Camp Captain Mooney Cemetery Veterans Memorial - Live Oak, FL
N 30° 19.072 W 081° 44.662
17R E 428436 N 3354243
This memorial in the historic Camp Captain Mooney Cemetery consists of a flagpole bearing the United States flag and an inscribed tablet at its base.
Waymark Code: WMJ5X2
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 09/29/2013
Published By: 3am
Views: 7
Although this memorial is located in a cemetery that is the final resting place for primarily U.S. Civil War Confederate soldiers, this memorial is a non-specific veterans memorial. A simple gray granite tablet at the base of the flagpole reads:
THIS FLAG FLIES IN HONOR
OF ALL THOSE WHO FOUGHT,
SERVING OUR COUNTRY,
TO KEEP IT FLYING.
ABOUT THE CEMETERY:
"The Camp Captain Mooney Cemetery was created on March 1, 1864 when Confederates killed in an attack on Camp Captain Mooney were buried where they fell. The camp was defended by 19 Confederates, and the attackers were 500 mounted members of the 40th Massachusetts who were returning to Jacksonville after the US defeat at Olustee.
The cemetery is now owned by the United Daughters of the Confederacy. Within the cemetery is a hand-made monument marking the location of 5 graves of unknown Confederate soldiers, a monument erected in 2001 to commemorate the battle that occurred here, and a monument and flagpole marking a Confederate veterans plot."
-- Source
According to the Find A Grave website, there are 106 graves in this cemetery.
Two markers in the cemetery provide the following information.
Marker #1:
Camp Capt. Mooney
Cemetery
Founded March 1st, 1864
Owner: Florida Division UDC
On March 1st, 1864, in this general area,
the final Battle of the Olustee Campaign was
fought. Many of the dead from the Skirmish at
Cedar Creek reside within these gates.
Marker #2:
Camp Captain Mooney Cemetery
UDC
United Daughters of the Confederacy
Florida Division
On March 1st, 1864, a running battle known as
"Skirmishes at Cedar and McGirt's Creeks, Fla"
began near Whitehouse. Still reeling from
their defeat at Olustee, five hundred men
from the 40th Massachusetts mounted
infantry overran the 19 defenders of a
small Confederate Army Outpost known
as Camp Captain Mooney.
Seven were shot dead.
Twelve were captured.
The dead were buried where they fell.
This monument commemorates the
bravery of those men who fell in
that long ago battle.