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Do you consider Arkansas and Missouri rivals?
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:07 pm
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:07 pm
With all these threads by Arkansas poster about beating Missouri I think they are rivals.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:08 pm to FiddleHead
Duh, border war. It's a natural rivalry.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:09 pm to FiddleHead
I don't think so. I think over time it will develop.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:09 pm to wmr
Yes. Very similar football programs plus natural border rivalry.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:09 pm to Stonehog
Their Yankee soldiers fought our Grays at Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove.
Bleeding Ar-Kansas
You didn't know this?
Bleeding Ar-Kansas
You didn't know this?
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:33 pm to FiddleHead
Absolutely. Very heated. Very Egg Bowl like.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:34 pm to I Ham That I Ham
quote:
Their Yankee soldiers fought our Grays at Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:34 pm to FiddleHead
I don't consider them at all.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:35 pm to FiddleHead
I don't consider Arkansas or Missouri at all.
ETA: Get out of my head, DWag!
ETA: Get out of my head, DWag!
This post was edited on 2/17/13 at 7:36 pm
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:36 pm to FiddleHead
I reckon that I don't give a frick.
But sure, they're cellar dweller wars are fun to watch while listening to the Benny Hill theme.
But sure, they're cellar dweller wars are fun to watch while listening to the Benny Hill theme.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:44 pm to Stonehog
quote:
Duh, border war. It's a natural rivalry.
Jimmy Dykes? Is that you?
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:46 pm to I Ham That I Ham
quote:
Their Yankee soldiers fought our Grays at Pea Ridge and Prairie Grove.
Bleeding Ar-Kansas
You didn't know this?
The Governor of Missouri tried to move the capitol to Neosho, less than an hour from the Arkansas border.
LINK
On July 2, 1861 the Neosho State Guards under Captain Henderson Jennings assisted in the capture of the Union Army's Captain Conrad and a company of Colonel Sigel's Third Missouri Infantry Regiment, which had occupied Neosho and were quartered in the court house.
On October 21, Missouri Governor Claiborne Jackson and the pro-Southern members of the Missouri General Assembly who had been forced to flee from Jefferson City on the approach of the Union Army, held next to their last legislative session at Neosho. On October 28, 1861, they established a provisional capital in Neosho. Governor Jackson and the Missouri General Assembly met in the Masonic Hall, numbering thirty nine members of the House and ten of the Senate. They passed an ordinance of secession and the event was celebrated with cannon firing by General Sterling Price's State Guardsmen who were camped in the adjacent hills. The Confederate States government accepted the results of the vote, and Missouri was admitted as the 12th state of the Confederacy. However, the pro-Union members of the General Assembly had already convened, and supported by the occupying Union troops, had declared Jackson removed from office, as well as all who favored the South. The pro-Union members then set up a their own provisional government and appointed Hamilton R. Gamble to be governor. Missouri would have three governors during the course of the Civil War, one elected by the people (Jackson). and two appointed by the pro-Union government (Gamble and William Preble Hall).
General Price made an effort to organize a Confederate defense of Missouri and initially succeeded, but any chance for concerted pro-Southern action ended when he was defeated in March 1862 at Pea Ridge.
This post was edited on 2/17/13 at 7:47 pm
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:47 pm to FiddleHead
No... Arkansas has no rival
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:48 pm to I Ham That I Ham
quote:
Jimmy Dykes? Is that you?
don't you put that evil on me.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:49 pm to bayou2003
That's great and all but here are some numbers that show their Yankeeness:
By the end of the Civil War Missouri had supplied nearly 110,000 troops to the Union and about 40,000 troops for the Confederate Army.
By the end of the Civil War Missouri had supplied nearly 110,000 troops to the Union and about 40,000 troops for the Confederate Army.
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:49 pm to reggierayreb
quote:
No... Arkansas has no rival
What about Texas??
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:51 pm to Stonehog
"Border War 2.0"
"there has been a rivalry brewing in this part of the country"
oh, Jimmy
"there has been a rivalry brewing in this part of the country"
oh, Jimmy
Posted on 2/17/13 at 7:52 pm to I Ham That I Ham
quote:
That's great and all but here are some numbers that show their Yankeeness:
By the end of the Civil War Missouri had supplied nearly 110,000 troops to the Union and about 40,000 troops for the Confederate Army.
A lot of Missouri fighters were rebels. Southern and Western Missouri was confederate. Jasper Co even flew the confederate flag at the courthouse in Carthage. That's why you never hear about any pro union Missourians or famous people fighting for the union. You only hear about the ones that supported the confederacy.
This post was edited on 2/17/13 at 7:53 pm
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