Welcome to Old Pleasant Hill Monument (Battle of Pleasant Hill) - Pleasant Hill, LA
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member kwashnak
N 31° 51.217 W 093° 30.800
15R E 451436 N 3524324
Introduction and Narrative about the Battle of Pleasant Hill located in the Pleasant Hill Battle Park, Highway 175 at Parish Road 1068 in Pleasant Hill, LA (up the road from the current town of Pleasant Hill).
Waymark Code: WMP1VB
Location: Louisiana, United States
Date Posted: 06/12/2015
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 3

Inside the park is a narrative monument explaining the action in the area surrounding the Battle of Pleasant Hill (April 9, 1864) - part of the Red River Campaign in Louisiana.

Front:

Welcome to Old Pleasant Hill

You are standing on the corner of Main and 1st Streets Downtown. The stores and shops were mostly to your left and behind you along Main Street. Some were along 1st Street. About 150 feet to your left was 2nd Street Etc. Houses were scatted block by block in all directions from here.

Imagine you were standing here at about 4:30 pm Saturday April 9, 1864. The sound of musket fire, cannons, horses running, clanking of equipment, shouts of orders and screams of wounded men is deafening. Thousands of Yankee solders are running past in various directions as regiments move to new positions to meet the onslaught of the Confederates converging on this spot from three directions.

The Confederate cavalry is dismounted to your right rear. General Churchill's Confederate Arkansas and Missouri divisions are charging in directly behind you and to your left rear. General Walker's Texas division should be in view charging into town, down the Mansfield Road, Main Street and to its right, General Green's dismounted Confederate cavalry is making its way through the woods to your left front and General Polinac's Louisiana and Texas division is coming in more slowly to your left and in front of you way back in the woods. You are standing in a very dangerous place. Bullets are whizzing past you. Cannonballs are screaming overhead, some exploding close by.

Military activity has been heavy in and through town for a week or so with General Taylor's confederate army concentrating here then falling back to Mansfield. The Yankee cavalry rode into town on the 7th, fighting the Confederate cavalry through town for about 2 miles to Dr. Wilson's farm where the Confederates stopped for a good size fight then they slowly fell back fighting off and on to Sabine Crossroads this side of Mansfield. The Yankee twenty mile long wagon train began passing through on the 7th and all day on the 8th with Yankee soldiers trying to get past it to where General Taylor's army was slaughtering the Yankee cavalry at Sabine Crossroads on the 8th. Most of the Yankee infantry arrived here during the night of the 8th from Grand Ecore and began digging in to get ready for the Confederates. They skirmished around the town all day on the 9th then all hell broke loose around 4 pm. The battle continued for over 2 hours in and around the town. About dark the Confederates fell back about 2 miles. The Yankees pulled out during the night, leaving the dead and wounded were they fell.

Reverse:

A terrible sight met the eyes of those who braved the field of carnage on that Sunday morning. Many thousands of dead, dying and wounded men lying as far as the eyes could see intermixed with well over a thousand dead horses, broken and scattered equipment, etc. The activity in pleasant hill continued. The dead soldiers had to be buried, the wounded tended, the dead horses burned, the thousands of muskets and other scattered usable equipment gathered and the mess cleaned up. Scattered items, spent and dropped bullets, cannonball fragments, etc. are still being picked up here and there today 130 years later.

There would be more deadly fighting for the armies as the Yankees extracted themselves from the Red River campaign. General Banks army to the south, General Steel's army to the north and Admiral Porter's fleet on the river but the Battle for Shreveport and threatened invasion of Texas was over.
Union, Confederate or Other Monument: Other or General Civil War

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Related Website: [Web Link]

Photo or photos will be uploaded.: yes

Date Installed or Dedicated: Not listed

Name of Government Entity or Private Organization that built the monument: Not listed

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