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Barbourville
September 19, 1861 Knox County, KY Campaign:
Opening Skirmishes in the West
Capt. Isaac J. Black, USA Col. Joel A. Battle, CSA
There were about 300 Home Guards against Battle's regiment-sized
force. Casualties were light, 15 for the North and a handful of
Southerners.
Kentucky Union sympathizers had trained recruits at Camp Andrew Johnson, in
Barbourville, throughout the summer of 1861. Confederate Brig. Gen. Felix
Zollicoffer entered Kentucky in mid-September intending to relieve pressure on
Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston and his troops by conducting raids and generally
constituting a threat to Union forces and sympathizers in the area. On September
18, 1861, he dispatched a force of about 800 men under command of Col. Joel A.
Battle to disrupt the training activities at Camp Andrew Johnson. At daylight on
the 19th, the force entered Barbourville and found the recruits gone; they had
been sent to Camp Dick Robinson. A small home guard force commanded by Capt.
Isaac J. Black met the Rebels, and a sharp skirmish ensued. After dispersing the
home guard, the Confederates destroyed the training camp and seized arms found
there. This was, for all practical purposes, the first encounter of the war in
Kentucky. The Confederates were making their might known in the state,
countering the early Union presence.
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