Big Shanty to Kingston The raid began on April 12, 1862, when the regular morning passenger train from Atlanta, with the locomotive
General, stopped for breakfast at the Lacy Hotel. They took the
General and the train's three
boxcars, which were behind the tender in front of the passenger cars. The passenger cars were left behind. Andrews had previously obtained from the work crew a crowbar for tearing up track. The train's
conductor,
William Allen Fuller, and two other men, chased the stolen train, first on foot, then by a
handcar belonging to a work crew shortly north of Big Shanty. Locomotives of the time normally averaged , with short bursts of speed of about . In addition, the terrain north of Atlanta is very hilly, and the
ruling grades are steep. Even today, average speeds are rarely greater than between Chattanooga and Atlanta. Since Andrews intended to stop periodically to perform acts of sabotage, a determined pursuer, even on foot, could conceivably have caught up with the train before it reached Chattanooga. At Etowah, the raiders passed the older and smaller locomotive
Yonah which was on a siding that led to the nearby Cooper Iron Works. Andrews considered stopping to attack and destroy that locomotive so it could not be used by pursuers, but given the size of its work party (even though unarmed) relative to the size of the raiding party, he judged that any firefight would be too long and too involved, and would alert nearby troops and civilians. As the raiders had stolen a regularly scheduled train on a railroad with only one track, they needed to keep to that train's timetable. If they reached a
siding ahead of schedule, they had to wait there until scheduled southbound trains passed them before they could continue north. Andrews claimed to the station masters he encountered that his train was a special northbound ammunition movement ordered by General Beauregard in support of his operations against the Union forces threatening Chattanooga. This story was sufficient for the isolated station masters Andrews encountered (as he had cut the telegraph wires to the south), but it had no impact upon the train dispatchers and station masters north of him, whose telegraph lines to Chattanooga were working. These dispatchers were following their orders to dispatch and control the special train movements southward at the highest priority. Thus delayed at the junction town of Kingston, as the first of the southbound freight evacuation trains approached, Andrews inquired of that train's conductor why his train was carrying a red marker flag on its rear car. Andrews was told that Confederate Railway officials in Chattanooga had been notified by Confederate Army officials that Mitchel was approaching Chattanooga from
Stevenson, Alabama, intending to either capture or lay
siege to the city, and as a result of this warning, the Confederate Military Railways had ordered the Special Freight movements. The red train marker flag on the southbound train meant that there was at least one additional train behind the one which Andrews had just encountered, and that Andrews had no "authority for movement" until the last train of that sectional movement had passed him. The raiders being delayed at Kingston for over an hour, this gave Fuller all the time he needed to close the distance.
Kingston to Adairsville , built by Rogers, Ketchum & Grosvenor a year after the company built the
Yonah, which is believed to have been of similar design. The raiders finally pulled out of Kingston only moments before Fuller's arrival. They still managed north of Kingston again to cut the telegraph wire and break a rail. Meanwhile, moving north on the handcar, Fuller had spotted the locomotive
Yonah at Etowah and commandeered it, chasing the raiders north all the way to
Kingston. There, Fuller switched to the locomotive
William R. Smith, which was on a sidetrack leading west to the town of
Rome, Georgia, and continued north towards
Adairsville.
after cosmetic restoration at Spencer Shops, North Carolina Transportation Museum. The engine is now on display at the Atlanta History Center. Two miles south of Adairsville, however, the pursuers were stopped by the broken track, forcing Fuller and his party to continue the pursuit on foot. Beyond the damaged section, he took command of the southbound locomotive Texas south of Calhoun, where Andrews had passed it, running it backwards. The Texas
train crew had been bluffed by Andrews at Calhoun into taking the station siding, thereby allowing the General
to continue northward along the single-track main line. Fuller, when he met the Texas'', took command of her, picked up eleven Confederate troops at Calhoun, and continued his pursuit,
tender-first, northward.
Adairsville to Ringgold The raiders now never got far ahead of Fuller and never had enough time to stop and take up a rail to halt the
Texas. Destroying the railway behind the hijacked train was a slow process. The raiders were too few in number and were too poorly equipped with the proper railway track tools and demolition equipment, and the rain that day made it difficult to burn the bridges. As well, railway officials in Chattanooga had sufficient time to evacuate engines and rolling stock to the south, hauling critical railroad supplies away from the Union threat, so as to prevent their either being captured by General Mitchel or trapped uselessly inside Chattanooga during a Union siege of the city. With the
Texas still chasing the
General tender-first, the two trains steamed through
Dalton and
Tunnel Hill. The raiders continued to sever the telegraph wires, but they were unable to burn bridges or damage Tunnel Hill. The wood they had hoped to burn was soaked by rain. Just before the raiders cut the telegraph wire north of Dalton, Fuller managed to send off a message from there alerting the authorities in Chattanooga of the approaching stolen engine. Finally, at
milepost 116.3, north of
Ringgold, Georgia, just 18 miles from Chattanooga, with the locomotive out of fuel, Andrews's men abandoned the
General and scattered. Andrews and all of his men were caught within two weeks, including the two who had missed the hijacking. Mitchel's attack on Chattanooga ultimately failed. ==Aftermath==