Camp Dick Robinson The
East Tennessee and Georgia (ET&G) and
East Tennessee and Virginia (ET&V) railroads were vital to the
Confederacy since they provided a connection between
Virginia and the
Deep South that did not require going around the bulk of the southern
Appalachian Mountains. Shortly after the General Assembly rejected the Greeneville petition, Reverend
William Blount Carter, a delegate of the Greeneville session, travelled to
Camp Dick Robinson in Kentucky, where many of East Tennessee's Unionists had fled to enlist in the Union Army. He met with generals
George H. Thomas and
William T. Sherman, and his brother,
Samuel P. Carter, a U.S. Navy officer who had been appointed a general in the
Union Army. William Carter revealed his plan to destroy the region's main railroad bridges to pave the way for a Union invasion. Thomas liked the plan, and although Sherman was initially skeptical, he agreed after a short discussion. Carrying a letter from Thomas, Carter travelled to
Washington, D.C., to meet with President
Abraham Lincoln, Commanding General
George B. McClellan, and Secretary of State
William H. Seward. Lincoln, under immense pressure from Senator
Andrew Johnson and Congressman
Horace Maynard to provide some sort of aid to East Tennessee's Unionists, agreed with the plan. He allotted $2,500 for the operation, and Carter returned to Camp Dick Robinson to begin making arrangements.
Recruiting The nine bridges targeted were, from northeast to southwest: the bridge over the
Holston River at Union (modern
Bluff City); the bridge over the
Watauga River at Carter's Depot (modern
Watauga); the bridge over
Lick Creek near
Mosheim; the bridge over the Holston at
Strawberry Plains; the bridge over the
Tennessee River at
Loudon; the bridge over the
Hiwassee River at
Charleston; two bridges over
Chickamauga Creek in the vicinity of
Chattanooga; and the bridge over the Tennessee at
Bridgeport, Alabama. All were on the ET&V or ET&G lines with the exception of the Bridgeport bridge, which was on the
Memphis and Charleston, and one of the Chickamauga Creek bridges, which was on the
Western and Atlantic. In mid-October 1861, Carter set up a "command post" in
Kingston, Tennessee. Captains David Fry and William Cross, two officers who had been assigned to the operation, were tasked with burning the Lick Creek and Loudon bridges, respectively (although Cross's role has never been fully verified). Carter recruited
Alfred Cate of
Hamilton County to oversee the destruction of the bridges in southeast Tennessee, and he assigned the Union and Watauga bridges to
Daniel Stover, a son-in-law of Andrew Johnson. For the Strawberry Plains bridge, he recruited former
Sevier County sheriff William C. Pickens. Each of Carter's "lieutenants" in turn recruited reliable men to assist them. Cate assigned R.B. Rogan and James Keener to the Bridgeport bridge; William T. Cate (his brother) and W. H. Crowder to the Chickamauga Creek bridges; and Cate personally led the attack on the Hiwassee bridge, with the assistance of Thomas Cate (another brother), Adam Thomas, and Jesse and Eli Cleveland. Fry chose Greene Countians Jacob and Thomas Harmon, Jacob Hensie,
Alex Haun, and Harrison and Hugh Self. Pickens recruited several fellow Sevier Countians, among them David Ray, James Montgomery, and Elijah Gamble. ==Attacks==