Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Honor the warriors, if not the war

Catawba County, N.C., lost 624 men in the Civil War. The local Sons of Confederate Veterans camp is named for Capt. Charles Connor, who was the county's only casualty in Stoneman's Raid.

     Today, as Confederate Memorial Day is observed in the Carolinas, The Stoneman Gazette presents the following honor roll of Confederate soldiers and Southern civilians who were killed during Stoneman's Raid. 
     We will have the corresponding Union honor roll on Memorial Day, May 30.
     I have identified seven Confederate soldiers, dozens of unknown soldiers, and seven Southern civilians who lost their lives defending their homeland against Stoneman's Raid.
     It seems likely that the South lost at least 50 lives during the two-month raid, including civilians. That's about one death per day, which is actually not bad from a military perspective, considering that there were 4,000 armed Yankees roaming the countryside.
     Unfortunately, the names and stories of many of the Confederate defenders have been lost to history. By the spring of 1865, record-keeping was not a Confederate priority. Also, much of the opposition to Stoneman's Raid was by anonymous bushwhackers rather than organized troops.
     It is revealing that the list below includes four officers but only one private. Certainly there were many more Confederate privates who died on the battle lines. (On the Union side, 26 of the 33 fatalities were privates.) In fact, the only Confederate private we do know about is remembered because he was shot in his own hometown.
     I intend to revise this honor roll as additional information becomes available. If you have any names or details about those who gave their lives during Stoneman's Raid, please add a comment below.
 
CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS (listed in the order they fell)
  • Pvt. Joseph "Warren" Green was killed March 28 in Boone, N.C. Family tradition says he was shot by Myles Keogh, the flamboyant Irishman who led Stoneman's Raid into Boone. Green was listed as 22 in the 1860 census, so he would have been about 27 when he died. He was a Confederate private who had been wounded twice previously and may have been convalescing at home when he joined the Watauga Home Guards to confront Stoneman's Raid. Casualties in Boone also included Warren's cousin Calvin Green (who was gravely wounded but recovered) and civilians Jacob Mast Councill and Elijah Norris (who were killed). 
  • Capt. Francis M.Y. "Frank" McNeely (or MacNeely) was killed April 12 at Salisbury. According to historian Robert Lee Hadden, McNeely was involved in an exchange of gunfire at the Confederate Arsenal, and he killed two Yankees before he was shot. Another account says that after he was shot, he was beaten so badly that he died. A native of Rowan County, McNeely enlisted at age 21 in 1861, was appointed captain of the Rowan Rifle Guard, and served a year before returning home to Salisbury because of illness. He kept his commission and remained on light duty, which means he was probably working at the arsenal or the prison. 
  • Lt. A.B. Coffee was killed April 14 in Statesville, N.C., in a clash with the 15th Pennsylvania Cavalry. Newspaper accounts describe Lt. Coffee as "a fine specimen of a man" who was originally from Mississippi and served with Col. T.C. Flournoy's Confederate scouts. Encountering what he thought was a small party of Federal soldiers, he charged into Stoneman's lines and was shot through the mouth. He was taken to a home in Statesville, where he uttered his last words: "My gracious." The day after Stoneman's troops left Statesville, citizens dressed his body in a fresh suit of clothes and buried him with Masonic rites at the old Fourth Creek Presbyterian Church cemetery (now First Presbyterian Church of Statesville). A young lady named Annie Donnell who helped with the funeral described him as "a brave-looking soldier." Coffee is among 28 Confederate soldiers buried at the church and the only one killed in Statesville. 
  • Lt. Charles Connor was killed April 17 in Newton, N.C., by the 10th Michigan Cavalry. He came from a wealthy and influential family—his father was a congressman and his grandfather was governor. To read his story, click here
  • Lt. John T. Shotwell was executed April 18 near Blowing Rock, N.C., as he tried to escape from Kirk's raiders. Shotwell was among about a thousand prisoners captured by Stoneman in Salisbury, Statesville, and Lenoir, who were being marched across the mountains to Knoxville, and Col. George Kirk was determined to make an example out of him. "Damn him--shoot him!" Kirk ordered, according to an account by fellow prisoner Albert Stacey Caison. Several other prisoners died during this march. 
  • Cadet McKenzie "Theodore" Parker of the Arsenal Cadets was shot May 3 by Stoneman's troops on the courthouse square in Anderson, S.C. He was the next-to-last casualty of Stoneman's Raid. 
  • Sgt. A.C. Wall with Gen. Joseph Wheeler's cavalry was shot through the heart May 9 during a midnight skirmish near Madison, Ga., when he encountered a detachment of the 12th Ohio Cavalry led by Lt. J.J. Defigh. Sgt. Wall may have been a Texas Ranger. As far as I can tell, he was the last Confederate soldier killed in action during the Civil War.
UNKNOWN CONFEDERATE SOLDIERS
  • At least one suffered a fatal head wound in a gunfight with Col. Miller's 3rd Brigade April 5 in Wytheville, Va. Most of the Confederates defending Wytheville were from Kentucky under the command of Gen. John Echols. There were likely other Confederate casualties in this skirmish. The Union reported 35 killed, wounded, or captured. 
  • One was killed April 8 near New London, Va., during Major William Wagner's raid on Lynchburg, according to the regimental history of the 15th Pennsylvania Cavalry. 
  • Twenty-seven from Col. James T. Wheeler's 6th Tennessee Corps were killed April 8 in an ambush near Martinsville, Va., according to Col. Luther Trowbridge's history of the 10th Michigan Cavalry. One of these was skewered by Lt. Fred Field. If Trowbridge is right, this was the deadliest engagement of Stoneman's Raid. (I have identified five Union soldiers who died in this fight.) On the other hand, one Confederate report says that only one rebel died, a private named Edwards. 
  • Several Confederates in Col. Samuel Ferguson's cavalry may have been killed or wounded April 11 near Lexington, N.C., in a two-hour gunfight with the 10th Michigan. Col. Trowbridge's book says 75 to 100 were killed or wounded, based on newspaper accounts. However, this seems exaggerated, considering that the Yankees were retreating, yet none of them were even wounded. 
  • Two were killed April 11 near Greensboro, according to the 15th Pennsylvania history. One was during the capture of the Third S.C. Cavalry, and the other was by "lucky shot" from Charles Betts' battalion. 
  • One was killed April 12 in Salisbury on the piazza of the house of Frank Shober, according to Spencer. Certainly there were other Confederate deaths in Salisbury (the Union lost 10 men in winning the battle), but I have not been able to document them. 
CIVILIANS
  • Elijah Norris was shot in the back March 28 in Boone as he tried to escape the raid in Boone, N.C. He may have been a member of the Watauga Home Guard. 
  • James M. Howard was killed April 2 in Floyd County, Va., as he tried to prevent Stoneman's troops from looting, according to John D. Chapla's book on the 42nd Virginia Infantry. Howard had been a Confederate lieutenant but was discharged from the army in 1862. 
  • Matthew Ellison was killed May 1 near Turner Hill in Pickens County, S.C., after he refused to give up his plowhorse. In retribution, a Union soldier from Michigan in the same vicinity was killed May 9. 
  • Capt. Josiah Choice, 57, was shot May 2 in Greenville, S.C., when he threatened to kill anyone who took his horse, according to Greenville historian A.V. Huff. Choice served in Hampton's Legion under Gen. Wade Hampton III. The incident happened on the Buncombe Road in the vicinity of the Old Rock House. The enemy was Capt. James Lawson's battalion, detached from Asheville by Gen. Davis Tillson. 
  • A freed slave was shot by Lawson's battalion May 2 in Greenville. Robert Seigler's book, "The Best Gun in the World," includes an account from G.W. Taylor, a gunsmith at the State Military Works in Greenville. Taylor said a former slave who probably belonged to the estate of the late Vardry McBee shot at him from a distance of several hundred yards as he crossed an open field between Pendleton Street and the Gaillard School House. The next day, Lawson's troopers caught up with the man in the woods near the State Works, where they shot and killed him "for impudence."  
  • An unknown civilian was killed in Hartwell, Ga., between May 13 and 21 by occupying troops from the 11th Michigan Cavalry.
UNCERTAIN
  • Pvt. Josiah Davis of the 45th Virginia Infantry died April 7 in Carroll County, Va., according to the Carroll County Honor Roll. This would have been while Stoneman's 3rd Brigade was passing through Hillsville, but it is unclear if Davis was killed in action or had previously come home wounded.
  • Pvt. James T. Tyson of the 40th Alabama Infantry died May 23, 1865, in Salisbury and is buried in the Old Lutheran Church Cemetery. Records say his regiment surrendered at the Yadkin River bridge, but the date is unclear and I don't know if he fought in Stoneman's Raid.
  • Calvin J. Miller died May 26, 1865, and is also buried at the Lutheran cemetery in Salisbury. His grave is decorated as a Confederate veteran but I do not know if he fought in Stoneman's Raid. 

Thursday, April 14, 2016

First in war, last in peace, and still sipping taxes

By the epic standards of the Civil War, Stoneman's Raid was relatively trivial. 
Yet it is rich in material for a game of Trivial Pursuit in a category we'll call Civil War Bookends.
The answers to all these first-and-last questions can be found in the annals of Stoneman's Raid.

 Who was the first man mustered into the Confederate army?
 According to an obituary I found from The Greenville News dated June 27, 1917, it was William T. Shumate of Greenville, S.C.: "Mr. Shumate, according to the story he and his friends often related, was a member of the old Butler Guards, an ante-bellum military organization in Greenville. The guards volunteered for service in 1861 upon the outbreak of the war, and upon proceeding to Virginia, were mustered in. Mr. Shumate was the tallest man in the command, so was placed on the extreme right. The mustering officer took the men from right to left, and this company happening to be the first selected, Mr. Shumate was the first man to be mustered into the service."
 The Butler Guards, later known as Company B of the Second South Carolina Infantry, organized January 5, 1861—just two weeks after South Carolina voted to secede. They were called to active duty on April 15, three days after the bombardment of Fort Sumter, and were among several companies mustered in on May 22 and 23, 1861 in Richmond, Va. (We'll reveal Shumate's role in Stoneman's Raid at the end of this quiz.)

 So who was the first to enlist for the Union?
I don't know for sure, but a tall Ohio schoolteacher named Erastus Cratty Moderwell was among the very first who enlisted April 14, 1861, under a Kentucky abolitionist named Cassius Clay. A tribute to Moderwell in a 1912 memorial book said this was the "first volunteer organization raised for the War of the Rebellion."
Moderwell became a major in the 12th Ohio Cavalry, which was one of eight regiments in Stoneman's Raid. On April 21, 1865, he impersonated the 6-foot-4 Stoneman, fooled the Confederates, and bluffed them into surrendering the Nation Ford railroad trestle across the Catawba River, cutting the lifeline between Charlotte and South Carolina. Historian Benson John Lossing described this raid as "one of the most gallant little exploits of the war."
If only wars were always this much fun!


 Who loaded the first gun fired at Fort Sumter? 
 Historians may not agree with me on this, but I still like the story told by a Georgia soldier named Thomas Wheat who was captured by Stoneman's troops April 10, 1865, in Winston-Salem, North Carolina. "I had nothing against the Yankees," he told a New York newspaper, "but I was in for anything that promised a little sport."
 The first shot from Fort Sumter, by the way, was fired by none other than Abner Doubleday of baseball fame. The closest I can tie him to the raid is that he graduated from West Point just before Stoneman matriculated.
Two old South Carolina newspapers say that a Citadel cadet named Paul Allen (or Allan) was responsible for the first and last shots of the war

Where was the last Confederate victory?
Some say it was the defense of the Yadkin River bridge by Col. Zebulon York on April 12, 1865, during Stoneman's invasion of Salisbury, N.C. My vote is for Swannanoa Gap, where short-handed rebels and their one-armed general prevented Stoneman's Raid from crossing the Blue Ridge on April 20 and won a temporary reprieve for the citizens of Asheville. Both of those rebel stands came after Robert E. Lee's surrender on April 9.

Who was the last Confederate veteran in North Carolina?
A former slave named Alfred "Uncle Teen" Blackburn received the state's last Confederate pension ($26.26 per month) until 1951, when he died at age 109. Blackburn served in the rebel army alongside his master, so you could say that he owed his freedom to a war he lost. Uncle Teen was an eyewitness to one of Stoneman's battalions that burned three mills in Yadkin County on April 1, 1865.


What about the last Union pension from the Civil War?
There's one remaining. Irene Triplett of North Wilkesboro, N.C., still gets $73.13 per month from Uncle Sam for her father's service with Kirk's Raiders, a Union outfit under Stoneman's command who occupied Boone, N.C., in April 1865. She turned 86 in January 2016. Her father Mose Triplett was 83 when she was born in 1930 and 92 when he died in 1938, just a few days after attending the 75th anniversary of the Battle of Gettysburg. In effect, your taxes are still paying for Stoneman's Raid.

Who were the last Confederate soldiers killed in battle with Union troops?
As far as I have found, the last two were A.C. Wall of Texas, shot on or about May 9, 1865, near Madison, Ga., by Stoneman's 12th Ohio cavalry; and McKenzie "Theodore" Parker of South Carolina, killed May 3 in Anderson, S.C., by Stoneman's rear guard. The last Confederate officer killed in action was probably Captain Charles Connor of Catawba County, N.C., who was shot April 17, by Stoneman's 10th Michigan cavalry as they rode through Newton, N.C. There were several Yankees killed later, including two by friendly fire in the capture of Jefferson Davis on May 10.


Who was the last veteran of Stoneman's Raid? 
William Magee of the 12th Ohio was one of the last three Union soldiers alive before he died January 23, 1953, at age 106. Magee was an 18-year-old bugler in the regimental band that serenaded the young ladies of Athens, Georgia, on May 4, 1865. The last combat veteran of the Civil War, a New York infantryman named James Hard, outlived Magee by 48 days.

Who was the last Medal of Honor winner of the Civil War?
Col. Charles Betts of the Fifteenth Pennsylvania received the award in 1892 for leading 75 men from Stoneman's Raid who captured the Third South Carolina Cavalry April 11, 1865, near Greensboro, N.C. Robert E. Lee had surrendered in Virginia two days earlier, but neither side had heard the news.


Where was the last Confederate skirmish east of the Mississippi?
Let's end where we began, with the long arm of the law—tall Bill Shumate in Greenville, S.C. Sheriff Shumate organized a small force of Confederate veterans who exchanged gunshots with the Union's Thirteenth Tennessee Volunteer Cavalry. The skirmish was May 22, 23, or 24, 1865 a
s the Yankees headed home from Georgia following Stoneman's Raid. There is no mention of the skirmish in Shumate's obituary nor in three books on the history of Greenville County, and there is no historical marker on the likely site near Crescent Avenue. In recent years, however, Union and Confederate accounts have been found that show that the Yankees were on the verge of executing three or four captured Greenvillians and burning down the town—until the Masons intervened.
William T. Shumate

Sunday, January 24, 2016

Revisiting the Lincoln-Calhoun debate

Judge Felix Alley's 1941 book tried to show the underlying resemblance between Lincoln and Calhoun.
CRAYTONVILLE, S.C.
 The last time The Stoneman Gazette delved into Abraham Lincoln's parentage, the Yankees were in Lincoln County, N.C., where it was widely rumored that that the president had been born in the hills nearby.
 Now that DNA tests have traced the lineage of Lincoln's mother, let's explore another possible root of Lincoln's family tree. This one involves John C. Calhoun, the South Carolina statesman who was known as the "Father of Secession."
 Could Calhoun have also been the father of the president who defeated secession?
 Indeed, it appears likely that Calhoun had a fling with a young lady named Nancy Hanks. She lived in Anderson County, S.C., and her ancestors and mine share the same graveyard.
 After further review, however, I would say it is unlikely that she was the same Nancy Hanks who married Thomas Lincoln and gave birth to Abe, not necessarily in that order.
 Unlikely—but not impossible.
Lloyd Ostendorf's 1963 portrait
 of the enigmatic Nancy Hanks Lincoln
 Nancy Hanks was not an uncommon name. After Lincoln disclosed his mother's name in his 1860 campaign biography, more than a dozen Nancy Hanks were mentioned as the possible mother of the president. Hanks families here and there were suddenly reminded of young Nancies who had moved west over a half-century earlier. "Do you think Lincoln's mother could have been OUR long-lost Nancy?" You can see how rumors got started.
 Similarly, Calhoun is just one of a dozen men who have been investigated as Lincoln's possible father. You can read about them in The Many-Sired Lincoln, a 1925 story in The American Mercury magazine by a University of North Carolina professor named J.G. de Roulhac Hamilton.
 Regarding Calhoun, Hamilton reported:
     At Craytonville, Anderson County, South Carolina, was a stage-road tavern kept by one Christopher Orr. In Orr’s employ was a girl from the neighborhood, named Nancy Hanks, who was possessed of unusual beauty. At Abbeville lived Calhoun, a young, unmarried lawyer who made frequent trips to Pendleton by way of Craytonville. When he reached Orr’s tavern he nearly always developed a sick headache of such severity as to compel his stopping. Presently it was discovered that Nancy, free of favors, of course, was the cause of his visits and that presumably he was responsible for the condition which led to her discharge, and to her rejection by her own people. Calhoun then bought a horse and saddle and sent her off with some horse-drovers to Kentucky, where she had an uncle. Two months later her child was born and named for her uncle, Abraham Hanks. Six months later, the ever-obliging Thomas Lincoln married her. A variant of this is that Thomas Lincoln came to South Carolina with the horse-traders and for a consideration agreed to take Nancy off Calhoun’s hands. A frill on the story is that Calhoun once left Washington on horseback, bound for Kentucky, ostensibly to visit Henry Clay, but really to see his son Abraham. The rumor does not indicate whether he admired him or not.
       There was undoubtedly a Nancy Hanks at Craytonville, but she never married Thomas Lincoln nor gave birth to Abraham Lincoln. She did marry and was living long after the death of Nancy Hanks Lincoln [in 1818]. Whether or not the story of her relations with Calhoun is true is a matter of no importance so far as Abraham Lincoln is concerned.
 The Calhoun-Hanks relationship is no secret to historians. Margaret Coit detailed it in her 1950 Pulitzer Prize-winning biography, John C. Calhoun, American Portrait. (Flip to pages 49-52.) She wrote that Hanks "may even have been related to the Kentucky girl who became the mother of Abraham Lincoln."
 Coit does not mention a pregnancy but says that Calhoun had lifelong regrets about the relationship, even suggesting that it may have haunted him in his own presidential aspirations.
 The key to the story, of course, is whether the Nancy Hanks from Craytonville was the same woman who gave birth to Lincoln. Some members of the Hanks and Calhoun families believed she was.
 However, the recent DNA tests have traced Nancy Hanks' bloodline to ancestors in Virginia, rather than South Carolina. She was the daughter of Lucy Hanks and the granddaughter of Ann and Joseph Hanks, a Virginia farmer. Lucy was 17 and unmarried when she gave birth to Nancy Hanks in 1784 in Virginia. A month later, Lucy’s father Joseph moved the entire family to Kentucky.
 Lincoln cited his mother's Virginia roots in biographical information he wrote in 1859 and 1860. Abe idolized his mother, who died in 1818 when he was just nine, though he hinted to his law partner and biographer that he might have been born out of wedlock.
 Calhoun’s Nancy evidently came from a different branch of the Hanks family that settled on the South Carolina frontier near the Anderson-Abbeville county line.
She was said to be the daughter of Luke and Ann Hanks, and many of her kin (and mine) are buried at the Ebenezer Methodist Church in lower Anderson County. Luke Hanks evidently was from Virginia, so it is possible that Calhoun's flame and Lincoln's mom were cousins.

 Hamilton concluded that Craytonville's Nancy Hanks moved to Huntsville, Ala., married a man named Richard South, and lived into the 1830s. If this is true, it would rule her out as Lincoln's mother, who died in 1818. However, I think this is incorrect. What I have found online indicates that Huntsville's Nancy Hanks South was born in 1768, while Craytonville's Nancy Hanks was born 19 years later in 1787. Lincoln said his mother was born in 1784.
 John C. Calhoun was born in 1782 and would have been a 26-year-old bachelor in 1808 when Lincoln was conceived. In 1811 he married one of his cousins, Floride Bonneau Colhoun, and they had 10 children. Their fourth child, Anna Maria Calhoun (1817-1875), married Thomas Green Clemson (1807-1888). After he outlived his family, old Tom Clemson specified in his will that Calhoun's Fort Hill plantation would become the Clemson Agricultural College of South Carolina. To this day, Mr. Clemson's will guides the selection of the university trustees.


This marker was erected in 2019 by the Belton Area Museum Association




Craytonville: A crossroads for Stoneman's Raid
 The Craytonville crossroads also had what-if implications for Stoneman's Raid. A battalion of the Fifteenth Pennsylvania Cavalry commanded by Medal of Honor winner Lt. Col. Charles Betts rode through Craytonville on May 2, 1865, on their way from Laurens to Anderson in search of Confederate President Jefferson Davis. Some of them were involved in a brief skirmish with rebels.
 If the westbound Yankees had turned south at Craytonville, they could have captured Davis 20 miles away in Abbeville. That same day, Davis was at the home of Armistead Burt, where he presided over the last cabinet meeting of the Confederacy. Davis eluded capture for eight more days.
 By the way, Jefferson Davis' father, Samuel Davis, was also among those implicated in The Many-Sired Lincoln. If that had been true, the rival Civil War presidents would have been half-brothers. 


The paternity case for John C. Calhoun

 Would you think more highly of John C. Calhoun if you knew he was Lincoln's daddy? It's an interesting premise that some of Calhoun's apologists tried to advance in the context of the "Lost Cause" following the Civil War.
 Among them was Armistead Burt (1802-1883), a five-term U.S. Congressman who was Davis' host at Abbeville. Burt had married Calhoun's favorite niece, Martha, so he knew the family secrets. According to some accounts, he confided with friends that he believed President Lincoln was the son of Calhoun and the Craytonville barmaid, Nancy Hanks.
 Judge Felix Alley of Waynesville, N.C., attempted to legally prove that Calhoun was Lincoln's father in his 1941 book, Random Thoughts and the Musings of a Mountaineer. (Flip to page 371). He made an interesting point when he said the Nancy Hanks of Craytonville was the niece (rather than the daughter) of the South Carolinians, Luke and Ann Hanks. If that was the case, it's possible that the Nancy Hanks in Craytonville was from the Virginia family identified by DNA tests. On the other hand, Alley thought Nancy's mother Lucy was actually a Shipley, and this was disproven by DNA.
 Judge Alley's research appears to be well-documented, but TIME magazine scoffed at his conclusions:
Last week a judge of North Carolina's Superior Court handed down his considered opinion that Abraham Lincoln was the illegitimate son of South Carolina's fire-breathing State's-righter John C. Calhoun. Since the day Lincoln was nominated for the Presidency, amateur historians of North Carolina's Great Smoky Mountains have tried to prove that he was illegitimate. The Calhoun theory was not new. When it was first advanced, in 1911, it was soon shown that the Nancy Hanks in the case eventually became a respectable Mrs. South.
 The Great Smoky Mountains Colloquy published "The Curious Paternity of Abraham Lincoln" in 2008, referencing several publications that traced Lincoln's roots to the Oconoluftee Valley near Cherokee, N.C.
 If you dare to Google, you can find even more. Here is a link to one account that appears to have been written in the 1960s. It is probably based on a series of newspaper articles by D.M. Knotts published in Columbia, S.C., in 1911, which in turn may have been based on 1893 stories in the Charlotte Observer. It is fascinating to read, but it is unsigned and includes several glaring historical errors, so I can't vouch for any of the testimonies or details. In particular, it refers to Abbeville courthouse records where Calhoun agreed to pay Hanks $100 per year to support an illegitimate son born February 12, 1809 (Lincoln's birthday). What's more, the legal witnesses included none other than Thomas Lincoln.
 Such a document would be a blockbuster, but as far as I know it does not exist. Many of Abbeville's historic court records were destroyed in a fire in 1872. 


I have overlaid red arrows on this 1845 map to show Calhoun's 50-mile route from Abbeville to Pendleton via Craytonville (labeled as Creytonville). Northwest of Pendleton, "J.C. Calhoun" marks the site of Fort Hill, which was Calhoun's plantation and is now the campus of Clemson University.
 
Blue arrows show the route of Stoneman's 15th Pennsylvania Cavalry. On May 2, 1865, they passed through Craytonville en route from Laurens (labeled as Laurensville) to Anderson. They missed a chance to capture Jefferson Davis, who was fleeing via Abbeville (yellow arrows).


To see the entire map, click here. It was drawn before the creation of Oconee County in 1868, Saluda in 1896, Greenwood and Cherokee in 1897, and McCormick in 1916.

Monday, November 16, 2015

Monument finally finds its way home

The new marker on Main Street in Blowing Rock
BLOWING ROCK, N.C.
 The state historical marker next to the quaint Blowing Rock 1888 Museum has a little history of its own. This is its second home, which seems appropriate if you know much about Blowing Rock.
The same marker was originally erected 50 miles away in Roaring River, a quiet crossroads in Wilkes County named for a rushing tributary of the Yadkin River.
Marker N10 previously stood in Roaring River
(photo by Michael Wilcox)
Stoneman's troops passed through both locations (Blowing Rock twice), but the date on the marker and the reference to Gen. Alvan Gillem make it obvious it was intended for Blowing Rock when it was cast in 2012.
Our reference points: 
March 28, 1865, Blowing Rock: Gen. Gillem led Stoneman's 2nd and 3rd Brigades southbound from Boone through the Watauga Gap, which is where U.S. 321 now crosses the Eastern Continental Divide. The next day, those troops burned Patterson's Mill at the foot of the mountain and marched east along the Yadkin River. At Wilkesboro, Col. William Palmer and the 1st Brigade crossed to the north bank, but fast-rising floods stranded the rest of Stoneman's cavalry on the south side. The divided forces continued downstream on opposite sides of the Yadkin.
March 31, Roaring River: Following days of torrential rain, the Roaring River was living up to its name when Col. Palmer and his troops had to cross it—three days later than the date on the plaque that once marked the spot. The next day, the troops stranded on the south bank of the Yadkin (including Gen. Gillem) began fording the swollen river from Jonesville to Elkin and launched their invasion into Virginia.
April 17-18, Blowing Rock: After leaving Gen. Gillem in charge of mop-up operations east of the Blue Ridge, Gen. Stoneman passed through Blowing Rock as he headed northbound from Lenoir, leading a thousand Confederate prisoners to the Union headquarters in Knoxville.
One of the rebel prisoners was killed during the latter trip through Blowing Rock, according to this account written in 1891 by Albert Stacey Caison, who was captured twice by the Yankees, first at Gettysburg in 1863 and again back home in Lenoir on April 15, 1865.
     I was at home one month when Stoneman made his raid through the county and came to Lenoir. I was in the yard in my shirt-sleeves when I first saw the Yankees, and might have made my escape, but thinking they were our Home Guard, I deliberately walked around the house in full view of them, and saw my mistake when the guns were pointed at me, and I could only throw up my hands in token of surrender. I was carried right off, without a coat, and was all night without coat or blanket, and almost frozen. They issued no rations, but my mother was allowed to supply me with food. My sister went with my parole to General Gilliam and begged him to release me, but he refused to do it. This was Easter-eve, 1865. On Monday [April 17], we marched twenty miles up the Blue Ridge and camped at Yadkin spring, where we received our first rations—a half-ear of corn for each prisoner—for twenty-four hours. And this in a land not yet despoiled of provisions, where our captors had plenty to spare. I had some remains of my lunch, and did not want the corn; but half a dozen famished men were eager for it. Next morning we were turned over to [Col. George] Kirk and marched on to Boone.
     At Estes's school-house Lieutenant [John] Shotwell and two other men made their escape, and but for an open path to the school-house would have been safe. When discovered, two surrendered, and Shotwell was captured just as he gave a sign of surrender. Kirk, with characteristic cruelty, said, "Damn him; shoot him!" and his orders were obeyed; and this gallant young soldier was murdered right before our eyes and left lying as he had fallen. A friend of his begged to be allowed to go to him, and when permission was given he went and straightened his body and took $50 in gold out of his boot, intending to send it to young Shotwell's father; but was soon relieved of it by an officer, and Mr. Shotwell never saw it. I was one who went with this broken-hearted man in search of his son’s body many months afterwards. Murder and robbery was the order of the day with Kirk’s band. At Boone, while gathered around the courthouse, Kirk rode into our midst, called us “cowards, cut-throats, damned rebels,” and every vile thing he could think of, and threatened the most horrible vengeance if we attempted to escape.”
The Estes school-house probably was in the vicinity of the Chetola resort. Lot Estes bought 100 acres there in 1846, and he and his son L.W. "Len" Estes" built the original pond to power a mill shortly after the war. Estes developed one of Blowing Rock's first hotels, called Silverlake, and I presume the school was also on the property. L.W. Estes would have been about 24 at the time of the raid and 54 when he left Blowing Rock for Oregon, where his son settled. Estes "looked like General Grant," according to John Arthur's history of Watauga County. (If you know the exact location of the Estes school-house, please add a comment.)
The plaque was relocated from Roaring River to Blowing Rock in 2014 as a replacement for the original marker that was "scrapped" during highway construction.
Who knows why it was placed in Roaring River in the first place?
At least it's not the only Stoneman marker with issues.