If they were to successfully make their way to Little Rock, General Samuel Curtis and his Army of the Southwest needed to hook up with Commander Augustus Kilty’s White River expedition and much needed supplies. The Confederates, assuming that Curtis was retreating instead of marching to meet Kilty, made a move to strike him. Little did they know they would be fighting a critical battle that would determine the course of the war in 1862 Arkansas.
Cotton Plant (or Hill's Plantation or Cache River)
Study map of Battle of Cotton Plant (Wikimedia)
On
July 7 Curtis started his army towards Clarendon, the final leg of the march.
To reach there he would first need to cross the Cache River. The Confederates
had already made moves to hold the Cache River crossing. Brigadier-General Albert
Rust led 5,000 men in the area. This force included Texas cavalry (six
regiments) and Arkansan infantry. Rust ordered Colonel William Parsons to secure
the crossing with the 12th and 16th Texas Cavalry (1,000
men in all). The 12th and 16th did not move up together
and the former stopped 6 miles south of the crossing in order to wait for the
other. By failing to secure the crossing with his 12th regiment,
Parsons gave the Federals time to take it.[1]
The area around the Cache River was heavily wooded, with plenty of swampland as
well. As Federals and Confederates alike had to deal with branches, clouds of
mosquitoes, and wet ground while a plethora of animals hooted, screeched, and
flapped in the background. One Texan said it felt like a primeval world.[2]