Sunday, March 22, 2015

March 23, 1865---“To destroy but not to fight”



MARCH 23, 1865:    

Stoneman’s Great Raid begins. 

 
Tasked “to destroy but not to fight,” Major General George Stoneman U.S.A. leads 6,000 cavalrymen from Mossy Creek, Tennessee across sections of North Carolina and Virginia, tearing up railroads, burning bridges, obstructing roads, destroying farms and crops, factories, mills, and trains. The Great Raid lasted a full month, continuing until the day of Joseph E. Johnston C.S.A.’s surrender on April 26th

During the Great Raid his men burned the abandoned Salisbury P.O.W. Camp in Salisbury, North Carolina, and came within moments of capturing a fleeing Jefferson Davis, who was on board the last train to cross the Reed Fork Creek Bridge, just before Stoneman destroyed it. 

Stoneman covered 630 miles of often rugged territory, and terrorized the residents of the region. Whether Stoneman’s Great Raid contributed much to the actual Confederate surrender is very unlikely however.  


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