Essentials:
November 25, 1863. Civil War Soldier Witnessed Battle on Lookout Mountain. A Georgia soldier wrote to his sister about witnessing the battle on Lookout.
Battle of Cloyd’s Mountain
In 1864, under the orders of General Ulysses S. Grant, Brigadier General George Crook and three brigades of the Army of West Virginia marched south through the Appalachian Mountains, intent on destroying the Virginia & Tennessee Railroad. This railroad was under the protection of Brigadier General Albert G. Jenkins’s few Confederate units.
General George Crook, ca. 1870s (Library of Congress)
On May 9, 1864, after receiving reports of Union forces in the area, Jenkins prepared for defense at Cloyd’s Mountain, near Dublin in Pulaski County. Local men joined in the defense, including Rev. William P. Hickman, minister of the Blacksburg Presbyterian Church, and his New Dublin Presbyterian congregation. Hickman’s church in Blacksburg (now Cabo Fish Taco) is the only antebellum worship structure still standing in the town. The current New Dublin Presbyterian Church was built in 1875, incorporated an earlier structure. Rev. Hickman was wounded in the fray and died later of his injuries.
Early fighting at Cloyd’s Mountain appeared to favor Confederates and their strong defensive position, but persistent Union attacks eventually broke through, forcing the Confederates to retreat. The battle lasted for one fierce hour, devolving into brutal hand-to-hand combat. One participant recalled that “most of the regiments engaged in it had served in greater and more important battles, but all united in the opinion that, for fierce and deadly intensity, Cloyd[‘s] Mountain exceeded them all” (Whisonant 161). Making matters worse, a fire broke out on the battlefield and many wounded soldiers perished in the flames.
Confederate forces lost not only the battle, but also their commander. Jenkins was wounded in battle, and later died in hospital due to improper care after an amputation. Casualties were high for the relatively low number of troops engaged and the short duration of the battle: 688 Union and 538 Confederate.
After the battle, victorious Union forces pressed further into Virginia, burning the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad depot at Dublin before turning towards the strategically important New River Bridgeat Central Depot (Radford). Dublin Depot was important as a supply depot and as one of three locations in Virginia where captured runaway slaves were kept until their owners could reclaim them. The current historic depot building dates to 1913. Crook destroyed the New River Bridge on May 10 and turned towards Blacksburg the next day. Crook’s men camped on the grounds of Mountain View (the 1850s manor house still stands in the south end of Blacksburg, a private residence) and wounded Federal soldiers were treated at a field hospital set up in the home of local cattle farmer C. M. Broce. The Broce plantation house, built c. 1843, is now home to Virginia Tech’s Alpha Gamma Rho fraternity. William Averell’s men followed Crook through Blacksburg May 12, 1864, confiscating food and valuable from the local citizenry.
Finding Cloyd’s Mountain
From Dublin, Virginia, take State Route 100 North until you arrive in the vicinity of 5702 Cleburne Boulevard. A historical marker and plaque stand at the Cleburne Wayside on the left. The grave of Captain Christopher Cleburne, CSA, stands nearby at the place where he fell mortally wounded during the battle. Another historical marker stands further north on Rt. 100, just before the road crosses Cloyd’s Mountain itself.
For More Information
Alpha Gamma Rho, “The Broce Plantation and the Civil War.”
Dorothy H. Bodell and Mary Elizabeth Lindon, “Blacksburg During the Civil War.”
Dr. H. Jackson, “Dublin Depot” (John D. Trolinger, 2001).
Ervin L. Jordan Jr., Black Confederates and Afro-Yankees in Civil War Virginia (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1995), 80.
Howard McManus, The Battle of Cloyds Mountain: The Virginia and Tennessee Railroad Raid, April 29–May 19, 1864 (Lynchburg, VA.: H. E. Howard, 1989). Clean road game online free.
Robert C. Whisonant, Arming the Confederacy: How Virginia’s Minerals Forged the Rebel War Machine (New York: Springer, 2015).
In the American Revolutionary War, the Battle of Kings Mountainoccurred in the northern part of western South Carolina almost atthe North Carolina border.A British force encamped on top of the mountain. According tothe current Military Theory, they were in an invincible positionand in absolutely no danger.An American Army attacked climbing up the mountain from severaldirections.
A musket could be reloaded faster than a rifle and wasa better weapon on level land. A rifle could shoot a greaterdistance and could shoot much better at an angle. The Americansused rifles to shoot uphill. British muskets could not shootdownhill.Major Ferguson, the British commander, tried to escape. DanielBoone aimed his rifle. Major Ferguson fell dead.
The rest ofthe British surrendered.When the report of the battle reached Europe, the entirecontinent became amazed. The Americans had created new battletactics. The Netherlands and other countries declared war onEngland.For that reason Thomas Jefferson considered The Battle of KingsMountain the most important battle of the Revolutionary War.