Sunday, August 7, 2011

The 400 Roswell missing women of 1864

Via Billy



As local commuters drive to work every day, the vast majority of are impervious to an event that occurred 147 years ago.

This is the 150th year since the beginning of the American Civil War. So much conflict history surrounds Atlanta and North Georgia.

Just down the road from a myriad of strip shopping centers in Atlanta and Roswell is a story of unimaginable suffering.

The Allenbrook residence in Roswell, owned by the family of Roswell King, served as the home of the Ivy Woolen Mills Superintendant.

In 1864, the mills were churning out 191,000 yards of cloth and 30,000 yards of "Roswell grey" uniforms made by hundreds of white and black women.

11Alive reporter Jeff Hullinger asked the State of Georgia's "go to guy" on the Civil War, Barry Brown, "Are you surprised we don't really know this story in Atlanta?"

"Absolutely, it's one of the most heart rendering stories of the Civil War era," replied the heritage tourism specialist with the Georgia Department of Economic Development.

A quarter-mile down river stands the ruins of the mill, through the thicket, the mosquitoes, the mud, and the snakes.

Large snakes stand guardian over the ruins near the intersection of Roswell Road and Riverside Drive, off the Chattahoochee River.

It was here Union General Kenner Gerrard and his men first saw the French flag flying and the hundreds of women working to make the Confederate cloth.

The flag was flown to try to fool the army crossing the chest-high river.

Why the ruse?

"It was the only idea they had left. The ivy woolen mill manager, Theofile Roche, thought it would keep the Federals at bay and they wouldn't burn the operation," Brown said.

It didn't work. They burned the mill.

General Sherman ordered General Gerrard to arrest the 400 women and their 300 children and charge them with treason. He said, "let them foot it."

The Union soldiers rounded up the Southern women and quarantined them in Roswell's Square until early August. Then they marched with children in tow 10 miles to Marietta.

In Cobb County, women and children were put on railcars, shipped north of the Ohio River with nine days of rations and dumped.

Many died. Many were never seen again.

"They were cut loose on their own. Their families were still down here in the South," said Brown. "They were left to make a living for themselves in a land not familiar with. Some made it back to Roswell."

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7 comments:

  1. Cruelty simply for the sake of cruelty. I wonder why they don't teach that in the schools up north?

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  2. Brock:

    I copied and embedded the video onto my own web site, giving YOU credit for bringing it to my attention.

    Thank you.

    John Robert Mallernee
    Armed Forces Retirement Home
    Gulfport, Mississippi 39507

    ReplyDelete
  3. Interesting and never heard of it.

    D.Stroud
    Tarboro NC

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  4. I have spread this story, at my events, for many years and I was told that some of this women and children had been sold into slavery. I Kentucky newspaper had an ad that said there were white and black slaves for sale at approx the same time. This could be hear say.

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  5. Well, they disappeared completely, so seems they might have been sold or killed, as I believe that some trace of them would have been found, if simply released in the north. Actually, you would think a trace would have been found if sold into slavery, so they were probably killed.

    ReplyDelete