River Run Red: The Fort Pillow Massacre in the American Civil War

Overview

On April 12, 1864, a force of more than 3,000 Confederate cavalry under Nathan Bedford Forrest galloped across West Tennessee to storm Fort Pillow on the Mississippi River, overwhelming a garrison of some 350 Southern white Unionists and over 300 former slaves turned artillerymen. By the next day, hundreds of Federals were dead or wounded, more than 60 black troops had been captured and reenslaved, and more than 100 white troops had been marched off to their doom at Andersonville. Confederates called this bloody ...

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River Run Red: The Fort Pillow Massacre in the American Civil War

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Overview

On April 12, 1864, a force of more than 3,000 Confederate cavalry under Nathan Bedford Forrest galloped across West Tennessee to storm Fort Pillow on the Mississippi River, overwhelming a garrison of some 350 Southern white Unionists and over 300 former slaves turned artillerymen. By the next day, hundreds of Federals were dead or wounded, more than 60 black troops had been captured and reenslaved, and more than 100 white troops had been marched off to their doom at Andersonville. Confederates called this bloody battle and its aftermath a hard- won victory. Northerners deemed it premeditated slaughter. To this day, Fort Pillow remains one of the most controversial battles in American history.

The fullest, most accurate account of the battle yet written, River Run Red vividly depicts the incompetence and corruption of Union occupation in Tennessee, the horrors of guerrilla warfare, and the pent-up bigotry and rage that found its release at Fort Pillow. Andrew Ward brings to life the garrison's black troops and their ambivalent white comrades, and the intrepid Confederate cavalrymen who rode with the slave trading Nathan Bedford Forrest, future founder of the Ku Klux Klan.

The result is a fast-paced narrative that hurtles toward that fateful April day and beyond to establish Fort Pillow's true significance in the annals of American history. Destined to become as controversial as the battle itself, River Run Red is sure to appeal to readers of James McPherson's bestselling Crossroads of Freedom: Antietam.

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Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly
This massive narrative painstakingly recounts the notorious--and much-disputed--massacre of the Union garrison at Fort Pillow, Tenn., by Nathan Bedford Forrest's Confederate cavalry on April 12, 1864. The outnumbered garrison, containing an artillery regiment of 300 freed slaves and a cavalry regiment of 350 white Tennessee Unionists, asked for a truce but various errors on both sides led the Confederates to believe that the Union soldiers were refusing Forrest's call to surrender. The ensuing attack left approximately two-thirds of the garrison dead or taken prisoner. Ward (Dark Midnight When I Rise: The Story of the Jubilee Singers) details overwhelming evidence that many were killed while surrendering or wounded, and that the rebels slaughtered fleeing African-American civilians as well. A congressional investigation resulted, but Forrest returned to civilian life and reputedly went on to found the KKK. The author vividly builds his case, portraying a wide range of the actors in the drama as well as the broader context--western Tennessee's unhappy history of slavery meant that the Union garrison was riven from within while assaulted from without. Ward's story of this notorious "collision of Southerners--white and black" makes an outstanding addition to Civil War literature. (Sept.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
A dark episode of the Civil War comes under scrutiny by an author who admits to having a fascination with 19th-century massacres. Fort Pillow, Tenn., on the Mississippi River, housed some 650 federal troops in 1864. Among the soldiers, two types were locally hated with particular passion: "Tennessee Tories," or homegrown unionists, and former slaves who had donned Yankee blue. On April 12, a force of some 2,300 veteran Confederate cavalrymen under Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest traveled across the western counties of Tennessee to attack Fort Pillow. Forrest, notes Ward (Dark Midnight When I Rise, 2000, etc.), had plenty of reason to despise both the Tories and the African-Americans in the Union ranks, for he had been a slave trader before the war, and unionist and abolitionist ideas were strong in much of the state. As Ward observes, Tennessee was the last of the Southern states to secede and enter the Confederacy, and was effectively the first to be reabsorbed into the Union. Not that that made life any easier for the former slaves; the unionists and the Union Army generals alike considered them to be well-suited for the heavy grunt work involved in being artillerists-"heaving shells and cannonballs, hauling cannon into place, pulling caissons, driving mules." When Forrest's troops arrived, they immediately set about butchering Yankees and former slaves: As Ward documents, scores were killed after they surrendered, as they did after a vigorous battle, one that the Confederates, by a contemporary account, considered "the hardest contested engagement that Forrest had ever been engaged in." The battle remains surrounded in controversy: For their part, some Northern historians consider theattack on Fort Pillow to have been a premeditated massacre, whereas some Southern historians have ascribed the post-surrender killings to the confusion of battle, the alleged drunkenness of the artillerists and the like. Probably won't settle any arguments.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780143037866
  • Publisher: Penguin Group (USA) Incorporated
  • Publication date: 10/31/2006
  • Pages: 560
  • Product dimensions: 5.54 (w) x 8.40 (h) x 1.22 (d)

Meet the Author

Andrew Ward is the author of numerous books, most recently the award- winning Dark Midnight When I Rise: The Story of the Jubilee Singers. He is a former contributing editor at The Atlantic Monthly, commentator for National Public Radio's All Things Considered, columnist for The Washington Post, and screenwriter.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted April 11, 2006

    The Truth Seems to Finally Come Out.

    Living just 3 miles from Fort Pillow. I'm well familar with the fact, fiction, and political spin placed on it. Mr. Ward has done a superb job of researching and compiling the facts into an entertaining and logical work which is the closest to the truth that any author has done. Other books concerning the Fort Pillow Massacre spend the majority of their time either villifying Forest or Exonerating him. My only regret is that this story won't get out the the majority of schoolchildren who will study the Civil War in classes, but will probably never even hear of Ft. Pillow in their classrooms

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