TerryB
Lt. Colonel
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2008
- Location
- Nashville TN
Forrest biographer John A. Wyeth was about 15 when the war broke out and was from northern Alabama. After the fall of Fort Donelson, the Federals cobbled together a makeshift gunboat, which Wyeth seemed to think was the only thing they had patrolling the Tennessee River. He and some other un-enrolled boys and old men hatched a scheme to fire on it with shotguns. Following it to a bend in the river where they thought it would come within range, they set up an ambush, but their buckshot only slightly wounded one man. The gunboat answered with canister, scattering the would-be bushwhackers hither and yon.
Wyeth went on to ride with Morgan's scouts, as a civilian scout, until he officially enlisted in 1863 in Russell's 4th Alabama Cav. His father finally agreed to let him enlist, even though I think he was still under age. He was captured later that year and spent most of the rest of the war in a POW camp.
Wyeth went on to ride with Morgan's scouts, as a civilian scout, until he officially enlisted in 1863 in Russell's 4th Alabama Cav. His father finally agreed to let him enlist, even though I think he was still under age. He was captured later that year and spent most of the rest of the war in a POW camp.