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Stoneman Raid Historical Marker
Stoneman Raid State Historical
Marker
Located on Broad St. Just
West of the Intersection of
Broad and N. Lumpkin streets,
Athens
(Text)
THE STONEMAN
RAID
Closing in on
Atlanta in July, 1864, Maj. Gen. W.T. Sherman found
it "too
strong to assault and too extensive to invest". To force
its
evacuation,
he sent Maj. Gen. Geo. Stoneman's cavalry to cut the
Macon railway
by which Atlanta's defenders were supplied. At the
Battle of Sunshine
Church (19 miles NE of Macon). Stoneman surrendered
with 600 men
to Brig. Gen. Alfred Iverson, Jr., after covering
the escape of
Adams' and Capron's brigades. Both retreated via Athens,
intending to
resupply their commands here and to "destroy the armory
and other government
works".
At the bridge
over Middle Oconee River (4 miles SW), they were
stopped by Home
guard units with artillery. Unable to cross, they
turned west:
Capron on the Hog Mountain Road through Jug Tavern
(Winder), and
Adams on roads farther north by which he reached the
Union lines
near Marietta without further loss.
While resting
his exhausted command briefly at King's Tanyard (NW of
Winder), Capron
was surprised before dawn on the 3rd by William's Kentucky brigade.
About 430 men were captured, Capron himself and a few
others escaping
through the woods. The prisoners were brought to Athens
by Col. W.C.P.
Breckinridge, 9th Kentucky Cavalry, and held under guard on
the college
campus until they could be sent to the prison at Andersonville.
029-6 GEORGIA
HISTORICAL MARKER 1984
[Replaces Georgia
Historical Commission marker 029-6,
with the same
text, erected in 1957]
Photo: Ed Jackson
© Carl Vinson Institute of Government,
The University of Georgia
Go to Georgia Historic Markers web site
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November 16, 1999. This
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