Ohio History Journal

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THE MORGAN RAID IN OHIO

THE MORGAN RAID IN OHIO.

 

 

R. W. MCFARLAND.

In the article under the above heading, published in the

January number, there are several errors which ought not to

pass unnoticed. The paragraph to which reference is made, is

as follows, viz.: "The Ohio Raid practically ended at Buffing-

ton Island, although Morgan himself was not captured there,

but with a small portion of his men escaped and fled to Lake

Erie, being captured at New Lisbon in Columbiana county, Ohio,

within one day's ride of Lake Erie." Morgan was not cap-

tured at New Lisbon, but six or eight miles further south, at

Salineville. From this village it is about a hundred miles to

Lake Erie. Exhausted cavalrymen are not likely to travel a

hundred miles a day. Further, Morgan was not making for

Lake Erie, but for the Ohio River. And still further: The

"small portion of his men, numbered about nine hundred, accord-

ing to Reid's 'Ohio in the War.'"

See Howe's History of Ohio, Vol. 1, p. 457: "After the bat-

tle, Morgan with not quite 1,200 men escaped.

Twenty miles above Buffington he struck the river again, got

300 of his men across, when the approaching gunboats checked

the passage. Returning to the 900 still on the Ohio side, he once

more resumed his hurried flight. His men were worn down

and exhausted by enormous work. When foiled in the attempted

crossing above, he headed for the Muskingum. Foiled here

by the militia under Runkle, he doubled on his track, and turned

again towards Blennerhassett's Island. The clouds of dust

which marked his track betrayed his movement, and on three

sides the pursuers closed in on him.

"While they slept in peaceful expectation of receiving his

surrender in the morning, he stole out along a hillside that had

been thought impassable, his men walking in single file and

leading their horses, and by midnight he was once more out of

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