Archibald S. Dobbins

Archibald S. Dobbins
Dobbins in uniform, c. 1862
Born
Archibald Stephenson Dobbins

c. 1827
Disappearedc. 1878 (aged 51)
Patagonia (present-day Santa Cruz Province), Argentina
StatusMissing for 146 years, 10 months and 15 days
MonumentsDobbins Memorial Marker, Confederate Cemetery, Helena, Arkansas
Occupations
Spouse
Mary P. Dawson
(m. 1849)
Children3
Military service
AllegianceConfederate States
BranchArmy
Years of service1862–1865
RankColonel
Commands
Battles
Criminal details
Criminal statusRemitted, restored to duty
Criminal chargeDisobedience of Orders in the face of the enemy
PenaltyDismissed from Service

Colonel Archibald Stephenson Dobbins (c. 1827 – c. 1878) was an officer of the Confederate army who commanded a cavalry regiment in the Trans-Mississippi Theater of the American Civil War. Initially refusing to serve under Marmaduke after the Marmaduke-Walker Duel, Dobbins was court-martialed for insubordination.

Born in Maury County, Tennessee, Dobbins entered Confederate service in 1862 as a volunteer aide-de-camp to Major-General Thomas C. Hindman. That same year, Dobbins was commissioned a colonel of cavalry. Paroled as a prisoner of war at Galveston, Texas, on July 13, 1865, he went into the mercantile business in New Orleans. Moving without his family to Santarem, Brazil, in 1867, he settled two years later near Itaituba, where he opened a sawmill and gristmill. In 1878, he immigrated to the Patagonia region of Argentina where he was engaged in business. The circumstances surrounding Dobbins' death remain a mystery to this day.