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  2. Jun 15, 2016 · In 1864, about 400 Roswell Mill workers – mostly women – were taken as prisoners by the Union Army. (Photo courtesy of Civil War Women Blog) While traveling through North Georgia in 1830, businessman Roswell King noted the potential of the land along Victory Creek.

  3. Jul 3, 2018 · Union troops and Kenner Garrard, a brigadier general, were seeking a way to cross the Chattahoochee River and began a 12-day occupation of the undefended Roswell on July 5 by destroying the...

  4. On July 5, 1864, Federal General Kenner Garrard's cavalry reached Roswell and finding it undefended, occupied the city. General Garrard reported to General William Sherman on July 6, 1864 that..." there were fine factories here. I had the building burnt, all were burnt. The cotton factory was working up to the time of its destruction, some 400

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  5. Roswell was a thr iving New England–style mill town whose “Roswell Gray” fabric was used for Confederate uniforms and tents, and an array of products that supported the Southern war effort ...

  6. More than 36,000 Union troops occupied Roswell, and Sherman ordered the Roswell mills burned and the workers and managers deported to Indiana, but did not burn other private property. Two bridges were built by Dodge, and from July 13 to 17, Gen. James McPherson's corps crossed and marched to the Battle of Atlanta.

  7. Union Soldiers occupied Roswell from July 5 – July 17, 1864 on their march to Atlanta. The Roswell Manufacturing Company mill was destroyed by fire twice. In 1864, Union General W.T. Sherman ordered soldiers to torch the mill. Lightening caused the second fire. Telephone service came to Roswell in 1901. All phone numbers were one digit.

  8. The Atlanta campaign was a series of battles fought in the Western Theater of the American Civil War throughout northwest Georgia and the area around Atlanta during the summer of 1864. Union Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman invaded Georgia from the vicinity of Chattanooga, Tennessee, beginning in May 1864, opposed by the Confederate general ...

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