War with Mexico! Quincy's first test on foreign soil

"Gentlemen, we saw in battle what few men will ever see. We saw the blood of human beings flow down that canyon and trickle from ledge to ledge down the rocky gorge."
The description was from the obituary of Quincyan William Kelly, a sergeant in the 2nd Illinois Regiment during the Mexican War as related by a fellow soldier and friend upon his death. More than 100 of Quincy's sons had witnessed scenes like this during the war with Mexico in 1847. Sgt. Kelly's uncle, 2nd Lt. Timothy Kelly, was the only Quincy soldier to die there.
In the spring of 1846, the "Quincy Battalion," made up of men from Quincy's three militias, was returning home from peacekeeping during the Mormon conflict around Hancock County. A deep sense of pride and patriotism was prevalent in the city. The patriotic men who made up the battalion had seemingly just put down their rifles when word came of war with Mexico.
Gov. Thomas Ford called for three brigades from Illinois. Thirty companies were promptly assembled with Capt. James D. Morgan's Quincy Rifles becoming the 7th Company and first to reach full strength. A dozen Irishmen from the Montgomery Guards, led by Capt. Timothy Kelly of Quincy, also enlisted. Kelly, who had come to Quincy in the late 1830s with other Irish men to build the Northern Cross railroad, had just lost an election for mayor to John Wood by 27 votes
The Quincy Whig, reporting on the exciting events of June 2, 1846, reported, "After a large crowd had been collected opposite the Court House, Judge Lott, one of the volunteers, ascended the steps, and addressed the people-appealing to their patriotism, and their State and county pride. Soon after, those that had enrolled their names took up their line of march, preceded by drum and fife-and marched around the square."
Eventually, six regiments from Illinois would serve in the Mexican War, the reason 14 years later in the Civil War, numbering of Illinois' regiments began at the 7th Illinois.
Capt. Morgan's company, whose recruits included Lt. Benjamin M. Prentiss, a later Civil War hero at the Battle of Shiloh, got a rousing send off by the citizens of Quincy. Morgan and Prentiss received ceremonial swords. On June 14, 1846, the company departed Quincy on the boat the Die Vernon, which made its way down the Mississippi River to Alton. There they became part of Col. John J. Hardin's 1st Illinois Regiment.
Capt. Kelly's group of Irishmen departed soon after without the fanfare, flags or swords. Once they got to Alton, Kelly's men merged with several other smaller groups of volunteers and became part of the 2nd Illinois Regiment led by Col. William H. Bissell, the future governor of Illinois whom John Wood succeeded in March 1860 on Bissell's death in office.
In Alton, the Quincy men soon distinguished themselves as one of the elite companies. As the Alton Telegraph reported, "The rifle company from Quincy under the command of Capt. Morgan is confessedly the best drilled company on the ground ... Col. John J. Hardin of the First Regiment of Illinois Volunteers, has apptd. Lt. B. M. Prentiss, of the Quincy Riflemen as his adjutant."
After a month of drilling and preparation, the Illinois regiments departed via the Mississippi River, landed in New Orleans on July 24, 1846, then continued on to Texas.
In San Antonio, several more company elections were held. Peter Lott was elected captain of Company E, 2nd Regiment, and Kelly was elected 2nd lieutenant. It was also here that Col. Hardin issued special orders to Quincy Rifleman Edward Everett. An unruly Texan recently had shot Everett just above the right knee while he was trying to break up a disturbance.
Everett was relieved of regular army duty. Hardin kept Everett in his regiment by having him collect information on the history and customs along the line of march into Mexico, as well as producing ink paintings of buildings and other items of interest. Everett's drawings, paintings and descriptions, especially of the San Antonio area, were highly detailed. His art is still on display in Texas, and many of his personal papers are housed at the Historical Society of Quincy and Adams County.
The Quincy men marched on, eventually reaching Saltillo, just north of Buena Vista, Mexico. It was here in February 1847 that Gen. Zachary Taylor, future president of the United States and his approximately 5,000 troops, would dig in for battle against the estimated 16,000-man army of Antonio Lopez Santa Anna. Capt. Morgan and a portion of the 1st Illinois Regiment were ordered to remain in Saltillo and guard the rear while the remainder of the 1st and 2nd Illinois Regiments moved on to Buena Vista. The impending battleground was scored with deep ravines and studded with hills and cliffs. On Feb. 22, the steel tips of thousands of Mexican Army lances were seen shimmering in the sunlight as Santa Anna's army advanced to meet the Yankees in what were to become two of the most important days of the war.
Neither side gained advantage the first day. The next day dawned clear and cold. As the sun broke the horizon, Santa Anna charged the U.S. troops in their weakest position along a Buena Vista plateau. An Indiana Regiment was scattered and reinforcements were called in to stem the fierce attack. The Illinois regiments, already having withstood several withering attacks, charged into battle against Santa Anna's far superior numbers and were overwhelmed. Hundreds of Illinoisans were forced into deep ravines. Santa Anna's men lined the sides of the steep cuts in the earth with their rifles and lances all pointed downwards. The U. S. Army here would suffer its greatest number of casualties of the war. It was in one of these ravines that Quincy would see its only known loss of the Mexican War. Lt. Timothy Kelly, along with several other well-known officers, Col. Hardin among them, would fall nearby.
The remainder of the Quincy men soldiered onward through Mexico with distinction until they were mustered out on June 19, 1847, having fulfilled their commitment of one year of service.
A huge barbecue honoring Quincy's recently returned troops was held on July 17, 1847, at an area known then as "The Springs," just east of where the former Dick Brothers Brewery stands today. Orville Hickman Browning of Quincy was about to address the crowd when news spread of the arrival on the riverfront of the steamer Ocean, carrying Lt. Kelly's body, Captains Morgan and Lott escorting. The crowd rushed to the landing and followed the remains to St. Lawrence cemetery on 18th and Maine. There Lt. Timothy Kelly was laid to rest in ground he had donated to his Catholic Church a few years before.
Scott Reed is the key account manager for Casa Vinicola Zonin Import Company based in Italy. He is a member of the Historical Society and is currently writing a book on the Irish in Adams County. Born and raised in Quincy, he now resides in Edwardsville.
Sources
People's History of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois. Quincy: Jost & Kiefer, 1972
The History of Adams County, Illinois. Chicago: Murray, Williamson & Phelps, 1879.
Asbury, Henry. Reminiscences of Quincy, Illinois. Quincy, IL: D. Wilcox & Sons, 1882.
Collins, William H. and Cicero F. Perry. Past and Present of the City of Quincy and Adams County, Illinois. Chicago: S.J. Clarke Publishing Co., 1905.
Piggott, Michael. "Irish Pioneers of the Upper Mississippi Valley." The Journal of the American Irish Historical Society, IX (1910)
Everett, Edward. "On the March to the Mexican War, 1846." Transactions of the Illinois State Historical Society. Springfield: Illinois State Journal Co., 1906
Tyler, Ronnie C.. "The Mexican War: A Lithographic Record" Southwestern Historical Quarterly, Vol. LXXVII, No. 1 July 1973. Texas State Historical Association
The Quincy Whig, June 10th, 1846
The Quincy Whig, July 8th, 1846
The Lockhart Post, Feb 23rd, 1900





