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Parker’s Cross Roads (1862)
 
War:   American Civil War
 
Date(s):   31 Dec 1862
 
Location:   Henderson County, Tennessee, US
 
Outcome:   Confederate victory
 
Description:   Parker’s Cross Roads

Brig. Gen. Jeremiah C. Sullivan, USA
Brig. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest, CSA

The Union eventually deployed two brigades (about 3,000 men) against Forrest’s lone brigade.

US losses were about 250; Forrest lost roughly 500.

As Brig. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest’s expedition into West Tennessee neared its conclusion, Union Brig. Gen. Jeremiah C. Sullivan, with the brigades of Col. Cyrus L. Dunham and Col. John W. Fuller, attempted to cut Forrest off from withdrawing across the Tennessee River.

Dunham’s and Forrest’s march routes, on December 31, 1862, brought them into contact at Parker’s Cross Roads. Skirmishing began about 9:00 am, with Forrest taking an initial position along a wooded ridge northwest of Dunham at the intersection. Confederate artillery gained an early advantage. Dunham pulled his brigade back a half mile and redeployed, facing north. His Federals repelled frontal feints until attacked on both flanks and rear by Forrest’s mounted and dismounted troops. During a lull, Forrest sent Dunham a demand for an unconditional surrender. Dunham refused and was preparing for Forrest’s next onset when Fuller’s Union brigade arrived from the north and surprised the Confederates with an attack on their rear; Confederate security detachments had failed to warn of Fuller’s approach. “Charge ’em both ways,” ordered Forrest. The Confederates briefly reversed front, repelled Fuller, then rushed past Dunham’s demoralized force and withdrew south to Lexington and then across the Tennessee River.

Both sides claimed victory, but the Confederate claims appear to have more credence.


Content provided by:
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Selected sources:
American Battlefield Protection Program, Heritage Preservation Services, National Park Service.



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