William T. "Bloody Bill" Anderson (Confederate guerrilla)
William Yates Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1030 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died 1120 in England |
Immediate Family: |
Husband of
Margaret Anderson |
William T. Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1838 |
Death: |
Died October 26, 1864 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of William Anderson and Martha Anderson |
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Managed by: |
Private User |
Last Updated: |
February 16, 2015
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William T. "Bloody Bill" Anderson (circa 1838 – October 26, 1864) was a pro-Confederate guerrilla leader in the American Civil War.
Anderson was known for his brutality towards Union soldiers, and pro Union partisans, who were called Jayhawkers. Anderson participated in Quantrill's raid on Lawrence, Kansas on August 21, 1863. An estimated 200 civilian men and boys were reported to have been killed and many homes and buildings in Lawrence were burned to the ground.
On October 26, 1864 Anderson was killed after he and his men were lured into an ambush near the hamlet of Albany, which is now part of Orrick, in Ray County, Missouri. The ambush was carried out by a group of militiamen led by Colonel Samuel P. Cox.
Early life
Anderson was born either in 1838 or 1839 in either Jefferson County or Salt Springs Township, Randolph County in Missouri and grew up near Huntsville in Randolph County, Missouri. His parents were William C. Anderson, a hat maker, and Martha (née Thomason) Anderson. In 1850 his father traveled to California leaving Anderson and his two brothers, Ellis and James, to provide for the family in his absence. In 1857, after William Anderson Sr. returned from California, the Anderson family moved to Agnes City Township, Kansas.
Prior to the Civil War Anderson worked for a time escorting wagon trains along the Santa Fe Trail and was suspected of being a horse thief. During this time he had supposedly conducted several forays into Missouri with the primary purpose of stealing horses. It is during this time period, from roughly 1854 through 1858, a bloody border war called Bleeding Kansas was raging between residents of Missouri and Kansas. Guerrilla forces from Kansas, called "Jayhawkers", and Missouri, called "Bushwackers", engaged in attacks against each other as well as civilians.
Anderson's father was shot dead in March 1862 by a local judge over a stolen horse. Anderson and his brother Jim later confronted the judge, killing him along with his brother-in-law. Now in trouble with the law, Anderson and his family left Kansas and moved to western Missouri.
Civil War service
1863 and the raid on Lawrence, Kansas
By the spring of 1863 Anderson along with his brother Jim had become partisan rangers joining Quantrill's Confederate guerrilla company. Anderson later became one of Quantrill's lieutenants.
Anderson participated in Quantrill's raid on Lawrence, Kansas on August 21, 1863. About 200 civilian men and boys were reported to have been killed, and many homes and buildings in Lawrence were burned to the ground.
General Thomas Ewing, Jr., the local Union commander, ordered the arrest of the relatives of the leading members of Quantrill's guerrilla company. Anderson's sisters Mary, Josephine, and Martha were imprisoned with nine other women who were accused of spying and assisting the Confederate partisans. The group of women were housed in a three story building at Kansas City, Missouri.
On August 14, 1863 the building collapsed, killing four of the women. Anderson's sister Josephine was among the dead while his sister Mary survived but was permanently crippled. Both sides claimed different reasons for the building collapse. Some claimed that Union soldiers made the structure unsound by removing partitions and posts in an effort to make more space for prisoners. General Ewing countered that the prisoners had caused the collapse themselves by digging an escape tunnel. This incident has been suggested as the spark for the brutality that Anderson henceforth displayed against Union soldiers and civilians.
Quantrill led his men on a winter retreat to Texas where Bill Anderson married Bush Smith of Sherman, Texas. Quantrill and Anderson quarreled during this time and Anderson returned to Missouri in March 1864. Anderson now headed his own cavalry company.
1864 and the raid on Centralia, Missouri
In 1864 Anderson gained notoriety for his particular savagery against Union soldiers and civilian sympathizers alike. He and his men usually shot their prisoners along with mutilating and scalping the dead. He sent letters to newspapers in Lexington, Missouri, promising further violence against pro-Union civilians and threatening to take women of Union families as hostages. That year he was joined by a group of recruits who had served briefly with Archie Clement, his own lieutenant; these recruits included Frank James, who had been one of Quantrill's Raiders, and the sixteen-year-old Jesse James. During this time, Anderson's men adopted the practice of dangling the bloody scalps of their victims from their horse bridles.
Anderson reportedly wrote to a newspaper in Lexington, Missouri on July 7, 1864 stating:
“ I commenced at the first of this war to fight for my country, not to steal from it. I have chosen guerrilla warfare to revenge myself for wrongs that could not [be] honorably avenged otherwise. I lived in Kansas when the war commenced. Because I would not fight the people of Missouri, my native state, the Yankees sought my life, but failed to get me. Revenged themselves by murdering my father, destroying all my property, and have since that time murdered one of my sisters and kept the other two in jail [for] twelve months.”
On September 27, 1864, Anderson led fellow bushwhackers in the Centralia Massacre looting and terrifying the local populace. During the attack they barricaded the tracks of the Northern Missouri Railroad and forced a train to stop. The group robbed the civilian passengers and killed 22 Union soldiers who were returning home on furlough. Anderson left one Union sergeant alive for a possible prisoner exchange the rest he had stripped, shot, scalped or otherwise mutilated.
The same day, Union Major A.V.E. Johnston of the newly raised 39th Missouri Infantry Regiment (Mounted) set off with his men to pursue Anderson's band. Anderson, in conjunction with other guerrilla leaders such as George Todd, sent out a detachment that lured Johnston into a trap. After discharging their single-shot rifles and causing light guerrilla casualties, the Union soldiers were overrun by the pistol-wielding bushwhackers. Many fled in a panic as the guerrillas cut them down. Those who tried to surrender were slaughtered. Around 120 mounted infantrymen were killed in the ambush and pursuit. Bodies of the soldiers were decapitated and mutilated by some of the guerrillas.
Anderson's death
At the time of the Battle of Centralia, the Union command was busy opposing a raid by General Sterling Price, at the head of 12,000 Confederate cavalrymen. Price feinted towards St. Louis, made an attack on the federal garrison at Pilot Knob, then turned west, drawing the Union forces south of the Missouri River. Anderson met briefly with Price, but chose to return to the north side of the river, where he faced only local militia.
Union headquarters assigned militia Colonel Samuel P. Cox the task of eliminating the guerrilla leader. On October 26, 1864, Cox managed to locate Anderson near the hamlet of Albany, which is now part of Orrick, in Ray County, Missouri. Ironically, he used one of Anderson's favorite tactics against him. Cox sent a mounted detachment to lure the guerrillas into an ambush.
Cox gave this account of the battle:
“ I had only about 300 men under my command and gave the word to stand their ground – this fight must be victory or death – and not a man faltered. We dismounted at the wooden bridge leaving our horses in charge of the men with the commissary wagons. Crossing the bridge I stationed my men in the timber and gave explicit instructions not to begin shooting until I gave the command. Lt. Baker was sent ahead to reconnoiter and bring on the fight with instructions to retreat through our line. Cas. Morton, now a retired brigadier general, of Washington, D.C., was sent to Baker with the word to start the fight. Baker dashed up to where Anderson and his men were having meal ground and getting provisions, and opened fire. Instantly Anderson and his men were in their saddles and gave chase to Baker, who retreated under instructions and came dashing through our line. Anderson and some 20 of his men came in their historic manner, with their bridle reins in their teeth and revolver in each hand. When my men opened fire, many of Anderson's command went down. Others turned and fled, but the grim old chieftain and two of his men went right through the line, shooting and yelling, and it was as Anderson and one of his men turned and came back that both of them were killed. The celebrated (Capt.) Archie Clement, who had gone through our line with Anderson, kept right on across the bridge and stampeded my wagon train and its guards boy [sic] yelling to them to fly as the command was cut to pieces, and thinking it was one of their men, they ran and kept it up until I was a day or two getting them together again. In the hubbub, Clemens escaped. Clell Miller, afterwards a noted bank robber and a desperate character, was wounded in this fight and taken prisoner. It was with difficulty I restrained my men and the citizens from lynching him.”
Anderson led his men in a charge straight into the waiting militiamen who opened fire upon them. "Bloody Bill" fell from his horse after being shot twice through the side of the head and his surviving men then retreated while being pursued. It has been alleged that a silken cord with fifty-three knots was found on Anderson to mark the number of men he had killed. Human scalps were also found attached to his horse's bridle. In his pocket a photograph of Anderson and his wife was found as well as lock of hair from their infant child. Also found on Anderson's body were private papers and orders from General Sterling Price combined these items were used to confirm Anderson's identity.
Anderson's remains were taken to Richmond, Missouri put on public display and photographed. He was then decapitated, his head stuck on a telegraph pole and his body was dragged through the streets before being buried in an unmarked grave in Richmond's Pioneer Cemetery. In 1908 the ex-guerrilla and outlaw Frank James arranged for a funeral service at Anderson's grave site. A veteran's tombstone was placed over his grave in 1967 and the birth year is there incorrectly stated as 1840.
William Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1820 |
Death: |
Died 1862 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Joseph Anderson |
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Managed by: |
Private User |
Last Updated: |
February 16, 2015 |
Joseph Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1800 |
Death: |
Died 1856 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
James Anderson |
James Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
estimated between 1735 and 1795 |
Death: |
(Date and location unknown) |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
William Anderson |
William Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
estimated between 1706 and 1794 |
Death: |
(Date and location unknown) |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Peter Anderson |
Peter Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
estimated between 1700 and 1760 |
Death: |
Died 1801 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
John Anderson |
John Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
November 20, 1695 |
Birthplace: |
Perquimans Co., North Carolina |
Death: |
Died January 21, 1779 in Louisa Co., Virginia |
Cause of death: |
Aft. 1760 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Robert Anderson and
Mary Elizabeth Anderson |
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Robert Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1663 |
Birthplace: |
New Kent County, Virginia Colony |
Death: |
Died February 22, 1716 in Hanover County, Province of Virginia |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Robert Anderson, I and
Cecelia Anderson Our Line is This Richard married Charity Pouncey. daughter of Anthony Pouncey.
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Jannet Anderson and
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others |
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This where our line splits with Bloody Bill. His line is with Robert Born 1663 Married Mary Elizabeth, Our is Richard Born 1673, married Charity Pouncey (Robert and Richard are brother , sons of Robert and Elizabeth
Robert Anderson, I
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Birthdate: |
1634 |
Birthplace: |
New Kent, New Kent County, VA, USA |
Death: |
Died 1712 in St Peters Pennsylvania, New Kent, Virginia, USA |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir Richard Anderson, II and
Mary Anderson |
Richard Anderson, II |
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Birthdate: |
1618 |
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Birthplace: |
Tring, Hertfordshire, England, United Kingdom |
Death: |
Died 1662 in Gloucester, Gloucester County, Virginia, Colonial America |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Richard Anderson, I and
Elizabeth Anderson |
Richard Anderson, I |
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Birthdate: |
1580 |
Birthplace: |
Pendley, Hertfordshire, England |
Death: |
Died 1635 in King and Queen County, VA, USA |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Edward Watershed Anderson and
Madilyn Anderson |
Edward Watershed Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1566 |
Birthplace: |
Durham, County Durham, England |
Death: |
Died August 1, 1605 in Durham, County Durham , England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir John Anderson, Kt. and
Mary Anderson |
John Anderson, Kt. |
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Birthdate: |
1545 |
Birthplace: |
Fife, Scotland |
Death: |
Died August 1, 1605 in Hertfordshire, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir Edmund Anderson and
Magdalena Anderson |
Edmund Anderson, Sir |
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thdate: |
1525 |
Birthplace: |
St. Andrew's, Holburn, Clerkenwell St., Middlesex, England, United Kingdom |
Death: |
Died August 1, 1605 in Eyeworth, Bedfordshire, England |
Place of Burial: |
St Botolph Aldgate |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir William Anderson, Kt. and
Katherine Anderson |
Chief Justice of the Common Pleas under Elizabeth I, sat as judge at the trial of Mary, Queen of Scots.
Marriage to: Madylin Madalgen (Lady) Anderson (born Smythe) in 1566 Eyworth, Bedfordshire, England
William Anderson, Kt. |
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Also Known As: |
"Henry" |
Birthdate: |
1510 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died October 18, 1557 |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Henry Anderson, Sir and
Anne Anderson |
Henry Anderson, Sir |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1465 |
Birthplace: |
Bedfordshire, England |
Death: |
Died 1520 in Durham, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Roger Anderson, Sir and
Mrs... Anderson |
Offices Held
Sheriff, Newcastle 1571-2, alderman 1575, mayor 1575-6, 1583-4, 1594-5; j.p. Northumb, from 1577, co. Dur. 1584; sheriff, Northumb. 1586-7.
Biography
Anderson, like his father, was a prominent member of the Newcastle corporation. In 1589 and 1593 he shared the representation of the town with his cousin Henry Mitford, and the family group, which included the Carrs, was well known for its active work on behalf of the privileges of Newcastle and of the merchants company. Anderson is mentioned in the parliamentary records of 1584 as serving on a committee for the better observing of the Sabbath day (27 Nov.), and as burgess for Newcastle he could also have served on a committee about Hartlepool pier ( Feb. 1589). He was ‘licensed to depart about her Majesty’s service’ on 24 Mar. 1589.
During his first mayoralty, while the see of Durham was vacant, Anderson tried to annex Gateshead to Newcastle. William Fleetwood, then escheator of Durnham, prevented this by warning Burghley that whereas Gateshead was protestant, the Newcastle corporation was predominantly Catholic, ‘save Anderson, and yet he is so knit ... with the papists that aiunt ait negant negat’. In 1577 Anderson was the town’s suitor to Walsingham for a £40 annuity out of the customs. His later quarrels with members of the corporation arose over a lease which he and William Selby I, as trustees or ‘grand lessees’ for Newcastle, obtained from the Queen in 1583. This gave the town control of the manors of Gateshead and Whickham, with valuable coal deposits: in 1591 Anderson and Selby were paying the bishop of Durham an annual rent of £107 15s.8d. Quarrels broke out among the aldermen and burgesses over the administration of the mines, and these exacerbated the disputes already taking place in the corporation about the control of the government of the town. In 1592 Anderson wrote to the 3rd Earl of Huntingdon, president of the council in the north, complaining of ‘defects of government’ at Newcastle, and suggesting that the Earl should ask Burghley’s permission to intervene. Matters came to a head in 1597 with appeals from leading Newcastle citizens to the Privy Council. Anderson and Selby were accused of appropriating the mines to their own use, embezzling profits, rigging corporation elections to keep out those who were not grand lessees of Gateshead and Whickham, and blocking attempts to reform the government of the town. The quarrel apparently died down when Newcastle received a new charter in 1600.2
Apart from his public career, little is known of Anderson. In May 1589 he was trading with Turkey through the Levant company, and there is a reference, dated March 1591, to his trade with Italy. In 1593 he was a commissioner for the customs on exported cloth, while six years later he was one of those appointed for the ‘suppression of schism’ in his district. He died at the beginning of August 1605, and was buried at Pittington. His will, dated 1 Aug
Roger Anderson, Sir |
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Birthdate: |
1440 |
Birthplace: |
Bedfordsdhire, England |
Death: |
Died 1490 in Durham, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir John Anderson and
Lady Agnes Lockwood |
Sir John Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1415 |
Birthplace: |
Newcastle Upon Tyne, Northumberland, England |
Death: |
Died 1465 in Lincolnshire, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Sir William Anderson |
Sir William Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
1385 |
Birthplace: |
Newcastle Upon Tyne, Northumberland, England |
Death: |
Died 1440 in Newcastle Upon Tyne, Northumberland, England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Walter Anderson and
Elizabeth Anderson |
Walter Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1319 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died 1400 in England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
William Anderson and
Ellen Anderson |
William Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1270 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died 1350 in England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
Agnes (Angus?) Anderson |
Agnes (Angus?) Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1190 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died 1230 in England |
Immediate Family: |
Son of
William Yates Anderson and
Margaret Anderson |
William Yates Anderson |
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Birthdate: |
circa 1030 |
Birthplace: |
England |
Death: |
Died 1120 in England |
Immediate Family: |
Husband of
Margaret Anderson |
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Anderson is a surname deriving from a patronymic meaning "son of Anders/Andrew" (itself derived from the Greek name "Andreas", meaning "man" or "manly"). It originated in parallel in the British Isles and the Nordic countries. In Scotland, the name first appeared in records of the 14th century as "Fitz Andreu" (meaning son of Andrew), and developed in various forms by the Scottish Gaelic patronymic of "MacGhilleAndrais" which means the servant of St. Andrew. Variations of this name were MacAndrew, Gillanders and Anderson. The name soon migrated to other parts of Scotland due to the popularity of the name "Andrew" as associated with the Patron Saint of Scotland and the largest grouping lies in the north-east of Scotland from the Mearns through Aberdeenshire, Banff and Moray. In England, the very first recorded spelling of the family name is probably that of William Andreu, which was dated 1237, in the ancient charters of the county of Buckinghamshire, England, in the year 1237. Anderson is the eighth most frequent surname in Scotland and 52nd most common in England.[1] In Sweden, the form Andersson is the most common surname.[2] In Norway and Denmark, the form Andersen is quite common, being the fifth most common surname in both countries[3][4] - see Andersen. The Scandinavian forms Andersson and Andersen were often rendered as Anderson by immigrants to the English-speaking countries, whereby the latter form became one of the most common surnames in Anglophone North America. The name was eleventh most common surname reported in the 1990 United States census, accounting for 0.3% of the population.[5] It is the twelfth most common surname reported in the 2000 United States Census.[6] Anderson is also one of the most common surnames in Canada.[7] Other spelling variations include: Andison, Andersonne, Andersoun, Andirsoone, Andresoun, Androson, Andirston, Andresson, Andrewson, and Andresen. |
Anderson
Origins
and history
Anderson is an English and Scottish patronymic surname, meaning ’son of Andrew‘.
In this form, it is more common in the Lowlands, but it is widespread in
Scotland in different forms. In the Highlands, it was rendered as MacAndrew, of
medieval Scottish origin. Both names share the same Scottish Gaelic derivation
of ‘Gilleaindreas’ - literally a servant of St. Andrew, Scotland’s patron saint.
Though it is said there is no exact place of origin, the Kinrara manuscript contains details of a claim that the MacAndrews came to Badenoch from Moidart c.1400. The tales of the vengeance of Iain beg MacAindrea on cattle lifters who raided Badenoch may confirm this. However, there is no disputing the intellectual pedigree that his kinfolk subsequently established.
The tradition of scholarly erudition has significant roots in Anderson clan history throughout all the disciplines. This tradition was first established by Alexander Anderson who published works on geometry and algebra in Paris between 1612 and 1619. His cousin, David Anderson of Finshaugh, shared a similar skill in mechanics and mathematics that he applied to removing a large rock that had obstructed the entrance to Aberdeen harbour. This achievement earned him the nickname ‘Davie-Do-a’-Things.’
The lands of Clan Andrew are in Badenoch. The Clan itself is recorded in the Kinrara manuscript as coming to the lands of Badenoch, in the heart of the Chattan Confederation territory, from Moidart around 1400. Thus Clan Anderson became part of the Chattan Confederation.
Clan profile
Motto: Spem successus alit (translation, “Success nourishes hope”), (meaning, “Stand sure”)
Crest: An Oak Tree
Gaelic Name: Mac Ghille Aindrais
Badge: Hand holding a laurel wreath
Lands: Badenoch
Origin of Name: “Son of Andrew”
Tartan: Mostly blue,it is the only Scottish tartan of all the clans woven with seven colors, all others bearing no more than six colors.
The name Anderson in Ireland is usually of immigrant origin having been brought to the country by settlers who arrived into the Province of Ulster from England, especially during the seventeenth century. It is in the Northern Counties that descendants bearing this name can still mostly be found. The name literally means 'son of Andrew'.