1910 1st Ed., Quantrill & The Border Wars, William Connelley, Illustrated

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1910 1st Ed., Quantrill & The Border Wars, William Connelley, Illustrated Specs
BindingHardcover
LanguageEnglish
Special Attributes1st Edition, Illustrated
AuthorWilliam Elsey Connelley
PublisherThe Torch Press
TopicCivil War (1861-65)
SubjectHistory
Character FamilyWilliam Clarke Quantrill
Original/FacsimileOriginal
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1910First EditionQuantrill and the Border WarsWilliam Elsey ConnelleyGood condition (see photos)No writingNo DJTop edge trimmed; others untrimmed (see photo)Numerous illustrations (see photos)pp. 542Dimensions: 9 1/2" x 6 1/4" x 2" An outstanding study of William Clarke Quantrill and the famous "Border Wars" in Kansas and Missouri in the 1860's. With the outbreak of the Civil War, Quantrill joined the Confederacy and fought at Lexington, Missouri. Preferring guerilla tactics, he organized his own gang of southern sympathizers. Although he failed to receive any Confederate endorsement or direct support, he and his men raided communities supposed to have Union sympathizers and robbed mail coaches. They frequently murdered citizens who were suspected of being Union sympathizers. In 1862, Quantrill and his gang were declared outlaws by Union officials. Quantrill helped Confederate troops capture Independence, Missouri in August, 1862. A year later Quantrill, with 300 men plus another 150 men who were loosely allied to him descended on Lawrence, Kansas, burning much of the city down and killing nearly 150 citizens. A few weeks later, after defeating a small group of Federal soldiers at Baxter Springs, Kansas, Quantrill put the Federal prisoners to death. Quantrill was finally mortally wounded in 1865 by Federal troops during a raid into Kentucky in which he led only 33 men. Many later outlaws rode with Quantrill during those violent years. Frank James, Jesse James, Cole Younger, and other noted outlaws are among them.