Ambush of Sanders and McCabe
(sidebar)During the Civil War, neither the North nor the South was totally united over the key issues. Just as some Northerners supported slavery and secession, some Southerners were abolitionist and Unionists. These issues could split families, divide communities, and generate violence. As the "official" war progressed, quasi-military organization were formed to wage another war against soldiers and civilians alike. Ambushes and retaliation comprised the "war within the war" between 1861 and 1865.
A half-block behind you on Road Street, Confederate guerillas shot and killed two men on January 5, 1863. At about 10:30 P.M., Lt. Nathaniel H. Sanders, Co. D, 1st North Carolina Volunteers (U.S.) and Unionist civilian Joseph T. McCabe, a former Confederate soldier, were attacked as they returned from an Emancipation party on the northern edge of town. President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation had become effective on January 1. Federal troops were required to enforce it, while Confederate guerillas were determined to oppose it.
McCabe fell dead, but Sanders staggered through the streets before collapsing and dying in his brother's arms at the Grandy House hotel on Shepherd Street. His brother and company commander, Capt. Enos C. Sanders, ordered his men to scour the town and arrest the culprits.
He reported on February 16 that "the company turned out and succeeded in capturing two of the murderers with their guns in their hands. We captured several others, but without their arms. They were placed in prison to await an invest investigation, which was held, and the innocent set free."
The violence in Elizabeth City, however, was only beginning.
(sidebar)Unionists were not above resorting to violence in confrontations. Confederate Col. Charles E. Hennningsen reported an episode near Elizabeth City on February 10, 1862, during the Confederate retreat.
"Generally the population appear to be very true: there are, of course, some traitors, but fur less disloyalty than in Western Virginia. A painful instance of the latter occurred?[when] a man by the name of Lester [Lister] deliberately shot a [Confederate] private who rode into his yard, and then barricaded himself in the upper rooms of his house, refusing to surrender. ?After appearing to consent [to surrender] he suddenly and treacherously attempted to fire at the captain, and did fire afterward several times at the men. I ordered the house to be fired. He was driven by the smoke to the window and shot. ?[He] was a very violent Union man, and had been waited on a month previous by a vigilance committee."
Major funding for this project was provided by the North Carolina Department of Transportation, through the Transportation Enhancement Program of the Federal Transportation Efficiency Act for the 21st Century
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