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Huntsville Massacre

Madison County, Arkansas

 

On January 10th, 1863, nine men who were Southern sympathizers, were removed from a guardhouse in the predawn hours of a cold, icy morning and were taken to a field on the banks of Vaughn’s Branch where they were lined up and shot by members of Company G of the 8th Missouri Calvary commanded by Lieutenant Colonel Elias Briggs Baldwin.  Eight of the men died as a result of this execution and the ninth man survived but was shot in the back of the head with the bullet going through his head, knocking out a lot of his teeth.  He succeeded in crawling about a quarter of a mile to the nearby home of Mrs. Elizabeth Vaughn, where she nursed him for over a month and after his recovery he returned to Mississippi.  This man told the story of what had happened and who was responsible for it, as did Hugh Berry who survived for one day after being shot.

Photographs and information courtesy of Joy Russell - jrussell44 @ aol.com.

Location of the Huntsville Massacre

on 10 January 1865

In Memory of the Brave Men of Huntsville and Madison County, who were executed at this location by Union Soldiers. 

This monument erected Summer 2005 by the Madison County Genealogical & Historical Society and Huntsville Lodge #364, Free & Accepted Masons.

 

Robert Coleman Young; age 56 – also known as – “Parson Young”; Baptist Minister.

Hugh Samuel Berry: age 31 - son of the aforementioned William M. Berry; Capt. in the Confederate army; home on leave.

John Hughes, connection unknown.

John William Moody: age 32 – nephew-in-law to Chesley H. Boatright; Deputy U.S. Marshal (1860 Census Enumerator), farmer; Confederate Army Captain.

William Martin Berry: age 60 -  a prominent member of Odeon Masonic Lodge; brother of State Senator John Berry; John Berry was also the father to James R. Berry, son-in-law of Isaac.

 

Watson P. Stevens age 29; cousin of the Berry’s

Chesley H. Boatright: age 39 - a blacksmith, former county treasurer, Deacon of the Huntsville Cumberland Presbyterian Church, and prominent Mason

Askin Hughes, connection unknown.

Cassie  Boehm and Shane Crusha placing their tributes on the monument.

Members of the First Arkansas Light Artillery, Sons of the Confederate Veterans, and local re-enactors  salute the men with three volleys.

 

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