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Morgan's Raid

Morgan's Raid (also the Calico Raid or Great Raid of 1863) was a diversionary incursion by Confederate cavalry into the Union states of Indiana, Kentucky, Ohio, and West Virginia during the American Civil War. The raid took place from June 11 to July 26, 1863. It is named for the commander of the Confederate troops, Brigadier General John Hunt Morgan. Although it caused temporary alarm in the North, the raid failed.

Morgan's Raid
Part of the American Civil War

Map of Morgan's route. Small groups of Morgan's scouts and raiding parties rode through some southern Indiana counties. The main body of Morgan's force followed a route through eight counties, passing through such towns as Corydon, Salem, Lexington, Vernon (rather than North Vernon), and Versailles on the way to Harrison, Ohio.
DateJune 11 – July 26, 1863 (1863-06-11 – 1863-07-26)
Location
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States Confederate States
Commanders and leaders
Ambrose Burnside
Henry M. Judah
John Hunt Morgan
Strength
40,000+ 2,462
Casualties and losses
6,000 prisoners paroled 2,000 prisoners taken

The raid covered more than 1,000 miles (1,600 km), beginning in Tennessee and ending in northern Ohio. It coincided with the Vicksburg and Gettysburg Campaigns. It was meant to draw U.S. troops away from those fronts by frightening the North into demanding its troops return home. Despite his initial successes, Morgan failed to recross the Ohio River and eventually surrendered what remained of his command in northeastern Ohio near the Pennsylvania border. Morgan and other senior officers were held in the Ohio Penitentiary, but they tunneled their way out and took a train to Cincinnati, where they crossed the Ohio River into Kentucky.

Tennessee and Kentucky edit

General Morgan and his 2,460 handpicked Confederate cavalrymen, along with four artillery pieces,[1] departed from Sparta, Tennessee, on June 11, 1863. The expedition intended to divert the attention of the Union Army of the Ohio from Confederate forces in the state and possibly stir up pro-Confederate sentiments in the North. General Braxton Bragg, the regional Confederate commander, intended Morgan's cavalrymen to distract U.S. forces by entering Kentucky. Morgan, however, confided to some of his officers that he had long desired to invade Indiana and Ohio to bring the terror of war to the Union. Bragg had given him carte blanche to ride throughout Tennessee and Kentucky, but ordered him to under no circumstances cross the Ohio River.[2] On June 23, the Federal Army of the Cumberland began its operations against General Bragg's Confederate Army of Tennessee in what became known as the Tullahoma Campaign, and Morgan decided it was time to move northward into Kentucky.

 
The Battle of Tebbs' Bend

On July 2, hoping to disrupt Union communication lines, Morgan rode into Kentucky, where sympathetic citizens openly welcomed his cavalrymen. Crossing the rain-swollen Cumberland River at Burkesville, Morgan's division advanced to the Green River, where it was deflected by half of a Union regiment (the 25th Michigan Infantry) at the Battle of Tebbs Bend on July 4. Morgan surprised and captured the garrison at Lebanon. He trapped 400 men from the 20th Kentucky in the town's railroad depot, but the well-fortified building provided considerable protection. In a six-hour fight, Federal troops killed Morgan's youngest brother, Thomas, during the Confederate's final charge. Morgan finally captured and then paroled the U.S. troops.

A grieving Morgan continued northward to Louisville, riding through Springfield, Bardstown, and Garnettsville. Along the way, the Confederates endured several smaller skirmishes with Union troops and Kentucky home guard units. However, he turned his remaining men to the northwest and headed for the Ohio River just south of the city.

At Springfield, Morgan sent a detachment north and east of Louisville, intending to confuse Union forces about where Morgan was heading. Before rejoining Morgan, this detachment crossed the Ohio River at Twelve Mile Island and was captured near New Pekin, Indiana. To further mislead the U.S. soldiers of his objectives, Morgan had his telegrapher, "Lightning" Ellsworth, tap telegraph lines and, pretending to be a Union telegrapher, send several messages giving different headings for the raiders and false reports of the size of Morgan's force—sometimes reporting it as high as 7,000 men. Ellsworth did this throughout the journey, especially in Indiana.[3]

Indiana edit

 
Panic in Louisville as Morgan's troops approach; Drawing from Illustrated Battles of the Nineteenth Century, vol. 2

Morgan had sent spy Thomas Hines and a party of 62 Confederates, posing as a Union patrol, on a secret mission into Indiana in June to determine if the local Copperheads would support or join Morgan's impending raid. After visiting the local Copperhead leader, Dr. William A. Bowles, Hines learned that no desired support would be forthcoming. He and his scouts were soon identified as actually being Confederates, and, in a minor skirmish near Leavenworth, Indiana, Hines had to abandon his men as he swam across the Ohio River under gunfire. He wandered around Kentucky for a week seeking information on Morgan's whereabouts.[4][5]

By now reduced to 1,800 men, Morgan's main column had arrived on the morning of July 8 at Brandenburg, Kentucky, a small town along the Ohio River, where Hines rejoined them. Here, the raiders seized two steamboats, the John B. McCombs and the Alice Dean. Morgan, against Bragg's strict orders,[6] transported his command across the river to Indiana, landing just east of Mauckport. A small company of Indiana home guards contested the crossing with an artillery piece, as did a riverboat carrying a six-pounder. However, the gunboat soon withdrew, and Morgan's forces safely crossed the river into Indiana that night. After burning the Alice Dean and sending the John B. McCombs downriver with instructions not to pursue him, Morgan headed away from the river.[7]

Governor Oliver P. Morton worked feverishly to organize Indiana's defense, calling for men to take up arms and form militia companies. Thousands responded and organized themselves into companies and regiments. Col. Lewis Jordan took command of the 450 members of the Harrison County Home Guard (Sixth Regiment, Indiana Legion), consisting of poorly trained civilians with a motley collection of arms. His goal was to delay Morgan long enough for Union reinforcements to arrive.[8]

Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside, commander of the Department of the Ohio with headquarters in Cincinnati, quickly organized local Federal troops and home militia to cut off Morgan's routes back to the Confederacy.[9] Morgan headed northward on Mauckport Road with another brother, Colonel Richard Morgan, leading the forward elements. On July 9, one mile (1.6 km) south of Corydon, Indiana, the county seat of Harrison County, his advance guard encountered Jordan's small force, drawn in a battle line behind a hastily thrown up barricade of logs. The colonel attacked, and in a short but spirited battle of less than an hour, he simultaneously outflanked both Union wings, completely routing the hapless militia.[10] Accounts vary as to the number of casualties that resulted from the Battle of Corydon, but one source estimates that 4 of Jordan's men were killed, 10–12 were wounded, and 355 were captured. Morgan counted 11 dead and 40 wounded raiders.[11] Among the dead Federals was the civilian toll keeper who perished near his tollgate. Raiders killed a Lutheran minister, Reverend Peter Glenn, on his farm, 4 miles (6 km) from the battlefield, and stole horses from several other farmers.[10]

General Morgan led his division into Corydon, where he paroled his demoralized prisoners and ransomed the town for cash and supplies.[10] Morgan's soldiers then traveled east and reached Vienna on July 10, where they burned a railroad bridge and depot and tapped a telegraph line. After spending the night in Lexington, they headed to the northeast, terrorizing the small towns along the way, including Vernon, Dupont, New Pekin, Salem, and Versailles.[12]

On July 11, while crossing Blue River near New Pekin, Confederate Capt. William J. Davis and some of his men were captured by 73rd Indiana Infantry and a detachment of the 5th U.S. Regulars. Davis and several other soldiers were taken to New Albany and secured in the county jail.[13]

On the night of July 11, Morgan camped near the town of Dupont, Indiana. Subsequently, on July 12, his men burned the town's storehouse. They stole 2,000 hams before continuing east.[12] By the next day, such a large amount of meat in the open air had attracted flies, and the soldiers began discarding hams along the side of the road, leaving a trail for Indiana militia troops to follow as they chased Morgan and his men out of the state.[14]

Morgan then headed for Salem, immediately occupying the town and placing guards over the stores and streets. His cavalrymen burned the large brick depot, along with all the railcars on the track and the railroad bridges on each side of town. They demanded ransoms from area flour and grist mills. After looting stores and taking about $500, they departed in the afternoon.[13]

In Versailles, a group of freebooters invaded the local Masonic Lodge, Versailles No. 7, and stole the Lodge's office badges made from French silver coins. Morgan, himself a Freemason, ordered the officers' jewels returned, punishing the thievery of his men.[15]

Morgan finally left Indiana at Harrison, closely pursued by U.S. cavalry.[7]

Ohio & West Virginia edit

The Confederates entered Ohio on July 13, destroying bridges, railroads, and government stores. Morgan's raid spread alarm across southern and central Ohio and caused speculation about his destination. Harper's Weekly, a leading Northern newspaper, reported:[16][17]

The raid of the rebel Morgan into Indiana, which he seems to be pursuing with great boldness, has thoroughly aroused the people of that State and of Ohio to a sense of their danger. On 13th General Burnside declared martial law in Cincinnati, and in Covington and Newport on the Kentucky side. All business is suspended until further orders, and all citizens are required to organize in accordance with the direction of the State and municipal authorities. There is nothing definite as to Morgan's whereabouts; but it is supposed that he will endeavor to move around the city of Cincinnati and cross the river between there and Maysville. The militia is concentrating, in obedience to the order of Governor Tod.

— July 25, 1863, Harper's Weekly
 
Morgan's Raiders enter Old Washington, Ohio

Sidestepping Burnside's forces that protected Cincinnati to the south he traveled through such northern communities as Harrison, New Baltimore, Colerain, Springdale, Glendale and Sharonville. Morgan and his men ran into significant resistance when trying to capture Camp Dennison. Morgan would eventually retreat and regroup with the other column of his men in Montgomery and bypass Camp Dennison through Wards Corner.[16][18] Morgan continued east to the Ohio River where, just north of modern Ravenswood, West Virginia, there was a ford at Buffington Island that would allow him to cross over into that state. Burnside correctly guessed Morgan's intentions. Federal columns under Edward H. Hobson and Henry M. Judah and river gunboats swiftly converged to contest any river crossing.[19][20] Burnside also sent a militia regiment from Marietta, Ohio, to hold the ford until the Federal forces could arrive. Morgan arrived on the evening of July 18 but decided not to attack the militia in the gathering darkness. It proved to be a mistake.[20]

By morning, the cavalry and gunboats had arrived, blocking Morgan's escape route.[18] At the subsequent Battle of Buffington Island in Ohio, Union troops won a decisive victory and captured 1,025 of Morgan's men in total, including his brother Richard and noted cavalryman Col. Basil W. Duke.[21][16] Cut off from safety by the Union gunboats, Morgan and his remaining cavaliers headed northeast back into Ohio. A second attempt at crossing 20 miles (32 km) upriver (opposite Belleville, West Virginia) also failed, with several of Morgan's men drowning in the swirling river as the gunboats and Union cavalry again drove off the raiders. Col. Adam "Stovepipe" Johnson and over 300 raiders escaped into West Virginia and safety, but General Morgan remained on the Ohio side with the rest of his dwindling force.[16][18] He was turned away at skirmishes in Gallia County at Coal Hill and Hockingport, losing more of his force.

As Morgan, with 400 remaining men, headed away from the river into the interior of southern Ohio, he paused at Nelsonville, a small town on the Hocking Canal. His men burned ten wooden canal boats and set a covered bridge ablaze to slow their pursuers.[16][20] However, as soon as Morgan's raiders rode off, citizens rushed to save the burning span. Two hours later, Union cavalry arrived, delighted to find that the townspeople had prepared a feast for them.[22]

 
Group of "Morgan's Men" while prisoners of war in Western Penitentiary, Pennsylvania[a] All were captured with John Hunt Morgan in Ohio, 1863

With his men somewhat rested on Peter Weaver's homestead near Triadelphia on July 22 and guided down Island Run by the son, John Weaver, who was held hostage, Morgan forded the broad Muskingum River at Eagleport, just south of Zanesville, before turning northward in Guernsey County.[23] He still hoped to cross the Ohio River at some point and head through West Virginia to safety.[24] At the village of Old Washington, Morgan's weary men fought a skirmish in the streets before hastily departing, pursued by Union cavalry under Brig. Gen. James M. Shackelford.[25] On July 26, Union forces defeated Morgan at the Battle of Salineville and finally caught him that afternoon near West Point in Columbiana County.[26] They were held in Wellsville, Ohio, then taken to the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus rather than to a prisoner-of-war camp, because of reports that captured Union officers had received similar treatment.[16] Many of his enlisted men ended up in the Camp Douglas stockade in Chicago.[27]

The general and six officers made a daring escape on November 27 by tunneling from an air shaft beneath their cells into the prison yard and scaling the walls.[28] Only two of Morgan's men were recaptured, and he and the rest soon returned to the Confederacy. Morgan was killed less than a year later in Greeneville, Tennessee, by a Union cavalryman after refusing to halt while attempting to escape.[14]

Impact edit

During his raid, Morgan and his men captured and paroled about 6,000 U.S. soldiers and militia, destroyed 34 bridges, disrupted the railroads at more than 60 places, and diverted tens of thousands of troops from other duties.[29] He spread terror throughout the region and seized thousands of dollars worth of supplies, food, and other items from local stores, houses, and farms. Since the timing somewhat coincided with the Gettysburg Campaign and raids towards Pittsburgh by John D. Imboden's cavalry, many assumed at the time that Morgan's Raid was part of a coordinated effort to threaten the Ohio River commerce and spread the war to the North. Few in the North realized that Morgan's adventure was a violation of his orders and had nothing to do with Robert E. Lee's simultaneous movement into Pennsylvania.[30]

In Ohio alone, approximately 2,500 horses were stolen, and nearly 4,375 homes and businesses were raided. Morgan's Raid cost Ohio taxpayers nearly $600,000 in damages and over $200,000 in wages paid to the 49,357 Ohioans called up to man 587 companies of local militia.[31]

Despite their military defeat and high casualties, the long raid had accomplished much for Morgan's men. Col. Basil Duke, Morgan's brother-in-law and second-in-command of the raid, later wrote, "The objects of the raid were accomplished. General Bragg's retreat was unmolested by any flanking forces of the enemy, and I think that military men, who will review all the facts, will pronounce that this expedition delayed for weeks the fall of East Tennessee, and prevented the timely reinforcement of Rosecrans by troops that would otherwise have participated in the Battle of Chickamauga."[32]

To many Confederates, the incursion became known as the "Great Raid of 1863" and was initially hailed in the newspapers. However, along with Gettysburg and Vicksburg, it was another in a string of defeats for the Confederate Army that summer. Several Northern newspapers derisively labeled Morgan's expedition as the "Calico Raid," in reference to the raiders' propensity for procuring personal goods from local stores and houses.[33]

Memorialization edit

 
Historical marker noting Morgan's activities at Brandenburg, Kentucky, where his forces captured two steamboats, the John B. McCombs and the Alice Dean, before crossing the Ohio River into Indiana

Kentucky and Indiana have well-marked John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trails that allow tourists to follow the route of Morgan's Raid through their states, along with websites and written tour guides.[34] In November 2001, the State of Ohio placed a John Hunt Morgan historical marker on the site of the Ohio State Penitentiary, remembering his imprisonment and daring escape.[28] An equestrian statue of General Morgan was erected and dedicated in 1911 in downtown Lexington, Kentucky.[35] Ohio's plans for a similar formal trail finally came to fruition in 2013, when the state erected over 600 directional markers and 56 interpretive signs commemorating the route and the important incidents of the raid.[36] Signage was installed during the spring and summer of 2013, in the months leading up to the 150th anniversary of the "Great Raid."[37]

On the weekend of July 27–28, 2013, communities in Carroll, Jefferson, and Columbiana County, Ohio, held a driving tour to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the raid, with a Civil War era church service, the dedication of a Morgan's Raid Heritage Trail tablet to mark the location of the fighting at Sharp's farm, and events in towns on and near the raid route.[38]

The oil painting "Morgan's Raiders" is hung at the Federal Building and U.S. Courthouse in Gainesville, Georgia. The painting was made in 1936 by artist Daniel Boza, commissioned by the Works Progress Administration (President Franklin Roosevelt administration).[39]

Notes edit

  1. ^ In prisoner photo: (l to r) Captain William E. Curry, 8th Kentucky Cavalry; Lieutenant Andrew J. Church, 8th Kentucky Cavalry; Lieutenant Leeland Hathaway, 14th Kentucky Cavalry; Lieutenant Henry D. Brown, 10th Kentucky Cavalry; Lieutenant William Hays, 20th Kentucky Cavalry.

References edit

  1. ^ W. H. H. Terrell (1869), "The Hines and Morgan Raids" (PDF), Indiana in the War of the Rebellion: Report of the Adjutant General, vol. 1 (1960 ed.), p. 215 (pdf p. 6)
  2. ^ Kelsey, p. 323; Official Records.
  3. ^ Mosgrove account in SHSP
  4. ^ "Summary of the Hines and Morgan Raids, June/July, 1863". INGenWeb. 1869.
  5. ^ Horan, James David (1954). Confederate Agent, a Discovery in History. New York: Crown Publishers. ISBN 978-0517227275.
  6. ^ "John Hunt Morgan's 1863 Raid". American Battlefield Trust.
  7. ^ a b Boyer, Margrette (December 1912). "Morgan's Raid in Indiana". The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History. 8 (4): 153–154. JSTOR 27785388 – via JSTOR.
  8. ^
  9. ^ "Morgan's Raiders". Ohio Civil War.
  10. ^ a b c Funk, Arville L. (June 1958). "The Battle of Corydon". Indiana Magazine of History. 54 (2): 134–137. JSTOR 27788566 – via JSTOR.
  11. ^ Funk, Arville L. (1969). A Sketchbook of Indiana History (revised ed.). Christian Book Press. p. 88.
  12. ^ a b "Morgan's Raid July 8–13 1863". Indiana Historical Bureau. 16 December 2020.
  13. ^ a b "Morgan's Raiders Ride on the Monon July 12, 1863, Salem, Indiana". Monon Railroad Historical Technical Society, Inc.
  14. ^ a b "Morgan's Raiders and the Jewels of Versailles". Masonic Library and Museum of Indiana.
  15. ^ Hodapp, Christopher L. (2018). Heritage Endures: Perspectives On 200 Years of Indiana Freemasonry. Indianapolis, Indiana: Grand Lodge F&AM of Indiana. p. 102. ISBN 978-1-5136-2902-5.
  16. ^ a b c d e f "Morgan's Raid into Ohio". Carnegie Public Library.
  17. ^ "Morgan's Raid". Harper's Weekly. July 25, 1863. p. 467.
  18. ^ a b c Bishop, Taylor. "Morgan's Great Raid of 1863". American Battlefield Trust.
  19. ^ Bitikofer, Sheritta. "Battle of Buffington Island: Morgan's Foray Across the Ohio River". American Battlefield Trust.
  20. ^ a b c "Morgan's Raid". Touring Ohio.
  21. ^ "Buffington Island". American Battlefield Trust.
  22. ^ "About Nelsonville". City of Nelsonville.
  23. ^ Roos, Gregory (May 18, 2021). "Deerfield Township". The Historical Marker Database.
  24. ^ Roos, Gregory (May 18, 2021). "Eagleport". The Historical Marker Database.
  25. ^ Prats, J.J. (August 4, 2017). "Morgan's Raid in Old Washington". The Historical Markers Database.
  26. ^ "Battle of Salineville Location". Ohio Civil War.
  27. ^ Alberts, Dennis (September 7, 2021). "John Hunt Morgan's Great Escape". TimeLines Magazine.
  28. ^ a b Ohio Historical Society
  29. ^ "Salineville". National Park Service.
  30. ^ Robertson, Middleton (June 1938). "Recollections of Morgan's Raid". Indiana Magazine of History. 34 (2): 188–194. JSTOR 27786966 – via JSTOR.
  31. ^ Harper, p. 23.
  32. ^ Duke, p. 460.
  33. ^ Etcheson, Nicole (July 22, 2013). . The New York Times. Archived from the original on June 2, 2023. Retrieved July 21, 2023.
  34. ^ Indiana's John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail 2005-07-26 at the Wayback Machine
  35. ^ "John Hunt Morgan Statue Controversy: 1910 Edition". Kentucky Historical Society.
  36. ^ Ohio's new John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail follows Confederate army's push across a panicked state
  37. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-02-20. Retrieved 2013-07-27.
  38. ^ Staff Writer. "Morgan's Raid celebrates 150th anniversary throughout the area". Alliance Review. Retrieved 2023-04-18.
  39. ^ Vardeman, Johnny (Nov 14, 2009). "Who are the men depicted in post office mural?". Gainesville Times. Retrieved 3 May 2021.

Bibliography edit

  • "An Incident of Morgan's Raid: Valueless Bill Left to Pay for Fine Horse and Wheat Crop," The Zanesville Signal, Vol. 28, no. 219 (Tuesday, 4 December 1906), p. 2, col. 4.
  • Duke, Basil Wilson, A History of Morgan's Cavalry. Cincinnati, Ohio: Miami Printing and Pub. Co., 1867.
  • Harper, Robert S., Ohio Handbook of the Civil War. Columbus: The Ohio Historical Society, 1961.
  • Horwitz, Lester V., The Longest Raid of the Civil War. Cincinnati, Ohio: Farmcourt Publishing, Inc., 1999. ISBN 0-9670267-3-3.
  • Kelsey, D.M., Deeds of Daring by the American Soldier North and South During the Civil War. New York, Akron, and Chicago: The Saalfield Publishing Company, 1903.
  • Mingus, Scott L., "Morgan's Raid," CHARGE! Magazine, Vol. 4, August, 2004, pp. 12–13. Text used by permission of the Johnny Reb Gaming Society.
  • Mosgrove, George Dallas, "Following Morgan's Plume in Indiana and Ohio," Southern Historical Society Papers, Vol. XXXV. January–December, 1907.
  • Ramage, James A., Rebel Raider: The Life of General John Hunt Morgan. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1986. ISBN 0-8131-1576-0.
  • Richardson, John V. Die Weber Familie: The Weber, Wollenschlager, Habermann, and Kempf Families. Los Angeles, ITA Press, 2020. ISBN 0-9819196-3-4.
  • Simmons, Flora E., A complete account of the John Morgan raid through Indiana and Ohio, in July, 1863. Self-published, 1863.
  • Thomas, Edison H., John Hunt Morgan and His Raiders. Lexington: University Press of Kentucky, 1975. ISBN 0-8131-0214-6.
  • U.S. War Department, The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies, 70 volumes in 4 series. Washington, D.C.: United States Government Printing Office, 1880–1901. Online version

Further reading edit

  • Boyer, Margrette. "Morgan's Raid in Indiana." The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History 8.4 (1912): 149–165. online free
  • Brown, Dee A. Morgan's Raiders. New York: Konecky & Konecky, 1959. ISBN 0-914427-79-2.
  • Carnegie Public Library (East Liverpool, Ohio). "Morgan's Raid into Ohio". Retrieved December 10, 2018.
  • Conway, W. Fred. Corydon – The Forgotten Battle of the Civil War. New Albany, IN: FBH Publishers, 1994. ISBN 978-0-925165-03-9.
  • Conway, W. Fred., and James M. Wells. The Most Incredible Prison Escape of the Civil War. New Albany, IN: FBH Publishers, 1994. ISBN 978-0-925165-04-6.
  • Funk, Arville L. The Morgan Raid in Indiana and Ohio (1863). Superior Printing Company, 1971. OCLC 14099212
  • Mowery, David L. Morgan's Great Raid: The Remarkable Expedition from Kentucky to Ohio. Charleston, SC: History Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1-60949-436-0.
  • Robertson, Middleton. "Recollections of Morgan's Raid." Indiana Magazine of History (1938): 188–194. online
  • Simms, Jeremiah Hickman, ed. The Last Night and Last Day of John Hunt Morgan's Raid: Eyewitness Accounts of Morgan's Ohio Raid of 1863. West Jefferson, OH: Genesis Publishing, 1997. OCLC 38070234. First published by the author in 1913.
  • Still, John S. "Blitzkrieg, 1863: Morgan's Raid and Rout." Civil War History 3.3 (1957): 291–306. summary
  • Swiggett, Howard. The Rebel Raider: A Life of John Hunt Morgan (1934).

External links edit

  • Geib, George W., Emeritus Professor of History, Butler University. "Indiana Historical Bureau: Morgan's Raid"
  • Morgan's Men Association

morgan, raid, this, article, includes, list, general, references, lacks, sufficient, corresponding, inline, citations, please, help, improve, this, article, introducing, more, precise, citations, july, 2011, learn, when, remove, this, message, also, calico, ra. This article includes a list of general references but it lacks sufficient corresponding inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations July 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message Morgan s Raid also the Calico Raid or Great Raid of 1863 was a diversionary incursion by Confederate cavalry into the Union states of Indiana Kentucky Ohio and West Virginia during the American Civil War The raid took place from June 11 to July 26 1863 It is named for the commander of the Confederate troops Brigadier General John Hunt Morgan Although it caused temporary alarm in the North the raid failed Morgan s RaidPart of the American Civil WarMap of Morgan s route Small groups of Morgan s scouts and raiding parties rode through some southern Indiana counties The main body of Morgan s force followed a route through eight counties passing through such towns as Corydon Salem Lexington Vernon rather than North Vernon and Versailles on the way to Harrison Ohio DateJune 11 July 26 1863 1863 06 11 1863 07 26 LocationTennessee Kentucky Indiana Ohio West VirginiaResultUnion victoryBelligerentsUnited StatesConfederate StatesCommanders and leadersAmbrose BurnsideHenry M JudahJohn Hunt MorganStrength40 000 2 462Casualties and losses6 000 prisoners paroled2 000 prisoners taken The raid covered more than 1 000 miles 1 600 km beginning in Tennessee and ending in northern Ohio It coincided with the Vicksburg and Gettysburg Campaigns It was meant to draw U S troops away from those fronts by frightening the North into demanding its troops return home Despite his initial successes Morgan failed to recross the Ohio River and eventually surrendered what remained of his command in northeastern Ohio near the Pennsylvania border Morgan and other senior officers were held in the Ohio Penitentiary but they tunneled their way out and took a train to Cincinnati where they crossed the Ohio River into Kentucky Contents 1 Tennessee and Kentucky 2 Indiana 3 Ohio amp West Virginia 4 Impact 5 Memorialization 6 Notes 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 Further reading 10 External linksTennessee and Kentucky editGeneral Morgan and his 2 460 handpicked Confederate cavalrymen along with four artillery pieces 1 departed from Sparta Tennessee on June 11 1863 The expedition intended to divert the attention of the Union Army of the Ohio from Confederate forces in the state and possibly stir up pro Confederate sentiments in the North General Braxton Bragg the regional Confederate commander intended Morgan s cavalrymen to distract U S forces by entering Kentucky Morgan however confided to some of his officers that he had long desired to invade Indiana and Ohio to bring the terror of war to the Union Bragg had given him carte blanche to ride throughout Tennessee and Kentucky but ordered him to under no circumstances cross the Ohio River 2 On June 23 the Federal Army of the Cumberland began its operations against General Bragg s Confederate Army of Tennessee in what became known as the Tullahoma Campaign and Morgan decided it was time to move northward into Kentucky nbsp The Battle of Tebbs Bend On July 2 hoping to disrupt Union communication lines Morgan rode into Kentucky where sympathetic citizens openly welcomed his cavalrymen Crossing the rain swollen Cumberland River at Burkesville Morgan s division advanced to the Green River where it was deflected by half of a Union regiment the 25th Michigan Infantry at the Battle of Tebbs Bend on July 4 Morgan surprised and captured the garrison at Lebanon He trapped 400 men from the 20th Kentucky in the town s railroad depot but the well fortified building provided considerable protection In a six hour fight Federal troops killed Morgan s youngest brother Thomas during the Confederate s final charge Morgan finally captured and then paroled the U S troops A grieving Morgan continued northward to Louisville riding through Springfield Bardstown and Garnettsville Along the way the Confederates endured several smaller skirmishes with Union troops and Kentucky home guard units However he turned his remaining men to the northwest and headed for the Ohio River just south of the city At Springfield Morgan sent a detachment north and east of Louisville intending to confuse Union forces about where Morgan was heading Before rejoining Morgan this detachment crossed the Ohio River at Twelve Mile Island and was captured near New Pekin Indiana To further mislead the U S soldiers of his objectives Morgan had his telegrapher Lightning Ellsworth tap telegraph lines and pretending to be a Union telegrapher send several messages giving different headings for the raiders and false reports of the size of Morgan s force sometimes reporting it as high as 7 000 men Ellsworth did this throughout the journey especially in Indiana 3 Indiana edit nbsp Panic in Louisville as Morgan s troops approach Drawing from Illustrated Battles of the Nineteenth Century vol 2 Morgan had sent spy Thomas Hines and a party of 62 Confederates posing as a Union patrol on a secret mission into Indiana in June to determine if the local Copperheads would support or join Morgan s impending raid After visiting the local Copperhead leader Dr William A Bowles Hines learned that no desired support would be forthcoming He and his scouts were soon identified as actually being Confederates and in a minor skirmish near Leavenworth Indiana Hines had to abandon his men as he swam across the Ohio River under gunfire He wandered around Kentucky for a week seeking information on Morgan s whereabouts 4 5 By now reduced to 1 800 men Morgan s main column had arrived on the morning of July 8 at Brandenburg Kentucky a small town along the Ohio River where Hines rejoined them Here the raiders seized two steamboats the John B McCombs and the Alice Dean Morgan against Bragg s strict orders 6 transported his command across the river to Indiana landing just east of Mauckport A small company of Indiana home guards contested the crossing with an artillery piece as did a riverboat carrying a six pounder However the gunboat soon withdrew and Morgan s forces safely crossed the river into Indiana that night After burning the Alice Dean and sending the John B McCombs downriver with instructions not to pursue him Morgan headed away from the river 7 Governor Oliver P Morton worked feverishly to organize Indiana s defense calling for men to take up arms and form militia companies Thousands responded and organized themselves into companies and regiments Col Lewis Jordan took command of the 450 members of the Harrison County Home Guard Sixth Regiment Indiana Legion consisting of poorly trained civilians with a motley collection of arms His goal was to delay Morgan long enough for Union reinforcements to arrive 8 Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside commander of the Department of the Ohio with headquarters in Cincinnati quickly organized local Federal troops and home militia to cut off Morgan s routes back to the Confederacy 9 Morgan headed northward on Mauckport Road with another brother Colonel Richard Morgan leading the forward elements On July 9 one mile 1 6 km south of Corydon Indiana the county seat of Harrison County his advance guard encountered Jordan s small force drawn in a battle line behind a hastily thrown up barricade of logs The colonel attacked and in a short but spirited battle of less than an hour he simultaneously outflanked both Union wings completely routing the hapless militia 10 Accounts vary as to the number of casualties that resulted from the Battle of Corydon but one source estimates that 4 of Jordan s men were killed 10 12 were wounded and 355 were captured Morgan counted 11 dead and 40 wounded raiders 11 Among the dead Federals was the civilian toll keeper who perished near his tollgate Raiders killed a Lutheran minister Reverend Peter Glenn on his farm 4 miles 6 km from the battlefield and stole horses from several other farmers 10 General Morgan led his division into Corydon where he paroled his demoralized prisoners and ransomed the town for cash and supplies 10 Morgan s soldiers then traveled east and reached Vienna on July 10 where they burned a railroad bridge and depot and tapped a telegraph line After spending the night in Lexington they headed to the northeast terrorizing the small towns along the way including Vernon Dupont New Pekin Salem and Versailles 12 On July 11 while crossing Blue River near New Pekin Confederate Capt William J Davis and some of his men were captured by 73rd Indiana Infantry and a detachment of the 5th U S Regulars Davis and several other soldiers were taken to New Albany and secured in the county jail 13 On the night of July 11 Morgan camped near the town of Dupont Indiana Subsequently on July 12 his men burned the town s storehouse They stole 2 000 hams before continuing east 12 By the next day such a large amount of meat in the open air had attracted flies and the soldiers began discarding hams along the side of the road leaving a trail for Indiana militia troops to follow as they chased Morgan and his men out of the state 14 Morgan then headed for Salem immediately occupying the town and placing guards over the stores and streets His cavalrymen burned the large brick depot along with all the railcars on the track and the railroad bridges on each side of town They demanded ransoms from area flour and grist mills After looting stores and taking about 500 they departed in the afternoon 13 In Versailles a group of freebooters invaded the local Masonic Lodge Versailles No 7 and stole the Lodge s office badges made from French silver coins Morgan himself a Freemason ordered the officers jewels returned punishing the thievery of his men 15 Morgan finally left Indiana at Harrison closely pursued by U S cavalry 7 Ohio amp West Virginia editThe Confederates entered Ohio on July 13 destroying bridges railroads and government stores Morgan s raid spread alarm across southern and central Ohio and caused speculation about his destination Harper s Weekly a leading Northern newspaper reported 16 17 The raid of the rebel Morgan into Indiana which he seems to be pursuing with great boldness has thoroughly aroused the people of that State and of Ohio to a sense of their danger On 13th General Burnside declared martial law in Cincinnati and in Covington and Newport on the Kentucky side All business is suspended until further orders and all citizens are required to organize in accordance with the direction of the State and municipal authorities There is nothing definite as to Morgan s whereabouts but it is supposed that he will endeavor to move around the city of Cincinnati and cross the river between there and Maysville The militia is concentrating in obedience to the order of Governor Tod July 25 1863 Harper s Weekly nbsp Morgan s Raiders enter Old Washington Ohio Sidestepping Burnside s forces that protected Cincinnati to the south he traveled through such northern communities as Harrison New Baltimore Colerain Springdale Glendale and Sharonville Morgan and his men ran into significant resistance when trying to capture Camp Dennison Morgan would eventually retreat and regroup with the other column of his men in Montgomery and bypass Camp Dennison through Wards Corner 16 18 Morgan continued east to the Ohio River where just north of modern Ravenswood West Virginia there was a ford at Buffington Island that would allow him to cross over into that state Burnside correctly guessed Morgan s intentions Federal columns under Edward H Hobson and Henry M Judah and river gunboats swiftly converged to contest any river crossing 19 20 Burnside also sent a militia regiment from Marietta Ohio to hold the ford until the Federal forces could arrive Morgan arrived on the evening of July 18 but decided not to attack the militia in the gathering darkness It proved to be a mistake 20 By morning the cavalry and gunboats had arrived blocking Morgan s escape route 18 At the subsequent Battle of Buffington Island in Ohio Union troops won a decisive victory and captured 1 025 of Morgan s men in total including his brother Richard and noted cavalryman Col Basil W Duke 21 16 Cut off from safety by the Union gunboats Morgan and his remaining cavaliers headed northeast back into Ohio A second attempt at crossing 20 miles 32 km upriver opposite Belleville West Virginia also failed with several of Morgan s men drowning in the swirling river as the gunboats and Union cavalry again drove off the raiders Col Adam Stovepipe Johnson and over 300 raiders escaped into West Virginia and safety but General Morgan remained on the Ohio side with the rest of his dwindling force 16 18 He was turned away at skirmishes in Gallia County at Coal Hill and Hockingport losing more of his force As Morgan with 400 remaining men headed away from the river into the interior of southern Ohio he paused at Nelsonville a small town on the Hocking Canal His men burned ten wooden canal boats and set a covered bridge ablaze to slow their pursuers 16 20 However as soon as Morgan s raiders rode off citizens rushed to save the burning span Two hours later Union cavalry arrived delighted to find that the townspeople had prepared a feast for them 22 nbsp Group of Morgan s Men while prisoners of war in Western Penitentiary Pennsylvania a All were captured with John Hunt Morgan in Ohio 1863 With his men somewhat rested on Peter Weaver s homestead near Triadelphia on July 22 and guided down Island Run by the son John Weaver who was held hostage Morgan forded the broad Muskingum River at Eagleport just south of Zanesville before turning northward in Guernsey County 23 He still hoped to cross the Ohio River at some point and head through West Virginia to safety 24 At the village of Old Washington Morgan s weary men fought a skirmish in the streets before hastily departing pursued by Union cavalry under Brig Gen James M Shackelford 25 On July 26 Union forces defeated Morgan at the Battle of Salineville and finally caught him that afternoon near West Point in Columbiana County 26 They were held in Wellsville Ohio then taken to the Ohio Penitentiary in Columbus rather than to a prisoner of war camp because of reports that captured Union officers had received similar treatment 16 Many of his enlisted men ended up in the Camp Douglas stockade in Chicago 27 The general and six officers made a daring escape on November 27 by tunneling from an air shaft beneath their cells into the prison yard and scaling the walls 28 Only two of Morgan s men were recaptured and he and the rest soon returned to the Confederacy Morgan was killed less than a year later in Greeneville Tennessee by a Union cavalryman after refusing to halt while attempting to escape 14 Impact editDuring his raid Morgan and his men captured and paroled about 6 000 U S soldiers and militia destroyed 34 bridges disrupted the railroads at more than 60 places and diverted tens of thousands of troops from other duties 29 He spread terror throughout the region and seized thousands of dollars worth of supplies food and other items from local stores houses and farms Since the timing somewhat coincided with the Gettysburg Campaign and raids towards Pittsburgh by John D Imboden s cavalry many assumed at the time that Morgan s Raid was part of a coordinated effort to threaten the Ohio River commerce and spread the war to the North Few in the North realized that Morgan s adventure was a violation of his orders and had nothing to do with Robert E Lee s simultaneous movement into Pennsylvania 30 In Ohio alone approximately 2 500 horses were stolen and nearly 4 375 homes and businesses were raided Morgan s Raid cost Ohio taxpayers nearly 600 000 in damages and over 200 000 in wages paid to the 49 357 Ohioans called up to man 587 companies of local militia 31 Despite their military defeat and high casualties the long raid had accomplished much for Morgan s men Col Basil Duke Morgan s brother in law and second in command of the raid later wrote The objects of the raid were accomplished General Bragg s retreat was unmolested by any flanking forces of the enemy and I think that military men who will review all the facts will pronounce that this expedition delayed for weeks the fall of East Tennessee and prevented the timely reinforcement of Rosecrans by troops that would otherwise have participated in the Battle of Chickamauga 32 To many Confederates the incursion became known as the Great Raid of 1863 and was initially hailed in the newspapers However along with Gettysburg and Vicksburg it was another in a string of defeats for the Confederate Army that summer Several Northern newspapers derisively labeled Morgan s expedition as the Calico Raid in reference to the raiders propensity for procuring personal goods from local stores and houses 33 Memorialization edit nbsp Historical marker noting Morgan s activities at Brandenburg Kentucky where his forces captured two steamboats the John B McCombs and the Alice Dean before crossing the Ohio River into Indiana Kentucky and Indiana have well marked John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trails that allow tourists to follow the route of Morgan s Raid through their states along with websites and written tour guides 34 In November 2001 the State of Ohio placed a John Hunt Morgan historical marker on the site of the Ohio State Penitentiary remembering his imprisonment and daring escape 28 An equestrian statue of General Morgan was erected and dedicated in 1911 in downtown Lexington Kentucky 35 Ohio s plans for a similar formal trail finally came to fruition in 2013 when the state erected over 600 directional markers and 56 interpretive signs commemorating the route and the important incidents of the raid 36 Signage was installed during the spring and summer of 2013 in the months leading up to the 150th anniversary of the Great Raid 37 On the weekend of July 27 28 2013 communities in Carroll Jefferson and Columbiana County Ohio held a driving tour to commemorate the 150th anniversary of the raid with a Civil War era church service the dedication of a Morgan s Raid Heritage Trail tablet to mark the location of the fighting at Sharp s farm and events in towns on and near the raid route 38 The oil painting Morgan s Raiders is hung at the Federal Building and U S Courthouse in Gainesville Georgia The painting was made in 1936 by artist Daniel Boza commissioned by the Works Progress Administration President Franklin Roosevelt administration 39 Notes edit In prisoner photo l to r Captain William E Curry 8th Kentucky Cavalry Lieutenant Andrew J Church 8th Kentucky Cavalry Lieutenant Leeland Hathaway 14th Kentucky Cavalry Lieutenant Henry D Brown 10th Kentucky Cavalry Lieutenant William Hays 20th Kentucky Cavalry References edit W H H Terrell 1869 The Hines and Morgan Raids PDF Indiana in the War of the Rebellion Report of the Adjutant General vol 1 1960 ed p 215 pdf p 6 Kelsey p 323 Official Records Mosgrove account in SHSP Summary of the Hines and Morgan Raids June July 1863 INGenWeb 1869 Horan James David 1954 Confederate Agent a Discovery in History New York Crown Publishers ISBN 978 0517227275 John Hunt Morgan s 1863 Raid American Battlefield Trust a b Boyer Margrette December 1912 Morgan s Raid in Indiana The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History 8 4 153 154 JSTOR 27785388 via JSTOR Indiana Historical Marker for Morgan s Raid Morgan s Raiders Ohio Civil War a b c Funk Arville L June 1958 The Battle of Corydon Indiana Magazine of History 54 2 134 137 JSTOR 27788566 via JSTOR Funk Arville L 1969 A Sketchbook of Indiana History revised ed Christian Book Press p 88 a b Morgan s Raid July 8 13 1863 Indiana Historical Bureau 16 December 2020 a b Morgan s Raiders Ride on the Monon July 12 1863 Salem Indiana Monon Railroad Historical Technical Society Inc a b Morgan s Raiders and the Jewels of Versailles Masonic Library and Museum of Indiana Hodapp Christopher L 2018 Heritage Endures Perspectives On 200 Years of Indiana Freemasonry Indianapolis Indiana Grand Lodge F amp AM of Indiana p 102 ISBN 978 1 5136 2902 5 a b c d e f Morgan s Raid into Ohio Carnegie Public Library Morgan s Raid Harper s Weekly July 25 1863 p 467 a b c Bishop Taylor Morgan s Great Raid of 1863 American Battlefield Trust Bitikofer Sheritta Battle of Buffington Island Morgan s Foray Across the Ohio River American Battlefield Trust a b c Morgan s Raid Touring Ohio Buffington Island American Battlefield Trust About Nelsonville City of Nelsonville Roos Gregory May 18 2021 Deerfield Township The Historical Marker Database Roos Gregory May 18 2021 Eagleport The Historical Marker Database Prats J J August 4 2017 Morgan s Raid in Old Washington The Historical Markers Database Battle of Salineville Location Ohio Civil War Alberts Dennis September 7 2021 John Hunt Morgan s Great Escape TimeLines Magazine a b Ohio Historical Society Salineville National Park Service Robertson Middleton June 1938 Recollections of Morgan s Raid Indiana Magazine of History 34 2 188 194 JSTOR 27786966 via JSTOR Harper p 23 Duke p 460 Etcheson Nicole July 22 2013 Mr Morgan s Daring Raid The New York Times Archived from the original on June 2 2023 Retrieved July 21 2023 Indiana s John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Archived 2005 07 26 at the Wayback Machine John Hunt Morgan Statue Controversy 1910 Edition Kentucky Historical Society Ohio s new John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail follows Confederate army s push across a panicked state Civil War tour Retracing Morgan s Raid Archived from the original on 2015 02 20 Retrieved 2013 07 27 Staff Writer Morgan s Raid celebrates 150th anniversary throughout the area Alliance Review Retrieved 2023 04 18 Vardeman Johnny Nov 14 2009 Who are the men depicted in post office mural Gainesville Times Retrieved 3 May 2021 Bibliography edit An Incident of Morgan s Raid Valueless Bill Left to Pay for Fine Horse and Wheat Crop The Zanesville Signal Vol 28 no 219 Tuesday 4 December 1906 p 2 col 4 Duke Basil Wilson A History of Morgan s Cavalry Cincinnati Ohio Miami Printing and Pub Co 1867 On line version Harper Robert S Ohio Handbook of the Civil War Columbus The Ohio Historical Society 1961 Horwitz Lester V The Longest Raid of the Civil War Cincinnati Ohio Farmcourt Publishing Inc 1999 ISBN 0 9670267 3 3 Kelsey D M Deeds of Daring by the American Soldier North and South During the Civil War New York Akron and Chicago The Saalfield Publishing Company 1903 Mingus Scott L Morgan s Raid CHARGE Magazine Vol 4 August 2004 pp 12 13 Text used by permission of the Johnny Reb Gaming Society Mosgrove George Dallas Following Morgan s Plume in Indiana and Ohio Southern Historical Society Papers Vol XXXV January December 1907 Ramage James A Rebel Raider The Life of General John Hunt Morgan Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1986 ISBN 0 8131 1576 0 Richardson John V Die Weber Familie The Weber Wollenschlager Habermann and Kempf Families Los Angeles ITA Press 2020 ISBN 0 9819196 3 4 Simmons Flora E A complete account of the John Morgan raid through Indiana and Ohio in July 1863 Self published 1863 Thomas Edison H John Hunt Morgan and His Raiders Lexington University Press of Kentucky 1975 ISBN 0 8131 0214 6 U S War Department The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies 70 volumes in 4 series Washington D C United States Government Printing Office 1880 1901 Online versionFurther reading editBoyer Margrette Morgan s Raid in Indiana The Indiana Quarterly Magazine of History 8 4 1912 149 165 online free Brown Dee A Morgan s Raiders New York Konecky amp Konecky 1959 ISBN 0 914427 79 2 Carnegie Public Library East Liverpool Ohio Morgan s Raid into Ohio Retrieved December 10 2018 Conway W Fred Corydon The Forgotten Battle of the Civil War New Albany IN FBH Publishers 1994 ISBN 978 0 925165 03 9 Conway W Fred and James M Wells The Most Incredible Prison Escape of the Civil War New Albany IN FBH Publishers 1994 ISBN 978 0 925165 04 6 Funk Arville L The Morgan Raid in Indiana and Ohio 1863 Superior Printing Company 1971 OCLC 14099212 Mowery David L Morgan s Great Raid The Remarkable Expedition from Kentucky to Ohio Charleston SC History Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 60949 436 0 Robertson Middleton Recollections of Morgan s Raid Indiana Magazine of History 1938 188 194 online Simms Jeremiah Hickman ed The Last Night and Last Day of John Hunt Morgan s Raid Eyewitness Accounts of Morgan s Ohio Raid of 1863 West Jefferson OH Genesis Publishing 1997 OCLC 38070234 First published by the author in 1913 Still John S Blitzkrieg 1863 Morgan s Raid and Rout Civil War History 3 3 1957 291 306 summary Swiggett Howard The Rebel Raider A Life of John Hunt Morgan 1934 External links editOhio Department of Natural Resources The Role of Geology in Morgan s Raid Geib George W Emeritus Professor of History Butler University Indiana Historical Bureau Morgan s Raid John Hunt Morgan Heritage Trail Morgan s Men Association Longestraid com website for definitive work on Morgan s Raid Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Morgan 27s Raid amp oldid 1207758318, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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