Description: |
Although Brig. Gen. Felix K. Zollicoffer’s main responsibility was to guard 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 Thomas received orders to drive the Rebels across
the Cumberland River and break up Maj. Gen. George B. Crittenden’s army. He left Lebanon and slowly marched
through rain-soaked country, arriving at Logan’s Crossroads on January 17, where he waited for Brig. Gen. A.
Schoepf’s troops from Somerset to join him. Maj. Gen. George 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 the Yankees. The Rebels attacked Thomas 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 Rebel attack forced the first unit it hit to retire, but stiff resistance followed and Zollicoffer was
killed. The Rebels 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. Mill Springs, along
with Middle Creek, broke whatever Confederate strength there was in eastern Kentucky. Confederate fortunes did
not rise again until summer when Gen. Braxton Bragg launched his offensive into Kentucky. 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. |