavalry of the West was then dismissed and Ford crossed over into Mexico with the protection of General Mejia for himself and his family. Other Confederate officers and government leaders followed in the weeks to come, and according to Fehrenbach, they "thronged Maximillian's capital." But all of their grandiose plans and die-hard dreams came to naught. "Maximillian [was] soon to be deserted by the French, and he had no help to give, nor were the Southerners comfortable in a foreign land."
    Union warships landed 25,000 troops at Brownsville in the early summer of 1865 and the Confederate government of Texas simply evaporated. By the end of the year there were 52,000 blue-jackets on the border with Mexico and a general amnesty in effect for southern officers, if they would accept parole, and many did. John Ford was among them.
    In 1863, John Salmon Ford was almost fifty. He had already lived through a fantastic career -- medical doctor, lawyer, prominent journalist, State senator for two terms, mayor of Austin and captain of the Texas Rangers. Ford was an old "Texian."
    He was a staunch Houston supporter for years, then a Know-Nothing leader, a Knight of the Golden Circle, and a Secessionist delegate to the Texas 1861 convention in turn. He shed roles easily, as popular ideas changed.
    Ford was a man of major strengths. Profane to the point of ingenuity, an inveterate gambler, free with both "his money and his pistol," Ford was a great captain, a leader of men, and a diplomat of considerable skill. He lived great times. He died poor. Most of the great frontier captains did the same. He was one of the fantastic, but forgotten, figures of the old frontier. He was impatient, brilliant, and erratic -- and yet compulsively self-disciplined when he had to be. He had prejudices but no philosophy. Again and again, he employed reason to obtain his objectives, and chose to bargain rather than fight. Above all, he instinctively went where the action was. He was tough enough to rule wild men. He showed a thirst for intrigue and a drive for power. Over ... five decades, he was to be the only man in Texas history who was involved in a major way in every action or controversy of his time. -- T.R. Fehrenbach, from "The Cavalry of the West".
    In a very real sense, it was Ford -- as the leader of The Cavalry of the West -- who worked with Mexican-Americans in Texas to keep the bloody civil conflict in Mexico from spilling over the border during the War Between The States, and it was he who helped disillusioned Confederate officers and officials come back from Mexico after Confederate Texas evaporated.
    He was both a star-gazer and a pragmatic man of action. He led by example and was tougher than the toughest frontier fighters of that incredible era. We sure could use a leader like him, today.


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