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Home Tennessee Sullivan County Blountville Historical Markers The Cannonball House ~ Narrowly Missed Destruction

The Cannonball House ~ Narrowly Missed Destruction

at the intersection of Bristol Highway (TN Route 126) and Anderson Rd, Blountville, TN , USA
  Tennessee TN State Historical Marker
Tennessee State
Historical Marker

 
The Cannonball House
Narrowly Missed Destruction


You are standing in front of the Miller-Haynes house, known as the Cannonball House because of structural damage it sustained from Union cannon fire during the Battle of Blountville on September 22, 1863. During the artillery exchanges, Confederate forces were largely behind and east of the house, while Col. John W. Foster's Union forces were positioned west of here at Blountville Cemetery. Several cannonballs struck the house's western side.

It was fortunate that artillery fire did not destroy the house completely. Kentucky Confederate Edward O. Guerrant wrote in his diary on September 25: ?Twelve dwellings, the Court House, Jail & both hotels were burned by the enemy's shells. About the half (& better half) of the little town was destroyed.? Foster, in contrast, reported on the day of the battle that ?the shells of the enemy set fire to the town, and a great portion of it was consumed.?

In 1849, Elbert S. Miller had purchased the house and lot from J. Irwin's heirs; Miller later sold the home to Matthew T. Haynes, who lived there during the Civil War with his wife Kate Snapp Haynes and other members of the Snapp family. Haynes held the Confederate office of state receiver and was responsible for acquiring the confiscated property of Union sympathizers. Haynes's brother, Landon Carter Haynes, was one of the region's most vocal Confederates and represented Tennessee at the Confederate Senate in Richmond.

Erected by Tennessee Civil War Trails.

Last updated: 2/14/2015 15:17:00
 
    Related Themes: C.S.A., Confederate States of America, Confederacy, Union States
 
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