NC State Brochure cover side - North Carolina Civil War
Transcription
NC State Brochure cover side - North Carolina Civil War
O 221 Other Civil War Trails Site 268 21 Information or Welcome Center 421 Siloam 74 Rockford Boone 421 Fort Hamby 601 Wilkesboro T E N N E S S E E 421 321 19W 77 General George Stoneman Patterson Mill 21 40 Hot Springs (Warm Springs Hotel) 213 Marshall (Col. Allen House) 64 SmithMcDowell House 18 Vance Birthplace Statesville Hickory 70 Morganton 70 21 Salisbury (Rowan County Courthouse) 64 Old Fort (Swannanoa Gap) Canton (Locust Field Cemetery) 16 40 ASHE VI L L E 74A 601 64 Rocky Ford Engagement Carson House Marion 40 Lenoir (St. James Church) 64 26 25 Waynesville (Multiple Sites) 221 Mars Hill College 70 Taylorsville 64 19E Burnsville (John McElroy House) 321 221 Chimney Rock Village (Hickory Nut Gorge) 52 16 85 276 Lincolnton 74A Cottage Home 77 26 64 Rutherfordton 273 29 74B 27 601 1861 C A R O L I N A 77 June 10 Battle of Big Bethel, Va. July 21 First Battle of Manassas, Va. October 21 Battle of Ball’s Bluff, Va. ★ ★ ★ ★ 1862 June 26–July 1 Seven Days’ Battles, Va. August 28–30 Second Battle of Manassas, Va. 1 95 70 401 F U.S. rifled cannon battery firing on Fort Macon on April 25, 1862, Union batteries and gunboats bombarded Fort Macon for eleven hours. The Confederates ran up the white flag at 4:30 p.m., and formally surrendered the following morning. the generals marched north and bested Gen. John Pope’s force at the Second Battle of Manassas in August. Lee then invaded western Maryland to rally support, supply his army, and gain foreign recognition for the Confederacy. His hopes were dashed at Antietam Creek on September 17, 1862, the bloodiest day in American history, and he retreated to Virginia. President Abraham Lincoln soon issued the Emancipation Proclamation, making the conflict a war for freedom as well as for the preservation of the Union. Freedmen and escaped slaves throughout the East flocked to the Union colors and joined regiments of United States Colored Troops (USCTs). In 1863, after Lee’s victory at Chancellorsville in May and the death of Jackson, Lee marched north again through Maryland and into Pennsylvania. When he confronted Union Gen. George G. Meade’s army at Gettysburg, the Confederate tide was turned back again. North Carolinians, meanwhile, experienced both conventional and unconventional warfare. Near the coast, Federal expeditions disrupted Confederate supply lines, temporarily disabled railroads, and destroyed manufacturing centers. In the western mountains, neighbor fought neighbor as Unionists and Confederates conducted a bloody “war within a war.” Union commander-in-chief Gen. Ulysses S. Grant launched simultaneous attacks in the spring of 1864 against the Confederates throughout the South. He accompanied Meade’s army in Virginia during the Overland Campaign, maneuvered Lee ever closer to Richmond, and finally besieged him there and at Petersburg. A succession of Federal commanders pressed Confederate forces in the Shenandoah Valley and laid waste to the “Breadbasket of the Confederacy.” Gen. Philip H. Sheridan eventually swept the Shenandoah clear of Confederates under Gen. Jubal A. Early. In southwestern Virginia, eastern Tennessee, and western North Carolina, Union cavalry raided salt works and railroads. Gen. William T. Sherman, in the Deep Mitchener Station 40 301 Smithfield U.S. Line of March General William T. Sherman 421 501 15 Averasboro Battlefield Museum C.S. 3rd Line Old Bluff Church 1 Hastings 70 To House Kinston Hannah’s Creek Village of C.S. Line Bentonville of March 301 Merging of Dunn Route to the Armies Bentonville Bentonville 117 Battlefield Departing Averasboro 401 13 40 295 FAYETTEVIL L E (Multiple Sites) 501 401 301 15 Murdoch Morrison Gun Factory Wagram Bethel Church Laurel Hill Church Cheraw Laurel Hill 401 117 95 Laurinburg Stewart-HawleyMalloy House 1863 General Joseph E. Johnston June 10–July 14 Gettysburg Campaign, Va., Md., Pa. July 1–3 Battle of Gettysburg, Pa. July 18–23 Potter’s Raid, N.C. ★ ★ ★ ★ WAR WITHIN THE WAR S ecession and war divided western North Carolinians, and neighbors and families quickly came to blows as angry words gave way to fists and guns. Confederate conscription acts fostered resistance, the mountains sheltered deserters from both sides, and armed bands brutally settled scores. Western North Carolina and East Tennessee also produced two notable leaders, one Confederate and one Unionist. Confederate Col. William H. Thomas of North Carolina, the only white man to serve as a Cherokee chief, had helped establish the Qualla Boundary (Eastern Band of Cherokee reservation) north of Franklin. He organized Thomas’s Legion of Cherokee Indians and Mountaineers in Knoxville, Tennessee, in 1862, with 400 Cherokee in two of his companies. It fought in Tennessee, Kentucky, and Virginia and largely prevented the Federal occupation of western North Carolina. In 1864, Maj. George W. Kirk, a Unionist native of Greeneville in East Tennessee, organized the 3rd North Carolina Mounted Infantry (U.S.). He recruited men and boys from western North Carolina, especially in nearby Madison County, as well as in East Tennessee. Kirk and his men became famous, or infamous, for their raids on Confederate sympathizers and training camps in western North Carolina. “James Bennett’s House, Where Johnston Surrendered,” Harper’s Weekly South, first captured Atlanta and then marched to the sea, occupying Savannah. The Carolinas, South and North, felt the weight of Sherman’s boot early in 1865. Fort Fisher, the “Gibraltar of the South” that protected the blockade-running capital of Wilmington, N.C., fell in mid-January, cutting the supply lifeline to Lee in Virginia. Grant, meanwhile, forced Lee’s lines westward around Petersburg until they finally broke at Five Forks on April 1, a week and a half after Sherman almost crushed Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston’s army at Bentonville, North Carolina. Lee evacuated Petersburg and Richmond and marched his dwindling army west, hoping to turn south and join Johnston. Grant blocked his way, however, and cornered him at Appomattox Court House, where Lee surrendered on April 9. The Confederate government fled south through North Carolina. In Washington, John Wilkes Booth assassinated Lincoln on April 14 at Ford’s Theater, then fled through southeastern Maryland to Virginia, where he was shot and killed on April 26. On that same day, at Bennett Place near Raleigh, North Carolina, Johnston surrendered to Sherman, essentially ending the Civil War. ★ ★ ★ ★ 1864 13 Point Harbor Fort Branch Rocky Mount Tarboro (Multiple Sites) 64 Princeville 264 301 Tranters Creek Greenville Grimsley Church (N or th Ca rol i na Scuffleton Bridge Black Jack Hookerton 17 St. John’s Kinston Church (Multiple Sites) RR ) 117 Mount Olive Washington (Multiple Sites) 258 Goldsboro 13 (Multiple Sites) General John G. Foster Wyse Fork Union Attack 70 at Southwest Creek Engagement at Whitehall New Bern (Multiple Sites) 258 17 Confederate States Armory 40 70 Jacksonville (Cushing’s New River Raid) Bogue Sound Block House 17 To Wilmington Huggins Island Battery at Hammocks Beach SP North Carolina Historic Sites 919-733-7862 www.nchistoricsites.org North Carolina Museum of History 919-807-7900 www.ncmuseumofhistory.org Civil War Preservation Trust 888-606-1400 www.civilwar.org Duplin County TDC 910-296-2181 www.duplintourism.org Elizabeth City CVB 866-324-8948 www.discoverec.org COASTAL REGION Greene County C. of C. 252-747-8090 www.greenechamber.com Brunswick County 800-795-7263 www.ncbrunswick.com Greenville-Pitt County CVB 800-537-5564 www.visitgreenvillenc.com Cape Fear Coast CVB 877-945-6386 www.explorecapefearcoast.com Kinston-Lenoir County CVB 800-869-0032 www.visitkinston.com Martin County TTA 800-776-8566 www.visitmartincounty.com Davidson Co. Historical Museum 336-242-2035 www.visitdavidsoncounty.com New Bern/Craven County CVB 800-437-5767 www.visitnewbern.com Durham CVB 800-446-8604 www.durham-nc.com Onslow County Tourism 800-932-2144 www.onslowcountytourism.com Edgecombe ARTS 252-823-4159 www.edgecombearts.org Perquimans County C. of C. 252-426-5657 www.perquimans.com Fayetteville Area CVB 800-255-8217 www.visitfayettevillenc.com Washington County Travel and Tourism 252-793-3248 www.visitwashington countync.com Greater Goldsboro Travel and Tourism 919-734-2245 www.greatergoldsboro.com Washington TDA 800-999-3857 www.originalwashington.com Cherokee veterans of Thomas’s Legion at the 1903 Confederate Reunion in New Orleans. PIEDMONT REGION Averasboro Battlefield & Museum 910-891-5019 www.averasboro.com Fort Macon, in Carteret Co., surrendered to Union forces on April 26, 1862. Bentonville Battlefield 910-594-0789 www.bentonvillebattlefield. nchistoricsites.org Greater Raleigh CVB 800-849-8499 www.visitraleigh.com Halifax County TDA 800-522-4282 www.visithalifax.com Johnston County Visitors Bureau 800-441-7829 www.johnstoncountync.org Laurinburg/Scotland County Area C. of C. 910-276-7420 www.laurinburgchamber.com Newport Barracks Carolina City Civil War Trails Site Beaufort Hoop Pole Fort Macon Creek State Park Information or Welcome Center RAIDS AGAINST THE LIFELINE N orth Carolina’s factories supplied Confederate armies with shoes, clothing, weapons, and other necessities during the war. In addition, ships loaded with European goods ran the Union blockade of the Southern coastline to such ports as Wilmington, North Carolina, guarded by Fort Fisher. A network of rail lines, especially the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad and the Petersburg Railroad (also called the Weldon Railroad), transported supplies to Gen. Robert E. Lee’s army in Virginia. After Federal forces occupied most of North Carolina’s barrier islands and coastline in 1862, they attacked the state’s railroads, factories, and naval facilities. In December 1862, Union Gen. John G. Foster marched from New Bern to Goldsboro and burned the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad bridge. Union Gen. Edward E. Potter, raiding from New Bern in July 1863, destroyed mills, trains, and bridges, including the Wilmington and Weldon Railroad bridge at Rocky Mount. The Confederates quickly restored rail service after each raid. In October 1864, U.S. Navy Lt. William B. Cushing destroyed the ironclad CSS Albemarle at Plymouth, in one of several attacks on river defenses. By August 1864, Wilmington was the last major Confederate seaport open to blockade runners. After two attempts, Union forces captured Fort Fisher on January 15, 1865, then secured rail centers such as Goldsboro. Lee’s supply line was cut, and the war ended three months later. January 15 Surrender of Fort Fisher, N.C. September 29 Battle of Chaffin’s Farm and New Market Heights, Va. June 22–30 Wilson-Kautz Raid, Va. ★ 1865 February 1–April 26 Sherman’s Carolinas Campaign, S.C. and N.C. March 19–21 Battle of Bentonville, N.C. March 24–April 26 Stoneman’s Raid, Va. and N.C. April 1 Battle of Five Forks, Va. April 2–3 Fall of Petersburg and Richmond, Va., Lee’s Retreat Begins, Va. May 2–October 19 Shenandoah Valley Campaigns, Va. September 19 Third Battle of Winchester, Va. October 19 Battle of Cedar Creek, Va. October 27 Cushing Torpedoes CSS Albermarle, N.C. ★ Lincolnton-Lincoln County C. of C. 704-735-3096 www.lincolnchambernc.org Harper House, at Bentonville Battlefield State Historic Site in Johnston Co., was a field hospital. Hatteras (Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum) Kenansville North Carolina Division of Tourism, Film & Sports Development 4324 Mail Service Center Raleigh, NC 27699-4324 800-VISITNC www.visitnc.com Dismal Swamp Canal Welcome Center 252-771-8333 www.dismalswamp.com Roanoke Island Festival Park Plymouth (Multiple Sites) 64 Falkland Lexington TA 866-604-2389 www.visitlexingtonnc.com Currituck C. of C. and Visitors Center 252-453-9497 www.currituckchamber.com Freedmen’s Colony Williamston (Asa Biggs House) The following further explore and expand upon the story of the Civil War: North Carolina Office of Archives and History 919-807-7280 www.ah.dcr.state.nc.us Edenton (Battle of Albemarle Sound) 17 64 THE CIVIL WAR REVISITED Crystal Coast TA 800-786-6962 www.sunnync.com 158 95 May 15 Battle of New Market, Va. May 26–June 21 Hunter’s Raid, Va. Chowan County TDA 800-775-0111 www.visitedenton.com Hertford (USCT Monument) 258 May 4–June 20 Overland Campaign, Va. May 5–6 Battle of the Wilderness, Va. May 8–19 Battle of Spotsylvania Court House, Va. May 31–June 12 Battle of Cold Harbor, Va. June 15 Siege of Petersburg begins, Va. May 1–3 Battle of Chancellorsville, Va. May 10 Death of Stonewall Jackson, Va. June 9 Battle of Brandy Station, Va. Moyock Knotts Island Henry Currituck County CH Shaw Maple House Battle of Elizabeth City Albemarle & Museum of the Albemarle Chesapeake Canal Indiantown Creek Bridge Wingfield Battle of South Mills 17 April 17–20 Battle of Plymouth, N.C. October 14 Battle of Bristoe Station, Va. THE EASTERN CAMPAIGNS rom the beginning of the Civil War until its end, the proximity of the national capitals—Washington, D.C., and Richmond, Virginia—made the Eastern Seaboard a center of military activity. Union blood was first shed in the Baltimore Riots of April 19, 1861, and some of the last Confederate casualties of the war fell in North Carolina four years later. The tides of war swept over Maryland, Virginia, and North Carolina again and again. Confederate President Jefferson Davis directed a defensive war at first. When U.S. forces marched into northern Virginia in July 1861, the result was a stunning Confederate victory at Manassas Junction. The Federals fared better along the northeastern coast of North Carolina, where Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside defeated Confederate gunboats and land forces. Gen. George B. McClellan led a massive U.S. army up the Peninsula against Richmond in the spring of 1862, but Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee repulsed it near the city limits in the Seven Days’ Battles in June. In the Shenandoah Valley, meanwhile, Gen. Thomas J. “Stonewall” Jackson defeated several Union armies before joining Lee at Richmond. Together, The Market House, Fayetteville Photo: John S. Salmon 485 RA L EIG H (Multiple Sites) 64 January 11–March 14 Burnside Expedition, N.C. September 4–19 Antietam Campaign, Va., Md., W.Va. February 8 Battle of Roanoke Island, N.C. September 14 Battle of South Mountain, Md. March 14 Battle of New Bern, N.C. September 17 Battle of Antietam, Md. March 9 Battle of Hampton Roads (Monitor vs. Virginia), Va. December 13 Battle of Fredericksburg, Va. March 23–June 9 Jackson’s Shenandoah Valley Campaign, Va. April 4–June 25 Peninsula Campaign, Va. December 11–18 Foster’s Raid, N.C. April 12 Shots fired at Fort Sumter, Charleston, S.C. April 15 President Abraham Lincoln calls for volunteers to suppress “insurrection” April 17 Virginia secedes April 19 Baltimore Riots May 21 North Carolina secedes NORTH CAROLINA 74 440 R) n R S O U T H 70 501 Jackson (Battle of Boone’s Mill) Historic Halifax CSS Albemarle 301 ldo C HAR LOTTE 401 40 We n & 85 25 Information or Welcome Center n December 21, 1864, Union Gen. William T. Sherman completed his “March to the Sea” and captured Savannah, Georgia. He soon headed north through the Carolinas, planning ultimately to link his army with those that Union general-in-chief Ulysses S. Grant accompanied in Virginia. Sherman marched into South Carolina on February 1, 1865. Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston concentrated his forces in central North Carolina. Sherman divided his army into left and right wings and entered the Tar Heel State early in March. Union Gen. John M. Schofield’s troops, en route to Goldsboro from Wilmington, repulsed Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg’s forces at Wyse Fork near Kinston on March 8–10. Sherman occupied Fayetteville the next day, then marched north. On March 16, Confederate Gen. William J. Hardee delayed Sherman’s left wing near Averasboro. Johnston attacked Sherman three days later at Bentonville, where the Confederates at first routed the lead Federal division. The two Union wings then merged and almost severed Johnston’s line of retreat on March 21. He withdrew toward Smithfield that night, and Sherman reached Goldsboro and Schofield on March 23. Sherman advanced toward Raleigh on April 10, while Johnston retreated to Greensboro. Learning of Gen. Robert E. Lee’s April 9 surrender at Appomattox Court House, they came to terms on April 26 at Bennett Place near Durham after much negotiation. Johnston surrendered almost 90,000 Confederate troops in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida. 158 Winton Wilmington & Weldon RR gto 221 176 64 49 O Carolinas Campaign Driving Route 540 Murfreesboro (Roberts-Vaughn House) Roanoke Canal 158 1 min 74 Civil War Trails Site ( W il Hendersonville The Last Encampment Bennett Place Leigh Farm The Mountaineer 213 n March 24, 1865, Union Gen. George Stoneman led 6,000 cavalrymen from Tennessee into western North Carolina and southwestern Virginia to disrupt the Confederate supply line by destroying sections of the Virginia and Tennessee Railroad, the North Carolina Railroad, and the Piedmont Railroad. He also sought to liberate Union prisoners-ofwar held in Salisbury and hoped to deprive the Confederate armies of supplies, cut off avenues of retreat, and encourage Unionists in western and central North Carolina. Stoneman struck at Boone on March 28, then divided his force and sent part into Virginia on April 2; it returned to North Carolina a week later. On April 12, the Federals occupied Salisbury and burned the already abandoned prison, as well as public buildings, industrial structures, and supply depots. Stoneman moved west the next day, dividing his command again in the face of limited resistance. Other than a fight at Swannanoa Gap, Stoneman and his cavalrymen encountered only bushwhackers and isolated groups of Confederate soldiers. Stoneman’s forces approached Asheville on April 23, negotiated a truce, and rode through the streets on April 26, while Confederate Gen. Joseph E. Johnston surrendered to Union Gen. William T. Sherman near Durham. Two days later, part of Stoneman’s force returned to Asheville to loot. Other elements either continued to Tennessee or joined the pursuit of Confederate President Jefferson Davis into Georgia. Stoneman’s Raid had ended. Duke Homestead D U RH A M Durham’s Station Brassfield Station 85 ★ ★ Wilkes County C. of C. 336-838-8662 www.wilkesnc.org Orange County Visitor Center 919-732-7741 www.historichillsborough.org Caldwell County C. of C./TDA 800-737-0782 www.caldwellcochamber.org Rockingham County TDA 800-316-7625 www.ncnorthstar.com Franklin Area C. of C. 877-254-2583 www.franklin-chamber.com Rowan County CVB 800-332-2343 www.visitsalisburync.com Graham County TTA 800-470-3790 www.grahamcountytravel.com Statesville CVB 877-531-1819 www.visitstatesville.org The North Carolina, Virginia and Maryland Civil War Trails programs invite you to explore both well-known and less familiar sites associated with America’s greatest drama. Together, more than 750 places tell the epic and heart-felt stories of civilians and soldiers who experienced triumph and tragedy during the war. This map-guide identifies nearly 200 sites throughout North Carolina. Each site is interpreted and accessible and encourages you to explore diverse settings where America’s destiny was forged. Entire Trails and regions can be explored at your own pace, and many sites offer other historical and recreational opportunities. Enjoy one of the numerous walking tours available in many communities. Solicit the services of an outfitter for a once-in-a-lifetime adventure through the scenic and historic countryside. Shop at one of hundreds of antique and specialty shops, dine in 19th century taverns and inns, or simply walk amid the serenity of a preserved battlefield and let the stories you’ve discovered ignite your imagination as you envision how now peaceful landscapes were once the scenes of the deadliest battles known to man. For more detailed travel information, visit any North Carolina, Virginia or Maryland Welcome Center or local Visitor Center, or contact any of the organizations listed in this guide. For additional Civil War Trails information, visit www.civilwartrails.org. Asheville CVB 800-920-1437 www.exploreasheville.com Burke County TTC 888-462-2921 www.burkecountytourism.org Haywood County TDA 800-334-9036 www.smokeymountains.net Jackson County TTA 800-962-1911 www.mountainlovers.com Madison County TDA 877-262-3476 www.visitmadisoncounty.com North Carolina State Capitol Building, Raleigh Maggie Valley Area Visitors Bureau 800-624-4431 www.maggievalley.org Stokes County ED 336-593-2496 www.stokescounty.org McDowell County TDA 888-233-6111 www.mcdowellnc.org Thomasville Tourism Commission 800-611-9907 www.thomasvilletourism.com Rutherford County TDA 800-849-5998 www.rutherfordtourism.com Vance County Tourism 252-438-2222 www.kerrlake-nc.com Yadkin Valley C. of C. 336-526-1111 www.yadkinvalley.org Yancey County/Burnsville C. of C. 800-948-1632 www.visityancey.com Follow this sign to discover more than 750 Civil War sites along ten breathtaking trails. Hundreds of sites are accessible to the public for the fi firrst time. How to Use this Map-Guide MOUNTAIN REGION Northampton County C. of C. 252-534-1383 www.northamptonchamber.org April 9 Robert E. Lee surrenders at Appomattox Court House, Va. April 10 Last Confederate Cabinet Meeting, Danville, Va. April 14 John Wilkes Booth assassinates President Abraham Lincoln, flees through Southern Maryland April 26 Gen. Joseph E. Johnston surrenders near Durham, N.C. April 26 John Wilkes Booth killed near Port Royal, Va. BALTIMORE WASHINGTON, D.C. RICHMOND RALEIGH 85 95 NORTH CAROLINA TRAILS INFORMATION 1.800. VISIT NC www.visitnc.com ★★★ VIRGINIA TRAILS INFORMATION 1.888 . CIVILWAR www.virginia.org Follow these signs to more than 750 Civil War sites in North Carolina, Virginia, and Maryland ★★★ MARYLAND TRAILS INFORMATION Enjoy the scenic and historic countryside throughout North Carolina. Brochure Design by Communication Design, Inc., Richmond, VA 40 Roanoke Canal Museum CAROLINAS CAMPAIGN 85 © 2007 Virginia Civil War Trails, Inc. Stoneman’s Raid Civil War Trails Site West Point Hillsborough STONEMAN’S RAID 1.888 . CIVILWR www.visitmaryland.org H B ER TH R D UL SIS KC NN 701 295 11 306 New Bern Academy Hospital John Wright Stanly House Jones House Union Point Park 258 New Bern Battlefield 11 REE MS C D EK R RE ASHEVILLE Canton (Locust Field Cemetery) Cashiers (Zachary-Tolbert House) 178 Sandford House 17 ST Fort Johnston Carolina Beach State Park Fort Fisher Battery Buchanan John Wright Stanly House Jones House SOUT H FRO To Cameron Art Museum 76 Fort Macon State Park on al Se as ho re oo ko ut Na ti Hoop Pole Creek Cape Lookout Lighthouse R I V E R Ocracoke Lighthouse “The importance of the point [Hatteras] cannot be overrated. … From there the whole coast of Virginia and North Carolina … is within our reach. … From it offensive operations may be made upon the whole coast of North Carolina … extending many miles inland. … In the language of … an official report, ‘it is the key of the Albemarle.’” Gen. Benjamin F. Butler, U.S. Army, Aug. 30, 1861 Attmore-Oliver House Tryon Palace ST GE ST AR ND EN CH Cat Hole of the Neuse 70 LI BUS 70 17 Stall’s Battery 11 NEW BERN V R I E R 0 5 10 15 20 Mileage Scale Union Point Park Wyse Fork 258 New Bern Battlefield (4 miles) Bald Head Island Confederate Retreat E N E U Last Mass Confederate Union Capture Line of Defense POLLOCK ST NT ST DAWSON ST. To Fort Fisher N ras CSS Neuse Historic Site EAST FRONT ST F E A R Free Ferry BROAD ST BERN ST E R R I V 17TH ST 4TH ST 16TH ST Cape Fear Museum WOOSTER ST. PER SON 421 Fort Anderson Remains of the Ironclad CSS Neuse, CSS Neuse Historic Site, Kinston NEW ST CRAVEN ST Fayetteville Independent Light Infantry Parade Grounds Wilmington National Cemetery ST MIDDLE ST AN NS T GREE N ST Market House 24 74 17 N EE QU HANCOCK ST L S T MARKET ST Bellamy Mansion New Bern Academy Hospital METCALF ST ST 87 PRINCESS ST Forks Road Engagement at Cameron Art Museum JOHNSON ST EDEN ST IN 133 CHESTNUT ST GRO VE S T C y Ferr eH ap e att CSS Albemarle 76 WILMINGTON Oakdale Cemetery GRACE ST 3RD ST AVE RAY T NS ROB NKL SEL COO L SP RIN ALE G S XAN T DER ST 64 401 FRA RUS GILL ESPIE ST DIC KS T EW AY FRE JR . THE 276 MA IDE NL AN E OLD ST 301 Cross Creek Cemetery ST Macon Co. Historical Museum ROW AN ST W 64 25 LAM ON ST MAS ON ST (At WWII Memorial) HAY ST WILMINGTON Wilmington Railroad Museum 70 Huggins Island Battery at Hammocks Beach State Park 117 76 GE ST 176 Museum of the Cape Fear MO ORE ST BO 74 64 74 FAYETTEVILLE 12 rry 17 GEOR ARSENAL AVE Edward Hale House BRADFORD AVE M A RT IN LU RK AY Franklin (Dixie Hall) W ROWAN ST R KI 64 PA W Thomas’s Legion 19B NG 26 GE 441 87 301 ST E D National Forest RAMSEY BLU 276 Pisgah ORANGE ST 24 D NR ISO RCH MU VD BL G AG BR Greenhill Cemetery RI 211 58 74A ESO Battle House 23 74 40 Sergeant Powhatan Beaty, 5th U.S.C.T. Beaty’s regiment fought at the Forks Road engagement on Feb. 20-21, 1865, against the last Confederate stand before the Federals captured Wilmington on Feb. 22. 40 Waynesville Engagement 74 129 421 Vance Birthplace C A P E L 276 23 CHEROHALA SKYW AY SmithMcDowell House N . E R 19 19 Confederate States Armory sword guard cast in letters CSA, Confederate States Armory, Kenansville, North Carolina Courtesy Liberty Hall, Kenansville, N.C. Fe re sho (Graveyard of the Sea Atlantic Museum) l a n atio R Great Smoky Mountains National Park Nantahala National Forest Lumberton Hatteras To ll R F E A PA 25 R Carolina City Morehead City Beaufort 24 E RIV 26 301 E Barracks Bogue Sound Block House W 70 74 IV E . C A P E A Mars Hill College N R) n R Marshall (Col. Allen House) R 501 9 213 R ldo Hot Springs (Warm Springs Hotel) E e & W 213 Maggie Valley (Kirk’s Raid) 129 Stewart-HawleyMalloy House AP Colonel William H. Thomas Courtesy North Carolina Office of Archives and History Robbinsville (Civil War in Graham County) 401 Cheraw 101 70 Newport Jacksonville Cushing’s New River Raid on 79 Laurinburg Ferry 12 Havelock ngt N 95 RD Cape Hatteras Lighthouse S O U N D I V IRE DW OL Free Ferry 58 17 Laurel Hill Church Laurel Hill 19W Cedar Island NWR I V E R 117 lmi HIA Murdoch Morrison Gun Factory 74 (Wi C LA 1 Bethel Church B William H. Thomas to his wife, June 17, 1861 52 E R E R Wagram 601 S Confederate States Armory M L U “The mountains of Western North Carolina would be the center of the Confederacy; we shall then have one of the most prosperous countries in the world. It will become connected with every part of the South by railroad. It will then become the center of manufacturing for the Southern market [and] the place where the southern people will spend their money, educate their children, and very probably make laws for the nation.” I TR 87 Toll Croatan National Forest 15 Rockingham U 41 Kenansville 301 12 Lantern recovered fron the USS Monitor, Graveyard of the Atlantic Museum. Courtesy NOAA S 74 401 211 501 Attmore-Oliver House Museum 70 58 24 ay P A M L I C O New Bern FAY E T T E V I L L E 77 Pea Island NWR E Cherokee Indian Chuttahsotee’s rifle, Thomas’s Legion Courtesy Macon County Historical Museum Confederate Wyse Fork Line of Defense Union Attack at Southwest Creek 40 421 264 17 N Market House and square in Fayetteville, late 19th century. Courtesy North Carolina State Archive Bodie Island Lighthouse 118 DU 210 Roanoke Island Alligator River NWR A L L I G A T O R LVD RD 82 13 w Roanoke Island Festival Park 64 Swanquarter NWR Cap eL (P 485 Engagement at Whitehall 55 Mount Olive W r ate NAGS HEAD 264 R IV ER S o u t h w e s t Civil War Trails Site e e k REE MS C MI B A D ) RR ied mo nt Church ST 178 74 87 S Lake Wylie 111 55 Jockey’s Ridge State Park General Benjamin F. Butler 117 Departing Averasboro 158 Lake Mattamuskeet NWR Cat Hole CSS Neuse Kinston Historic Site Confederate Retreat Last Mass Union Capture Stall’s Battery 581 13 AM 276 401 Old Bluff R PE AR D ST 24 601 55 ER US HO ON CHARLOTTE Dunn DIS 25 Averasboro Battlefield Museum C.S. 3rd Line Merging of the Armies Bentonville Battlefield ST 210 85 Route to Bentonville Grifton St. John’s Church RD AD 27 AN TON 49 58 Battle of Goldsboro Bridge LI CO 43 HA NR AH Hookerton M PLYMOUTH A Y 301 13 Goldsboro Wayne County Museum PA tal 64 R W T E W A 87 501 15 Hannah’s Creek Village of Bentonville 11 123 coas Siege of Washington Black Jack R V E R I 27 ACK RD TR CE Concord RA 221 176 24 C.S. Line of March L VI 27 109 DE 29 74B 74 421 52 Lowesville Willow Dale Cemetery I n t er Washington USS Picket 99 R Kannapolis 273 Rutherfordton 70 Oakdale Cemetery 33 Scuffleton Bridge Grimsley Church Hastings House Greenville 903 258 U.S. Line of March 26 64 Mitchener Station Smithfield 210 74A National Forest 264 H R T 220 77 Cottage Home E 40 Alligator Lake 32 301 264 401 Pocosin Lakes NWR Tranters Creek 12 O Harris Lake I V 70 70 Lincolnton Somerset Place Phelps Lake Falkland ST Freedmen’s Colony 43 Wilson 95 BUS 85 R 276 301 Clayton 221 Chimney Rock Village (Hickory Nut Gorge) Pisgah “Battle of Bentonville,” Harper’s Weekly 4TH 158 Creswell 64 ST Point Harbor Columbia Plymouth Asa Biggs House 64A Garner 1 321 74A K Canton (Locust Field Cemetery) Jordan Lake 75 16 N Lake Norman 49 Salisbury Williamston 64 3RD R 40 C.S.Military Prison Asheboro Princeville Ausbon House ST N D S O U 64 R 64 Old Fort (Swannanoa Gap) Rowan County Courthouse Hall House IV R I V E R 17 V E R I ASHEVILLE 55 64 64 R 94 RALEIGH R V E R I Newton Marion SmithMcDowell House 21 A 74 E S Cary D E E P 64 I M A N E A R L E M B L A Fort Branch Edgecombe Cemetery BlountBridges House 440 54 R 501 70 40 40 I E 70 Tarboro U 13 Hamilton 64 T Carson House Lexington 147 Roanoke River NWR 98 70 109 Hickory Brassfield Station Q R Morganton E DURHAM L R Edenton (Battle of Albemarle Sound) 17 Rocky Mount 540 Chapel Hill 311 Falls Lake E A Vance Birthplace 85 Homestead Statesville Iredell Co. Court House A 125 Hertford (USCT Monument) P T 25 16 H 49 Thomasville 601 64 Rocky Ford Engagement 421 Piedmont Railroad Davidson Co. Courthouse 18 D EK R RE Cemetery 220 V R I 64 Mars Hill College 26 Jefferson Davis Encampment W 64 Hospitals 64 Lenoir (St. James Church) 54 4 O L 221 1 I V E R U T 19E 85 High Point 40 Bennett Place Durham’s Station Leigh Farm 258 N Q 17 903 Duke Homestead The Last Encampment A 95 15 Historic West Stagville Point O S T 52 21 R R 213 Hot Springs Warm Springs Hotel Hillsborough 13 11 301 85 501 85 40 Historical Museum 311 Pisgah National Forest 70 ina RR th Carol ) Burlington 45 125 70 40 Indiantown Albemarle & Creek Bridge Chesapeake Canal PA R V E R I GR E E N S BOR O Patterson Mill Burnsville (John McElroy House) Marshall (Col. Allen House) (Nor 77 68 213 29 421 Battle of Elizabeth City Museum of the Albemarle Wingfield 49 WI NSTON- SALEM Fort Hamby 321 34 32 E O K L Pisgah National Forest 19W Wilkesboro 343 Burning of Winton Winton Jackson Kittrell Confederate Cemetery R VE RI AI A P P A L A CH I A N T R 601 Battle of Boone’s Mill Historic Halifax CSS Albemarle 903 Piedmont Railroad 158 Murfreesboro (RobertsVaughn House) N Belews Lake RALEIGH Henderson Reidsville 220 Weldon 48 BLVD 158 158 IN ST DURHAM 65 Roanoke Rapids A L S T 311 Wentworth Cemetery MAR TIN LUTHER KIN G JR Roanoke Canal Wilmington & Weldon RR MA ST T 704 15 158 14 Vance’s Governor’s Mansion 70 158 TW ALEXANDER DR 540 ENO Birds-eye view of the C.S. Military Prison, lithograph by C.A. Kraus in 1886, Salisbury, N.C. LENOIR ST 54 40 Roanoke Canal Museum CABARRUS ST TER WA SON Annie Eliza Wentworth Johns Madison 401 SOUTH ST 87 Rockford (York Tavern) 421 Brassfield Station Dismal Swamp National Wildlife Refuge Battle of South Mills C H O W A N Boone 147 RD Mackay Island National Wildlife Refuge Moyock Knotts Island Currituck County Currituck NWR Free Courthouse Ferry Henry Shaw Currituck Maple House Beach Lighthouse Seven Patriot Heroes DAVIE ST W S OE Scales Law Office Hanging Rock State Park Moratock Iron Furnace 52 321 LIS 301 17 258 A 421 Leigh Farm NW AL MARTIN ST Glencoe Thomaston Battle of Plymouth (Port o’ Plymouth Museum) Cushing’s Torpedo 13 35 95 FER 135 74 268 751 NEW BERN AVE State Capitol 1 55 Leaksville Cotton Mill Y Siloam (Reeves Homeplace) CO R EDENTON ST Fort Compher Battlefield CSS Albemarle ING 89 HARGETT ST 58 MA Eden 89 58 Franklin 58 SH WA Dan River 501 70 Emporia (Village View Manor) 58 JONES ST St. 58 Mary’s School HILLSBOROUGH ST 98 LANE ST 58 Village of Village of Riddick’s Deep Creek Great Bridge Folly Dismal Siege of Pleasant Grove Swamp Suffolk Baptist Church 168 Gabriel Chapel & Canal Cemetery Cuffeytown Cemetery J EF RIDGE UE N 220 360 15 VER RI 58 501 NC Museum of History Backwater Line NR MO BL WA Boydton (Boyd Tavern) Courtland (Mahone’s Tavern) C O E R I N T 221 K PA R 15 MIA Danville (Multiple Sites) 8 Mount Airy ST 58 Martinsville 103 O XB ORO 773 58 21 360 Oakwood Cemetery OAKWOOD AVE E LAN KIN RAN 77 70 Durham’s Station Laurel Hill (J.E.B. Stuart Birthplace) 58 85 BUS Place POLK ST GLENWOOD ST 29 58 52 221 SR 221 21 Bennett 360 ST MARY’S ST Halifax Court House Carolinas Campaign Driving Route 58 Cr Union Attack at Southwest Creek State or National Forest KINSTON Information or Welcome Center