This battle set off a chain of skirmishes and engagements at Crooked Creek (April 30), Hog Mountain (April 30),
Blountsville (May 1), Black Creek/Gadsden (May 2), and Blount's Plantation (May 2). Finally, on May 3, Forrest surrounded Streight's exhausted men 3 mi east of
Cedar Bluff, Alabama, and forced their surrender. They were sent to
Libby Prison in
Richmond, Virginia. Streight and some of his men escaped on February 9, 1864. The battle also led indirectly to the death of Confederate Lieutenant A. Wills Gould, as an artillery officer who was known for his gallantry in his two years of service. Gould went to Forrest's HQ tent to beg him off of the reassignment but Forrest in his typical manner again started berating him. Forrest witnesses said was cussing him a blue streak. Gould argued in was an impossible task he attempted to perform for Forrest. It immediately became a heated argument. The sequence of event's is unclear as eye witnesses visually could not see the event's unfold. Forrest emerged with a bullet in his abdomen while Gould suffered a stab wound to the lung proving fatal. June 14, 1863, in which Gould was killed. In any event, asking for an artillery officer to limber and unlimber repeatedly in rolling hills was ineffective practice. ==Union order of battle==