St. Albans raid
Young was captured in
Morgan's Raid but fled to Canada in the fall of 1863. Young traveled back to the Confederacy via
Nova Scotia and
Bermuda, where he proposed Canada-based raids on the
United States as a means of building the
Confederate treasury and forcing the
Union Army to protect their northern border as a diversion. Young was
commissioned as a
lieutenant and returned to Canada, where he recruited other escaped rebels to participate in the October 19, 1864, raid on
St. Albans, Vermont, a quiet town 15 miles (25 km) from the Canada–US border. ) readable
pdf file Young and two others checked into a local hotel on October 10, saying they had come from
St. John's in Canada for a "sporting vacation." Every day, two or three more young men arrived. By October 19, there were 21
cavalrymen assembled; just before 3:00 p.m. the group simultaneously staged an
armed robbery of the three banks in St. Albans. They announced that they were Confederate soldiers and stole a total of $208,000 ($ in current dollar terms). As the banks were being robbed, eight or nine of the Confederates held the townspeople prisoner on the
village green as their horses were stolen. The Confederates killed one townsperson and wounded another. Young ordered his troops to burn the town down, but the four-ounce bottles of
Greek fire they had brought failed to work, and only one shed was destroyed. The raiders fled with the money into Canada, where authorities arrested them and held them in
Montreal. There, the
Lincoln administration retained prominent Irish-Canadian lawyer Bernard Devlin, QC, as counsel for the prosecution in the subsequent court case, which sought the raiders' extradition. The court ultimately decided that the soldiers were under military orders and that the officially
neutral Canada could not
extradite them to America. They were freed, but the $88,000 ($ in current dollar terms) the raiders had on them was returned to Vermont. ==Later career==