Sam Davis Home-Confederate Martyr - Smyrna TN
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 35° 59.131 W 086° 30.065
16S E 544974 N 3982457
This is the Sam Davis Home, one of Tennessee’s most significant Confederate memorial properties. Samuel (“Sam”) Davis, born here in 1842, enlisted in the Rutherford Rifles (Co. I, 1st Tennessee Infantry) in 1861 and fought in western Virginia.
Waymark Code: WM186T1
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 06/10/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

Sam Davis Home-Confederate Martyr-This is the Sam Davis Home, one of Tennessee’s most significant Confederate memorial properties. Samuel (“Sam”) Davis, born here in 1842, enlisted in the Rutherford Rifles (Co. I, 1st Tennessee Infantry) in 1861 and fought in western Virginia. After his enlistment expired, he returned home and joined Capt. Henry B. Shaw’s Coleman’s Scouts, Confederate cavalrymen who gathered information on Union troop movements. Federal authorities considered them spies. In November 1863, as Davis carried documents and newspapers to Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg, he was captured near Pulaski. Union Gen. Grenville M. Dodge, the future chief engineer of the Union Pacific Railroad, interrogated Davis and offered him freedom if Davis would divulge the name of the person who had supplied him with confidential reports from the Union camp in Pulaski. Davis refused, and Dodge ordered a quick military trial, which sentenced Davis to death. He was executed in Pulaski on November 27, 1863.

Davis and his reported statement (reminiscent of Revolutionary War hero Nathan Hale), “If I had a thousand lives to live, I would have them all rather than betray a friend” quickly became legendary. In 1909, the State of Tennessee dedicated a monument to the “boy hero of the Confederacy” on the state capitol grounds. In the 1920s, local residents acquired his family home and 168 acres of the farm as a memorial. In addition to the main house, the historic farm offers the opportunity to view Davis’s gravesite and several outbuilding, including slave quarters, a kitchen, and a smokehouse. A museum interprets Davis’s live and the war in Rutherford County.

“The coming ages will place his character forward as a typical Confederate soldier and as an American.” — Bromfield L. Ridley, 1906

“When I was about 13 or 14, my father’s family arranged for me to go to the Nashville Military Academy, where I became acquainted with Sam Davis. He was of the most honest, steadfast, and bravest boys I’ve ever known.” — Joseph A. Rucker, Jan 1, 1868

(captions)
Sam and John Davis — Courtesy Sam Davis Memorial Association
1909 state capitol unveiling — Courtesy Sam Davis Memorial Association
Gen. Braxton Bragg Courtesy Library of Congress
Gen. Grenville M. Dodge Courtesy Library of Congress
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Don.Morfe visited Sam Davis Home-Confederate Martyr - Smyrna TN 06/19/2023 Don.Morfe visited it