TENNESSEE HISTORY Classroom
FULL HISTORY STORIES


The last of the breed


Benjamin McCulloch was born in Rutherford County, TN on Nov. 11, 1811 to Alexander and Francis McCulloch and would be one of 12 children born to the couple. The young McCullochs were originally Scots-Irish stock from North Carolina, but their families had eventually migrated to the frontiers of Tennessee, where the couple married in Nashville. The cast their fortunes in the backwoods of the region and soon became one of early Tennessee’s leading families.
While Ben was still an infant, problems began with the Red Stick Creeks leading Alexander McCulloch and his brother, like many other men in the region, to enlist in the Tennessee militias being raised to check the Creek’s British-backed campaign against the Southern settlers.
Alexander McCulloch was an educated man and his quick thinking abilities soon had him posted as an aide-de-camp to General John Coffee. He and his brother made a name for themselves at the Battles of Horseshoe Bend, Tallahassee, and New Orleans, where Alexander McCulloch’s brother was killed in combat.
McCulloch’s actions under fire during the campaigns earned the respect of fellow soldiers Ensign Sam Houston and Sgt. David Crockett. As with many men, who serve together in combat, close ties formed between them and the men became close friends.
When they returned to Tennessee, the men began building their lives in the frontier state. Both Crockett and Houston had moved from their homes in East Tennessee and migrated westward. While studying law, Houston resumed his career as a teacher and among his students were Ben McCulloch’s older brothers. Crockett also relocated near the family and soon the men found their lives intertwined in the growing state of Tennessee. Young Ben McCulloch looked up to Crockett and Houston and he soon began spending a lot of time in the backwoods with Crockett and forging a reputation as a hunter in his own right. The two families would eventually become inseparable and Crockett’s influence on young Ben McCulloch would rival that of his own father and lead him to a life in the frontier that would make him a legend in the Old West.The McCulloch family followed their fortunes, however, and moved to Florence, Al. where Ben grew up learning all he could from the Cherokee and other Native Americans living in the region. He picked up the art of making dugout canoes and soon developed into one of the best in the region – building a large one to transport supplies and a small one to use in the backwoods on his hunting expeditions.
When Ben was 17-years-old, he and his family moved back to Tennessee’s Dyer County. The sons began clearing the land and building the home’s outbuildings. Ben camped himself under a sugar tree near the homeplace and, as years went by, would never let anyone cut it down. He made his home in Dyer County and was soon one of its most popular residents, especially when it came to hunting bears. He was credited with killing as many as 80 bears in a single year rivaling Crockett and Henderson Clark for the title of champion bear hunter in the region. In fact, Ben McCulloch and David Crockett’s sons became good friends and often hunted together in the backwoods for days at a time. One of Ben’s weaknesses, however, was his lack of formal education. While his mother and father had helped him learn how to read, the young man felt he should better educate himself if he wanted to do more with his life. He looked up to and admired David Crockett and Sam Houston and knew they had sacrificed a lot to gain an education. Following their example, Ben fought to overcome his gap in education by becoming a voracious reader. Whenever opportunity prevented itself, he took the chance to learn everything he could and didn’t rely only on books to do so. His time with the Indians had made him a good student of human character and McCulloch learned how to fit himself into almost any situation.
When he wasn’t hunting, McCulloch was on rafting trips often with his younger brother Henry. The two traveled as far as New Orleans, where Ben took time out to unsuccessfully try and locate the grave of his fallen uncle. It wasn’t too long before the wanderlust common to the men of that era soon fell upon Ben and his brother.
In the early 1830s, Ben made arrangements to join a trapping expedition in St. Louis bound for the Rocky Mountains, but arrived too late and chose instead to go to Wisconsin where he worked as a lead miner. After a couple of years, the Tennessean returned to his home in Dyer County and heard that David Crockett was forming an expedition to go to Texas.
The men who wanted to go with Crockett, but couldn’t leave during harvest, were to rendezvous with the group at Nacogdoches on Christmas. Ben and his brother Henry took out after his mentor, but, upon reaching the border, the older Ben picked up some information that led him to convince Henry he should return home for a year before coming west to join him.
As he crossed over into Texas alone and started down the Brazos River, an illness soon fell upon him that left Ben in bad shape and needing medical attention. He fortunately came upon the home of a former Dyer County native, who nursed him back to health, but it meant he couldn’t join up with Crockett. The sickness unknowingly saved his life. When he recovered, he learned that Mexican General Santa Anna had stormed the Alamo Mission and killed all who were there, including Crockett and his neighbors.
Ben McCulloch determinedly rode further south along the Brazos River and into the camp of Gen. Sam Houston where he immediately volunteered for the Texas Army. The fellow Tennessean was glad to see an old friend and immediately put him in charge of one of two cannons known as the "Twin Sisters". When Gen. Santa Anna marched his troops into San Jacinto, McCulloch remained at his post through the harshest of combat and kept his guns blazing. His resolve under fire amazed those who fought with him earned the respect of his commanding officers. When the battle ended, Gen. Sam Houston found McCulloch and promoted him on the spot to First Lieutenant for his actions.
Following the battle, McCulloch returned to Dyer County to raise his own militia. In the process, he took enough time out while home to learn surveying. He, his brother Henry, and David Crockett’s son Robert soon returned to Texas with the new militia, but the war had ended.
Ben decided to resign his commission and turned the militia over to Robert Crockett. He and his brother moved to the City of Seguin where Ben worked as a surveyor. In addition, he ran for and was elected to the Congress of the Republic of Texas in 1839. As is the case in most newly formed nations, political turmoil was rife and soon Ben McCulloch found himself on the field of honor in a duel with a rival. The Tennessean was severely wounded in the fight and lost most of the use of his arm, but it didn’t slow him from accomplishing his goals or proving his abilities as a fighter.
In 1840, he led a militia force against the Comanches, who were staging their great raid on the Texas settlers, and defeated them as well as containing Mexican raiders who were riding over the border to wreak havoc on the settlers. McCulloch’s cleverness on the field and under fire became legendary in Texas. President Sam Houston under Capt. John Hayes soon brought Ben and his men into the Texas Ranger Company where he assumed his old rank as First Lieutenant.
Many former veterans of the Texas War for Independence made up the Texas Rangers and they quickly earned a reputation for being the best law enforcement agency in America. In order to become a Ranger, it was often said that a man had to know how to ride like a Mexican, track like a Comanche, shoot like a Tennessean, and fight like the devil. While Rangers belonged to military-style companies, many operated individually as law enforcement officers because of the vastness of the Texas region. Gun maker Samuel Colt and a Texas Ranger had designed and produced the Walker Colt repeating revolver that gave Rangers the ability to be effective in small groups or as individuals.
While working as such, Ben McCulloch again ran for office and was elected to the Texas legislature following the republic becoming a state. The Tennessean proved himself well equipped to handle the frontier arenas of politics and military life and soon became one of the leading men of Texas.
In 1846, McCulloch was called upon to raise a group of volunteers for the Mexican War where he was appointed major and became chief of Scouts for General Zachary Taylor. His service in the war lived up to its billing. One of his greatest feats was disguising himself and leading his men 100 miles behind Gen. Santa Anna’s lines to gather intelligence reports on troops strengths and tactical positions. In addition, he proved to be a great spy and was able to slip in and out of Mexican towns with ease. His abilities quickly caught the attention of American military command and reportedly correspondents covering the war. One of which who wrote:
"McCulloch is as vigilant as a tiger... he is a border man, a ranger, and an Indian fighter... more than this Ben McCulloch is a great man. I fancied him a perfect devil, a backwoodsman, a ruffian, and unpolished desperado. Instead he is a thinker with a precise and clear mind, but isn’t much of a talker. With him, ‘it is!’ or ‘it is not!’
Following the war, McCulloch grew restless and joined the 1849 gold rush to California. He, like many others, struck out in the fields, but took a job as Sheriff of Sacramento County, California where he proved himself an able sheriff and earned a reputation as a hard fighter and a fast hand with a gun.
After a while, he grew homesick for Texas, however, and the Tennessean returned. In March 1853, he was appointed a U.S. Marshal by then- President Franklin Pierce for the Eastern District of Texas.
Marshal McCulloch became a man who was much feared by criminals because of his tenaciousness in tracking down and bringing in the most hardened criminal. His cunning and wit on the trail as well as his ability as a no-nonsense fighter made him a feared man on the outlaw trails in the region. Whatever was called for in pursuing a suspect, he did so with the intent of bringing them back alive where they stood trial and most chose to face a judge in a courtroom than Ben McCulloch in a fight.
In the wake of General Albert S. Johnson’s 1858 expedition to negotiate a settlement with the Mormons in Utah, McCulloch’s reputation as a negotiator and U.S. Marshal earned him an appointment from President James Buchanan as a commissioner to aid in the Mormon negotiations, which proved successful. A year later, the Tennessean resigned from his Marshal’s post to pursue other interests and became involved in the great debate over whether or not Texas should secede from the Union.
When the state decided to secede from the Union and join the Confederacy, Ben was appointed a Colonel in the Confederate Army. Col. McCulloch immediately marched his troops to San Antonio where he received the surrender of Union General David. E. Twiggs, who was Commander of the Department of Texas, his troops, and all federal supplies being held in the city, which included numerous artillery pieces.
By February 1861, Col. McCulloch’s service had caught the attention of upper command and he became the first Confederate officer promoted to the rank of Brigadier General. The 50-year-old McCulloch with white hair down to his shoulders was given command of the Southwest Division comprising of Arkansas and the Indian Territory. Eastern press reports suddenly started vilifying the former U.S. Marshal and stating ridiculous facts such as he wanted to kidnap Pres. Abraham Lincoln.
Gen. McCulloch moved his troops into the Indian Territory and tried to come to agreement with Chief John Ross to locate his headquarters in the region. He failed to do so and instead located his headquarters at nearby Fort Smith, Arkansas where he started a series of troop movements to secure the territory for the South.
His forces were defeated at the Battle of Dug-Out Springs, but he united with General Sterling Price’s troops and scored a victory at the Battle of Wilson’s Creek, which came to be referred to by later historians as the "Western theater’s Bull Run".
A Union officer at the battle described the Confederate force against them as "with not a tent, not a blanket, nor any clothes, except the few they had on their back, and four-fifths of the men were barefooted."
The Confederate forces were beaten back at first during the battle, but soon rallied and forced the Union into retreat whereupon the Confederate forces seized all but one of the federal artillery pieces that were abandoned by the fleeing soldiers. In the battle Union General Nathaniel Lyon, who had made a name for himself in the Seminole War and secured Missouri for the North, was killed when his flanks were suddenly exposed. More than 23 percent of the 5,400-man Union force fell in the battle. Federal ambulances crowding onto the battlefield to retrieve the wounded left in such haste that their general’s body remained on the field where he had fallen.
General McCulloch had Lyon’s body brought to his headquarters where he ordered it returned to Union Major Sam Sturgis in Springfield, MO for proper burial.
Following the battle, the General returned to Arkansas and with General Earl Van Dorn began preparations for what would become known as the Battle of Pea Ridge, Ark. From that geographical point, it was thought the Confederate forces could begin a campaign to sweep north and capture St. Louis, where the city was happily making preparations to receive them. Full-blood Cherokee Colonel Stand Watie and his men joined McCulloch and Dorn’s men. Although the Indian units were largely made up of Cherokee, there were other units of Choctaws, Chickasaws, and other western bands filling out the ranks of the Confederate.
The night before the battle General Benjamin McCulloch reflected on his boyhood in Tennessee. His thoughts also turned to the fact the Battle of the Alamo had occurred 26 years ago to the day and only by chance had he missed being at his mentor’s side.
As the next day dawned, he and his men took the field near Elkhorn Tavern and the General, who always had a dislike for military uniforms, was dressed in a dove colored coat with blue pantaloons, Wellington boots, and a Maynard rifle slung over his shoulder. The first day of battle, McCulloch’s troops had pushed the Union’s left flank back and captured numerous pieces of federal artillery. In the afternoon, the General was riding his horse in front of the 16th Arkansas Infantry and just behind his front line skirmishers who were testing the enemy’s strength.
During this time, Union forces were moving towards the Confederate skirmishers. Infantryman Peter Pelican of the Thirty-Sixth Illinois Infantry, Company B had taken up position behind a fence near Sugar Creek and readied himself for the Confederate force that was approaching. Without knowing it, the Illinois Infantryman took aim at a Confederate officer and fired. He saw him tumble off of his horse and hit the ground. The Union soldiers charged on the Confederate lines and drove them back, but they quickly rallied and pushed the Union force into retreat.
As the Confederate line moved back to its original position, one of the officers recognized the dove-colored coat and blue pantaloons of Gen. Ben McCulloch. A bloodstain began appearing on the front of his coat and the officer noticed McCulloch’s rifle, sidearms and gold watch had been taken from his body. Although two more Southern generals would fall and Louisiana commander Louis Herbert would be captured, Confederate forces were able to claim an expensive victory.
The body of Gen. Benjamin McCulloch was retrieved from the battlefield and returned to Texas where he was laid to rest with full honors in the Texas National Cemetery. Although his final career was short, it had maintained all the brilliance that had made him a folk hero on the frontier. His death also signified the ending of an era in American history. Ben McCulloch was one of the last of the rough and tumble frontier statesmen that had dominated American politics in the early 1800s – one that helped forge the backbone of a movement that would lead the young American Republic to not only expand but help secure its boundaries to the shores of the Pacific Ocean.



Numerous descendants of Ben McCulloch still live in Texas and in Tennessee. The grave of his father Alexander McCulloch is located three miles west of the City of Dyersburg, Tenn. near McCulloch’s Chapel. The grave is located on the old homestead site of the McCulloch family.
Although he is largely remembered for his actions in Texas, Ben McCulloch was one of thousands of Tennesseans who made a name for themselves in Texas. In "The Harper Encyclopedia of Military History", they round out his biography with this sentence: "A classic frontiersman with an aversion to wearing military uniform, McCulloch was also an able combat leader and his death at Pea Ridge was a notable loss to the Confederacy." Like every other battle fought west of Virginia, the Battle of Pea Ridge is little mentioned in history books, but the other Confederate officers who fought that day would go on to have an impact in the war years later. Full-blood Cherokee Col. Stand Watie would eventually go on to achieve the rank of General in the Confederate Army and distinguish himself numerous times in combat. In fact, he would be the last Confederate general to surrender in the War Between the States.
A biography on the Tennessean was written in 1888 by Victor M. Rose entitled "The life and services of Gen. Ben McCulloch". The 110-year-old biography is impossible to find, however, and only a few antique collectors are known to possess copies of it. What information is available can be found in various histories on the founding of the Texas Republic and the annals of the Mexican War. All who knew him in his day, held him in legendary status and his colorful antics in law enforcement earned him respect at the nation’s highest levels. McCulloch’s colorful antics fighting Comanches and other "renegade" Indians also brought him respect among Native Americans, who thought more of a man who would fight than one who would retreat or show weakness to them. McCulloch wasn’t described by them as being prejudice, but as being a hard man in a fight and worthy of being left alone.
The one thing that separated the Tennessean apart from most adventurers in his day, however, was his quest to educate himself. In both Tennessee and Texas, Ben McCulloch was regarded as one of the best read men in the territory and spent many hours clutching a book and obtaining the latest publications, which was no easy feat in a day where only the most necessary supplies were transported west. It was ironic that he would die at the same age and in the same manner 26 years and one day to the date of the Battle of the Alamo. Only luck had kept McCulloch from dying that day in 1836 with the man whom he had looked up to and emulated his entire life.