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Photo Gallery: Battle of King's Tanyard
Marker text:
On July 31, 1864, at the Battle of Sunshine Church (19 miles NE of Macon),
Maj. Gen. Geo. Stoneman surrendered with 500 men to Brig. Gen. Alfred
Iverson, Jr., after covering the escape of Adams' and Capron's brigades of
his cavalry command. Both units retreated via Athens, intending to resupply
their troops there, but were stopped early on August 2nd at the river bridge
south of Athens by Home Guard units with artillery. Unable to cross, they
turned west; Capron on the Hog Mountain road to Jug Tavern (Winder), and
Adams on roads farther north by which he reached the Union lines near
Marietta without further loss.
Late that night, Capron halted briefly at Jug Tavern, fed
and watered his horses, then marched to King's Tanyard (about 300 yards E)
and halted again for two hours to rest his exhausted command. A large body
of runaway negroes, who had followed the column, crowded in between the rear
pickets and the main body.
Before dawn on August 3rd, Williams' Kentucky brigade, in
pursuit from Sunshine Church, charged over his pickets and into the
panic-stricken negroes "driving and scattering everything before them."
Thrown into confusion, Capron's men soon gave way and stampeded toward
Mulberry River. About 430 were captured and sent to Athens; others escaped
into the woods. Capron himself, with six men, reached Marietta four days
later -- on foot.
This engagement, called also the Battle of Jug Tavern, was
the final event of the Federal fiasco known as the Stoneman Raid.
007-3 Georgia Historical Commission 1957
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