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William Y Slack

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Name
  
William Slack

Unit
  
Missouri State Guard


William Y. Slack image2findagravecomphotos200132311075100629

Born
  
August 1, 1816 Mason County, Kentucky (
1816-08-01
)

Place of burial
  
Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery Fayetteville, Arkansas

Years of service
  
1846–1847 (USA) 1861–1862 (CSA)

Rank
  
Captain (USA) Brigadier General (CSA)

Battles/wars
  
American Civil War Battle of Carthage First Battle of Springfield Battle of Wilson's Creek Battle of Pea Ridge

Other work
  
Attorney, state legislator

Died
  
March 21, 1862, Benton County, Arkansas, United States

Battles and wars
  
Battle of Carthage, First Battle of Springfield, Battle of Wilson's Creek, Battle of Pea Ridge, American Civil War

Service/branch
  
United States Army, Confederate States Army

Allegiance
  
United States of America, Confederate States of America

Commands held
  
4th Infantry Division

William Yarnel Slack (August 1, 1816 – March 21, 1862) was a Missouri lawyer, politician, and general in the Missouri State Guard (aligned with the Confederate States Army) during the American Civil War. He led a division in some of war's earliest major battles in the Trans-Mississippi Theater and was mortally wounded in the Battle of Pea Ridge in Arkansas.

Contents

Early life and career

William Y. Slack was born in rural Mason County, Kentucky, in the summer of 1816. Three years later, his father John Slack moved the family to Boone County, Missouri, and settled near Columbia. John Slack, a potter by trade, became the first justice of the peace for Perche Township. As a young adult, William Slack studied law, passed his bar exam, and established a private practice in Chillicothe. He was among the leading citizens that helped raise cash to found what later became the University of Missouri.

During the Mexican War, Slack raised a company of volunteers and served as their captain in the 2nd Missouri Volunteers under Sterling Price. He mustered out of the army in 1847 after fourteen months of service.

Slack served in the Missouri General Assembly, where he was noted as a strong pro-slavery advocate. He became a member of the state convention called to develop and ratify the new Missouri state constitution.

Civil War service

Shortly after the start of the Civil War, pro-Confederacy factions in Missouri became organized as the Missouri State Guard, and Slack, with his previous military experience and political connections, was appointed by Governor of Missouri Claiborne F. Jackson as a brigadier general in command of the 5th Division of the MSG. His commission dated from July 4, 1861. In an August reorganization of the Guard, Slack assumed command of the 4th Division, which consisted of both cavalry and infantry. He saw action in the battles of Carthage and Springfield. He was wounded by a bullet in the left hip at the Battle of Wilson's Creek on August 10.

By the end of October, Slack had recovered sufficiently to resume his field duties. He took command of the 2nd brigade of the Missouri State Guard on January 23, 1862. On March 7 of that year, he was shot again in the left hip during the Battle of Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern) in Arkansas. He was taken to a house a mile in the rear lines, where he improved and was assumed to be recovering. Because of fears he might be captured by Union forces, he was transported seven miles eastward to a field hospital in Battle of Pea Ridge (Elkhorn Tavern) in Arkansas, where his condition rapidly deteriorated. He lingered for two weeks before dying early in the morning of March 21. He was buried in the yard, but in 1880, his remains were exhumed and reinteered in the Fayetteville Confederate Cemetery in Fayetteville, Arkansas.

Ironically, due to communication delays between the Trans-Mississippi District and the Confederacy's War Department in distant Richmond, Virginia, his formal commission as a brigadier general in the Confederate Army was awarded posthumously dating from April 12, 1862.

His commander at Pea Ridge, Sterling Price, deemed Slack as one of "my best and bravest officers."

References

William Y. Slack Wikipedia