Streight's Raid
Raid
The actual capture of Col. Streight's larger and better equipped forces was achieved by a clever ruse, when General Forrest paraded his much smaller force back and forth in front of Streight, convincing him that he was opposed by a superior force. After surrendering and being informed of the deception Streight reputedly demanded his arms back to prepare for a proper fight, a request cheerfully declined by Forrest.
This unsuccessful Northern raid was coordinated with the more famous Grierson's Raid, also in April-May 1863, with 1,700 mounted troopers in three regiments by Col. Benjamin Grierson (1826-1911), further west driving south around the besieged Mississippi River port town and fortress of Vicksburg down through Mississippi from LaGrange, Tennessee to the Federal-occupied state capital of Baton Rouge, Louisiana in the south, partially as a feint to confuse the scattered Confederate forces.
Union losses were 12 killed, 69 wounded, and 1,466 captured, for a total of 1,547.
Chronology of events / locations of Streight's Raid in April-May 1863
- Nashville, Tennessee (state capital) (7–10 April) — proceeded by river
- Palmyra, Tennessee (11–13 April) — proceeded on foot
- Yellow Creek, Tennessee (13–14 April) — proceeded on foot
- Fort Henry, Tennessee (15–17 April) — proceeded by river
- Eastport, Mississippi (19–21 April) — proceeded either by foot or river
- Bear Creek/River, Mississippi (22 April) — proceeded on foot the rest of the way
- Tuscumbia, Alabama (24–26 April)
- Mount Hope, Alabama (27–28 April)
- Moulton, Alabama (28 April)
- Day's Gap, Alabama (29–30 April)
- Battle of Day's Gap (30 April)
- Skirmish at Crooked Creek (30 April)
- Skirmish at Hog Mountain (30 April)
- Arrival at Blountsville (1 May)
- Skirmishes at Blountsville (1 May)
- Skirmishes at the East Branch of the Black Warrior River (1 May)
- Skirmishes at the crossing of Black Creek, near Gadsden (2 May)
- Damaged ammunition while crossing Will's Creek, near Gadsden (2 May)
- Gadsden, Alabama (2 May)
- Blount's plantation, about 15 miles from Gadsden (2 May)
- Skirmishes at/near Blount's Plantation, Cherokee County (2–3 May)
- Centre, Alabama (3 May)
- Cedar Bluff, Alabama (3 May)
- Surrender to Confederate Major General Nathan Bedford Forrest, 3 miles east of Cedar Bluff, Alabama (3 May)
- Taken east to Confederate States capital at Richmond, Virginia, as prisoners of war
Union order of battle
Colonel Abel D. Streight
- 80th Illinois Infantry Regiment
- 51st Indiana Infantry Regiment
- 73rd Indiana Infantry Regiment
- 3rd Ohio Infantry Regiment
- 1st Middle Tennessee Cavalry Regiment (2 companies)
Notes
- ^ "Streight's Raid", Encyclopedia of Alabama website. Accessed 10 July 2015.
- ^ Dyer 1908, p. 663.
References
- Dyer, Frederick H. (1908). A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion: Battles, Campaigns, Etc. in Alabama. Des Moines, Iowa: Dyer Publishing Co. pp. 663–664. Retrieved 4 August 2020.
- Robert L. Willett (1999). The Lightning Mule Brigade: Abel Streight's 1863 Raid Into Alabama. Guild Press. ISBN 978-1-57860-074-8.
External links
- Nathan Bedford Forrest Historical Society
- Abel D. Streight biographical sketch in Streight Family Collection, ca. 1850-ca. 1945, Indiana Historical Society