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--- Improvement of Larry McMurtry --- draft ---

Larry McMurtry
BornLarry Jeff McMurtry
(1936-06-25)June 25, 1936
Archer City, Texas, U.S.
DiedMarch 25, 2021(2021-03-25) (aged 84)
Archer City, Texas, U.S.
Occupation
NationalityAmerican
Alma materUniversity of North Texas (BA), Rice University (MA)
GenreWestern, contemporary Western, essays, screenplays
Notable worksHorseman, Pass By (1961)
The Last Picture Show (1966)
Terms of Endearment (1975)
Lonesome Dove (1985)
Streets of Laredo (1993)
Dead Man's Walk (1995)
Comanche Moon (1997)
Spouses
Jo Scott
(m. 1959; div. 1966)

Norma Faye Kesey
(m. 2011)
Children1 : James McMurtry



George M. Todd (September 17, 1839 – October 21, 1864) was a Canadian born American Confederate guerrilla leader during the American Civil War who served under William C. Quantrill. A participant in numerous raids, including the Lawrence Massacre in 1863, he was ultimately killed at the Battle of Little Blue River in 1864.

Early life[edit]

George was the 5th of seven children, four of whom died in childhood. There is one account that he was the youngest of the three. This is proven incorrect by birth records and census information. The family moved from Montréal to Chateaugay, NY around 1849/1850, which was a very popular crossing during the mid-19th century from Canada into the US. The next census where their names appear are in the 1860 Kansas City census. He is listed in the 1860 KCMO census as residing with his parents, George & Margerit, and his younger sister, also Margerit.

There was a surviving older brother, Thomas MacDonald Tod (b.1831 in Scotland and d. 1861 in or around KCMO), who married a Miss Hannah Catherine Moore of Washington, MO on February 9, 1856 and they had a son, Henry Morris Tod (b. 1861 in MO).

Todd's older sister, Mary Todd, married a Mr Henry Pilcher Westlake (b. July 31, 1831 in Fayette, VA d. 05/1899 in Mexico D.F.) on February 8, 1858 in KC, MO and moved to Syracuse, Missouri in 1860.

He had a younger sister, Margerit (b. Canada on 08/06/44-1901), who never married or had children.

In the 1910 edition of the KS State Historical Society, Mr Geo. Martin writes: "I knew him and his family well. They were Scotch people and came to Kansas City from Canada in 1859, as I now remember it. The family consisted of 5 persons: the father, the mother, one daughter and two sons, Tom and George, the latter being the youngest of the family. The father and Tom were practical stonemasons, and worked at the trade, while George, then about eighteen years of age, was a helper. I was assistant city engineer at the time, and when not at work the Todds spent much of their time in my office. They were awarded a contract to construct a sewer in the bottom of a deep ravine across our public square, and during the progress of this work Tom was struck and killed by a stone which rolled down the embankment to the bottom of the ravine. The father and Tom were well respected, but George was of a sullen, morose disposition, having little to say to anyone, and with no close associates, but without vicious habits as far as I know. Why he took to the "bresh" will always remain a mystery, as he had no knowledge of any of the issues involved in war, no grievances to redress, no wrongs to avenge nor property interests to protect. One would think from his origin he would have been an enemy of slavery, but the eccentricities of the human family are many and varied and past explaining. At one time it was reported that he was at the family residence in this city, whereupon a half dozen young men, including myself, banded together to capture him. Accordingly, we went to the house about ten o'clock PM, all well armed, and were met at the door by his mother. We informed her we came to see George and she at once denounced us in a volume of vitriolic vituperation, declaring, "You wretches want to spill the best blood of Scotland, the noblest blood of Scotland!"; but unheedful of her scolding, we proceeded to search the house, and not finding him, we descended into cellar carrying lighted candles, but he was not there. I have since thought it fortunate that for the members of that expedition that Todd was absent, otherwise some blood would have been shed and it might not have been the best blood of Scotland. Todd became one of the most savage and bloodthirsty of Quantrill's followers, and was killed on October 22, 1864, the day of the battle of the Big Blue."[1]

Mr Martin continues in a footnote: "Tom Todd had married in St Louis before 1859, as I now remember, an estimable young woman. At the time of his fatal injury, he asked his brother George to take good care of her and see that she was protected. Soon after George went with the guerillas, he married her. After his death, she again remarried and moved to California, where she still lives. Morgan T Maddox, one of Quantrill's men, gave me this information from which I wrote my account of the death of George Todd, printed in my 'Quantrill & the Border Wars,' pg 455. On the 24th of March, 1910, Maddox again repeated this story to me, and added that when he went up to Todd, he was still quivering in death, and that a volley was fired at him and one other man while they were dragging Todd down into the slough. - W.E. Connelly"[2]

Todd was documented as marrying Miss Hannah Catherine Moore 12/1861 but no documented issue was noted from the union. Todd married and left directly to join Quantrill. Ms Moore remarried a J W Waller in 1868 and moved to Sacramento, CA after the war.

Mr Martin's description is interesting but flawed with his own disinformation. He cited Todd as having no "vicious habits" but somehow warrants late night visits with armed militia to extract him and being relieved not to have met with him and later describes him as "savage" and "bloodthirsty." It's apparent Mr Martin was more familiar with George (the father) and Tom rather than Todd himself. Likewise, it was noted Todd joined the guerillas because he had gotten into some kind of "trouble" in Independence, MO at one point. Also, another stimulus for taking to the "bresh" was a noted incident with his father. In Petersen's book, Quantrill at Lawrence, he writes: "At the beginning of the war, the Todds were building bridges and structures around Kansas City. When the war started, the Federals asked George's father to help build army fortifications around the border. When he refused he was thrown in prison and put on a diet of bread and water. The cold dampness of the prison disabled the elder Todd, and he became unable to care for himself. Neighbors had to come to the cell to help feed him. George had already joined Col. William Roper's regiment in the Missouri State Guards and when he returned home he was thrown in jail. After his release and seeing the treatment his father was given by the Federals he joined Quantrill in 1862, eventually becoming Quantrill's second in command. It was this incarceration of his father that turned him against the Union authority. An acquaintance remarked that he possessed a large amount of personal courage due to his early association in Price's army."

Physical description and personality[edit]

Todd was described in one source as standing roughly 5'8" but most sources state he was 6'. Quantrill was noted at 5'8" and in his portrait with Todd, Todd stands taller than him, so 6' is more than likely closer to his true height. He was documented as auburn haired or blondish, with blue eyes and a fair complexion. He was documented in one place to have a lispy voice (unsourced). There is lack of clarity as to whether or not he was literate. Detractors call him "barely literate," while other sources note he had basic literacy and played the piano some. Another guerilla noted he would be seen reading books on military history and enjoyed talking about military manoeuvres and tactics but was otherwise reserved and quiet. Kate King noted he was a very kind person, on average, one of her "best friends" and used to give her candy. KC neighbor, Marietta Allen, noted both George and his family were kind and generous people, on the whole. An acquaintance remarked that he possessed a large amount of personal courage due to his early association in Price's army. It was said that he bore the mark of several different wounds on his body.

Biography[edit]

Todd had worked as a bridge mason before the war, and served with the Missouri State Guard before joining Quantrill in 1862. He rose to become one of Quantrill's principal lieutenants, and participated in various raids of his own as well as with Quantrill. During the First Battle of Independence on August 11, 1862, Todd served under Quantrill in a two-pronged attack on the city led by Col. John T. Hughes. During the fighting, Todd liberated several prisoners in the city jail, one of whom was the city marshal, James Knowles, who had been imprisoned for the killing of a rowdy citizen. Knowles and a Union captain named Thomas (whom Todd had captured at this same time) were summarily executed by Todd and his men, who wanted revenge for previous attacks made by those two on their command.[3]

On August 21, 1863, Todd participated in Quantrill's raid on Lawrence.

Todd and his men did not participate in the Centralia Massacre, on September 27, 1864. Primarily known for the massacre of unarmed union soldiers on a train (This was performed by William T. Anderson and not endorsed by Todd, whom reprimanded Anderson for the deed), the guerrillas overran a relief force of inexperienced mounted infantry carrying single shot rifles, killing nearly all of them as well.

Todd was killed during the Battle of Little Blue River, on October 21, 1864, possibly by Lt. Col. George H. Hoyt of the Fifteenth Kansas, although an eyewitness believed that the fatal shot was probably fired by a nearby private.[4] According to Edwards, "a Spencer rifle ball entered his neck in front, passed through and out near the spine, and paralyzed him. Dying as he fell, he was yet tenderly taken up and carried to the house of Mrs. Burns, in Independence. Articulating with great difficulty and leaving now and then almost incoherent messages to favorite comrade or friend, he lingered for two hours insensible to pain, and died at last as a Roman."[5][6] Todd was buried at Woodlawn Cemetery[7] in Independence, where his grave is a local historical attraction.[8]

Family tree[edit]

FATHER: George Moncrieff Tod (b. July 18, 1807) in the Dundee region of Scotland
MOTHER: Margerit Morris (b. 1805) in Fife, Scotland
married in Dundee, Angus, Scotland on November 25, 1829

ISSUE: 1.) 09/13/1830-1843: David Rankine Tod (b. Scotland), d. June 26, 1843 in Montreal, buried July 27, 1843

2.) 1831-1859/1860: Thomas Tod (b. Scotland d. MO)

3.) 04/03/1833 (04/02?)-06/17/1903: Mary Lindsay Tod (b. Canada) – married Henry Pilcher Westlake (b. July 31, 1831 in Fayette, VA d. 05/1899 in Mexico D.F.) on February 8, 1858 in KC, MO. Issue – Mary Margaret Westlake (1859-1860), Charles Thomas (1864-1925), Edith (1866-1938), Henry Lindsay (1869-1924, St Louis, MO).

4.) 08/22/1837-1846: Rachel Fisher Tod (b. Canada), died May 21, 1846 and buried May 25, 1846 in Montreal, Canada

5.) 09/17/1839-10/22/1864: George Appleton Tod (b. Canada d. Missouri)

6.) March 23, 1843: Margerit Tod (b. Canada), baptized June 8, 1844. Died in 1901 and is buried in Eagle Cemetery in Sacramento, NM

7.) 01/05/1846-1846: Elizabeth Helen Tod (b. Canada) – baptized December 4, 1846, died May 31, 1846 and buried March 6, 1846 in Montreal

Gallery[edit]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Martin, G. W. (Ed.). (1910). Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society: 1909-1910 (Vol. XI). Topeka, KS: State Printing Office.
  2. ^ Martin, G. W. (Ed.). (1910). Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society: 1909-1910 (Vol. XI). Topeka, KS: State Printing Office. p 284
  3. ^ Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society, 1909-1910, Volume IX. Topeka: State Printing Office, 1910, p. 284.
  4. ^ Lause 2016, p. 82.
  5. ^ Richard J. Hinton. Rebel Invasion of Kansas and Missouri. Chicago: Church and Goodman, 1865, page 105.
  6. ^ George S. Grover. "Price Campaign of 1864," Missouri Historical Review 6 (Oct. 1911 – Jul. 1912), page 174.
  7. ^ George M. Todd at Findagrave.com
  8. ^ Where the Civil War Began Archived July 24, 2008, at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on July 12, 2008

Sources[edit]

  • Lause, Mark A. (2016). The Collapse of Price's Raid: The Beginning of the End in Civil War Missouri. Columbia, Missouri: University of Missouri Press. ISBN 978-0-826-22025-7.

External links[edit]


"I notice in your volume IX Bill Todd's name is frequently quoted, whereas it should read George Todd. I knew him and his family well. They were Scotch people and came to Kansas City from Canada in 1859, as I now re- member it. The family consisted of five persons: the father, mother, one daughter and two sons, Tom and George, the latter being the youngest of the family. The father and Tom were practical stonemasons, and worked at the trade, while George, then about eighteen years of age, was a helper. I was assistant city engineer at the time, and when not at work the Todds spent much of their time in my office. They were awarded a contract to construct a sewer in the bottom of a deep ravine across our public square, and during the progress of this work Tom was struck and killed by a stone which rolled down the embankment to the bottom of the ravine. The father and Tom were highly respected, but George was of a sullen, morose dispo- sition, having little to say to anyone, and with no close associates, but with- out vicious habits as far as I know. Why he took to the "bresh" will always remain a mystery, as he had no knowledge of the issues involved in war, no grievances to redress, no wrongs to avenge nor property interests to protect. One would think from his origin he would have been an enemy of slavery, but the eccentricities of the human family are many, varied and past explaining. At one time it was reported he was at the family resi- dence in this city, whereupon a half dozen young men, including myself, banded together to capture him. Accordingly we went to the house about ten o 'clock p. m. , all well armed, and were met at the door by his mother. We informed her we came to see George, and she at once denounced us in a volume of vitriolic vituperation, declaring "You wretches want to spill the best blood of Scotland, the noblest blood of Scotland"; but unheedful of her scolding we proceeded to search the house, and not finding him, we de- scended into the cellar carrying lighted candles, but he was not there. I have since thought it fortunate for the members of that expedition that Todd was absent, otherwise some blood would have been shed and it might not have been the best blood of Scotland. Todd became one of the most savage and bloodthirsty of Quantrill's followers, and was killed October 22, 1864, the day of the battle of the Big Blue. 2

I read many articles in your volume IX with much interest, especially that of Captain Palmer, many of whose statements are quite surprising. On page 461, he says: " Quan trill was wounded and his brother killed on the Cottonwood by Jayhawkers." The people of the South should not be cen- sured for believing and circulating this fiction, when they can quote a Federal military officer as their authority. On page 460 he says five of Quantrill's men were hanged on the present site of the Coates House in this

Note 2. — "Tom Todd had married in St. Louis before 1859, as I now remember, an estimable young woman. At the time of his fatal injury he asked his brother George to take good care of her and see that she was protected. Soon after George went with the guerrillas he married her. After his death she again married and removed to California, where she still lives. Morgan T. Mattox, one of Quantrill's men, gaveme the information from which I wrote my account of the death of George Todd, printed in my 'Quan trill and the Border Wars,' page 455. On the 24th of March, 1910, Mattox again repeated this story to me, and added that when he went up to Todd he was still quivering in death, and that a volley was fired at him and one other man while they were dragging Todd down into the slough."— W. E. Connelley."

Martin, G. W. (Ed.). (1910). Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society: 1909-1910 (Vol. XI). Topeka, KS: State Printing Office, p. 284.


October 10, 1864, Rosecrans telegraphed Maj.-gen. S. R. Curtis, at Leaven- worth, Kan., as follows:

"Price's movements are not known, but he has avowed his intention to go to Leavenworth. If he will try this it will enable our columns under Mower and Smith and our cavalry to get between them and the Osage, and they will suffer. They spread and stretch out for subsistence; therefore, your cavalry can boldly strike the head of their columns, and hurt and retard their march. The telegraph lines are so interrupted it will be difficult to communicate with you. W. S. Rosecrans, Major-general."

For sixteen months prior to this date I had been kept busy chasing bush- whackers, scouting the country— over every road and by-path in Jackson, Lafayette, Johnson, Cass and Bates counties, and down the Kansas border as far as Fort Scott. My company, A, Eleventh Kansas volunteer cavalry, had been kept recruited to its maximum, or nearly so, and all were well- trained veterans, good hunters and trailers for the most formidable foe that ever harassed an army— the Missouri bushwhackers or guerrillas, com- manded by Quantrill, and ably assisted by such desperadoes as Bill Ander- son, Arch Clements, Bill Todd, Jesse and Frank James, Cy Porter, Coon Thornton, Thrailkill, Upton Hayes, Cole Younger, Si Gordon, and Dick Yeager. Before the war these guerrillas were, many of them, plainsmen, Indian fighters, border toughs— others wayward sons of good families in Mis- souri—reckless daredevils all. The service and drill necessary to success- fully meet such a foe had made my company A fairly known along the border, especially to military commanders."


"The following incidents come before my mind as a panorama, vivid as life, a story that can never be told, the record of which would fill a hundred volumes of intensely interesting matter, and one never to be forgotten by any one of the men who were active witnesses of the sickening details: Sterling Price's first march to the South, and his several attempts to wrest Missouri from the Union; Joe Shelby's raids up to Price's last disastrous raid, in September and October, 1864; Quantrill's Lawrence raid, August 21, 1863, when he slaughtered in cold blood 142 unarmed non-combatants, and


464 Kansas State Historical Society.

sacked and burned that undefended city; how this sack and massacre might have been averted had it not been for a mistake of judgment on the part of one of our best and most loyal officers; Quantrill's escape from eighty men of Pomeroy's command, the Ninth Kansas, when they had him and five of his men surrounded in a burning house; the ambuscade and cowardly murder of eighteen of Capt. Henry Flesher's men, company E of the Ninth Kansas cavalry, June 17, 1863, by Bill Todd, at Brush creek, within a mile of Westport, then a military station; Bill Anderson's wreck and capture of a railroad-train on the North Missouri railroad, at Centralia, in November, 1861, and slaughter of eighty unarmed and wounded soldiers; the massacre of Blunt's staff, escort and teamsters at Baxter Springs, Octo- ber 6, 1863; Capt. Charles Cleveland's desertion, with several of company H, Seventh Kansas black horse cavalry, his turning highwayman, and how it took nearly 2000 cavalry four months to disperse his band and kill him; the resignation of Geo. H. Hoyt, captain company K, Seventh Kansas cav- alry, to raise a band of over 300 redlegs, an organization sworn to shoot rebels, take no prisoners, free slaves, and respect no property rights of rebels or of their sympathizers; our chase for Quantrill from the Missouri river to Arkansas and back before and after the Lawrence raid; the final driving of Quantrill and his men beyond the Mississippi, and his death at the military prison hospital at Louisville, Ky., June 6, 1865, from wounds received at his capture near Taylorsville, Ky., May 10, 1865."

"A ring on the finger of the dead woman attracted his attention, and whipping out his bowie-knife he cut off the finger to release the ring. Before leaving, this gallant(?) party of Union defenders said to the two terror-stricken daughters: "If you want to plant the old lady, drag her out, for we are going to fire the ranch. ' ' Unaided they dragged the coffin from the burning home, nursed their father back to life, and watched for the dawn of day. A colored servant came to tell me the story early next morning. I did all I could to relieve their dis- tress, tried to locate the villains, but did not for over a year learn who the night raiders were. My vote, as a. member of a court-martial held in March, 1865, helped to give this same captain a dishonorable dismissal from the service, which he had from the first disgraced. Young Lawrence came home from New Mexico and joined Quantrill for revenge. In fact, "re- venge" was the watchword from the north line of Kansas south on the line between Kansas and Missouri into Arkansas. Old scores from the early Kansas troubles had to be settled. The war was not commenced at Fort Sumter; it started in Kansas in 1855, and the fires had been kept bright until the Fort Sumter breeze had fanned the entire border counties into a flame.

Thus, from early spring until October, 1861, Lane's brigade fought under the black flag the rebels opposed to us. Upton Hayes, General Rains, Davidson, Standwatie and his Choctaw and Chickasaw Indians, Coon Thorn- ton (the worst daredevil of them all), Quantrill, Thrailkill, Bill Anderson, Arch Clements, Jesse James (who made Missouri notorious after the war), his brother Frank, Cole Younger, Si Porter, Cy. Gordon, Bill Todd, Dick Yeager— all oflicers under Quantrill, commanding guerrilla bands— started in under the war cry : ' ' No surrender except in death ! ' '

The Kansans under Lane, Montgomery, Blunt, Jennison, Anthony, Hoyt and others accepted the challenge, and, until General Fremont, in October, 1861, issued his order ^ against this retaliatory work and forced a reorgani- zation of Lane's brigade, which forced Lane out of the army and back to the senate, there was no pretension to the common amenities of civilized war, and, in fact, with the guerrillas and bushwhackers, there was no quarter given or taken until the surrender of Lee. It was a fight to the death on both sides all through the war. The bushwhackers, who were the demon devils of this border war, personally more for plunder and daredevil notoriety than for patriotic impulses, were led by men holding roving commissions

Note 2.— The proclamation g-iven below is the nearest approach to the order mentioned by Captain Palmer, printed in the Official Records, and is contained in series 1, volume 3, on pages 563, 564. Col. D. Hunter, having relieved General Fremont early in November, 1861, counter- manded this proclamation for various reasons, which he cites.

"proclamation."

Martin, G. W. (Ed.). (1910). Collections of the Kansas State Historical Society: 1909-1910 (Vol. IX). Topeka, KS: State Printing Office.

https://alias-dictus.com/george-m-todd

In the early postings on Missouri guerillas, it was noted that guerillas fought alongside regulars in some 1862 actions.

George Todd and some of his men fought with Shelby at Little Blue on Oct. 21, 1864 during Price's Missour Invasion. According to a Union officer named George S. Grover who was there, Todd was shot and killed near the town square in Independence by retreating Federals as they fell back through the town from the Little Blue River.

Bryce

https://civilwartalk.com/threads/capt-george-todd.141664/