TN -- Denmark -- Britton's Lane battlefield:
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- Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
- BRITT_971105_01.JPG: Britton Lane
- Description of Subject Matter: Armstrong's Raid: Aug 25-Sep 3, 1862:
Raiding northward out of Mississippi to prevent reinforcement by U.S. Grant of Buell's army in Middle Tennessee, Armstrong's Cavalry Brigade passed through LaGrange and Grand Junction, engaged Federal troops at Bolivar and cut the railroad at Toone. They besieged the garrison here, then moved west to fight the Battle of Britton's Lane, thereafter withdrew southward.
Battle of Britton's Lane: Sep 1, 1862:
Ordered to raid north from Mississippi by Maj. Gen. Sterling Price, commanding the Army of the West, thus to prevent U.S. Grant's reinforcing Buell in Tennessee, Brig. Gen. Frank C. Armstrong's Cavalry Brigade here struck Col. Elias S. Dennis' Federal force of two cavalry troops, a battery and two infantry regiments. After four hours, in which they suffered heavy losses while taking 213 prisoners and two fieldpieces, the raiders withdrew, their mission accomplished.
The Battle of Britton Lane has been described by the keepers of the present battlefield as "the Battle Which History Forgot." While this may be true, the battle was one of the larger battles fought in western Tennessee during the war. In August of 1862, C.S. General Sterling Price, commander of all cavalry in the west, ordered C.S. Colonel Frank Armstrong to take his 3,300 Calvary Brigade and raid north into Tennessee along Northern-controlled rail lines, causing as much disturbance and commotion as possible. Federal officers, fearing an attack on Federally controlled Jackson, Tennessee, sent U.S. Colonel Elias Dennis and cavalry and infantry regiments totaling around 1,500 men to meet Armstrong. The two armies met at Britton Lane, with neither side expecting a heavy battle. The battle waged back and forth for four hours, until the Confederate troops gained the upper hand and managed to capture several hundred prisoners and two field pieces. The Southern soldiers left the field, their mission accomplished.
The preceding was from http://www.cwbattlefields.com/battlefields/brittonlane.html
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