Cannonball reader and Harrisburg CWRT member Doug Gibboney of Cumberland County was kind enough to send me a couple of photos of his house and barn, which were among the hundreds of Pennsylvania homesteads visited by the Confederate cavalry of J.E.B. Stuart in late June / early July of 1863.
Doug writes, "The house is on Rt. 74, Monroe Twp., Cumberland County. It was built in 1813 by the Young family. They still owned the house when Jeb Stuart and his boys rode by on the late afternoon and early evening of July 1. According to oral history, the Young family fled upon the Rebs' approach, taking with them as much as they could. Upon their return, they found a young horse in the barn when apparently had been stolen down the road and could no longer keep up. It became the daughter's saddle horse.
The house can be found on the map Jed Hotchkiss prepared for the C.S. invasion."




