Pittsburg County, Oklahoma
Military Data During the Civil War in Indian Territory, the Confederate depot at
Perryville was attacked on August 26, 1863, by Union
forces. After the
federal
victory at Honey Springs
in July 1863, Maj. Gen.
James Blunt,
division
commander of the Union Army of the Frontier, had
marched out of
Ft. Gibson to find and defeat the
Confederate army
in Indian Territory,
once and for all. Blunt's
scouts contacted Brig. Gen. William Steele's
rear
guard as he was
withdrawing south across the Canadian River. Steele
understandably did not want to stand and fight the
freshly reinforced
Blunt.
Their recent defeat at
Honey Springs deeply
dispirited Brig. Gen.
Douglas
Cooper's Indian troops. Brig. Gen. William Cabell's
Arkansas
troops were deserting en masse, and all of
Gen.
Steele's troops were in
poor supply. Steele decided
he
would send Cabell to Fort Smith in a
defensive
position, where he could be reinforced. Cooper moved
south to
Perryville where he could resupply. Cooper
then sent
a detachment under
Col. Chilly McIntosh further west
to cover his flank. It may have been on
Steele's
mind that Blunt would
pursue Cabell towards Fort Smith, which
would expose
Blunt's flank and supply lines to
Cooper, enabling
Cooper's
Indians and Texans to
spring a trap. Blunt would have been caught out in
the open without an escape
route, Cabell would have
reinforcements from
Fort Smith close at hand and
could pin Blunt on the Arkansas River's south
side.
Whether Blunt had
insight to Steele's plan is uncertain. Blunt
decided
to pursue Cooper, whom he had most recently
defeated
at Honey
Springs. After detailing scouts to
watch Cabell and McIntosh's movements,
Blunt
hastened to catch
Cooper. Perryville, a major supply depot for the
Confederates, was located halfway between Boggy
Depot and Scullyville, or
North Fork Town, on the
Texas
Road. By attacking Steele, Blunt hoped to
catch and destroy Cooper's
five thousand men and
their depot. Then he
would be free to take Cabell
and Fort Smith. Steele posted a strong
picket,
including two
howitzers, on the north side of town blocking the
road leading into Perryville. The Federals arrived
at the edge of town and
engaged the Confederates in
a
rare night fight. The Confederates were in a
fixed
position of hastily constructed barricades, and the
Confederate
artillery was centered on the road. The
Federals
deployed right and left
of the road and brought
artillery quickly into play. The heated exchange
lasted a short time. The
Confederates, fearing they
would be engulfed,
retreated without their stores,
leaving them in the hands of the Federals.
The Union
troops hit with such
swiftness that Steele was unable to summon
reinforcements. Blunt secured what supplies he could
use and ordered the
town
burned. The destruction of
this major Confederate
depot crippled the
Confederate
forces in Indian Territory as much as if
Cooper's
army had
been destroyed.

US-69 near the south-city limits of
McAlester
Civil
War Monument honoring the Perryville Battle. This monument is
located on US 69 near the south city limits of McAlester, Pittsburg
County, Oklahoma. This was the original site of the James Perry
Trading Post. Perryville was one of the most important trading towns
in 1849. During the Civil War Perryville served as Confederate post
and supply depot. In 1863 Union forces under Maj. Gen James Blunt burned
the town after the Battle of Perryville. In 1972 the Perryville site was
added to the National Register of Historic
Places
CIVIL WAR BATTLE OF PERRYVILLE
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