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Brevet Brigadier General
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Regtl. Quartermaster Shiloh 2020
Asst. Regtl. Quartermaster Antietam 2021
Regtl. Quartermaster Stones River / Franklin 2022
- Joined
- May 7, 2016
- Location
- Alabama
While visiting my sister (who doesn't believe in TV) in Sparta,Tennessee for Christmas I decided to walk up to the cemetery. One of the few CS graves was one of Gen. Dibrell. When I mentioned it to my Sis she said "Oh his pistol is in the museum" The museum was closed the whole time I was there and I knew they wouldn't let me play with it anyway.
The Journey Begins.
According to Colt's records this Colt Navy was shipped from the Colt manufacturing company in Hartford Connecticut on April 3, 1861, to it's New York Office. So how did it make its way South in 1862???????????????????
When the war broke out George G Dibrell enlisted as a private in the 25th Tenn Inf. He went on to be elected as Lt. Col. In May of 62 the unit reorganized at Corinth and he was not reelected. He traveled to Richmond and was given permission to raise a cavalry regiment. He returned to Sparta where he raised the 8th Tenn Cav. Before he and the regiment left Sparta the citizen gave him a Colt Navy revolver on which was inscribed "Presented to Col. George G. Dibrell 8th Tenn. Cav. by friends and citizens of Sparta, Tenn." The gun was first presented to Dibrell upon his formation of the 8th Tennessee Cavalry on Sept. 4, 1862 - the only regiment raised entirely in the Upper Cumberland, including men from White, Jackson, Smith, Van Buren, Overton and Putnam counties. The unit marched from Sparta to Murfreesboro to become part of Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest's brigade, and was involved in a remarkable number of battles and skirmishes during the war.
Promoted to Brigadier General in early 1865, Dibrell commanded a division under Wheeler during the Carolina Campaign. He accompanied the flight of the Confederate government following the evacuation and fall of Richmond in April 1865, having charge of protecting the national archives of the Confederacy and escorting President Jefferson Davis from Greensboro NC into Georgia. He was finally captured and paroled near Washington Ga. on May 9, 1865.
By command of Union General James H. Wilson, the officers were allowed to retain their personal sidearms and horses, but, the enlisted men were to be dismounted & disarmed. The parolees of Dibrell's Tennessee Brigade proceeded to march in military order towards Chattanooga where they were to receive rations for the rest of this march home. In Chattanooga, the Provost Marshall would not honor the terms of the surrender & all private property was confiscated including Gen. Dibrell's personal revolver, his horse and even his boots. Gen. Dibrell appealed to the regional commander, but to no avail. The Provost Marshall, who was a member of the 138th Indiana, took the pistol home as a war souvenir.
After the war an appeal by Dibrell to retrieve his sidearm later was unsuccessful. The story is, there was an understanding by the Provost Marshall and his men not to tell anybody he had this pistol, because Dibrell's name was on it, Efforts to find the name of the provost on duty that day in Chattanooga had proved unsuccessful, but research shows the gun did end up in Wabash, Ind., where it stayed until the 1950s, when a door-to-door insurance salesman saw the revolver and worked out a deal with the family to purchase it. When that man died, his widow sold the revolver to the private collector in Connecticut, who didn't even know its significance until searching Dibrell's name, which is etched on the handle, on the Internet. And, even though two groups in Indiana had expressed interest in purchasing the gun, he offered to sell it to the museum for the same price he had paid for it.
The citizen of Sparta and White county raised the $22.500 to buy the pistol and now it is back home.
The Journey Begins.
According to Colt's records this Colt Navy was shipped from the Colt manufacturing company in Hartford Connecticut on April 3, 1861, to it's New York Office. So how did it make its way South in 1862???????????????????
When the war broke out George G Dibrell enlisted as a private in the 25th Tenn Inf. He went on to be elected as Lt. Col. In May of 62 the unit reorganized at Corinth and he was not reelected. He traveled to Richmond and was given permission to raise a cavalry regiment. He returned to Sparta where he raised the 8th Tenn Cav. Before he and the regiment left Sparta the citizen gave him a Colt Navy revolver on which was inscribed "Presented to Col. George G. Dibrell 8th Tenn. Cav. by friends and citizens of Sparta, Tenn." The gun was first presented to Dibrell upon his formation of the 8th Tennessee Cavalry on Sept. 4, 1862 - the only regiment raised entirely in the Upper Cumberland, including men from White, Jackson, Smith, Van Buren, Overton and Putnam counties. The unit marched from Sparta to Murfreesboro to become part of Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest's brigade, and was involved in a remarkable number of battles and skirmishes during the war.
Promoted to Brigadier General in early 1865, Dibrell commanded a division under Wheeler during the Carolina Campaign. He accompanied the flight of the Confederate government following the evacuation and fall of Richmond in April 1865, having charge of protecting the national archives of the Confederacy and escorting President Jefferson Davis from Greensboro NC into Georgia. He was finally captured and paroled near Washington Ga. on May 9, 1865.
By command of Union General James H. Wilson, the officers were allowed to retain their personal sidearms and horses, but, the enlisted men were to be dismounted & disarmed. The parolees of Dibrell's Tennessee Brigade proceeded to march in military order towards Chattanooga where they were to receive rations for the rest of this march home. In Chattanooga, the Provost Marshall would not honor the terms of the surrender & all private property was confiscated including Gen. Dibrell's personal revolver, his horse and even his boots. Gen. Dibrell appealed to the regional commander, but to no avail. The Provost Marshall, who was a member of the 138th Indiana, took the pistol home as a war souvenir.
After the war an appeal by Dibrell to retrieve his sidearm later was unsuccessful. The story is, there was an understanding by the Provost Marshall and his men not to tell anybody he had this pistol, because Dibrell's name was on it, Efforts to find the name of the provost on duty that day in Chattanooga had proved unsuccessful, but research shows the gun did end up in Wabash, Ind., where it stayed until the 1950s, when a door-to-door insurance salesman saw the revolver and worked out a deal with the family to purchase it. When that man died, his widow sold the revolver to the private collector in Connecticut, who didn't even know its significance until searching Dibrell's name, which is etched on the handle, on the Internet. And, even though two groups in Indiana had expressed interest in purchasing the gun, he offered to sell it to the museum for the same price he had paid for it.
The citizen of Sparta and White county raised the $22.500 to buy the pistol and now it is back home.
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