Thomas C. Hindman
Thomas C. Hindman | |
---|---|
![]() Hindman in uniform, c. 1862 | |
Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Arkansas's 1st district | |
In office 1859–1861 | |
Preceded by | Alfred B. Greenwood |
Succeeded by | Logan H. Roots |
Personal details | |
Born | Thomas Carmichael Hindman Jr. January 28, 1828 Knoxville, Tennessee, U.S. |
Died | September 28, 1868 Helena, Arkansas, U.S. | (aged 40)
Cause of death | Homicide (gunshot wound) |
Resting place | Maple Hill Cemetery |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse |
Mary Watkins Biscoe (m. 1856) |
Children | 5 |
Military service | |
Allegiance | Major General (C.S.) |
Commands | |
Battles |
|
Thomas Carmichael Hindman Jr. (January 28, 1828 – September 28, 1868) was an American lawyer, politician, and a senior
Once the American Civil War began in 1861 and Arkansas seceded, Hindman joined the Confederate States Army, first commanding the
During the retreat after the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain in the summer of 1864, Hindman suffered an eye injury. He was placed on leave and traveled to Texas with his family. When the Confederacy collapsed in 1865, he fled to Mexico, but returned to Helena in 1867. Resuming his involvement in politics, he opposed the Reconstruction Era government of Arkansas. Hindman was shot by an unknown assassin at his home late on September 27, 1868, and died the next morning. Before his death, Hindman suggested the shooting was politically motivated.
Early life
Thomas Carmichael Hindman Jr. was born to Thomas C. Hindman Sr. and Sallie Holt Hindman on January 28, 1828. His parents were of English and Scottish descent, and his father had served in the
The elder Hindman often traveled to
Thomas Jr. graduated in 1843, as his class's salutatorian,[3] receiving highest academic honors.[4] After spending some time in New York, Hindman moved to Ripley, Mississippi, where his family had relocated while he was at school.[2] His father had become prominent in local politics.[5] In Mississippi, the younger Hindman farmed cotton and studied law with respected local attorney Orlando Davis.[3] In 1846, the Mexican–American War began, and Hindman became caught up in the war sentiment, hoping to gain glory and believing that Mexico had wronged the United States.[5]
Mexican–American War
After President
Hindman's unit, the 2nd Mississippi, trained at Camp McClung near
Return to Mississippi

Hindman's regiment returned to Mississippi later in 1848. In May 1849, Robert Hindman was killed by William Clark Falkner in a quarrel. Falkner had felt that Robert had attempted to block him from joining the Sons of Temperance brotherhood. In the quarrel, Robert pulled a gun which misfired, and Falkner stabbed him to death. He was acquitted, and then later killed a family friend of the Hindmans, again receiving an acquittal. The killings led to a gunfight between Thomas Jr. and Falkner that resulted in no injuries, and a duel was barely avoided.[11]
Hindman joined the Sons of Temperance himself, becoming active in the early 1850s and serving as a "recording scribe" for the organization. After completing his studies with Orlando Davis, he was admitted to the bar in 1851,[11] but found his calling in politics.[3] A major political debate in Mississippi during the 1851 elections concerned whether slavery should be allowed in the territories won during the Mexican–American War. Hindman served as delegate to a county Democratic Party convention and the state convention of the faction of the party that supported the expansion of slavery. Hindman initially supported John A. Quitman in the 1851 gubernatorial election, but switched allegiance to Jefferson Davis after Quitman withdrew.[12]
Davis and the pro-states' rights Democrats narrowly lost the 1851 election, but regained the governorship in 1853. That same year, Hindman was elected to a seat in the Mississippi House of Representatives from Tippah County. He was appointed to the judiciary committee and supported tax and education reform, reforms to the Mississippi Chancery Courts system, and the Fugitive Slave Act of 1850. He tried, with little success, to ensure that new railroads within the state complied with the requirements of their charters.[13]
Move to Arkansas

In March 1854, the term of the legislature ended,
During the summer of 1854, Hindman had been in contact with Quitman about a filibustering expedition to attempt to annex Cuba to the United States as a slave state. Hindman was unable to join the expedition. While lobbying for railroads in Little Rock in January 1855, he had been involved in an altercation with two men[20] after he offended their friend, the newspaper editor Charles C. Danley.[21] One, a Dr. Moon, pulled a pistol on Hindman, who was unarmed but expressed a willingness to fight at a later time when he had a weapon. The next day, inside the Arkansas House of Representatives building, Moon's associate Wilson pulled a pistol on Hindman, who shot Moon with a derringer pistol and then pulled another weapon on Wilson. Hindman was confronted by an angry mob and was later arrested. Released on bail, he returned to Helena and was eventually acquitted. The incident prevented him from going to Cuba as leaving the country would have made him appear to be a fugitive.[20]
Opposing the Know-Nothings
During 1855, Hindman continued to provide support for temperance groups. In May 1855, he became even more active in Arkansas politics, opposing the
At the outset of 1856, Hindman decided to run for Arkansas's 1st congressional district seat in the United States House of Representatives. He went on a speaking tour across northern Arkansas from late January to mid-March, stressing opposition to the Know-Nothings and abolitionism. Hindman was challenged for the Democratic Party's nomination by the popular incumbent Alfred B. Greenwood. The party held a nomination convention beginning on Monday, May 5. After 276 rounds of voting deadlocked between Hindman and Greenwood that stretched into Saturday morning, Hindman withdrew in the interest of party unity. Hindman actively campaigned for Greenwood, becoming in the words of biographers Diane Neal and Thomas Kremm "more visible during the canvass than Greenwood". These actions kept him in the public eye, and set him up to be a strong candidate for the 1858 election.[25]
Hindman's vocal opposition to the Know-Nothings led to a feud with state legislator W. D. Rice. The situation festered from June 1855 through May 1856, when the two exchanged hostile letters in a newspaper. On May 24, Rice and three of his relatives got into a street fight with Hindman and Cleburne. The participants knew a fight was coming and all were armed.[26] Rice fired first and hit Hindman in the arm and side. Hindman and Cleburne returned fire, and Cleburne was shot through the right lung. One of Rice's relatives died three days later from wounds suffered in the fight, and Cleburne almost died as well. Both Hindman and Cleburne were later legally acquitted for their actions during the fight.[27] During 1856, Hindman had also began courting Mary Watkins Biscoe, at one point sneaking into a convent to see her when her father attempted to force an end to the romance. They were married on November 11, with Cleburne serving as Hindman's best man.[28] Hindman's new father in-law was a wealthy landowner, and two of his bride's uncles had held statewide office. The marriage increased Hindman's financial position and social status.[29]
Bringing down Arkansas's political "family"
Hindman began another run for Congress in late 1857. The Know-Nothings had been defeated soundly in the 1856 elections, and he had no major opposition within his own party. He was quite popular with Arkansas Democrats, and this time he easily won his party's nomination for the 1st congressional district. He then handily defeated William M. Crosby in the general election to win the nomination.[30] During the campaign, he was involved in a carriage accident that broke his leg. The injury did not heal properly, leaving one of his legs 2 inches (5.1 cm) longer than the other. He had to wear a special boot,[18] and he walked with a limp the rest of his life.[31]
For years, Arkansas politics had been run by the political Conway-Johnson dynasty known as
Major disagreements between Hindman and his camp and the Family occurred over fiscal matters. The Real Estate Bank of Arkansas, a state bank, had previously collapsed as a result of the Panic of 1837, leaving Arkansas with large amounts of debt. Hindman suggested reducing the debt by foreclosing on mortgages held by the bank and suing the bank's stockholders, many of whom were members of the Family, for the collateral they had put up. Johnson, in turn, accused Hindman of wanting to get the bank problem resolved because his father in-law was a former trustee of the bank who owed the bank money and had been accused of mismanagement. Hindman also accused the state government of unfairly awarding a printing contract to the Family-owned True Democrat newspaper, while the Family responded that Hindman just wanted the contract to go to one of the two newspapers he owned, the States Rights Democrat and the Old Line Democrat. Hindman unsuccessfully attempted to get Congressional election dates changed, and both sides accused the other of being supported by Know-Nothings.[40] In November 1859, Hindman promised that he would appear in Little Rock to publicly argue against the Family, but instead went to Mississippi,[41] stating that there had been an illness in his family.[42] His failure to appear caused Robert Ward Johnson to refer to Hindman as "a bully and imposter". A duel between the two men almost occurred in December.[41] Another scandal arose when the press of the Family accused Hindman of writing a number of pro-Hindman letters under the name of "Viator"; Hindman later admitted to having been involved in writing them.[43]
Hindman's rise to prominence had caused turmoil in Arkansas politics,
American Civil War
Secession
Throughout his political career, Hindman had supported slavery, the right of slaveholders to take their slaves to other territories, and the belief that the Union could only be preserved if slavery was allowed.
In Congress, Hindman supported a canal to bypass a blockage on the
On December 20, 1860,
The situation changed in mid-April. On April 12, Confederate forces fired on Fort Sumter,[65] bringing on the American Civil War,[66] and Lincoln called on the states to furnish troops to put down the rebellion. Arkansas rejected the request, and the secession convention was recalled.[65] Lincoln's call for troops moved public opinion towards secession, and parts of the state began to prepare for war even though the state had not yet seceded.[67] Hindman made pro-secession speeches in the areas that had previously opposed it, and he was present on May 6 when the convention voted to secede from the Union. He personally telegraphed Davis, who was now the Confederate president, with the result.[68] With war coming, Hindman resigned his seat in the United States House of Representatives.[18]
Entering Confederate service
Hindman desired to be a member of the Arkansas delegation to the
In September, General Albert Sidney Johnston was placed in command of all Confederate forces west of the Allegheny Mountains, excluding the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. Hardee's force, including Hindman's regiment, was transferred to Kentucky later that month, but Hindman was on recruiting duties and did not immediately follow it.[76] He was promoted to brigadier general on September 28,[73] and after arriving in Kentucky, he was assigned to command one of two brigades in a division led by Hardee, with Cleburne, who was also in Confederate service, commanding the other.[77] While in Kentucky, Hindman's men fought in several minor actions, including the Battle of Rowlett's Station on December 17.[78]
Shiloh

On February 8, 1862, after a Union victory at the
Shortly before the battle, Hardee reorganized his corps into two ad hoc divisions, and Hindman's included both his original brigade (now commanded by Colonel Robert G. Shaver) and that of Brigadier General S. A. M. Wood.[82] The battle opened with Hindman's men fighting with Colonel Everett Peabody's Union brigade, in an exchange that prevented the Confederates from achieving complete surprise.[83] Wood's brigade later drove back a Union brigade, but suffered heavy losses in the effort.[84] Hindman personally led another attack that shattered a Union brigade.[85] During fighting with Colonel James C. Veatch's Union brigade, Hindman's horse was killed, and he was knocked out of the fighting by the fall,[86] having broken a leg.[18] With Hindman down and Hardee elsewhere on the field, Wood's and Shaver's battered and exhausted brigades fell out of the fighting, leaderless.[86] Johnston was mortally wounded during the fighting on April 6, which resulted in the Union forces being pushed back but not decisively defeated. Union reinforcements arrived, and on the next day drove the Confederates from the field.[87] Hindman received praise from both Hardee and Beauregard for his performance during the battle.[88]
Trans-Mississippi command
After Shiloh, Hindman took leave in Helena to recover.[89] He was promoted to the rank of major general to date from April 14[73] and reported back to the army at Corinth, Mississippi, on May 10.[89] On May 26, Hindman received orders from Beauregard to head back west of the Mississippi River and take command of Arkansas and the Indian Territory; these orders were expanded the next day to command Arkansas, Missouri, the Indian Territory, and Louisiana north of the Red River of the South.[90] After stopping to gather supplies and weapons in Memphis, Helena, and Napoleon, Arkansas, Hindman arrived in Little Rock on May 30.[91] Major General Earl Van Dorn had recently transferred almost all of the men and supplies in the Trans-Mississippi Department to east of the Mississippi, leaving very little in Arkansas.[92]
Hindman had to construct his department from little, in one of the least developed parts of the Confederacy.[93] He approached his task with zeal and energy, enforcing conscription laws[94] (he illegally exempted from conscription the manufacturers of some goods he deemed necessary),[95] promoted guerrilla warfare,[96] and declared martial law. He also took troops passing through the state for Trans-Mississippi use, ordered all white troops in the Indian Territory to report to Arkansas, set up facilities to produce supplies and weapons, and secured the return of a division of Missouri troops that had been sent east of the Mississippi.[97] He also reorganized the cavalry units within his department. Historian Stephen B. Oates credited Hindman's actions with making the cavalry under his authority "useful instead of ornamental".[98] In the long run, his support of guerrilla warfare backfired on Hindman, as it eventually led to an increase in lawlessness in the state. Some captured Union soldiers were tortured and murdered, and Shea suggested that Hindman's open hatred of the Union may have been to blame.[99]
Hindman established defensive positions on the
Hindman's methods in accomplishing these tasks were sometimes extralegal, and he angered the political elite of Arkansas. Planters objected when Hindman ordered cotton burned to prevent Union forces from capturing it, or when he impressed slaves for military construction projects.
Defeat at Prairie Grove

Holmes, who had been transferred west after performing poorly in the
In Hindman's absence, Brigadier General James S. Rains took command. The Confederates in southwestern Missouri withdrew back into Arkansas after the First Battle of Newtonia, splitting into two forces, one of which was shattered at the Battle of Old Fort Wayne.[116] Hindman returned to Fort Smith in mid-October, and had Rains removed for drunkenness. After learning that Union Major General John Schofield had advanced into Arkansas with 8,000 to 10,000 men, Hindman withdrew his force south across the Boston Mountains.[117] After the withdrawal, Schofield assumed that the Confederates were no longer threatening Missouri and took two of his three divisions back to Springfield, Missouri, leaving Brigadier General James G. Blunt's division in northwestern Arkansas.[118]
The Confederates had been defeated at the
Late on December 6, Hindman learned that Union forces, led by Brigadier General
Chickamauga

Hindman's earlier policies in Arkansas continued to make him unpopular during the Prairie Grove campaign, and the defeat at Prairie Grove worsened matters. The Arkansas congressional delegation petitioned Davis to transfer him out of the state, a request that was granted on January 30, 1863. Hindman was assigned to a court of inquiry related to the Confederate defeat at the
On August 16, Union Major General

Bragg then decided to attack Rosecrans elsewhere, at
Hindman sent one of his brigades to the support of Brigadier General Bushrod Johnson's division, ordered a second to resupply using captured Union ammunition, and intended to send his third brigade to Johnson's aid once it was ready. Instead, Johnson attacked without waiting for Hindman.[142] Bloody fighting against Thomas's men occurred, and Hindman's division entered the fray as well.[139] Longstreet had been unclear as to whether Johnson or Hindman were in charge, and both officers believed that they were responsible for both divisions.[143] Fighting, often at close quarters, continued until nightfall, when Thomas, now facing the wings of both Longstreet and Polk, withdrew. Bragg decided not to pursue on September 21.[144]
Suspension and transfer request
On September 29, 1863, Bragg suspended Polk from command for "neglect of duty" and Hindman for "disobedience of the lawful command of his superior officer", with Hindman's charge being related to the McLemore Cove incident. Hindman was sent to
Over the winter of 1863 to 1864, Hindman began supporting the Confederacy arming slaves, a highly controversial option. Cleburne made a public presentation in support of the idea, but it was rejected.[148] Not wanting to serve under Hood, Hindman requested a transfer to an inspector general or behind-the-lines duty in Florida or southern Georgia before he was replaced. With the transfer not having been acted on by February 28, Hindman tendered his resignation. He had no real intentions of resigning, but hoped that it would push the Confederate government into transferring him. Instead, he was ordered back to his divisional command on March 18. His hopes of a transfer or promotion had been blunted by his support for Cleburne's proposal to arm slaves, the hostile Bragg's position as an advisor to Davis, and his continuing unpopularity in the Trans-Mississippi due to his previous actions in Arkansas. His resignation was denied on March 23, and Hindman officially resumed commanding his division on April 3.[149]
Atlanta
In early May 1864, Union Major General
The Confederate retreat continued with sporadic fighting, with Johnston taking up a new position in the
Leave in Texas and end of war
On July 10, 1864, Hindman again requested a transfer, this time specifically to the Trans-Mississippi. This was denied because of his unpopularity in Arkansas, and he was instead offered a leave of absence to recover from his injury.
The Hindmans reached San Antonio in January 1865. By this time, the Confederacy was collapsing, and Atlanta had fallen. Over the next several months, false rumors about Hindman were circulating, such as that General
Later life
While he expected to have been able to easily make a living in Mexico, Hindman had trouble getting a law practice to flourish, despite learning Spanish.
In Carlota, agriculture did not do as well as hoped, and Hindman was unable to establish a successful legal practice because of the poverty of the residents. Hindman was part of a plan formed by several ex-Confederates in 1866 to establish a colony in the Yucatán Peninsula, but this failed as foreign support for the rule of Maximilian ended. The family moved to Orizaba before June; rebels against Maximilian razed Carlota not long after they moved. Maximilian's rule began to collapse, and the Hindmans were forced to return to the United States, returning to Helena in April 1867. Maximilian was overthrown and executed in mid-June.[168] Hindman requested a pardon from President of the United States Andrew Johnson, but this was denied.[169] Once settled in Helena, Hindman resumed his legal practice with John C. Palmer and later M. T. Sanders.[170]
Hindman also reentered politics, speaking against the
Assassination

On the night of September 27, 1868, while sitting in his home with his children, Hindman was shot through a window of his home. He was hit in the neck and jaw, and his
See also
- List of American Civil War generals (Confederate)
- List of assassinated American politicians
- List of assassinations by firearm
- List of United States representatives from Arkansas
- List of unsolved murders (before 1900)
References
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- ^ Neal & Kremm (1993), pp. 161–162.
- ^ Neal & Kremm (1993), p. 164.
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- ^ a b Symonds (1997), pp. 139–143.
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- ^ Neal & Kremm (1993), pp. 237–241.
- ^ a b Neal & Kremm (1993), p. 241.
- ^ Toms, J. Mason (March 20, 2021). "Hindman Hall Museum". Encyclopedia of Arkansas. Retrieved April 23, 2022.
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- Shea, William L. (2012). "Prelude to Prairie Grove: Cane Hill, November 28, 1862". Arkansas Historical Quarterly. 71 (2): 122–150.
- Shea, William L.; Hess, Earl J. (1992). Pea Ridge: Civil War Campaign in the West. Chapel Hill, North Carolina: ISBN 0-8078-4669-4.
- Sword, Wiley (1999) [1974]. Shiloh: Bloody April. Dayton, Ohio: Morningside Bookshop.
- ISBN 0-7006-0820-6.
- ISBN 978-0-8071-3150-3.
- Woods, James M. (1987). Rebellion and Realignment: Arkansas's Road to Secession. Fayetteville, Arkansas: ISBN 0-938626-59-0.
Further reading
- OL 22895434M – via Internet Archive.
- Winders, Richard Bruce (2016). Panting for Glory: The Mississippi Rifles in the Mexican War. No. 151 Williams-Ford Military History Series. College Station, Texas: Texas A&M University Press. .