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  2. The First Battle of Saltville (October 2, 1864) was fought near the town of Saltville, Virginia, during the American Civil War. The battle over significant Confederate saltworks in town was fought by both regular and Home Guard Confederate units against regular U.S. Army troops, which included two of the few black cavalry units of the United ...

  3. In early October 1864, coincident with Maj. Gen. Phil Sheridan's burning of the Shenandoah Valley, Union cavalry and infantry raiders led by Brig. Gen. Stephen G. Burbridge attempted to destroy the Confederate saltworks near Saltville in southwest Virginia.

  4. Saltville Battle and Massacre. Historic marker that commemorates the 5th and 6th US Colored Cavalry at the Battle of Saltville in Virginia on October 2-3, 1863, and honoring the 46 soldiers who were massacred afterward. The market is located west of the White House at the base of the 3 flagpoles at Camp Nelson National Monument.

  5. After the first battle, some Confederate troops killed around fifty wounded African American Union prisoners (known as the “Saltville Massacre”) General George Stoneman’s Union forces defeated Col. Robert Preston’s Confederate garrison in the Second Battle of Saltville (December 20-21, 1864) and temporarily destroyed the salt works

  6. Summary: The First Battle of Saltville was fought during the Saltworks Campaign and was the third of five Union attempts to destroy the salt capitol of the Confederacy. In an attempt to destroy the salt production near Saltville, Virginia, Brevet Maj. Gen. Stephen Burbridge led an army of 5,200 strong.

  7. The operation was a raid into southwestern Virginia to defeat the Confederate forces in the region and destroy the saltworks at Saltville and other enemy industrial infrastructure in the area. The expedition was under the command of Major General George Stoneman, the deputy commander of the Department of the Ohio, and consisted of various ...

  8. May 27, 2023 · Most of the details concerning the prelude to the first Battle of Saltville and the bloody battle itself, which occurred on October 2, 1864, are not disputed by Civil War scholars. However, two recent historical works that chronicle this chapter of Civil War history provide two sharply different interpretations of what occurred after the battle.

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