Under Confederate General Robert E. Lee, was the famous raider Lieutenant Colonel John Mosby. Although Lee did not rely allot on raiding and guerrilla warfare, at times raiders under John Mosby enabled Lee to raise havoc on supply and communication lines of the Union in Virginia. His exploits were chronicled in Southern Newspapers. One unusual "stunt" of John Mosby was the capture of Union General E.G. Stoughton as he lay sleeping at his Virginia headquarters. Mosby under the cover of night led 29 of his troops into the Fairfax County Courthouse and captured the general as he slept. The booty also included 32 prisoners, 58 horses plus arms and equipment. Mosby was known as the Gray Ghost. Reportedly Mosby awakened the sleeping general and asked him if he knew of the raider John Mosby. The half asleep general inquired if Mosby had been captured, and of course the punchline to the story was Mosby's reply of "He has caught you".
John S. Mosby was a Methodist.
John S. Mosby was born on December 6, 1833.
John S. Mosby was born on December 6, 1833.
John S. Mosby died on 1916-05-30.
Information about the history of Mosby's Rangers states that John Mosby the battalion commander was part of the 43rd Battalion in the 1st Virginia Cavalry.
Colonel John S. Mosby, a Confederate cavalry commander during the American Civil War, had five children. He and his wife, Pauline, had three daughters and two sons. Their children were named after various family members and had notable lives, with some becoming involved in public service and education.
John S Mosby was not killed by anyone. He died in Washington, D.C. on May 30, 1916.
In 1864, Mosby's Raiders, led by Confederate Colonel John S. Mosby, targeted Union supply trains operating along the railroads in Northern Virginia. They specifically attacked trains on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad and the Orange and Alexandria Railroad, disrupting Union logistics and supply lines. These raids were part of Mosby's guerrilla tactics, aimed at harassing Union forces and supporting the Confederate war effort.
The phone number of the John Singleton Mosby Foundation is: 540-351-1600.
John S. Mosby impressed Confederate General Robert E. Lee with his scouting abilities. So much so that he was promoted and assisted in forming attack strategies. Later, under the Confederate Partisan Ranger Act, Mosby was a Colonel that headed the 43rd Virginian Partisan Rangers. His success at escaping Union forces sent against him gained him the nickname of the Gray Ghost. Many military historians claim that the entire Confederate guerrillia operations extended the length of the war by as many as six months. In addition to Mosby, other partisan groups headed by men such as Nathan Forrest and John Hunt Morgan, were very successful in making raids behind Union lines and destroying war supplies and cutting railway links.
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