Nacogoches

Nacogoches

Wednesday, November 18, 2015

Maj Henry W. Raguet


RAGUET, HENRY WYNKOOP (1824–1862). Henry Wynkoop Raguet, merchant and Confederate officer, was born in Cincinnati, Hamilton County, Ohio, on June 29, 1824, to Henry and Marcia Anne (Towers) Raguet. The elder Henry Raguet, a veteran of the War of 1812, traveled to New Orleans in 1832 following the collapse of his mercantile business. There he met Sam Houston, who encouraged him to settle in the Nacogdoches area of East Texas. In 1833 he returned to Ohio and brought his family to Nacogdoches the following year. Along with a brother, the younger Henry Raguet assumed control of his father's mercantile business in 1852. The family company was highly profitable, as Henry was listed as having $120,000 in his personal estate and $40,000 in real estate by 1860. On December 18, 1860, Raguet married Pamela O. Starr in Nacogdoches. They had no children. When the Civil War began, Raguet enlisted as a private in Gen. Tom Green's Brigade. Later, Raguet served as lieutenant and captain in Company H of the Fourth Texas Cavalry Regiment and received a promotion to major on August 23, 1861. Raguet saw extensive action with this unit during the Sibley campaign into New Mexico and was wounded in the leg at the battle of Valverde, on February 20, 1862. Raguet was mortally wounded during the battle of Glorieta on March 28, 1862. Following his death, his remains were taken by his brother to Santa Fe, New Mexico, where they were buried with full military honors at the Odd Fellows Cemetery. A memorial marker was placed in his honor at Oak Grove Cemetery in Nacogdoches County, Texas. BIBLIOGRAPHY: Carolyn Reeves Ericson, People of Nacogdoches County in the Civil War (Lufkin, Texas: Pineywood,1980). Nacogdoches County Genealogical Society, Nacogdoches County Families (Dallas: Curtis, 1985). Aragorn Storm Miller CITATION The following, adapted from the Chicago Manual of Style, 15th edition, is the preferred citation for this article. Aragorn Storm Miller, "RAGUET, HENRY WYNKOOP," Handbook of Texas Online (http://www.tshaonline.org/handbook/online/articles/fra87), accessed November 18, 2015. Uploaded on April 8, 2011. Modified on January 18, 2013. Published by the Texas State Historical Association. Depiction of the Battle of Glorieta Pass by Roy Anderson The Battle of Glorieta Pass, fought from March 26 to 28, 1862 in northern New Mexico Territory, was the decisive battle of the New Mexico Campaign during the American Civil War. Dubbed the "Gettysburg of the West" (a term that "serves the novelist better than the historian") by some authors, it was intended as the killer blow by Confederate forces to break the Union possession of the West along the base of the Rocky Mountains. It was fought at Glorieta Pass in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in what is now New Mexico, and was an important event in the history of the New Mexico Territory in the American Civil War. There was a skirmish on March 26 between advance forces from each army, with the main battle occurring on March 28. Although the Confederates were able to push the Union force back through the pass, they had to retreat when their supply train was destroyed and most of their horses and mules killed or driven off. Eventually, the Confederates had to withdraw entirely from the territory back into Confederate Arizona and then Texas. Glorieta Pass thus represented the climax of the campaign.
Scurry then launched a three pronged attack on the Union line: Pyron and Raguet were ordered to attack the Union right, Shropshire the Union left, with the remainder of the Confederate force under himself attacking the Union center, supported by the artillery. The attack on the Union left was routed, with Shropshire killed, the attack in the center stalled, while the artillery was forced to withdraw after one cannon was disabled and a limber destroyed. The attack along the line then stalled, with the Confederates fighting by squads "with a desperation unequaled by any engagement of the war." At around 3:00 pm, the Confederates managed to outflank the Union right, but Raguet was mortally wounded. From the ridge (known after the battle as "Sharpshooters Ridge"), the Confederates started to pick off the artillerymen and infantry below them, while Scurry started to press the Union center again. This made the Union position untenable, forcing Slough to order a retreat; Tappan organized the companies on the left flank into a rear guard. Slough then reformed his line a half mile east of Pigeon's Ranch, where both sides skirmished until dusk. Slough retreated back to Kozlowski's Ranch, leaving Scurry in possession of the field. In 1987 two Confederate burial sites were discovered at Pigeon's Ranch; one was a solitary grave of Shropshire and the other was a mass grave of 30 Confederates. Only Shropshire and five others could be positively identified

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Rosalind Langston

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