The 'Battle of Mill Springs', also known as the 'Battle of Fishing Creek' in
Confederate terminology, and the 'Battle of Logan's Cross Roads' in
Union terminology, was fought in
Wayne and
Pulaski counties, near current
Nancy,
Kentucky, on
January 19,
1862, as part of the
American Civil War. It concluded an early Confederate offensive campaign in eastern Kentucky. While considered a small battle in comparison to many in the Civil War, the battle at Mill Springs was the second largest in Kentucky (only
Perryville had more bloodshed). It was also the first significant Union victory, much celebrated in the popular press, but was soon eclipsed by
Ulysses S. Grant's victories at Forts
Henry and
Donelson.
Battle
Although Confederate
Brig. Gen. Felix Zollicoffer's main responsibility was to guard the
Cumberland Gap, in November 1861 he advanced west into Kentucky to strengthen control in the area around
Somerset. He found a strong defensive position at Mill Springs and decided to make it his winter quarters. He fortified the area, especially both sides of the
Cumberland River. Union Brig. Gen.
George H. Thomas received orders to drive the Confederates across the Cumberland River and break up
Maj. Gen. George B. Crittenden's army. Thomas left
Lebanon and slowly marched through rain-soaked country, arriving at Logan's Crossroads on
January 17, where he waited for Brig. Gen.
Albin Schoepf's troops from Somerset to join him.
General Crittenden, Zollicoffer’s superior, had arrived at Mill Springs and taken command of the Confederate troops. He knew that Thomas was in the vicinity and decided that his best defense was to attack him, which he did at Logan's Crossroads at dawn on
January 19. Unbeknownst to the Confederates, some of Schoepf's troops had arrived and reinforced the Union force. Initially, the Confederate attack forced the first unit it hit to retire, but stiff resistance followed and Zollicoffer was killed, allegedly by
Col. Speed S. Fry[1]. The Confederates made another attack, but were repulsed. Union counterattacks on the Confederate right and left were successful, forcing them from the field in a retreat that ended in
Murfreesboro, Tennessee.
The Battle of Mill Springs, along with the
Battle of Middle Creek, broke the Confederate strength in eastern Kentucky. Confederate fortunes did not rise again until summer when Gen.
Braxton Bragg returned to the state by launching the . Mill Springs was the larger of the two Union Kentucky victories in January 1862. With these victories, the Federals carried the war into Middle Tennessee in February.
The battlefield today
The Mill Springs battlefield is located in Pulaski County, not far from Nancy, Kentucky. The historic town of
Mill Springs, after which the battle was named, is actually some distance away across
Lake Cumberland. Portions of the battlefield are preserved as a county park (named Zollicoffer Park in honor of the slain general). The Mill Springs Battlefield Association has protected portions of the battlefield by the acquisition of development rights to what is still a largely rural landscape, or by outright purchase. Zollicoffer Park contains the Confederate Cemetery, which consists of a mass grave. There is a corresponding
Mill Springs National Cemetery in Nancy, where the Union dead were interred.
The battlefield, which covers about 105 acres, was named by the
US Secretary of the Interior as one of the top twenty-five priority battlefields and is considered a
historic landmark. The
Zollie Tree was the tree attributed as the place Felix Zollicoffer fell; it no longer exists, the victim of a lightning strike, but the stump is marked.
On
November 4,
2006, the
Mill Springs Battlefield Visitors Center and Museum was officially dedicated.
[2] Several commemorative ceremonies are held at the battlefield each year, including candlelight tours, living history presentations, and occasional
re-enactments. The next re-enactment of the battle is planned for
September 29 and
September 30,
2007.
[3]
See also
★
Western Theater of the American Civil War
References
★
U.S. National Park Service battle description
Notes
1. Fry is generally credited with firing the fatal shot that killed General Zollicoffer, although this has been disputed since there was also a group of Union soldier around Colonel Fry who fired at the same time.
2. "It's Open!", ''The Zollie Tree'' (newsletter of the Mill Springs Battlefield Association), V. XI, No. 7, Winter 2007, p. 1.
3. ''The Zollie Tree'', ''Op cit'', p. 3
External links
★
Geoff Walden's website on the battle
★
Mill Springs Battlefield Association