Springfield Flag

The Second Kansas Volunteer Infantry was organized in Lawrence on June 11, 1861, in response to President Abraham Lincoln's first call for troops during the Civil War. Photo of Springfield flag

Later that month the regiment was mustered in at Kansas City, Missouri, for three months' service. The Second Kansas took part in several battles in Missouri, including Wilson's Creek (Springfield), as noted on the flag itself. The Adjutant General's history of Kansas regiments observed that "The Second regiment was the last one to leave the field (Wilson's Creek), and the only regiment which kept its line and organization unbroken from the first to the last of the fight, which lasted about six hours." The regiment was mustered out at Leavenworth on October 31, 1861.

Company H of the Second Kansas was formed in Emporia. The ladies of Emporia presented this flag (pictured) to the Company, creating it from red and white challis purchased either at a local store or ordered from Lawrence. Having no blue for the field, one woman provided enough blue cashmere from a dress pattern her mother had sent her.

"The day before they departed for Lawrence a beautiful flag was presented to them by the women of Emporia, one (Miss Fannie Yeakley) whom delivered a patriotic address as she tendered it to the standard bearer. Father Fairchild, a pioneer Methodist minister, spoke with eloquence and deep feeling. The company was in the fierce battle of Wilson (sic) Creek, where it lost four killed and eleven wounded. For the number of men engaged this was one of the severest battles of the Civil War. The Lieutenant wrote home:
Our little flag the ladies gave was completely riddled with shot and shell. And the brave one who carried it will not carry it home again. Tell the donors it has not been disgraced. You know the odds we fought against! I feel proud of our little Emporia Company. The State will never be disgraced by us. Our boys fought like devils for five long hours, and when the field was cleared the Kansas Second was the last to follow and cover the whole force."

-- from William E. Connelley's The Life of Preston B. Plumb, 1837-1891, Chicago: Browne and Howell Company, 1913.

A letter from Lt. C.S. Hills to the Emporia News and printed August 31, 1861, indicates:

"Our company suffered more severely than any other of the Second Kansas Regiment, as we carried the only flag in the regiment, ours being selected as the colors...Thomas Miller, our Ensign (a term used for standard bearer), I fear is dead--shot through the kidney--suffered beyond description."

Brigadier General Nathaniel Lyon was leading the Second Kansas into the battle when he was killed. It is said that the Second Kansas flag was the only Union flag on the field when this happened, suggesting that no other northern units carried flags into the battle. Lt. Hills' comments, if accurate, indicate that it was at least the only flag of the regiment on the field when Lyon fell. Further research of other northern units at Wilson's Creek may be needed to determine if they carried flags.

In addition to Thomas Miller, who was killed bearing the flag, two other members of the company are said to have been wounded carrying the flag.

On September 7, the Emporia News began to prepare the city for the return of their boys:

"One thing is pretty certain, and that is that our little Emporia company will come home in a few days. They have done themselves honor, and we are proud of them. They had the only colors on the battlefield in the Second Regiment, the one presented by the ladies of this place, and it has been honored by Gen. Fremont by having 'Springfield' inscribed on it. It is riddled and smoke-stained. They will probably bring it with them. Shall the boys have a public reception? Every citizen will answer yes. Let us get up a meeting and take measures to give them a public and hearty reception. They deserve it at our hands."

On October 12 the News reported on the return of the company:

"They brought with them the old blood-stained and bullet-riddled banner of Springfield. It was immediately hoisted in front of the Emporia House, and was admired of all admirers during the remainder of the day....The company was enlivened with the presence of many of the ladies of the village, who had assisted in making the banner, and who always love to honor the brave."

Connelley's The Life of Preston Plumb gives an account of the homecoming by Mrs. Anna Watson Randolph of Emporia:

"Sadly they marched up the aisle. Father Fairchild, who had prayed over them and sent them to battle such a short time ago, received them with tears rolling down his wrinkled cheeks. They placed the flag in his hands. He unfolded it. We saw it full of bullet holes, ragged and battle-stained. He pointed to the dark stains on the staff where the blood of the young soldier had trickled down, and told us how even in the struggle of death he had borne it up until a comrade could take his place. It was the target for the whole rebel army, having been chosen the flag of the Second Kansas regiment because of its lightness.
We sobbed and cried aloud. It was our first experience of the horrors of war."

The service of the Second Kansas Volunteer Infantry was over. On October 19 a notice appeared in the News calling for new recruits to serve under the "Old Flag," and many of the men would serve in the newly formed Second Kansas Volunteer Cavalry for the duration of the war. There is no evidence that the Springfield flag was carried by this later unit. It was one of the flags presented to the State Adjutant General after the war, and eventually donated to the Kansas Historical Society in 1905.

Save the Flags!

The Society's collections include 80 flags from the Civil and Spanish-American wars. The Society currently is raising funds for flag conservation and preservation through the Save the Flags! project.

Interested in other Civil War flags in the collections of the Kansas Museum of History? Check out these links:

Note: Both the First and Second Kansas Volunteer Infantries played significant roles at the battle of Wilson's Creek. Wilson's Creek National Battlefield is under the administration of the National Park Service and open to the public.

Return to the latest Cool Things.

Check out the Cool Things Archive.


Kansas Historical Society
 
Presentation Graphic
Kansas Historical Society
Kansas Historical Society