Samuel Ferguson
Champ Ferguson in 1865
Born(1821-11-29)November 29, 1821
DiedOctober 20, 1865(1865-10-20) (aged 43)
Cause of deathExecution by hanging
Resting placeFrance Cemetery
White County, Tennessee
36°01′32″N 85°20′15″W / 36.02567°N 85.33742°W / 36.02567; -85.33742
Criminal statusExecuted
Conviction(s)War crimes
Criminal penaltyDeath

Samuel "Champ" Ferguson (November 29, 1821 – October 20, 1865)[1] was a notorious Confederate guerrilla during the American Civil War. He claimed to have killed over 100 Union soldiers and pro-Union civilians.[2] He was arrested, tried, and executed for war crimes by the U.S. military after the war.

Early life

Ferguson was born in Clinton County, Kentucky, on the Tennessee border, the oldest of ten children. This area was known as the Kentucky Highlands and had more families who were yeomen farmers and generally owned few slaves. Like his father, Ferguson became a farmer but also earned a reputation for violence even before the American Civil War. He became a slave owner in the 1850s.[3][4]

On August 12, 1858, an altercation that culminated in a feud between Ferguson and the Evans brothers, Floyd and Alexander, resulted in the death of James Reed, the Evans' cousin and acting constable of Fentress County, Tennessee and the near death of Floyd Evans.[5] Both men were stabbed repeatedly by Ferguson as he attempted to flee mob justice, which the Tennesseans had meant to inflict on Ferguson after cornering him on their side of the border.[3] In the 1850s, Ferguson moved with his wife and family to the Calfkiller River Valley in White County, Tennessee.

Guerrilla activities

Ferguson circa 1850s

During the Civil War, East Tennessee, a mostly mountainous region, opposed secession from the Union.[6] The establishment in the region, for instance, of the "Free and Independent State of Scott" was an example of this.[7] The remainder of the state, which had more slaveholders, particularly in the plantation areas of West Tennessee, supported the Confederacy. The historical division made East Tennessee a target of informal engagements by both sides. Confederate troops fought engagements with local partisans, which took place far from the front.[8] From 1862, Tennessee was occupied by Union troops, which contributed to the tensions and divisions. The mountainous terrain and the lack of law enforcement during the war gave guerrillas and other irregular military groups significant freedom of action. Numerous incidents were recorded of guerrilla and revenge attacks, especially on the Cumberland Plateau. Families were often divided; one of Champ Ferguson's brothers fought as a member of the Union's 1st Kentucky Cavalry and was killed in action.[9]

Champ Ferguson nemesis "Tinker Dave" Beatty & Dr. Jonathan Hale. Hale was the Chief of Scouts for the Union Army of the Cumberland under Generals Rosecrans and George Thomas.

Early in the war, Ferguson organized a guerrilla company and began attacking any civilians that he believed supported the Union. Many local vendettas were prosecuted in occupied Tennessee under the guise of war. His men cooperated with Confederate military units led by Brig. Gen. John Hunt Morgan and Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler when they were in the area and some evidence indicates that Morgan commissioned Ferguson as a captain of partisan rangers. Ferguson's men were seldom subject to military discipline and often violated the normal rules of war.

Stories circulated about Ferguson's alleged sadism, including tales that he occasionally decapitated his prisoners and rolled their heads down hillsides. He was said to be willing to kill elderly and bedridden men. He was once arrested by the Confederate authorities and charged with murdering a government official and was imprisoned for two months in Wytheville, Virginia. The charges could not be proved, so he was eventually released.[7]

Trial and hanging

Ferguson surrounded by his guards
Ferguson surrounded by his guards
Ferguson hanged

At the war's end, Ferguson disbanded his men and returned home to his farm. As soon as the Union troops learned of his return, they arrested him and took him to Nashville, where he was tried by a military court for 53 murders. Ferguson's trial attracted national attention and soon became a major media event. One of Ferguson's main adversaries on the Union side, David "Tinker Dave" Beatty, testified against him.[10] Just as Ferguson had led a guerilla band against any real or presumed Unionists, Beatty led a guerilla band against any real or presumed confederates. Both did their best to ambush and kill the other. Ferguson acknowledged that his band had killed many of the victims named and said he had killed over 100 men himself. He insisted this conduct was simply part of his duty as a soldier.[2]

A notorious incident was Ferguson and his guerrilla band's involvement in killing wounded Union men and prisoners after the Battle of Saltville. The victims were members of the all-black 5th United States Colored Cavalry and their white officers. Ferguson and his men were charged with murdering the wounded in their hospital beds. Only the arrival of Thomas' Legion of Cherokee Indians and Highlanders had prevented the complete slaughter of the prisoners. As soon as Ferguson learned that regular Confederates had arrived, he left with his men.[11]

On October 10, 1865, Ferguson was found guilty and sentenced to hang. He made a statement in response to the verdict:

I am yet and will die a Rebel … I killed a good many men, of course, but I never killed a man who I did not know was seeking my life. … I had always heard that the Federals would not take me prisoner, but would shoot me down wherever they found me. That is what made me kill more than I otherwise would have done. I repeat that I die a Rebel out and out, and my last request is that my body be removed to White County, Tennessee, and be buried in good Rebel soil.

Johnson, James, Execution of Champ Ferguson, James K. Polk Papers, Box 1, Folder 9. (Tennessee State Library and Archives; Nashville Dispatch, 22 October 1865).
Ferguson's grave

He was hanged on October 20, 1865, one of only three men to be tried, convicted, and executed for war crimes during the Civil War. The others were Captain Henry Wirz, commandant of the infamous Andersonville prison in Georgia, and Henry C. Magruder, a Confederate guerilla fighter who was convicted of eight murders.[12][13] Ferguson was buried in a comb grave in the France Cemetery north of Sparta, White County, Tennessee. This site is now bordered by Highway 84 (Monterey Highway).

After his execution, Ferguson's statements to the Nashville Dispatch were published; The New York Times classified his letter as a confession. He admitted to killing at least ten people. Ferguson claimed nine of the men were killed in self-defense. He believed that one was committing murders and robbing private houses. Ferguson also stated that he had been convicted of the murders of several men who were killed by other members of his group. He denied some of the charges, including the killing of 12 soldiers at Saltville, and said that many of the men he was accused of killing had died in battle or been killed by bands other than his own. Ferguson felt that his trial had been neither just nor fair. Knowing that he would be sentenced to death, he questioned the reliability of all but two of the witnesses.[14]

References

  1. Stacey Graham (January 4, 2010). "Samuel 'Champ' Ferguson (1821–1865)". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Retrieved January 17, 2014.
  2. 1 2 McDade, Arthur (March 2001). "Tennessee Guerrilla Champ Ferguson Killed More Than 100 Men Before Facing The Hangman's Noose". America's Civil War. Vol. 14, no. 1.
  3. 1 2 "Notorious Characters – The Fergusons – Atrocious Murders, Etc." The Patriots and Guerrillas – Chapter II. WebRoots.org.
  4. Stewart, Bruce E. (February 2010). "Cumberland Blood: Champ Ferguson's Civil War". Journal of Southern History. 76 (1): 163–165. Gale A218656997 ProQuest 215785841.
  5. Mays, Thomas D. (2008). Cumberland Blood: Champ Ferguson's Civil War. SIU Press. ISBN 9780809328604. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  6. p 43 Studies in Tennessee Politics, Tennessee Votes 1799-1976
  7. 1 2 Margaret D. Binnicker, "Scott County", Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture Encyclopedia, Tennesseeencyclopedia.net, retrieved February 8, 2011
  8. "Bryan S. Bush Books :: Articles by Bryan S. Bush - Article: Guerilla Warfare in Kentucky". October 9, 2009. Archived from the original on October 9, 2009. Retrieved March 23, 2019.
  9. " 'I took time by the Forelock' Champ Ferguson's war" Archived July 14, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
  10. Bryant, Lloyd D. "David "Tinker Dave" Beatty – (L2)." History of Fentress County, Tennessee, The Fentress County Historical Society.
  11. Smith, Troy D. (December 2001). "Champ Ferguson: An American Civil War Rebel Guerrilla". Civil War Times. Retrieved April 22, 2014.
  12. Hixson, Walter (2013). American Settler Colonialism: A History. New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 108. ISBN 978-1-137-37425-7.
  13. "Clipped From The Courier-Journal". The Courier-Journal. October 21, 1865. p. 3. Retrieved March 30, 2023.
  14. Anonymous (October 29, 1865). "CHAMP FERGUSON.; Confession of the Culprit. (abbreviated title)". The New York Times. Retrieved February 20, 2014.
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