War Comes to Madisonville-Enjoying "forced hospitality" - Madisonville TN
Posted by: Groundspeak Regular Member Don.Morfe
N 35° 31.204 W 084° 21.803
16S E 739091 N 3933916
Madisonville, the seat of Monroe County, was divided during the war. A monument erected years later on the courthouse square commemorates residents who joined Confederate and Federal units.
Waymark Code: WM185A3
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 06/02/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member Turtle3863
Views: 0

War Comes to Madisonville-Enjoying "forced hospitality"-— Knoxville Campaign —- (preface) On November 4, 1863, to divert Federal forces from Chattanooga, Confederate Gen. James Longstreet led two reinforced divisions from the city to attack Union Gen. Ambrose E. Burnside’s garrison in Knoxville. Burnside confronted Longstreet outside Knoxville, then withdrew to his fortification on November 12, and Longstreet besieged the city. In Chattanooga, after Union Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s army defeated Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg’s forces at the end of the month, Grant ordered Gen. William T. Sherman to reinforce Burnside. As Sherman marched toward Knoxville, Longstreet withdrew on December 4. Sherman soon rejoined Grant.

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Madisonville, the seat of Monroe County, was divided during the war. A monument erected years later on the courthouse square commemorates residents who joined Confederate and Federal units.

Each side occupied the town at different times. On June 9, 1863, the Knoxville Daily Southern Chronicle reported that “the young ladies of Madisonville and vicinity gave a series of Tableaux together with a Concert, for the purpose of raising a fund in relief of our sick and wounded soldiers. They realized the Pretty little sum of one hundred and eighteen dollars on the occasion. ... There is not a town in the Confederacy where there is more unity of feeling and purpose respecting the Confederacy and its final triumph than Madisonville.”

On December 7, 1863, during the Knoxville Campaign, Union Gen. William T. Sherman ordered Gen. Jefferson C. Davis to occupy Madisonville. A soldier in the 86th Illinois Infantry who remained in town that night recalled, “The regiment lived well while here, nearly every family being set to work baking cornbread, cakes, and such. It passed a pleasant night with the good folks of this inland village, only regretting that it could not remain longer and enjoy more of their forced hospitality.”

The year 1864 was disastrous for Madisonville. Federal troops burned the courthouse, and together with local citizens, they demolished the county jail for its building materials. No image of the burned courthouse is known to exist. According to county seat records, local officials first considered repairing the building but then decided to raze the damaged structure and build a new courthouse in 1868.

“We marched 15 miles today and camped 5 miles South of Madisinville a little town better looken than most of towns of the same size. Some 300 rebs
cleared out as we advanced.” —John Hill Fergusson Diary, December 7, 1863

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This drawing by local artist C.F. Hunt shows the post-Civil War courthouse, which stood on this site until 1896, when it was demolished to build the present courthouse.
Gen. Jefferson C. Davis Courtesy Library of Congress
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Don.Morfe visited War Comes to Madisonville-Enjoying "forced hospitality" - Madisonville TN 06/03/2023 Don.Morfe visited it