Battle
of Round Mountain (Civil War)
November 19, 1861
click picture to
enlarge |
Artist: Wayne
Cooper
Sponsor: Sen. Ted V. Fisher
Dedication: May 18, 1998
Size: 48" x 36"
Type: Oil on Canvas
Location: 4th floor, Senate
Lounge |
The battle of Round Mountain
is listed in the "Official Records of the Civil War" as
the first battle fought in the Indian Territory. Fourteen
hundred Confederates, under the command of Colonel Douglas
H. Cooper, First Choctaw and Chickasaw Regiment, were pursuing
about 9000 Loyalist civilians led by Opothleyahola, a famous
Upper Creek leader. These civilians represented men, women
and children of all ages from tribes living in the Indian
Territory. They were trying to avoid being pulled into
an alliance with the Confederacy and chose to flee their
homes for the protection of Union forces in Kansas.
A series of holding actions
were fought through the day of November 19, 1861. About
sunset, the Confederates forward detachment pursued Loyalist
scouts into timberlines skirting the edge of two creeks
that formed a horseshoe at the foot of a hill called Round
Mountain. The scene in the painting portrays the action
that followed. Some seventy Confederates attempted to follow
the scouts into the timberlines, but were immediately subjected
to heavy fire and forced to retreat. The battle continued
into the night with the Confederates and Loyalists breaking
off final contact in the early hours of the morning of
November 20th.
Images are copyright
of The Oklahoma State Senate Historical Preservation Fund,
Inc. and the artist. Please contact Pam Hodges at
524-0126 or hodges@oksenate.gov for
further copyright information. |