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During the Civil War, fully two-thirds of East Tennessees citizens remained loyal to the Union. When their state was declared an independent nation and then negotiated a military alliance with the Confederate government, it was against the will of the majority of East Tennesseans.
Samuel P. Carter of Elizabethton, the daring sailor on horseback and a naval officer, led the Yankee cavalry in a raid from Kentucky into East Tennesseeinto his own backyard. This was part of a long-term effort by the Federal government to utilize the loyalty of East Tennesseans to destroy the Southern rebellion.
The author relates an exciting story of the first long-distance raid staged by the Union cavalry in this chronicle of a significant and often overlooked turning point in the Civil War.
Published 1989 / 90 pages / 6" ¥ 9"
ISBN: 0-932807-42-9 / Trade Paper / $8.95
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