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Elkin's Ferry Battleground

Elkins' Ferry
Elkins' Ferry.JPG
Elkin's Ferry Battleground is located in Arkansas
Elkin's Ferry Battleground
Elkin's Ferry Battleground is located in the US
Elkin's Ferry Battleground
Nearest city Prescott, Arkansas
Coordinates 33°55′50″N 93°21′26″W / 33.93056°N 93.35722°W / 33.93056; -93.35722Coordinates: 33°55′50″N 93°21′26″W / 33.93056°N 93.35722°W / 33.93056; -93.35722
Area 575 acres (233 ha)
Built 1864
NRHP Reference # 94001182
Significant dates
Added to NRHP April 19, 1994
Designated NHL April 19, 1994

Elkin's Ferry was the site of the 1864 Battle of Elkin's Ferry, an engagement of the Camden Expedition during the American Civil War. The battlefield is located about 10 miles (16 km) north of Prescott, Arkansas, spanning the Little Missouri River in Clark and Nevada counties in Arkansas. The 575-acre (233 ha) battlefield area was designated a part of the Camden Expedition Sites, a National Historic Landmark District made up of several of expedition's key sites, in 1994.

The 1864 Camden Expedition was part of a two-pronged strategy by the Union Army to drive Confederate resistance out of southwestern Arkansas and northern Louisiana, and pentetrated into Confederate Texas. Union Major General Frederick Steele led a Union force from Little Rock on March 23, 1864, with the objective of joining forces with Major General Nathaniel Prentice Banks at Shreveport, Louisiana. Confederate forces in Arkansas were directed from Washington, where the Confederate government of the state relocated after the fall of Little Rock. Confederate Major General Sterling Price ordered Brigadier General John S. Marmaduke to harry the Union column and to prevent it from crossing the Little Missouri River as it moved toward Washington. Advance Union forces established a beachhead on the south side of the Little Missouri on April 3, and clashed with Confederate defenders, who eventually withdrew upon the arrival of more of the Union column. Casualties were light: 18 Confederate soldiers killed and 50 wounded, and 30 Union soldiers wounded. The Union advance would be halted at Prairie D'Ane a week later, and eventually fail due to supply problems.


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