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Nostalgiaville |
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Cave City, Kentucky |
| CIVIL WAR HISTORY of Cave City, KENTUCKY |
| CAVE CITY RAID CSA General John Hunt Morgan and a company of troops arrived here, May 11, 1862. They seized a train reported to be carrying some of Morgan's men captured at Lebanon, Tennessee. Instead, it carried railroad employees whom he released. Morgan burned the train; later detained a second one carrying passengers. Among them were two officers of the command of Colonel Frank Wolford, USA. |
| GENERAL GEORGE W MORGAN After Morgan's Cave City Raid, Union General George W Morgan deployed infantry to guard trains and stations in Central Kentucky. (George W and John Hunt Morgan are not related) |
| COLONEL JOHN HUNT MORGAN May 11
- 12, 1862 On May 11, 1862 Colonel John Hunt Morgan and his advance guard seized the Cave City depot and captured the next train that stopped. Morgan's entire command arrived shortly thereafter. Morgan's troops proceeded to destroy the train: four passenger cars, a locomotive, and forty-five freight cars. The firebox was then filled with wood and set on fire. The Confederates then fired each car and sent the train racing down the tracks toward Bowling Green. |
| Morgan remembered "It was a grand sight,
that burning train going at head long speed to destruction." For weeks
passengers going through Cave City gazed in amazement at the scene where the
locomotive had exploded. For a hundred years on both sides of the
track, the underbrush and grass were burned, trees were torn out by their
roots, and wreckage was scattered on the ground. The next day at noon, guards north of Cave City heard a passenger train approaching, bound for Nashville from Louisville. Morgan's men blocked the tracks, stopping the train while other troops threw logs on the tracks behind the train, preventing a reverse run. Morgan confiscated $6,000 in cash from the express agent and captured two Union officers and several enlisted men. He then allowed the train to return to Louisville safely. Stories of the Cave City Raid and its success took on the trappings of a romantic saga of chivalry due to the way in which Morgan treated the train's female passengers. "I have no right to look into ladies baggage, or to examine their trunks. Southern gentlemen do no such thing" Morgan is reported as saying. |
| DOWN TOWN Cave City, KENTUCKY as seen by the Camera on July 7, 2005 |
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Cave City Convention Center |
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| HISTORIC HOMES of Cave City, KENTUCKY |
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| HISTORIC CHURCHES of Cave City, KENTUCKY |
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| Cave City Baptist Church | United Methodist Church | Cleveland Baptist Church |
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| Church of Christ | Free Bethel General Baptist Church |
| SIGNS of the TIMES in Cave City, KENTUCKY |
| Sleep in a Wigwam |
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