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Near East Bernstadt in Laurel County, Kentucky — The American South (East South Central)
 

Battle of Camp Wildcat

 
 
Marker #1 - The Navy In The Mountains image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
1. Marker #1 - The Navy In The Mountains
Inscription.
(Marker #1)
The Navy In The Mountains

Needing men with military training and political connections to the region, President Lincoln called upon two Navy officers to help organize the war effort in eastern Kentucky.

William “Bull” Nelson
A lieutenant in the Navy and a Kentucky native, Nelson was instructed to recruit and train soldiers to “liberate” east Tennessee. He established Camp Dick Robinson for that purpose. Nelson was known for his hot temper which eventually led to his death at the hands of a fellow Union officer.

Samuel P. Carter
Carter was on the U.S.S. Seminole, stationed near Brazil, when he was ordered home to help recruit and train refugees fleeing to Kentucky from his native east Tennessee. Carter selected the location for Camp Wildcat. He later became the only soldier ever commissioned a brevet major general in the Army and a rear admiral in the Navy.

(Marker #2)
Read All About It!

Soldier Reporters
Newspapers as far away as Boston carried accounts of the battle. Many “correspondents” were soldiers writing letters to newspapers back home. They often mixed facts and opinions.

From the Nashville Banner:
“We have seen Wildcat,
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and chased the kittens into their holes, but with all their Yankee cunning, they have not the courage to fight ....”

Captain Albert Roberts (alias John Happy), 20th Tennessee Infantry (CSA)

From the Toledo Blade:
“We passed the campground of Zollicoffer’s men and saw the ruin that they made. They laid waste to everything upon which they laid their murderous hands.”
E.B. Raffensparger, Chaplain, 14th Ohio Infantry (USA)

General Battles the Press
General Schoepf was unhappy with professional reporters who also followed the army. While camped at London after he battle he wrote:
“With importunate citizens on one side and meddlesome reporters on the other, I can scarce find time to attend to the appropriate duties .... cannot something be done to rid our camps of this latter class?”

(Marker #3)
Alfred Mathews
Soldier and Artist


The only illustration of the battle of Camp Wildcat was drawn by thirty-year-old Alfred E. Mathews, a private in the 31st Ohio Infantry. He arrived after the battle and based his drawing on descriptions from soldiers who had witnessed the fight.

His Art Pleased the General
Mathews created more than thirty-five illustrations during the war. His drawings of the siege of Vicksburg
Marker #2 - Read All About It! image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
2. Marker #2 - Read All About It!
were praised by General Grant as being “among the most accurate and true to life I have ever seen”.

Artists Captured the Action
Artists had an advantage over photographers during the Civil War because they could create action pictures. The long time needed to expose film forced photographers to limit their photos to subjects that wouldn’t move.

(Marker #4)
The Wilderness Road

In 1796 the Wilderness Road opened “the west” to settlement, and thousands of pioneers poured over the mountains into Kentucky.

A Promising Invasion Route
At the beginning of the Civil War both Confederate and Union generals viewed the Wilderness Road as a promising invasion route. The North saw a means of reaching and freeing east Tennessee. The South viewed it as a back way into the heart of Kentucky.

Road’s Promise Was Unfulfilled
Soldiers that walked the road found it unfit for travel. Years of rolling wheels and pounding hooves had taken a toll. Rocks broke wagon wheels, and mud holes swallowed horses and wagons.

“We found the road for three miles lined with the train of wagons, stuck in the mud, mules into their bellies ....”
Stephen Keyes Fletcher, 33rd Indiana Infantry

The road that looked so inviting on the map proved of
Marker #3 - Alfred Mathews image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
3. Marker #3 - Alfred Mathews
little use to either army.

(Right Illustration Caption)
“The Wilderness Road from Cumberland Gap to settlements in Kentucky is now completed.”
Kentucky Gazette, October 15, 1796

(Marker #5)
Thunder in the Hills

Both armies used artillery during the battle and the booming of their cannon could be heard for twenty miles.

The Confederates Shot Solid Ball and Log Chains.
“Whiz came a cannon ball ... and immediately after a log chain followed it whirling through the air.
Correspondent for the Cincinnati Gazette

The Union Fire Exploding Shells.
“The shells whistled through the air ... and fell bursting away in the valley below.”
Stephen Keyes Fletcher, 33rd Indiana Infantry

“Heavy” Artillery
On the evening after the battle, anticipating another attack, Union soldiers hauled two cannon weighing nearly a ton each up this hill to the top of Hoosier Knob.

“We met a hundred men dragging two of the heavy guns up the hill, a work one would almost conceive impossible ...”
Correspondent for the Cincinnati Gazette

(Marker #6)
Worries About The Home Front
Soldiers at Wildcat were often torn between duty and their cares
Marker #4 - The Wilderness Road image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
4. Marker #4 - The Wilderness Road
at home.


Guarding The Wrong Place
While posted at Camp Wildcat, Colonel Theophilous Garrard received a disturbing letter from his wife telling him that, while he has been away, Confederates had raided his home town.

Missing His Wife
Before marching to Wildcat, Confederate Colonel James E. Rains wrote his wife:

“How I would like to see you. The tone of your last letter was rather sad. Don’t be so, my precious wife .... These clouds will pass away ... My campaigns will soon be over.”

James Rains was killed on December 31, 1862, at the Battle of Stones River.

Encouraging Words
Stephen Keyes Fletcher of the 33rd Indiana offered encouragement to a brother disappointed as being left at home:

“Now don’t think of going to war ... Where would the farm go to? ... No other one could take your place.”

(Marker #7)
Geology Helped the Union

“On the 21st I reached the enemy’s entrenched camp on Rockcastle Hills, a natural fortification, almost inaccessible.”
General Felix Zellicoffer

Millions of Years in the Making
This “natural fortification” began forming nearly 300 million years ago when ancient rivers spread sand and gravel over the area. Under the
Marker #5 - Thunder in the Hills image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
5. Marker #5 - Thunder in the Hills
pressure of its own weight, the material hardened into rock which was later thrust up and eroded to form these hills and the cliffs that surround them.

No Easy Way Up
The rugged terrain forced the Confederates to approach Camp Wildcat up an easily defended valley.

Hoosier Knob proved especially difficult to attack. Surrounded by cliffs on three sides, the only access was up steep, narrow saddles on which the Union soldiers could train their guns.

(Marker #8)
Deadly Volley
“I ordered the works to be charged.”

Colonel Tazewell Newman, 17th Tennessee Infantry

It was up this ridge that Confederate Colonel Tazewell Newman led four companies of the 17th Tennessee Infantry, supported by three companies of the 29th Tennessee Infantry, in an assault on Hoosier Knob.

Confederates Are Hit Hard
Newman’s men were met with deadly blasts of Union gunfire. Company E was hit the hardest, with six soldiers killed and seventeen wounded. The dead included O.P. Newman, who was shot through the head while standing near his brother - - the Colonel.

Captain Became Governor
Company E was commanded by Captain Albert Marks. Marks had enlisted in the Confederate army despite his opposition to Tennessee’s decision to leave the Union. He later became Governor
Marker #6 - Worries About The Home Front image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
6. Marker #6 - Worries About The Home Front
of Tennessee.

(Marker #9)
Hoosier Knob - Point of Attack
The hardest fighting took place here.


Confederates Approached Unseen
The main attack came late in the morning. Six hundred Confederate soldiers emerged from the woods below to within thirty steps of where you now stand.

“They soon came near us under cover of wood, which entirely concealed their approach.”
Colonel John Coburn, 33rd Indiana Infantry

Union Soldiers Awaited Their First Test
Hoosier Knob was defended by six hundred Union soldiers from the 33rd Indiana Infantry and the 1st Kentucky Cavalry. Most had never seen battle.

“Some showed cool determination, others were excited and tremulous.”
Sergeant Eastham Tarrant, 1st Kentucky Cavalry

The Union Held Its Ground
Confederates attacked at least twice but were unable to drive the Union soldiers off the knob.

“(The Confederates) approached with wild cheers and loud oaths, but were met with volley after volley, which repulsed them. They fled, leaving their dead and wounded.”
John McBride, 33rd Indiana Infantry

(Marker #10)
Union Line Almost Breaks
Soldiers Caught Between Enemies and Officers


During the fighting
Marker #7 - Geology Helped the Union image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
7. Marker #7 - Geology Helped the Union
on Hoosier Knob, some Union soldiers began to panic and run. They found themselves facing the guns of their own officers.

“A few men from both the Kentucky and Indiana ... took to flight and rushed down the path .... Cols. Coburn and Wolford, pistol in hand braced themselves before the fugitives when they saw them flying, and threatening to shoot the first who attempted to pass soon restored order.”
Cincinnati Gazette

(Marker #11)
Digging In

Earthworks Built After The Battle


On the morning of the battle, the only Union fortification on this hill was a small breastwork of logs at the north end of the knob. Most of these entrenchments were dug in the afternoon only after the hardest fighting had ended.

Union reinforcements from the 14th and 17th Ohio regiments used bayonets, picks, and shovels to help construct the defenses. By evening 1,200 Union soldiers camped behind a shoulder-high ring of trenches and logs.

More Trees Than Soldiers Killed

Soldiers also constructed several hundred feet of log breastworks on the Winding Blade Road and Infantry Ridge.

After the battle a Kentucky soldier claimed that regiments from Ohio had slain more timber than his whole state could cut in a month.

(Marker #12)
Dealing With Death

“The
Marker #8 - Deadly Volley image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
8. Marker #8 - Deadly Volley
thought of laying those men in the ground far, far from home was more than could be borne.”

John Wilkens, 33rd Indiana Infantry

They Knew The Enemy
Union soldiers from the 1st and 2nd Tennessee Infantry, who arrived after the battle and helped bury Confederate dead, knew many by name.

“They found among the dead many acquaintances, neighbors, cousins, brothers and in one case a father.”
Correspondent for the Boston Courier

Confederate troops, passing the body of a Union soldier, identified him as a shoemaker from Bledsoe County, Tennessee named Merriman. After the war, one soldier wrote, “Of all who saw him and are yet living, I suppose not one has forgotten him.”

Different Burials
The Union held military funerals for its dead. Tributes were paid and music played.

Confederate dead were buried without ceremony near where they fell. Nearly ten years later, citizens of Crab Orchard, Kentucky returned to the battlefield and gathered the remains that could be found. After a solemn ceremony they were buried in the Crab Orchard Cemetery.

(Marker #13)
Disease More Deadly Than Guns
“They coughed in platoons, ... like the musketry at Wildcat.”


Disease Attacks After The Battle
The
Marker #9 - Hoosier Knob - Point of Attack image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
9. Marker #9 - Hoosier Knob - Point of Attack
Union army, which suffered only four deaths at Wildcat, lost more than two hundred to disease after the battle.

“There was much sickness with diarrhea, dysentery, measles, and fevers.”
Jonathan Wood, 14th Ohio Infantry

Help From Home
Catherine Merrill was one of several women who travelled to Kentucky from Indiana to help care for the sick.

“The little town with encampments around it seemed to be one great hospital.”
Catherine Merrill

Hoosiers Suffered
The 33rd Indiana Infantry suffered the most. By early December, from two to five of its soldiers were dying every day.

“Fount Caudell is sick ... buried two today ... two deaths last night ... Emanuel Phillips died last night ... Jeff Deivert died ... Fount Caudell died ...”
Diary of David Fateley, 33rd Indiana Infantry.

Regimental bands were ordered to stop playing music at funerals because it depressed the living. At one point less than one hundred men out of a thousand were able to fight and the regiment was declared unfit for duty.
 
Topics and series. This historical marker is listed in these topic lists: Roads & VehiclesWar, US Civil. In addition, it is included in the Former U.S. Presidents: #18 Ulysses S. Grant series list. A significant historical date for this entry is October 15, 1796.
 
Location.
Marker #10 - Union Line Almost Breaks image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
10. Marker #10 - Union Line Almost Breaks
37° 15.886′ N, 84° 12.003′ W. Marker is near East Bernstadt, Kentucky, in Laurel County. Marker can be reached from Old Wilderness Road, 0.1 miles south of Camp Wildcat Road (Sheltowee Trace). Marker is located along the Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail; the above directions are to the trail head at the Camp Wildcat Battlefield parking area. Directions to the battlefield parking area are clearly marked from both Interstate 75 (Exit 49) and US Route 25. Touch for map. Marker is in this post office area: East Bernstadt KY 40729, United States of America. Touch for directions.
 
Other nearby markers. At least 8 other markers are within 3 miles of this marker, measured as the crow flies. A different marker also named Battle of Camp Wildcat (a few steps from this marker); Nerve Center for the Union Army (about 300 feet away, measured in a direct line); The Battle of Wildcat (about 500 feet away); Camp Wildcat (about 500 feet away); Camp Wildcat and the Wilderness Road (approx. 0.3 miles away); Skaggs Trace (approx. 1.9 miles away); a different marker also named Camp Wildcat (approx. 2.2 miles away); Congressional Medal of Honor (approx. 2.4 miles away). Touch for a list and map of all markers in East Bernstadt.
 
More about this marker. Markers are located along the Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail with the trail head located between the visitors pavilion and the restroom facilities. The trail is a graveled path 3/4
Marker #11 - Digging In image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
11. Marker #11 - Digging In
mile in length to the summit with some steep portions.
 
Also see . . .
1. Battle of Camp Wildcat - Wikipedia entry. (Submitted on June 13, 2015.)
2. Camp Wildcat Preservation Foundation. Official website of the organization preserving the battlefield and making visitor improvements to the site. (Submitted on June 13, 2015.) 
 
Marker #12 - Dealing With Death image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
12. Marker #12 - Dealing With Death
Marker #13 - Disease More Deadly Than Guns image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
13. Marker #13 - Disease More Deadly Than Guns
Camp Wildcat Battlefield Visitor Pavilion image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
14. Camp Wildcat Battlefield Visitor Pavilion
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail Head image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
15. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail Head
Trail Map to Summit of Hoosier Knob image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
16. Trail Map to Summit of Hoosier Knob
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail near Marker #1 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
17. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail near Marker #1
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #5 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
18. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #5
The Geology of Hoosier Knob at Marker #7 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
19. The Geology of Hoosier Knob at Marker #7
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail Heading to the Summit image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
20. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail Heading to the Summit
Trail near Marker #8 (Deadly Volley)
The Summit of Hoosier Knob image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
21. The Summit of Hoosier Knob
Please Stay on the Trail image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
22. Please Stay on the Trail
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #9 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
23. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #9
Cannon on Summit of Hoosier Knob image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
24. Cannon on Summit of Hoosier Knob
As viewed from Marker #9
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #10 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
25. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail at Marker #10
Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail near Marker #13 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
26. Hoosier Knob Interpretive Trail near Marker #13
Union Entrenchments Near Marker #13 image. Click for full size.
Photographed By Duane Hall, May 23, 2015
27. Union Entrenchments Near Marker #13
 
 
Credits. This page was last revised on November 13, 2020. It was originally submitted on June 13, 2015, by Duane Hall of Abilene, Texas. This page has been viewed 588 times since then and 33 times this year. Photos:   1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 27. submitted on June 13, 2015, by Duane Hall of Abilene, Texas.

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May. 4, 2024