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The Stoneman Raid State Historical Marker
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Located on Ga. 11 between Round Oak and Wayside
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33.08898165, -83.61519832
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- (Text)
THE STONEMAN RAID
In July, 1864, Maj. Gen. W. T. Sherman's
army [US] closed in on Atlanta. Finding its fortifications "too
strong to assault and too extensive to invest," he sought
to force its fall by sending Maj. Gen. George Stoneman, with
three cavalry brigades (2112 men and 2 guns) to cut the Central
of Georgia R.R. by which the city's defenders [CS] were supplied.
On the 27th, Stoneman left Decatur, crossed the Ocmulgee (Yellow)
River near Covington (46 miles NW), and turned down the left
bank toward Macon.
On the 30th, at Clinton (7 miles S), he
detached parties of the 14th Illinois Cavalry which wrecked railway
facilities at Gordon, McIntyre and Toomsboro (SE of Clinton)
and at Griswoldville (SSE). They burned trains, loaded cars on
sidings, machinery, supplies, trestles and the railway bridge
over the Oconee River east of Toomsboro. Stoneman advanced to
Macon (19 miles SW) where he was stopped by Georgia Militia,
strongly intrenched. Unable to force their works, he shelled
Macon briefly, then attempted to retreat.
Next morning, Sunday the 31st, after a
night of harassment, he was brought to bay at this point by Brig.
Gen. Alfred Iverson, Jr., who, with only 1300 cavalry [CS] had
marched to intercept him.
Deceived by Iverson into believing that
he was being surrounded, his men exhausted and ammunition running
low, Stoneman covered the escape northward of Adams' and Capron's
brigades; then he surrendered himself, with about 600 men and
his artillery and train, to what Iverson had led him to believe
was a much larger force.
084-15 GEORGIA HISTORICAL
COMMISSION 1957
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