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Maj. Gen. Sterling Price’s Army of Missouri was headed west towards Kansas City and Fort
Leavenworth. Maj. Gen. Samuel R. Curtis’s Army of the Border, in and around Westport, was blocking the
Confederates’ way west and Maj. Gen. Alfred Pleasonton’s provisional cavalry division was pressing Price’s
army’s rear. Price had nearly 500 wagons with him and required a good ford over the Big Blue River to facilitate
the passage of his supplies. Byram’s Ford was the best ford in the area and became a strategic point during the
fighting around Westport. On October 22, Maj. Gen. James G. Blunt’s division held a defensive position on the
Big Blue River’s west bank. Around 10:00 am on the 22nd, part of Brig. Gen. Joseph O. Shelby’s Confederate
division conducted a frontal attack on Blunt’s men. This attack was a ruse because the rest of Shelby’s men
flanked Blunt’s hasty defenses, forcing the Federals to retire to Westport. Price’s wagon train and about 5,000
head of cattle then crossed the Big Blue River at Byram’s Ford and headed southward toward Little Santa Fe and
safety. Pleasonton’s cavalry was hot on the tail of Price’s army. Brig. Gen. John S. Marmaduke’s Rebel division
held the west bank of the Big Blue at Byram’s Ford to prevent Pleasonton from attacking Price’s rear. Pleasonton
assaulted Marmaduke at Byram’s Ford, around 8:00 am, on the 23rd. Three hours later, Marmaduke’s men had
enough and fell back toward Westport. With Pleasonton across the river, he was now an additional threat to Price
who was fighting Curtis’s Army of the Border at Westport. Price had to retreat south. |