West Virginia Civil War History
Battle of
Charleston (1862)
The Battle of Charleston was an
engagement on September 13, 1862, near Charleston, West Virginia (then
Virginia) during the Civil War. It should not be confused with the
Battle of Charleston (1861), which occurred a year earlier in Missouri.
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On September 6, 1862, General Loring,
with 5,000 men, left Rocky Gap, Virginia and began a march toward
Charleston. The Confederate troops first encountered Union forces near
Fayetteville on September 10, driving the Federals back toward
Charleston.
The pursuit continued all day on the
September 11, with the Federals splitting their forces near Gauley's
Bridge on both sides of the Kanawha River, and the CSA doing the same
in hot pursuit. By late afternoon on September 13, the Battle for
Charleston had begun and was over by 7:30 p.m. when Loring's troops
broke off the engagement at the Elk River. The Union forces withdrew
across the Ohio River over night, leaving Charleston to be occupied by
Confederate forces.
The occupation of Charleston by the
Confederates lasted a scant six weeks, until October 28, 1862, when
Loring's troops begin withdrawing under the threat of 12,000 Union
forces approaching from the northeast.
References
- Synopsis of information contained
in: 50th Virginia Infantry, Regimental History; John D
Chapla, ©1997 HE Howard, Lynchburg, VA, pages 50-58.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Charleston_(1862)
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