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historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16XM_the-union-advance_Nancy-KY.html
The commander of the 10th Indiana Volunteer Infantry wrote, "The way by which the enemy had retreated gave evidence that they had been in haste to reach their den. Wagons, cannon, muskets, swords, blankets, etc. were strewn all along the road ..."…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16VZ_confederate-artillery_Nancy-KY.html
Captain Arthur M. Rutledge's Tennessee Light Artillery Battery was organized in Davidson County, Tennessee. Rutledge was a West Point graduate who went on to become the Chief of Ordnance in Polk's Army of Mississippi. Rutledge's Tennessee Light Ar…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16VC_confederate-retreat_Nancy-KY.html
"Every one for himself was the motto." Much of the Confederate Army retreated through this area. They headed south along the Mill Springs Road toward their camps and fortifications just this side of the Cumberland River. Mississippi and Tenn…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16VB_the-blacksmith-shop_Nancy-KY.html
A small building that housed a blacksmith shop stood in this area at the time of the Battle of Mill Springs. According to local tradition, the blacksmith who worked there mined shale, low grade coal, from the ground near his shop. There are severa…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16UK_the-ravine_Nancy-KY.html
Colonel Speed Fry (photo inset) For much of the battle the Union defense line was behind a rail fence at the top of the hill. Colonel Speed Fry of the Union 4th Kentucky said that his men there came "under a galling fire from the enemy, who wer…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16UB_archaeology-and-the-mill-springs-battlefield_Nancy-KY.html
For several years the Mill Springs Battlefield Association, with the help of professional archeologists, has located and mapped artifacts on the battlefield. The type of artifact, their placement, and density is used to determine the units present…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16TT_balie-peyton-jr-1833-1862_Nancy-KY.html
Lieutenant Balie Peyton, Jr. All battles have their stories of heroism and devotion to duty. All battles have the tragic death of those too young. The story of Balie Peyton, Jr., at Mill Springs is one of those stories. Peyton's story lifts the…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16SU_the-union-line-at-the-fence_Nancy-KY.html
After the initial contact between the Union and Confederate forces in the foggy half light of the winter morning, Colonel Speed Fry, commanding the 4th Kentucky Infantry (US), pulled his men back to a rail fence on a hill east of the Mill Springs …
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16SG_battle-on-a-sabbath-morn_Nancy-KY.html
You are standing in the center of the area where most of the Mill Springs Battle took place on Sunday morning, January 19, 1862. This illustration depicts the scene from a birds eye viewpoint above and behind you. The Union line stood to your left…
historicalmarkerproject/markers/HM16S5_fix-bayonets-charge_Nancy-KY.html
"If it gets too hot for you, shut your eyes my boys - forward!" - Major Gustave Kammerling, 9th Ohio (photo inset) Union Colonel Robert McCook, commanding the Union 3rd Brigade ordered one of the few successful bayonet charges of the Civil War.…
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