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Monday Oct. 28 1861
CONFEDERATE COMMAND CHANGE CONDUCTED
In yet another of the bureaucratic shuffles that characterized the
early days of the war, one general was in and another was out in the
Western theater. Confederate Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner had been
more or less in charge of military affairs in Kentucky since the
preemptive strike that had moved troops into a state that was
supposed to be neutral ground. He was out, replaced by Gen. Albert
Sydney Johnston, and the forces were named the Army of Central
Kentucky. In yet another sad example of neighbor turning against
neighbor, a man in Braintree, Mass., was accused of spreading
pro-secessionist statements. He was ridden out of town on a rail.
Tuesday Oct. 28 1862
SCORCHED STEAMER SPREADS STINKY SMELL
The lure of the sea has long been a force inducing young people to
join the naval services. “Join the Navy and see the world” was not a
new idea even in the days of the War. It was, of course, understood
that some difficulty and sacrifice might be required of one, but the
terms took on a whole new meaning today in the defense of the
Confederate States of America. The Federal steamer Alleghanian was
anchored at the mouth of the Rappahannock River, thought to be safe
territory. A landing party led by Lt. John Taylor Wood, CSA, crept
aboard the vessel as it was preparing to sail for London. They set
it afire and escaped in the confusion. The ship was loaded with
guano, or bat defecation, the finest fertilizer in the world.
Wednesday Oct. 28 1863
NIGHTTIME NASTINESS NOT NEGLIGIBLE NEWS
The “Cracker Line” was the name for the supply line cut through to
the Union army bottled up in Chattanooga, Tennessee. It had barely
been established, and in fact was still under threat by Confederate
forces on Raccoon Mountain overlooking vital Brown’s Ferry. The
threat was obvious to both sides, and on this night in the war, Gen.
James Longstreet’s men came to try to knock it out. Brig. Gen. John
W. Geary’s troops in the Lookout Valley and Wauhatchie were the
defenders in this action, and despite intense action and being
outnumbered, the Federal lines held. It was one of the rare
nighttime actions of the war. Most combat was over by 4 a.m. The
Cracker Line was not threatened again.
Friday Oct. 28 1864
CURTIS CORNERS CONFEDERATE COLUMNS
It was surely the end of the line for Confederate Gen. Sterling
Price. Trying desperately to get his remaining men and supply wagons
to the safety of Arkansas, he was set upon today by the Union forces
of Gen. Samuel Ryan Curtis. They attacked
today and although the Southerners fought fiercely, Curtis got
reinforcements in and forced Shelby’s cavalry to withdraw. It looked
like curtains as night fell. Price was saved by a telegram from the
War Department in Washington, ordering most of Curtis’ troops back
to their stations with Rosecrans in St. Louis. By the time Curtis
got the mess straightened out with Halleck, Price had managed to
slip away yet again.
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