Battle of Backbone Mountain

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Marker for "Douglas The Camel" in Cedar Hill Cemetery, Vicksburg, Mississippi
Old Douglas and members of the 43rd Miss. Infantry living history group

Douglas The Camel, or “Old Douglas,” was a domesticated camel used by Company A of the 43rd Mississippi Infantry, part of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. Because of Old Douglas, the 43rd Mississippi Infantry came to be known as the Camel Regiment.[1] Douglas was not a veteran of the U.S. War Department program called the Texas Camel Experiment, which aimed to experiment with camels as a possible alternative to horses and mules, which were dying of dehydration in vast numbers. Jefferson Davis, who had ascended to the position of United States Secretary of War in 1853, was a strong proponent of the program, and used his political influence to make the experiment happen.[2] During the same period of the Texas Camel Experiment other camels were being privately imported into Mobile, Alabama. According to newspaper accounts in Alabama and Mississippi planters sought to experiment with the camels in agriculture work. "Old Douglas" was purchased by William Hargrove and was initially given to Colonel W. H. Moore by 1st Lt. William Hargrove when he joined the Forty-Third Mississippi Infantry.[3] Besides being a mascot, Moore assigned Douglas to the regimental band, carrying instruments and knapsacks.[1]

Active service

Though the men tried to treat Old Douglas like a horse, the camel was known to break free of any tether, and was eventually allowed to graze freely. Despite not being tied up, he never wandered far from the men. The Infantry’s horses feared Old Douglas, and he is recorded to have spooked one horse into starting a stampede, which reportedly injured many, and possibly killed one or two horses.[1]

Old Douglas’s first active service was with General Sterling Price in the Iuka campaign. He also participated in the 1862 Battle of Corinth.[3] He remained with the regiment until the Siege of Vicksburg, where he was killed by Union sharpshooters.[4] Enraged at his death, the men swore to avenge him. Col. Bevier enlisted six of his best snipers, and successfully shot the culprit. Of Douglas's killer, Bevier reportedly said, “I refused to hear his name, and was rejoiced to learn that he had been severely wounded".[5] Another commonly attributed theory is that Douglas was eaten during the Siege at Vicksburg by famished Confederate soldiers.[6]

Reception

Douglas is currently honored with his own grave marker in Cedar Hill Cemetery, in Vicksburg, Mississippi. He is, along with other camels used during the war, not overlooked by historians, nor by Civil War Reenactors.[3] There is currently a group called the Texas Camel Corps, whose mission is to promote the stories of camels, like Old Douglas, used during the Civil War.[7]

References

  1. ^ a b c ""Rebel" Camel" (PDF). John Marshall Stone Research Library.
  2. ^ "NPS.gov". www.nps.gov. Retrieved 28 October 2017.
  3. ^ a b c Bell, W. Scott (May 26, 2017). The Camel Regiment: A History of the Bloody 43rd Mississippi Volunteer Infantry, 1862–65. Pelican. ISBN 978-1455623075.
  4. ^ Burke, Angela L (2010-03-05). "Headboards Of Stone – A Mississippi Graveyard Rabbit Blog: Vicksburg National Cemetery & Cedar Hill". Headboardsofstone.blogspot.com. Retrieved 2013-02-19.
  5. ^ Johnson, Forrest Bryant (3 April 2012). The Last Camel Charge: The Untold Story of America's Desert Military Experiment – Forrest Bryant Johnson – Google Books. ISBN 9781101561607. Retrieved 2013-02-19.
  6. ^ "Grave of the Camel Who Served With the Confederate Army". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 2021-01-05.
  7. ^ "Texas Camel Corps". Texas Camel Corps. Retrieved 2013-02-19.