Captain (soon to be Colonel)
James M. Williams had been forming an African-American
regiment in
Kansas, made up largely of escaped slaves from
Missouri,
Arkansas, and
Indian Territory, and some free blacks. In August 1862, these men were mustered into Kansas militia service as the
1st Kansas Colored Volunteers. The United States was not yet ready to accept black troops in the Union Army. They weren't mustered into United States service until January 13, 1863, after the
Emancipation Proclamation. Despite the uncertainty of the regiment's future as a federal military force, Kansas ensured the men were armed with a mix of good
Austrian and
Prussian
muskets with
bayonets. Maj. B.S. Henning ordered Captain Richard G. Ward's 170-man
battalion and Captain Henry C. Seaman's 70-man battalion to proceed across the Missouri River to
Bates County, Missouri. They were accompanied by members of the
5th Kansas Cavalry serving as scouts, among them some Cherokee and blacks. The objective was to break up a
guerrilla army based on Hog Island in the
Osage River, near the Toothman homestead and about nine miles on the other side of the Kansas-Missouri border. The area away from the river was largely open tall-grass prairie and farms, without many trees. John Toothman had been identified as a guerrilla and imprisoned at Fort Lincoln, a Civil War prison camp near
Fulton, Kansas. As the Kansans approached on Monday, October 27, the scouts identified a large party ahead as local
Confederate guerrillas under Bill Truman and Dick Hancock, as well as
Missouri State Guard recruits under Colonel
Jeremiah "Vard" Cockrell (all mounted.) ==Siege and Engagement==