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Jones-Imboden Raid
Between April 24 and May 22, 1863, Confederate cavalry under Generals
William E. "Grumble" Jones and John D. Imboden carried the Civil
War into north- central West Virginia. Their goals were to disrupt the
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad at Oakland, Maryland, and at Grafton, cut
telegraph communication, and weaken federal control in the area.
The Confederates made a two-prong attack, with Imboden riding from Staunton
through Beverly to Buckhannon with 3,365 men. Jones led 2,100 men through
Petersburg and Moorefield, skirmished at Greenland Gap in Hardy County,
then was repulsed at Rowlesburg. He fell upon Morgantown, April 28, capturing
supplies and many horses, including those of curiosity-seekers who came
to town to learn what the excitement was. One of the Confederate raiders,
future Postmaster General William Lyne Wilson, later returned to Morgantown
as president of West Virginia University.
On April 29, at Fairmont, Jones waged the largest battle ever fought in
that part of the state against a force of 500 regulars, home guards, and
volunteers. There was some civilian involvement on both sides of the fight.
The Confederates prevailed, burning the personal library of Francis H.
Pierpont, governor of the Restored Government of Virginia, and exploding
an iron railroad bridge across the Monongahela River. Jones linked up
with Imboden at Buckhannon, skirmishing along the way, and together they
moved to Weston. Jones continued west to Burning Springs, where he set
fire to an estimated 150,000 barrels of oil and the producing wells, sending
a sheet of flame floating down the Little Kanawha River.
Imboden, later associated with his brother, George, in the development
of West Virginia coal mining, said in his report that the raiders covered
700 miles, fought two battles and several skirmishes, and captured nearly
700 prisoners, 1,000 cattle, and 1,200 horses. In addition to the oil,
they burned 16 railroad bridges and a tunnel, two trains of cars and several
boats. However, the damages were short-lived, and the Confederates never
seriously threatened the area again.
See also Burning Springs, Civil War, George W. Imboden, John D.
Imboden, William Lyne Wilson
Gerald D. Swick
Nashville, Tennessee
Stan Cohen, The Civil
War in West Virginia: A Pictorial History, 1976; Boyd B. Stutler,
West Virginia in the Civil War, 1966.
For further
information on the West Virginia Encyclopedia contact nutter@wvhumanities.org
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