Confederate At the start of the battle, Taylor had approximately 9,000 troops consisting of Brigadier General
Alfred Mouton's Louisiana/Texas infantry division, Major General
John G. Walker's
Texas infantry division, Brigadier General
Thomas Green's Texas cavalry division, and Colonel William Vincent's Louisiana cavalry brigade. He had also called on the 5,000 men in the divisions of Brigadier General
Thomas J. Churchill and Brigadier General
Mosby M. Parsons that had been encamped near
Keachi, between Mansfield and Shreveport. These troops arrived late in the afternoon, after the battle had commenced. Eyewitness accounts indicate that there were additional Louisiana men in the ranks. This included paroled soldiers from units that had surrendered at
Vicksburg, including many members of company B of the 17th Louisiana Regiment, the
Sabine Rebels. Historian Gary Joiner claimed that "there may have been from several hundred to several thousand of them." The Confederate Governor of Louisiana,
Henry Watkins Allen, had organized two battalions of the state guard and brought them to Taylor's aid, yet the documentary record is unclear as to what role they played in the battle. Joseph Blessington, a soldier in Walker's division, wrote that, "The Louisiana militia, under command of Governor Allen, was held in reserve, in case of an emergency." In addition, Blessington wrote that, from the surrounding communities, "old men shouldered their muskets and came to our assistance".
Union At the start of the battle, the Union forces consisted of a cavalry division commanded by Brigadier General
Albert L. Lee, consisting of approximately 3,500 men, and the 4th Division of the
XIII Corps, commanded by Colonel
William J. Landram, consisting of approximately 2,500 men. During the battle, the 3rd Division of the XIII Corps, commanded by General
Robert A. Cameron, arrived with approximately 1,500 men. The battle ended when the pursuing Confederates met the 1st Division of the
XIX Corps, commanded by Brigadier General
William H. Emory, with approximately 5,000 men, including the
47th Pennsylvania Infantry Regiment, the only regiment from the Keystone State to fight in the Union's 1864
Red River Campaign.
Thomas E. G. Ransom commanded the XIII Corps during the engagement, while the XIX Corps was commanded by
William B. Franklin. == Battle ==