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Rose Hill Raid
Major John Singleton Mosby
Fairfax County, Virginia - September 28, 1863 |
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The Gray Ghost of the
Confederacy was back. Major John S. Mosby commanding the
43rd Battalion Virginia Cavalry, Partisan Rangers, had been
seriously wounded in action a number of weeks earlier.
Rumors in the North were that Mosby had been killed. No
longer would Federal soldiers have to remove the planking
from bridges leading into Washington to prevent Mosby from
kidnapping the President. But they were wrong about his
demise.
Earlier in the year of 1863 Major Mosby's fame
grew with the successful raid at Fairfax City, capturing
Brigadier General Edwin Stoughton. Now his new plans were
to catch an even bigger prize, the Lincoln appointed Union
Governor Francis H. Pierpoint. To highlight Mosby's
audacity, a note was delivered to Pierpoint warning of
impending danger. "You did not see the farmer who rode by
your hotel on a hay wagon yesterday, did you Governor? My
driver pointed out your window, and I marked it plain. It's
just over the bay, and I'll get you some night, might
easy." The note was signed by Mosby!
Major Mosby and a few Rangers of Company A
began their raid to Alexandria in Fairfax County on
September 27th with the intent to capture the
Lincoln-appointed Governor. After passing quietly through
the Federal lines during the night, the raiding party
entered the governor's mansion and found that the Governor
had been called to Washington. Changing his plans Mosby
decided to capture the Governor's military aide, Colonel
Daniel French Dulany, who was staying at the nearby Rose
Hill Manor. Accompanying Mosby on the raid was D. French
Dulany, who was the son of Colonel Dulany.
As the ghosts in gray entered the Rose Hill
home they found Colonel Dulany in bed. Young French greeted
his surprised father, "How do Pa-I'm very glad to see you."
Bolting upright, his father replied, "Well sir, I'm d- sorry
to see you." (Anne S. Frobel's diary) As they were about to
leave the home, Colonel Dulany sarcastically remarked to his
son that there was an old pair of shoes around the house
that he had better take with him, "as he reckoned they were
darned scarce in the Confederacy, whereupon the son, holding
up his leg, which was encased in a fine pair of cavalry
boots just captured from a sutler, asked the old man what he
thought of that." (A letter from Mosby to his wife).
Now with their prize in tow the raiding party
headed back into "Mosby's Confederacy," most likely
traveling parallel to the Little River Turnpike. The
raiders then gathered combustible materials and burned the
railroad bridge crossing Cameron's Run. But Major Mosby
wasn't finished in his quest to capture Governor Pierpoint.
He would be back.
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Image Size 19 1/2" x 28
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Image Size 16 1/2" x 24"
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15 Artist's Proofs -
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Image Size 22 3/4 x 33"
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4 Artist's Proofs - Publisher Sold Out!
Image Size 27
1/2" x 40"
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