Col George R. Reeves' 11th Texas Cavalry, Camp#349

Col George R. Reeves' 11th Texas Cavalry, Camp#349 The Col. Reeves' 11th Texas Cavalry, Camp #349 meets the 1st Thursday of each month at 7:00 PM. Message for location.

03/13/2026

"We will ride until our enemies are defeated or our horses can no longer carry us ".. John Hunt Morgan ...
Cavalry Commander ... C.S.A.

He was born in Huntsville, Alabama, on June 1, 1825 and educated at Transylvania University ..
Morgan fought in the Mexican War as a first lieutenant in the Kentucky Mounted Volunteers and saw action at the battle of Buena Vista .. He married Rebecca Bruce in 1848 .. Worked as a h**p manufacturer in Lexington .. Morgan became a Mason and an active community leader, serving on the school board and city council and as captain of the fire department ...
(From 1852 to 1854) he served as captain of an artillery company in the state militia. In 1857 he formed the Lexington Rifles and attached the unit to the state guard militia in 1860 ...
Morgan initially supported Kentucky neutrality, but in September 1861, on his own authority, he led the Lexington Rifles in a series of guerrilla raids before officially joining the Confederacy as a captain of cavalry in October 1861.
In April 1862 Morgan was promoted to colonel and continued his raiding activities, earning the sobriquet “Francis Marion of the War.” He led a squadron at the battle of Shiloh.
On a raid from Knoxville to Cynthiana, Kentucky, from July 4-28, 1862, he recruited three hundred volunteers for the Confederate cause. On August 12, 1862, Morgan successfully disrupted General Don Carlos Buell’s campaign against Chattanooga by burning the twin Louisville and Nashville Railroad tunnels near Gallatin, which were vital links in the Union supply line. Embarrassed by this loss, Buell sent his entire cavalry force against Morgan and suffered a rout, including the capture of General Richard Johnson .. Morgan’s success emboldened Confederate plans for a Kentucky invasion, and Morgan’s cavalry joined General Braxton Bragg in the Perryville campaign. On December 7, 1862, Morgan captured a garrison of 1,834 Union troops at Hartsville, Tennessee.
In Murfreesboro, on December 14, 1862, Morgan, widowed since 1861, married seventeen-year-old Martha “Mattie” Ready in what was the highlight of the city’s winter social season. Most of the Confederate high command attended the ceremony, which was performed by Lieutenant General (and Bishop) Leonidas Polk. This marriage produced a daughter, Johnnie, who was born after Morgan’s death.

Two weeks after the wedding, Morgan’s troops participated in raids during the battle of Stones River, diverting Union troops from assisting General William S. Rosecrans’s army.
During his raids, Morgan often avoided direct combat through tactical plans which involved ruse and deception, including intercepting telegraph messages and sending out false ones to Union commands. During 1862 his command grew from 325 to a division of 3,900 and he was promoted to brigadier general on December 11, 1862.
In early 1863, as Union cavalry in the western theater gained proficiency and strength, Morgan began suffering losses in his confrontations. In an attempt to recoup some lost prestige and morale, he embarked on his legendary “Great Raid.” Morgan led his troops on an (unauthorized) raid through Kentucky, Indiana, and Ohio. During the raid, which lasted from July 1 to 26, 1863, Morgan spread panic in each successive town he approached, encountering newly formed militia who offered relatively weak resistance.
Passing through southern Indiana, he crossed into Ohio at Harrison, and moved within seven miles of Cincinnati. (Captured) with most of his command at West Point, Ohio, Morgan escaped from the Ohio State Penitentiary on November 27, 1863, and returned to Kentucky. His “Great Raid” was the northernmost incursion of western Confederate troops and served to bolster Southern morale after Lee’s defeat at Gettysburg. It also served to secure Morgan’s legendary status among Civil War generals ..
Despite the Confederate high command’s anger at his unauthorized, impetuous raid, he was restored to command. Reports of looting by Morgan’s men during an unsuccessful raid near Cynthiana, Kentucky, in June 1864, which ed to his suspension from command and the scheduling of a court of inquiry for September 10.

Morgan was surprised by Federal soldiers in Greeneville, Tennessee, on September 4, 1864, He was shot and died attempting to escape ...
Originally buried in Richmond, Virginia, his body was moved to Lexington, Kentucky, in 1868.
( Buried in the Lexington Cemetery, Lexington, Fayette cnty. Kentucky

03/06/2026
Happy new year!
01/02/2026

Happy new year!

Dan sure was busy last night! Merry Christmas!
12/25/2025

Dan sure was busy last night!

Merry Christmas!

03/15/2025

Take me off this page as an admin

Two events coming up in September and November at Frontier Village and Fort Wash*ta.
08/25/2024

Two events coming up in September and November at Frontier Village and Fort Wash*ta.

Memorial Day 2024
05/27/2024

Memorial Day 2024

Jeri Wilkin's passed away yesterday. Hisvisitation is Thursday at Wise Funeral home-6-8 pm; funeral Friday 10 am at Calv...
03/25/2023

Jeri Wilkin's passed away yesterday. His
visitation is Thursday at Wise Funeral home-6-8 pm; funeral Friday 10 am at Calvary Baptist Church, South 5th Street, Bonham. He was a great friend and will be missed.

Saved this from a local thrift store today, Marwal 1962.
01/28/2023

Saved this from a local thrift store today, Marwal 1962.

09/11/2022

The Belo Camp is starting a great project. Let's show up and support them.

Tommy May - Commander
Texas Division SCV 4th Brigade

Commander
William H.L. Well Camp #1588
Plano, TX.
_____________________________________________

A H Belo Camp has adopted a project to clean Confederate markers in Greenwood Cemetery. It's a very large job, as there are 423 Confederate headstones. We are soliciting help from other local camps, both for labor and donations for cleaning materials.

We will be meeting at Greenwood Cemetery in Dallas on September 17th, at 3:00. Point of contact is John Fulton, 972-971-2699, [email protected]. Please contact me with any questions or comments.

As Sons of Confederate Veterans, we owe it to Confederate Defenders to care for their final resting places.

Thank you,
John Fulton
A H Belo Camp 49

03/31/2022

Let's show the world we are still here. Everybody is encouraged to attend.

Tommy May - Commander
Texas Division SCV 4th Brigade

Commander
William H.L. Wells
Camp #1588 SCV
Plano, Tx.
_____________________________________________

Gentlemen, Just a reminder that The Lt Alexander Cameron Camp in Greenville will be having a Dedication ceremony to commemorate Confederate Heros Day Saturday April 2nd 2022 at 10a.m.
The ceremony will be held at Friendship Cemetery near Campbell Texas and will move a couple of miles to Shiloh Cemetery to conclude the ceremony. John Via is the Confederate Veteran we will be focusing on for the Confederate Heros ceremony along with19 other brave Confederate Veterans. Via survived Picketts Charge.
There will be a flagging ceremony, musket salute and a cannon volley.
We will begin at Freindship Cemetery. (PLEASE Google the directions as there is no physical address available)

We plan to eat following the ceremony at The Tin Cup Tavern.

Mechanized Cavalry members will meet at The QT station at 1400 Joe Ramsey blvd in Greenville Texas. KSU at 930 a.m. those of you in vehicles may meet and follow the motorcycles or meet us at the friendship cemetery. Ceremony begins at 10 a.m.

Hope to see everyone there.

Confederately,

1st Sgt. Mike "Jesse James" Pierce Company C 2nd Platoon 4th Squad "Iron Horse Greys" Son's of Confederate Veterans Mechanized Calvary

Texas Division Son's of Confederate Veterans
1st Lt Commander 4th Brigade

Commander
Son's of Confederate Veterans
Lt. Alexander Cameron Camp #2226 Greenville, Texas

Honorably Retired Texas Peace Officer

"TEXANS ALWAYS MOVE THEM" R.E.Lee

Address

Sherman, TX
75090

Website

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