In the Footsteps of J.E.B. Stuart: Rebels raid Mount Top, PA

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Mount Top.jpg

Mount Top is a tiny hamlet tucked in northwestern York County, Pennsylvania, not far from Dillsburg. Today, it's a whistle stop, as cars blow through the place on State Route 74. Few if any of the passersby are aware (or care) that they are traveling the same route as parts of Major General J.E.B. Stuart's cavalry during the Gettysburg Campaign of the American Civil War.

On the late afternoon of July 1, 1863, a long line of Confederate cavalrymen passed through this hilltop community en route to Dillsburg from their campsite at Dover. In command of this column was veteran Brigadier General Fitzhugh Lee, one of the South's better cavaliers. He led his own brigade of Virginia horse soldiers, as well as another Virginia brigade under Colonel John R. Chambliss, Jr. Perhaps 2,500 soldiers rode through Mount Top, and foraging patrols scoured the countryside in all directions, rounding up horses and mules, as well as seizing supplies and food of material value to the Old Dominion saddle soldiers.

Mount Top map.jpg

Yahoo map showing the location of the rural hamlet of Mount Top, Pennsylvania, with the known routes of the two main Confederate cavalry columns superimposed on the modern maps. The exact movements of J.E.B. Stuart's Rebels can be traced through a careful study of post-war damage claims filed by the farmers in the region. Foraging patrols ranged far and wide in the Mount Top region, and virtually every back road saw at least one body of Confederate cavalry stopping from farm to farm looking for fresh horses, as well as provisions and food.

Here is a partial list of those Pennsylvanians living in or near Mount Top who lost horses to Fitz Lee's men on July 1. A few of these men had also been raided by Albert G. Jenkins' West Virginia mounted infantry on June 29.

Daniel G. Altland - 3-yr-old bay mare "forcibly" taken from stable; 13-yr-old gray mare, 10-yr-old black mare taken from woods on Michael Gentzler's land. 3 halters / chains

William Beitzel - Black horse, gray horse, roan mare, 3 bridles

Michael Bentz - Two horses, halters

Martin B. Brenneman - 7-yr-old bay taken from stable

Jesse Gentzler - 5-yr-old black mare, 11-yr-old black mare, 4-yr-old bay mare, 6-yr-old bay mare. Also lost halter, chains, and wagon whip.

John Gentzler - Horse taken from meadow. Also lost halter and chain.

Joseph L. Hensby - 7-yr-old bay mare, halter

John Klinedinst - 11-yr-old gray mare, halter & straps, bridle

Lewis Myers - 4-yr-old black stallion taken from stable

John R. Raffensperger - 4-yr-old roan mare, halter. Was riding horse away from home when overtaken by Rebels Also lost 7-yr-old bay mare, 2-yr-old bay colt, 2+-yr-old bay colt hidden in thicket.

Jesse Rennoll - 16-year-old horse taken from stable; silver watch taken from Rennoll's pocket

Andrew B. Reynold - 18-yr-old gray mare, 4-yr-old black mare, 11-year-old bay taken from hiding place in clump of bushes on John Gentzler's farm in Warrington Township

William Smith - 5-yr-old roan taken from stable. Smith was among the men later accused of murdering a black servant left behind by the Confederates. The victim was accused of helping the Rebels steal horses in the vicinity.

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This page contains a single entry by Scott Mingus published on April 10, 2009 4:07 PM.

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