Raid on the L & N
Captain John Hunt Morgan Winter of 1861-1862
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He was the model of a 19th century cavalry officer - tall, dashing,
impeccably uniformed and always handsomely mounted. John Hunt
Morgan was a Kentucky gentleman with a flair for the daring. He
raised his own company of troops on the eve of war, and they followed
him into Confederate service in 1861. An expert leader and a superb
cavalry officer, he experienced a meteoric rise in rank from captain
to brigadier general. His bold raids behind enemy lines in Tennessee
and Kentucky - and into the Northern heartland of Ohio and Indiana
- disrupted Federal operations, reinforced Confederate defenses
and heartened the people of the embattled South. Once, as Morgan
brazenly led his horse soldiers on a raid through Federally-occupied
Kentucky, President Lincoln was moved to declare in frustration:
"They are having a stampede in Kentucky." Morgan launched
his reputation as a dashing Confederate cavalier with a series
of raids through Kentucky's Green River country in the winter
of 1861-1862. Targeting the important Louisville & Nashville
Railroad, Morgan - then a captain - led his hard-riding troopers
on a romp behind enemy lines. Braving bitter winter weather, they
burned bridges, captured at least one locomotive and destroyed
countless Yankee railroad cars. When the raids ended, Northern
forces in Kentucky were left distracted and unnerved - and the
fame and fable of warfare had crowned the fearless John Hunt Morgan.
950
Limited Edition Numbered and Signed.
100
Artist Proofs Numbered and Signed.
Image Size: 14 3/4" x 28 1/2"
Overall Size: 19 1/4" x 32 1/2"
This print may still be available on
the secondary market. Please call 817-560-2143 or
contact us through our website for
more information.
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