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==History== The borderlands of Kansas and Missouri were battlegrounds for insurgents during the [[American Civil War]], with raids going back and forth across the border. Bates County is noted as the site for the first combat engagement during the war of African-American soldiers serving with the Union and against Confederate forces, which occurred on October 28β29, 1862. The First Kansas Colored Division (part of the state militia) fought Confederate guerrillas at the [[Skirmish at Island Mound|Battle of Island Mound]] four miles north of present-day [[Rich Hill, Missouri]], and the Union forces won. The Kansas soldiers were badly outnumbered but stood their ground, fighting valiantly. The skirmish was covered by ''[[The New York Times]]'', which noted the men's bravery at a time when many people questioned whether former slaves could make good soldiers.<ref name="nyt">[https://www.nytimes.com/1862/11/19/news/affairs-west-negro-regiment-action-battle-island-mounds-desperate-bravery-negros.html?emc=eta1 "AFFAIRS IN THE WEST.; A Negro Regiment in Action—The Battle of Island Mounds—Desperate Bravery of the Negros—Defeat of the Guerrillas--An Attempted Fraud"], ''The New York Times'', November 19, 1862, accessed February 22, 2016</ref> Their heroic action preceded President Abraham Lincoln's announcement of the [[Emancipation Proclamation]] in January 1863 and establishment of the [[United States Colored Troops]]. Following a massacre of men and boys and the burning of [[Lawrence, Kansas]], by Confederate bushwhackers in the summer of 1863, the United States General [[Thomas Ewing Jr.|Ewing]] ordered the evacuation of the civilian population from rural areas of Bates and nearby counties except for within a mile of certain Union-controlled cities, in order to cut off sources of support for Confederate insurgents. This was done under [[General Order No. 11 (1863)|Order No. 11]]. The county had been a base of Confederate [[guerrillas]]. But, Ewing's order generated outrage and added to support of guerrillas in some areas. This mostly rural county continued to support agriculture in the decades after the Civil War. Since the early 20th century, population has declined as people have moved to cities for work.
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