The Indian Territory in the Civil War Message Board - Archive

New Book Chronicles Cabin Creek Battle

Get ready to ride on a raid with Stand Watie as Gregath Publishing Company proudly announces the release of Steven L. Warren's new book "Brilliant Victory: The Second Civil War Battle of Cabin Creek, Indian Territory." Warren's book tells the entire story of the last Confederate offensive into northern Indian Territory in September of 1864.

The book chronicles the successful raid led by Confederate brigadier generals Richard M. Gano and Stand Watie. On September 19, 1864, their rag tag force consisting of 2,000 Texas and Indian troops, surprised and captured a Union supply train of 300 wagons, including 1,800 mules and horses at the Cabin Creek station, Cherokee Nation. Watie and Gano's men made it safely back to the Confederate lines with 130 wagons filled with much need supplies and 740 mules. The captured supplies were later estimated to have been worth more than $1.5 million in 1864 dollars. In a congratulatory order published in October of 1864, Lieutenant General Edmund Kirby-Smith, the commander of all Confederate forces west of the Mississippi River, noted the success of "one of the most brilliant and daring raids of the entire war." Watie, Gano and their respective commands received a special commendation from the Confederate Congress in January of 1865 for the capture of the wagon train.

Warren documents the events leading up to the capture of the wagon train at Cabin Creek, including the battle at Flat Rock, which occurred north of present-day Wagoner, Oklahoma. At Flat Rock, black soldiers of Company K, First Kansas Colored Infantry were massacred by the bloodthirsty Confederate troops.

The author also writes about the Union forces attempt to recapture the wagon train at Pryor Creek. "It's a great story," Warren said. "It's amazing what Watie and Gano's men accomplished. The Texans and Indians didn't really trust one another, and yet they worked together to go behind enemy lines and capture a very valuable wagon train."

An authority on the Civil War battles at Cabin Creek, Warren has made presentations to historical and genealogical groups throughout Oklahoma, Kansas and Arkansas. Currently, Warren is writing a screenplay about the Cabin Creek battle. This is his first book, but it's not his first project on the Civil War in Indian Territory. In 1992, Warren and Rick Harding of Bartlesville, Oklahoma released the 90-minute television documentary "Last Raid at Cabin Creek," which Warren wrote and co-produced. Videotapes of the program have been sold to libraries across the country. The videotape has also been successful in the home video market. The documentary has won numerous awards, including recognition from the state of Oklahoma. The program was added to the collection of the Smithsonian Institution's Museum of American History in 1998.

The book is priced at $49.95, which includes shipping. The book is hardback, 8 1/2" by 11", 230 pages with photographs, maps, appendices and index, ISBN 0-944619-665. The book also features the partial war diary of Richard M. Gano, highlighting his early service in the early Indian Wars on the Texas plains and as the Lieutenant Colonel of the 7th Kentucky Cavalry, which was attached under General John Hunt Morgan's command.

Orders for the book can be made at the Gregath Publishing Company website located on the Internet at http://www.gregathcompany.com or by calling (918) 542-4148.

Orders may also be placed by mailing a personal check or money order to

Gregath Publishing Company
Box 505
Wyandotte, Oklahoma 74370

A 20-year veteran of the television industry, Warren is a descendant of both Union and Confederate veterans. He received his M.A. in Journalism from the University of Oklahoma in 1983 and his B.A. in Communications from the University of Tulsa in 1982. He is a 1978 graduate of Claremore High School, Claremore, Oklahoma. He is a member of the Oklahoma Historical Society, Civil War Preservation Trust, Friends of Cabin Creek Battlefield, Sons of Union Veterans of the Civil War, and the Friends of the Hunley. He and his wife Amy and their two daughters currently live in Spokane, Washington.

The Cabin Creek Battlefield Park is located three and one-half miles north of Pensacola, Oklahoma from Oklahoma State Highway 28. The park is owned by the Oklahoma Historical Society and is maintained by the Friends of Cabin Creek Battlefield, Inc., a local volunteer group. The park is open from daylight to dusk, 365 days a year.