I've written quite a bit (on this blog and elsewhere) about the guerrilla conflict in Missouri during the Civil War. I don't consider myself an apologist for the Confederate guerrillas, because I think that they (and the South in general) were ultimately on the wrong side of history, but I can see the Southern side of the story. I think that much of the story that America has traditionally been told about the guerrillas has been skewed in favor of the Union because it was generally told by the victorious Union side. For instance, the Missouri guerrillas have often been portrayed as murderous outlaws who had no military legitimacy and whose only goal was plunder. My book Other Noted Guerrillas of the Civil War in Missouri contains a fairly thorough discussion of how I see the guerrillas, but suffice it to say here that this simplistic Union portrayal of the guerrillas as opportunist brigands is far from the truth in most cases.
On the other hand, Southern apologists often go too far in the other direction and try to portray the guerrillas as gallant knights who were driven to take up arms only in response to the horrible maltreatment that they and their families received at the hands of the federal government. In many cases, there was some truth to this generalization, but it, too, is an oversimplification.
Take Dade County, Missouri, guerrilla Kincheon "Kinch" West (who was a first cousin of one of my great grandmothers, by the way), for example. Kinch is probably most famous for his raid on Melville (now Dadeville), in 1864. The Union side of the story seems to suggest that Kinch was nothing but an outlaw looking for plunder, whereas the Southern side of the story suggests that Kinch was a peaceful young man at the beginning of the war who only took to the bush on the Confederate side after his father was mercilessly killed without provocation by Union troops in 1863.
The truth is almost certainly somewhere in the middle. In all likelihood, Kinch joined the Confederate-allied Missouri State Guard near the outset of the war, although, as is often the case, no documentation of his military service has survived. What is known is that Kinch was later affiliated in his guerrilla activities with Lafayette "Fate" Roberts, who is known to have been an officer in the 8th Division of the Missouri State Guard during the early part of the war. So, Kinch, like most guerrilla leaders, probably did have some military standing or legitimacy, at least as far as the Southern side was concerned. However, it is also known that Kinch began his marauding activities before his father was killed by Union soldiers. In fact, his father was probably killed at least in part in retaliation for Kinch's activities. Of course, nothing would justify killing a father for what one of his sons had done, but the point I'm making is that Kinch was almost certainly not a peaceful young man who was staying home minding his own business at the time his father was killed, as the Southern side of the story would have us believe. In short, Kinch West was a desperate character, as the Union side of the story suggests, but he probably did not start out to be an outlaw and he did have personal reasons that helped drive him to desperation.
For anybody interested in more detailed information about Kinch West, I'm providing a link to a website dedicated to info about him:
http://freepages.genealogy.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~cspowell/researchpages/Kinch.html
Information and comments about historical people and events of Missouri, the Ozarks region, and surrounding area.
Sunday, September 9, 2012
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7 comments:
Cool blog you got here and thank you for the valuable information. This is truly a great read for me and definitely be back to read some more.
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Thanks. Glad you found the blog.
Thanks, Lee. Not sure whether you're saying I should write a more detailed account specifically about Kinch West or just that I should post more often on my blog. If you're saying the latter, the main reason I don't post more often is that I spend most of my time doing other kinds of writing (e.g. books, magazine articles, etc.) I enjoy the blog, though, because it gives me an opportunity to communicate, at least indirectly, with readers such as yourself.
Larry, I would be interested to know what else you might have written about Kinch. That's my link you have posted up there, although it's prehistoric by internet standards. I'm also interested in Fate Roberts as I have had a hard time finding information on him.
Chris, I haven't really written much about Kinch West, but my book The Civil War on the Lower Kansas-Missouri Border covers his raid on Melville (now Dadeville), for instance. I haven't researched him nearly as much as you obviously have. Your site may be prehistoric, as you call it, but it still contains a lot of good info.
Enjoyed reading your article, but It’s hard for me to have any sympathy for bushwhackers (or Jayhawkers or other irregulars). They had no mercy for the settlers. First hand accounts are very graphic. Have you read S.C. Turbo?
Yes, I've read some of the Turnbo manuscripts. I agree that there were a lot of atrocities committed in the Missouri region by irregulars (and sometimes regulars) in the name of one side or the other during the Civil War, and more were no doubt committed by bushwhackers ostensibly fighting for the South than by jayhawkers on the side of the North. However, I don't think you can lump all bushwhackers together and say that they were all merciless killers.
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