The Henegar House-"A bird can't live here!" - Charleston TN
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 35° 17.219 W 084° 45.285
16S E 704182 N 3907180
During the war, Henegar House’s occupants, as in many other Tennessee homes, were divided in their loyalties. Henry Benton Henegar, the owner, was a Unionist while his wife, Margaret Lea Henegar, was a secessionist.
Waymark Code: WM181F4
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 05/09/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

TEXT ON THE HISTORICAL MARKER

The Henegar House-"A bird can't live here!"-During the war, Henegar House’s occupants, as in many other Tennessee homes, were divided in their loyalties. Henry Benton Henegar, the owner, was a Unionist while his wife, Margaret Lea Henegar, was a secessionist. Whenever Confederates occupied Charleston, Benton Henegar left, but Margaret Henegar stayed no matter which army occupied the town. She later stated that “she never met with anything but courteous treatment from either side.”

At various times, the house served as headquarters for Union Gens. William T. Sherman and Oliver O. Howard and Confederate Gens. Marcus J. Wright and Simon Bolivar Buckner. On November 30, 1863, Charles A. Dana, assistant U.S. Secretary of War, met in the parlor with Sherman and Brig. Gen. James H. Wilson, the Army of the Cumberland’s chief engineer. Dana handed Sherman an order from Gen. Ulysses S. Grant to take command of the force en route to relieve Union Gen. Ambrose Burnside’s army in Knoxville, besieged by Confederate Gen. James Longstreet.

According to family tradition, Sherman advised Benton Henegar to take the family north for safety. The next morning on the back porch, Margaret Henegar asked Sherman: “We have braved the dangers and endured the hardships of the war so far, why should we leave now?” He is said to have replied, “Madam, when I get through with the Southland a bird can’t live here!.”

(sidebar)
This two-story Federal-style house was begun about 1849 on the site of Gen. Winfield Scott’s headquarters at Fort Cass during the Trail of Tears (the forced removal of the Cherokee in the 1830s) . In the same year, Henry Benton Henegar married Margaret Lea, daughter of Tennessee Representative (1833-1837) and Tennessee Secretary of State (1837-1839) Luke Lea. The house was completed in 1852 upon the Henegars’ return from Fort Leavenworth, Kansas, where they lived with Luke Lea during Lea’s service as Indian agent (1850-1851).

(captions)
Gen. William T. Sherman Courtesy Library of Congress
Gen. Oliver O. Howard Courtesy Library of Congress
Gen. Marcus J. Wright Courtesy Tenn. State Library and Archives
Gen. Simon B. Buckner Courtesy Library of Congress Henegar House porch, ca 1890 - Courtesy Natalie Winningham
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Don.Morfe visited The Henegar House-"A bird can't live here!" - Charleston TN 05/12/2023 Don.Morfe visited it