PARKS, WILLIAM PRATT (PHOTO) - Lafayette County, Arkansas | WILLIAM PRATT (PHOTO) PARKS - Arkansas Gravestone Photos

William Pratt (photo) PARKS

Cryer (Lewisville) Cemetery
Lafayette County,
Arkansas

William Pratt Parks
CAPTAIN CSA
Civil War Confederate
December 24, 1843 - June 13, 1907

From Vol. II Vicksburg Campaign
by Ed Bearss. Photo & bio courtesy
of Charles Walthall.

Bio:
William Pratt "Buck" Parks (1843–1907)

Captain Parks and his wife have a joint memorial stone at Wilson Cemetery in Lafayette County which references their burial at the Cryer Cemetery nearby. Cpt. Parks and his wife both have stones at the Cryer Cemetery. They were installed in June 2017.

William Pratt "Buck" Parks was a captain of a heavy artillery battery at the Battle of Vicksburg in Mississippi. Following the Civil War, Parks became a prominent leader of agrarian protest in Arkansas.

The 1860 Census shows William Pratt Parks living in Little Rock (Pulaski County) AR at the residence of Joshua and Susan Jones, along with four younger siblings. A newspaper article appearing in the Arkansas Gazette on May 16, 1911, listed Parks as being enrolled at St. Johns' College when it first opened, in October 1859. Parks served as a private in the Pulaski County Field Artillery Battery (Arkansas state troops), formed in May 1861 under the command of Captain William E. Woodruff Jr. This battery fought at the Battle of Wilson's Creek on August 10, 1861. Following this engagement, the Arkansas state troops were disbanded to prevent their being impressed into Confederate service and potentially being transferred east of the Mississippi River.

In October 1861, Parks signed up with Company D, Fourth Arkansas Infantry Battalion (CS). On December 3, he was appointed a first lieutenant of that unit. Soon afterward, Company D was detached from the Fourth Battalion to serve in the heavy artillery. The unit was transferred from the Arkansas service to that of Tennessee. The first recorded action fought by this unit, Captain Frederick W. Hoadley's Heavy Artillery Battery, was in the New Madrid–Island No. 10 Campaign from February to April 1862. This campaign resulted in Confederate defeat, and the battery suffered a severe loss of men and equipment.

During May and June 1862, the Tennessee heavy artillery units stationed at Vicksburg were reorganized as the First Tennessee Heavy Artillery Regiment (CS). The remainder of Hoadley's Battery was merged with the remnants of two Tennessee batteries and part of another. On May 10, Parks was chosen as the captain of the new battery, while Hoadley was promoted to the rank of regimental major. At about this time, Parks was serving as a volunteer aboard the Confederate ship CSS Arkansas. Through summer and fall of 1862, Parks' Battery periodically exchanged fire with the Union fleet on the Mississippi River.

Although Parks' career was on the rise, his health did not keep pace. During November and December 1862, he was frequently ill, and he was relieved of command in January 1863. By March 14, he was back on active duty as a quartermaster at Vicksburg. He was captured when Vicksburg fell on July 4. According to a later newspaper account, Parks returned to Little Rock after the war and worked for a time in the law office of Augustus Garland, later the governor of Arkansas. He then moved to Lewisville (Lafayette County), where he opened a law office and owned a farm.

He married Mattie Douglass in 1866.

Parks then became a leader of the discontented farmers against the Democratic Party elite in Arkansas. In 1880, Parks was also the Greenback Party nominee for governor of Arkansas. He had the endorsement of the Arkansas Republican Party but received only a third of the vote. In 1882, Parks traveled to southern Arkansas campaigning for Greenbackers, although he does not seem to have been a candidate.

In 1884, he purchased an interest in the Hope Dispatch, a radical farmer newspaper. In 1892, he ran as the Populist Party nominee for state attorney general and lost. In 1896, Parks was a member of the Populist Party's state convention's committee on resolutions and was a delegate to the Populist national convention. He was also involved in an effort to purchase land in Texarkana (Miller County) through a tax sale, although the previous owner challenged the sale in court; the 1889 case of Jared E. Redfield v. W. P. Parks was decided against Parks. The 1900 Census has Parks still living in Lafayette County, working as a lawyer and owning a farm.

Parks had 5 children.

Susie Ella Parks died as a child, and the family never got over it.

Mamie Clara Parks died young, she never married and had no children.

Tilman Bacon Parks b May 14. 1872, attended the Univ. of Texas and Uni of Virginia (Sigma Chi). Served as District Attorney Hope Ark. In 1920, T. B. was elected to Congress for the 7th District of Arkansas. Tilman B. Parks served in the U.S. House of Representatives from 1921 to 1936. T. B. married Fay Newton March 14, 1897 in Lewisvillle AR. T. B. and Fay moved to Hope, Ark 1915. Fay died of cancer about 1929. She is buried at Rosehill Cemetery. Hope, Ark. She was the daughter of Judge Issac Newton, Camden, AR.

John Douglass Parks died as a young man, never married, and had no children.

William Pratt Parks Jr. died young.

Capt. Parks died on June 13, 1907, at his home near Lewisville, AR.





(See Veteran memorial)

Contributed on 11/5/21 by MryAl8
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Record #: 1399863

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Submitted: 11/5/21 • Approved: 11/5/21 • Last Updated: 11/8/21 • R1399863-G0-S3

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