Burnsville

Burnsville (HM1GV3)

Location: Burnsville, NC 28714 Yancey County
Buy North Carolina State flags at Flagstore.com!
Country: United States of America
Buy United States of America flags at Flagstore.com!

N 35° 55.045', W 82° 18.087'

  • 0 likes
  • 0 check ins
  • 0 favorites
  • 961 views
Inscription

"The county is gone up"

Burnsville exemplified western North Carolinians? divided loyalties. Yancey County was evenly split on the secession issue. In January 1861, secession advocates in the town square burned an effigy of Cong. Zebulon B. Vance, who advised caution in response to Lincoln election. The future governor defenders vowed to tar and feather those responsible. Once the state seceded, many men enlisted in local Confederate companies, such as the Black Mountain Boys, while a few others joined the Federal units. The mountains soon became a haven for deserters from both sides.



In September 1863, Gov. Vance appointed John W. McElroy commander of the western "home guard" brigade to keep the peace and enforce Confederate conscription. McElroy already had told Vance that "many will go to the mountains before they will go to war." McElroy moved his headquarters from this house to Madison County in September 1863. On April 9, 1864, in McElroy absence, about 50 Yancey County women "assembled? and marched in a body to a store-house? and (carried off) about sixty bushels of Government wheat." The next day, McElroy reported, a band of 75 local renegades under Montraville Ray "came into Burnsville? surprised the guard, broke open the magazine, and took all the arms and ammunition. ?The county is gone up." Col. John B. Palmer soon marched 250 Confederate infantrymen here and attacked Ray force, capturing 15 and destroying the Ray family property. McElroy soon reestablished his headquarters here. In one of the last local acts of violence of the war, in April 1865, near here, Unionists shot and killed the Rev. Sam Byrd, whose son was a captain in McElroy home guard.



(sidebar)

John W. McElroy constructed this house about 1845, after he bought two lots here. He lived here until late in the 1850s but used the dwelling during the war. According to local tradition, after the April 1864 engagement in Burnsville, the house served as a hospital.



(captions)

(lower left) Gen. John W. McElroy; Montraville Ray.

(upper right) The Yancey County Courthouse, photographed ca. 1890, stood in the town square. It was constructed ca. 1850 and demolished in 1909. Photos courtesy Yancey History Association
Details
HM NumberHM1GV3
Series This marker is part of the North Carolina Civil War Trails series
Tags
Placed ByNorth Carolina Civil War Trails
Marker ConditionNo reports yet
Date Added Monday, September 29th, 2014 at 5:49am PDT -07:00
Pictures
Sorry, but we don't have a picture of this historical marker yet. If you have a picture, please share it with us. It's simple to do. 1) Become a member. 2) Adopt this historical marker listing. 3) Upload the picture.
Locationbig map
UTM (WGS84 Datum)17S E 382578 N 3975571
Decimal Degrees35.91741667, -82.30145000
Degrees and Decimal MinutesN 35° 55.045', W 82° 18.087'
Degrees, Minutes and Seconds35° 55' 2.7" N, 82° 18' 5.22" W
Driving DirectionsGoogle Maps
Area Code(s)828
Closest Postal AddressAt or near 102 W Main St, Burnsville NC 28714, US
Alternative Maps Google Maps, MapQuest, Bing Maps, Yahoo Maps, MSR Maps, OpenCycleMap, MyTopo Maps, OpenStreetMap

Is this marker missing? Are the coordinates wrong? Do you have additional information that you would like to share with us? If so, check in.

Check Ins  check in   |    all

Have you seen this marker? If so, check in and tell us about it.

Comments 0 comments

Maintenance Issues
  1. What historical period does the marker represent?
  2. What historical place does the marker represent?
  3. What type of marker is it?
  4. What class is the marker?
  5. What style is the marker?
  6. Does the marker have a number?
  7. What year was the marker erected?
  8. This marker needs at least one picture.
  9. Can this marker be seen from the road?
  10. Is the marker in the median?