Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker

Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker

Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker

Autobiography of Samuel S. Hildebrand: The Renowned Missouri Bushwhacker

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Overview

Most Civil War historians now agree that the guerrilla conflict shaped the entire war in significant ways. Some of these “bushwhackers”—Nathan Bedford Forrest, William Clarke Quantrill, John Singleton Mosby—have become quite infamous. Illiterate Sam Hildebrand, one of Missouri’s most notorious guerrillas—often compared to “Rob Roy,” and the subject of dime novels—was one of the few to survive the war and have his story taken down and published. Shortly after this he was killed in a barroom brawl. “I make no apology to mankind for my acts of retaliation; I make no whining appeal to the world for sympathy. I sought revenge and I found it; the key of hell was not suffered to rust in the lock while I was on the war path.” —Sam Hildebrand Hildebrand’s reign of terror gave the Union army fits and kept much of the Trans-Mississippi, especially Missouri, roiling in the 1860s. Over seven years of fighting he and his men killed dozens of soldiers and civilians, whites and blacks; he claimed to have killed nearly one hundred himself. He was accused of many heinous acts. The historical significance of Hildebrand’s story is substantial, but his bloody tale is eminently readable and stands quite well on its own as a cold-blooded portrait of a violent time in American history. Like the nightmarish and depraved world of the Kid in Cormac McCarthy’s novel Blood Meridian, Hildebrand’s world is truly ruthless and his story is brutally descriptive in its coolly detached rendering of one man’s personal war. Published in 1870, Hildebrand’s autobiography has long been out of print and has been a rare and highly prized acquisition among Civil War

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781610750547
Publisher: University of Arkansas Press
Publication date: 08/01/2016
Series: The Civil War in the West
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 280
File size: 3 MB

About the Author

Author/historian Kirby Ross is the recipient of a Kansas Governor’s Proclamation for his first book, The True Life Wild West Memoir of a Bush-popping Cow Waddy. He is a feature writer for the online magazine CivilWarStLouis.com and lives in Kirwin, Kansas.

Table of Contents

Contents Series Editor's Preface 000 Acknowledgements 000 Introduction 000 Editors' Preface 1870 000 Chapter One: Yankee Fiction 000 Chapter Two: Early History of the Hildebrand Family 000 Chapter Three: Determination to Take No Part in the War 000 Chapter Four: McIlvaine's Vigilance Mob 000 Chapter Five: His House at Flat Woods Attacked by Eighty Soldiers 000 Chapter Six: Interview with Gen. Jeff. Thompson 000 Chapter Seven: Trip to Missouri 000 Chapter Eight: Vigilance Mob Drives His Mother from Home 000 Chapter Nine: Trip with Burlap and Cato 000 Chapter Ten: Trip with Two Men 000 Chapter Eleven: Another Trip to Missouri 000 Chapter Twelve: Trip with Three Men 000 Chapter Thirteen: The Militia Mob Robs the Hildebrand Estate 000 Chapter Fourteen: Federal Cruelties 000 Chapter Fifteen: Started Alone 000 Chapter Sixteen: Started to Bloomfield with Three Men 000 Chapter Seventeen: Put in a Crop 000 Chapter Eighteen: Took Seven Men 000 Chapter Nineteen: Took Eight Men 000 Chapter Twenty: Trip to Hamburg with Fifteen Men 000 Chapter Twenty-one: Started with Six Men for Springfield, Missouri 000 Chapter Twenty-two: Started with Four Men 000 Chapter Twenty-three: Took Ten Men 000 Chapter Twenty-four: Took Fifteen Men 000 Chapter Twenty-five: Put in a Crop 000 Chapter Twenty-six: Started to St. Francois County, Missouri 000 Chapter Twenty-seven: Started with Nine Men to St. Francois County 000 Chapter Twenty-eight: Capt. John, with a Company of Federal, Burns the Headquarters in Green County, Arkansas 000 [or just make this Capt. John] Chapter Twenty-nine: Took a Raid into Missouri with Four Men 000 Chapter Thirty: Commanded the Advance Guard in Price's Raid 000 Chapter Thirty-one: Selected Three Men and Went to Missouri to Avenge the Death of Rev. William Polk 000 [or just make this Selected Three Men] Chapter Thirty-two: Started with Eight Men on a Trip to Arkansas River 000 Chapter Thirty-three: Gloomy Prospects for the South 000 Chapter Thirty-four: Started to Missouri with Four Men 000 Chapter Thirty-five: Trip to Missouri with Four Men 000 Chapter Thirty-six: Imprisoned in Jacksonport Jail 000 Chapter Thirty-seven: Military Operations for His Capture 000 Bibliography 000 Index 000

What People are Saying About This

Michael Fellman

"A superb modern edition of a rare 1870 imprint . . . a vivid impression of a boastfully murderous mentality unique in Civil War historiography."
author of The Making of Robert E. Lee and Inside War: The Guerrilla Conflict in Missouri During the American Civil War

Albert Castel

"This is a must book for all interested in separating the fact from fiction regarding Civil War guerrilla warfare and those who waged it."
author of William Clarke Quantrill: His Life and Times

Robert R. Mackey

"An exciting read' combined with the truth behind Hildebrand's story."
author of The Uncivil War: Irregular Warfare in the Upper South, 1861­1865

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