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Sauk River Camp Monument
Sauk River Camp
Here at the confluence of the Sauk (Sac) and Osage rivers, from October
through December, 1861,
Major General Sterling Price of the Missouri State Guard maintained a
recruitment camp.
Of the 12,000 men gathered here, 8,000 went with Price into the Confederate
States Army,
2,000 remained with the MSG under Brigadier General M. M. Parsons, and 2,000
went home
to protect their families, many to fight in bitter guerrilla warfare.
In March, 1862, Price’s two brigades fought at Pea Ridge, Ark. The next
month they crossed the river
to Mississippi. After fighting at Iuka, Corinth, Port Gibson, Champion Hill,
and Big Black River,
they were captured at Vicksburg, in July, 1863. They were exchanged in
September and consolidated into
a single brigade, receiving in May, 1864, the thanks of the Confederate
Congress for their "fidelity to the cause
of Southern independence." They afterwards fought in the Atlanta campaign
and at Franklin, Tenn.,
where they participated in the largest, bloodiest charge of the war. They
ended the war at Fort Blakely, Ala.,
in May, 1865, with only some 300 survivors under arms.
These Missourians fought more than a dozen battles in seven states, spending
37 of their 40 months
of service outside Missouri. No men served more valiantly, endured more
hardship, or sacrificed more
for their cause. In discipline and combat effectiveness they had few peers
and no superiors.
They were the South’s finest.
Prior to October 1861, most of these men fought as the
Missouri State Guard, Missouri’s Army,
and under this flag, seeing victories at Carthage, Oak Hills, Lexington
Hills, Lexington and Drywood.
From this body of men, fifteen Generals were produced for the Confederate
States of America.
John S. Bowen, John Clark, John Clark, Jr., Francis M. Cockrell, Basil Duke,
Daniel Frost, Martin Green,
Henry Little, James Major, John S. Marmaduke, M. M. Parsons, Sterling Price,
James Rains, Jo Shelby
and William Slack
"The finest body of Soldiers ever gazed upon." President Jefferson Davis,
1863
"I have never seen in battle their equals." General Van Doran, Corinth,
Miss.
"Missouri troops of the Army of the West were not surpassed by any troops in
the World." General
D. H. Maury, Corinth, Miss.
November 2003
Colonel John T. Coffee Camp 1934
Sons of Confederate Veterans



Submitted by Cheryl Bell
April 2006
Colonel John T. Cofee Camp
Official website located at:
http://coffeecamp.org/



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