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Battle
Flags at the Battle of Mill Springs, Kentucky
compiled by
Geoffrey R. Walden
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Federal Flags
Very little is known
about the flags carried by Federal units at Mill Springs. These would
presumably have been the National and regimental colors of silk, and
many silk flags from this early period were worn out in service and
replaced. Indeed, some of the Federal units that fought at Mill
Springs received replacement flags immediately following that
campaign. In fact, for some of the regiments, these flags issued
shortly after the battle appear to have been the first flags they were
ever issued, as noted below.
10th Indiana
Infantry
-- Colors had been presented to the regiment by the ladies of
Lafayette, Indiana, in the summer of 1861, but were "completely
torn into shreds by the bullets of the enemy" during the battle
(it is unclear whether this was a stand of colors - national and
regimental flags, or just one flag of uncertain style). The National
color was presented in December 1861 by Union ladies of Louisville.
The canton contained a scroll with the motto "E Pluribus
Unum" in gold thread, surrounded by silver stars. The following
inscription was on the stripes: "Presented by Sallie Mansfield
and Betty Crabb to the Tenth Regiment Indiana Volunteers" (a c.
1900 photograph shows the inscription was actually "Presented By
Miss B.C. & Miss S.N. To The 10th Ind. Regiment" - view this
photo and in-depth descriptions of these flags on the 10th
Indiana Infantry page). (Note
1)
2nd Minnesota
Infantry
-- The regimental color said to have been carried at Mill Springs is
preserved in Minnesota. It appears to be a regulation U.S.
infantry regimental color, but with the state seal on the obverse side
(the standard federal eagle is on the reverse).

Regimental
Flag, 2nd Minnesota Infantry, ca. 1862
(Missing portions have been whited-out in the photo on the right.)
Minnesota Military History Museum, photos courtesy Ryan Toews
9th Ohio
Infantry
-- About May 1861 the regiment had been presented a blue silk flag
with the inscriptions "For the First German Regiment of
Cincinnati" (in German) and on the reverse, "Kämpfet brav
für Freiheit und Recht" (Fight Bravely for Freedom and Justice).
The regiment presumably carried this banner into action at Mill
Springs. (Note
2)
2nd Tennessee
Infantry
-- A regimental flag that had been stored in Washington as a
captured Confederate flag was returned to Tennessee in 1905.
Although this was identified as a Confederate flag (perhaps that of
the 19th Tennessee Infantry), a 1905 drawing clearly shows that it was
a Federal regimental color. It is unknown whether this flag
dates to the Mill Springs period. The current location of this
flag is unknown. (Note
19)

Regimental
Flag, 2nd East Tennessee Volunteers (date unknown)
"The Returned Battle Flags"
Following the battle,
several of the victorious Federal regiments were presented flags made
by Hugh Wilkins in Louisville, Kentucky (Wilkins’ early flags are
generally distinguished by the light blue color of their cantons). The
1st Kentucky Cavalry received a "beautiful blue silk banner"
from Mrs. Wilkins, and the 10th
Indiana Infantry, 4th Kentucky Infantry, and 2nd Minnesota
Infantry received new Wilkins flags from the Loyal Ladies of
Louisville Soldiers Association. Indeed, it appears that these flags
issued to the Kentucky regiments following the battle were the first
they had, and they may have fought at Mill Springs without colors. (Note
3)

National
flag presented to the 2nd Minnesota Infantry
by the Loyal Ladies of Louisville, following the battle
Military Historical Society of Minnesota

National
flag presented to the 10th Indiana Infantry
by the Loyal Ladies of Louisville, following the battle
Indiana Historical Society; photo courtesy Mark Jaeger

Back to History Index
NOTES
1. OR I, Vol. 7, p.
92; James Birney Shaw, History of the Tenth Indiana Volunteer
Infantry. Lafayette, IN, priv. publ., 1912, pp. 131-132;
Lafayette, IN, Daily Journal, 5 February 1862.
2. Carl Frederick
Wittke, The Ninth Ohio Volunteers. Columbus: F. J. Herr,
1926, p. 15.
3. Sgt. E. Tarrant, The
Wild Riders of the First Kentucky Cavalry. Priv. Publ., 1894, p.
66; Union Soldiers & Sailors Monument Assn., The Union
Regiments of Kentucky. Louisville: Courier-Journal Job Printing
Co., 1897, p. 306; J. W. Bishop, The Mill Springs Campaign.
St. Paul, MN: St. Paul Book and Stationery Co., 1890, p. 74; Thomas W.
Fugate, "Kentucky Colors," Military Collector and
Historian, Vol. 43, No. 1 (Spring 1991), pp. 17-23; when the 1st
Kentucky Cavalry was issued a flag on 25 February 1862, the
requisition form noted that the regiment was "destitute of the
above mentioned articles;" the first receipt of flags ordered by
the state for its units was 23 January 1862, following the battle
(regimental records in the Kentucky Military History Museum, courtesy
Tom Fugate, curator).
19. The
Flags of the Confederate Armies. Returned to the Men Who Bore Them by
the United States Government. St. Louis: Charles E. Ware,
1905 (a paperback booklet, showing color drawings of the captured
battle flags returned to the South in March and April 1905, which was
printed for and presented to the United Confederate Veterans at their
reunion in Louisville, Kentucky, June 1905). The entry for
this flag shows no capture history, and it must have been mistakenly
stored in Washington among the Confederate flags.
I wish to express my
thanks to Joyce Butler (Maine Historical Society), Gay Carter, Howard
Freed (Pioneer Village), Tom Fugate (Kentucky Military History
Museum), Paul Hightower, Mark Jaeger, Mary Lohrenz (Old Capitol
Museum, Jackson, MS), Ron Nicholas, Ray Pennington, Rebecca Rose
(Museum of the Confederacy), Nancy Terhaar, and Duke Turpin for their
generosity in supplying some of the information used herein.
All text contents
copyright © 1998-2000, Geoffrey R. Walden; all rights reserved.
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