Showing posts with label Macadonia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Macadonia. Show all posts

Saturday, August 8, 2015

2009 ~ Saturday, August 1, Historic Markers in Waterloo, Alabama

We stopped along the side of the road to take a picture of the site of Civil War site of Wilson's Camp and spring.
There was activity by both the Union and Confederate soldiers in Florence during the Civil War.

Wilson's Headquarters and Camp
At this site from mid-January to mid-March 1865, Maj. Gen. James Harrison Wilson, U. S. Army, assembled the largest cavalry force ever massed in the Western Hemisphere. Five divisions totaling 22,000 camped from Gravelly Springs westward to Waterloo. Wilson made headquarters a mile east of the springs at Wildwood plantation, the boyhood home of Alabama senator and governor, George Houston. After intensive training, Wilson's Cavalry crossed Tennessee to invade South Alabama and Georgia, a campaign which included burning the University of Alabama at Tuscaloosa and the capture of Pres. Jefferson Davis at Irwinville, Georgia, in May 1865, after Lee's surrender. Donated by C. L. Culver
Gravelly Springs
We traveled into Waterloo where we saw a barge traveling down the Tennessee River

Waterloo
Settled 1819~Incorporated 1832

One of Alabama's oldest incorporated towns. Waterloo was an important Tennessee River port during the steamboat era. In the low~water season after large boats from Louisville, Cincinnati, and other places downriver unloaded here: smaller craft transported goods and passengers upriver to Florence at the foot of the Muscle Shoals. Following a disastrous flood in 1847, the town was moved from its location on the riverbank, now under Pickwick Lake, to present higher ground. Union gunboats shelled it in July 1862. Gen. William T. Sherman crossed the river here, in November 1863, and made temporary headquarters in Dr. O. B. Sullivan's home.

Barge traveling on the Tennessee River 

Boaters on the Tennessee River



Trail of Tears
Thousands of Cherokee Indians passed through Waterloo in the 1830s when they were forced by the U. S. government to move west on the "Trail of Tears". Most came by boat from Tuscumbia and camped here to await transfer to larger steamboats. During the encampment, several births, deaths, and escapes occurred.

One party of 1,070 Cherokees traveled overland from Ross' Landing in Tennessee due to low water in the upper river. Following the general route of U. S. Hwy. 72 to Florence, they arrived here on July 10, 1838, in miserable condition after a 23-day journey.


About 17,000 Cherokees were driven from their homeland in the southern Appalachian Mountains. Most traveled by land through Tennessee and on to Oklahoma. Great suffering and about 4,000 deaths occurred along the trail, especially during the winter of 1838-39



Trail of Tears Marker overlooking the Tennessee River 



Edith Newman Culvert Memorial Museum 1872-1995 
 Main Street and County Road 45 on Main Street.

The Newman House was restored and presented in 1995 to the citizens of Waterloo by Ezra Lee Culver, as a memorial to his wife, Edith Elizabeth Newman Culver. Built in 1872 by Hiram L. and Julia Ann Young Richardson. This house was purchased in 1918 by Joseph Newman, a native of Ohio and a U.S. veteran of the Civil War. His son, Clarkson Lytle Newman with his wife, Eunice Lindsey Newman, became the next owners. Their daughter, Edith, was reared here from her childhood until her marriage. The house remained in the Newman family until its dedication as a museum on October 14, 1995.


Capture of John A.Murrell

Natchez Trace Outlaw

— 1834 —

 John A. Murrell, known as the "Great Western Land Pirate," was captured near this site in the winter of 1834. He was said to have killed over 400 people, including many kidnapped slaves. His arrest was brought about by the clever maneuvering of Tom Brannon, a local African American slave. An attempt had been made by the outlaw to recruit Brannon as a contact man for his far-reaching empire of crime. Brannon was awarded $100 for his bravery and his name was publicized across the country.


Nelson Rivers Starkey Bridge City of Florence 
this is where the Capture of John Murrell marker is located 


Nelson Rivers Starkey Bridge City of Florence 
this is where the Capture of John Murrell marker is located 

Pestilence Before 20th Century
Before the 20th Century During its early history, this area was faced with periods of infectious epidemics. One of the most feared was the smallpox plague. It became a serious threat at the end of the Civil War, believed to have resulted from the frequent movements of troops here during the war. Yellow fever, a rare plague in the northern hemisphere, appeared here in the fall of 1878, resulting in 42 deaths in Florence. Four nurses from the Howard Association, a New Orleans charity organization, were sent here to assist with the sick and the dying.


Pesthouse and Cemetery 1866
Following an outbreak of the dreaded plague, smallpox (Variola), at Florence during the winter of 1865-66, the Board of Alderman adopted a resolution on January 2, 1866, that a Pesthouse be “erected at the vineyard as soon as possible.” According to tradition, this Pesthouse, believed to have been a simple two-room log structure, was located in this area where people with infectious diseases could be isolated from the community. Also located nearby is a small cemetery where victims of these diseases were sometimes buried in unmarked graves.

Macedonia Church of Christ 
 County Road 158 west of Road 5
Tracing its roots to the early 1800s, The Macedonia Baptist Church originally met in homes with Joseph Fanning, a visiting evangelist. In 1834, J. W. Smith supervised a building on this site. In 1880, T.B. Larimore, an evangelist among Churches of Christ was asked to preach. The group then changed its name to Macedonia Church of Christ. This church has made a powerful local and worldwide impact. Its adjoining cemetery is the resting place for many of the country's beloved sons and daughters.
It started to rain so we finished up with the Macedonia marker
There are streaks of rain in the picture of the marker.
That afternoon after dark we took the grandkids to Heritage Park to watch the water show, and they all decided to get wet. 


When the water came up out of the fountains it was blue, pink, yellow, and white.

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