The Battlefield of Poison Springs

                


                In last week’s column, I wrote about White Oak Lake and the state park alongside its shore. I mentioned that one of the park’s great amenities is its visitors’ center, which includes artifacts from nearby Poison Springs Battlefield State Park. These historic items, which include ammunition, belt buckles, buttons and other pieces, are located in the White Oak Lake State Park visitors’ center because there is no visitors’ center at Poison Springs. But there is a lot to see and do, especially if you love visiting Arkansas Civil War battle sites as much as I do.

 

                Poison Spring Battlefield State Park is located about 10 miles northwest of Camden. The park commemorates the Civil War battle fought on its grounds on April 18, 1864. 

 

                In March 1864, Union Gen. Frederick Steele led about 15,000 trained soldiers out of Little Rock to join in the Union’s Red River Campaign. The goal of the plan was to join Gen. Nathaniel Banks’ troops in northern Louisiana and eventually invade Texas. 


                Steele and his troops seized Camden on April 15 but did not continue onward to Louisiana. Instead, Steele sent troops to gather supplies from nearby farms. On April 17, Col. James M. Williams led roughly 600 federal troops, many of whom were former slaves, to forage the farms and forests west of Camden. When Williams and his men were returning to Camden the following day, they were attacked by Confederate forces led by generals John Marmaduke and Samuel Bell Maxey. 


                Union forces suffered more than 300 casualties while the Confederates lost only 114. This defeat, along with a similar loss to the rebels at Marks’ Mills on April 25, caused Steele and his troops to abandon the Camden area and return to Little Rock on May 3.

 

                Interestingly, no one seems to know why the battle and the park are called Poison Springs. The name Poison Spring was known to Camden-area residents at the time of the action and was used in battle reports, but its origins are uncertain. Years after the Civil War’s end, local tales claimed that the Union troops became sick after drinking the cold spring water, which the Confederates had poisoned. But there is no evidence to confirm the story.

 

                The 85-acre Poison Springs Battlefield State Park is located on both sides of Arkansas Highway 76. The highway was built along the road used by the Union supply train when it was roadblocked and attacked by the Confederate force during the battle of Poison Springs. But the battle covered a much larger area, estimated by historians to be as large as 9,000 acres. 

 

                    Act 182, passed by the Arkansas General Assembly in 1961, established Poison Spring Battleground State Park, and it is one of three state parks that commemorate the Camden Expedition (including Jenkins’ Ferry and Marks’ Mills). The day-use only park is operated by the state parks division of the Arkansas Department of Parks, Heritage & Tourism and features outdoor interpretive signage, trails and picnic sites. As there is no visitors’ center on site, there are no bathrooms or exhibits. For those, you will need to visit nearby White Oak Lake State Park. But for those of you participating in the Arkansas State Parks Club 52 passport program, there is a place where you can make a pencil rubbing of the stamp at the park.

 

                    Poison Springs Battlefield State Park was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1969, and along with eight other sites, is part of the Camden Expedition Sites National Historic Landmark. The park was declared part of the National Historic Landmark on April 19, 1994.

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