Grafton to Camp Allegheny Tour / 204corricksmap
Photo by Linda Walcroft
May 2007
www.CivilWarFieldtrips.com

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Detail from Historical Marker
204corricksmap
General Garnett
Map from Sign at Corrick's Ford
General Garnett

Excerpt from the Civl War Interpretative Sign at Corrick's Ford

Retreat Becomes Disaster

Federal victory at Rich Mountain on July 11, 1861 forced Confederate Gen. Robert S. Garnett's 4,000 troops to retreat from Laurel Hill in Barbour County. Garnett, fearing his escape route was blocked, struck northeast. His goal was to circle back to safety.

Garnett's army wagons labored over narrow mountain traces. His Confederates were further slowed in crossing the rain-swollen Shavers Fork of Cheat River. On July 13, a force of 1,800 Federals under Capt. Henry W. Benham caught Garnett's rear guard at Corrick's Ford, one-half mile south. The Confederates retired after a bloody skirmish, leaving their dead, a cannon, and most of the wagons.

A few minutes later, along the rocky shallows here, Gen. Garnett was killed while attempting to delay the pursuit. Federal troops splashed across the river and recovered his body just behind this marker. He was the first general killed in the Civil War.

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