, including this ship, the
CSS Muscogee. After the outbreak of hostilities, King attempted to continue his business as an architect and builder, constructing a factory and a mill in
Coweta County, Georgia, and a bridge in Columbus, Georgia. While working on the Columbus bridge, Confederate authorities conscripted King to build obstructions in the
Apalachicola River, south of Columbus to prevent a naval attack on the city. After completing the obstructions on the Apalachicola, Confederates tasked King to construct defenses on the
Alabama River before returning to Columbus in 1863. By this time, Columbus had become a major shipbuilding city for the Confederacy. King and his men were assigned to assist in constructing vessels at the Columbus Iron Works and Navy Yard. In 1863–64, King constructed a
rolling mill for the Iron Works, which manufactured cladding for Confederate
ironclad warships. King's crews also provided lumber and timbers for the Navy Yard. They were at least peripherally involved with the construction of the
CSS Muscogee. During 1864, King wrote to Jemison, who had also opposed secession but was then serving in the
Confederate Senate. King asked what would happen if he stopped working for the Confederacy. Jemison's response is unknown. King remarried in June 1865 to Sarah Jane Jones McManus. == King and Reconstruction ==