Fading memories of the Civil War
As a young person I had little interest in my family’s history – something I regret a great deal now. I remember only the outlines of some of the stories and little “factoids”, not the identities of the central characters.
So far as I know, none of my ancestors lived in McDonald
County, Missouri before or during the war, but it is possible that my
great-grandmother Eliza Jane Carnell followed her husband south from
Cass County, Missouri to be near him when he was in the military. She is
likely the one who swallowed her wedding ring to keep it away from
either soldiers or bushwhackers. A good story, but I don’t know for
sure. Her husband, John Leonard Carnell was based at a camp in
Maysville, Arkansas, and fought at the Battle of Cane Hill. Since it was
close to Pea Ridge, it is likely he fought there too, but no proof. We
do know that they fled to Sherman, Texas after the war and were likely
acquainted with the Younger and James brothers.
I have so many unanswered questions like: Why did my great
grandfather, Nimrod Porter Bunch move his family from Sarcoxie (the
oldest town in SW Missouri) to Johnson County and remain there for some
time thereafter? My grandfather was born there in 1865 and was old
enough to remember the difficulties of bringing a herd of hogs across
the many waterways between there and McDonald County where they settled
on Big Sugar Creek at White Rock.
Was he a Confederate?
Likely, but unknown. His brother, James Henry Bunch fought on the
Confederate side and is featured in an online story called “Big, Mean
and Ornery” by Dr. Barbara Inman Beale. My mother knew him and
remembered how he liked to trip children like her with his cane.
Apparently, he was ornery to the end.
One great-grandmother managed to raise and butcher a hog in
times of great want. She hid her efforts from a gang of bushwhackers by
covering the carcass under the laundry. The same tools were needed for
both projects – a big iron kettle of boiling water being the most
obvious and the clothing was used to hide the parts of the hog, so she
was able to deceive the intruders.
Another interesting story was about some shirttail relatives
who lived near Rocky Comfort. With the men all gone to war, an old woman
died. The remaining women managed to construct a coffin but
transporting it to the graveyard was a problem. They had no horses or
mules, so they hitched a cow to a sled, loaded the coffin, and set off
to the burial site. At some point, the sled tipped over, the coffin fell
off and shattered. It was not told how they coped from that point, but
they did manage to complete their task.
It has been reported that by the end of the war, only eight
families still lived in McDonald County. With both the Union and
Confederate armies and countless bushwhackers roaming the countryside,
it is not too surprising that it was left an empty land. I wish I had
paid more attention to the stories, but my memories have faded too much.
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