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The goal of Col. Streight’s raid was to cut of the Western & Atlantic Railroad that supplied General Braxton’s Bragg’s Confederate army in Middle Tennessee. Starting in Nashville, Tennessee, Streight and his men first traveled to Eastport Mississippi, then they traveled eastward to Tuscumbia Alabama. Then On April 26, 1863, Streight left Tuscumbia and marched southeastward, Streight’s initial movements were screened by Union General Grenville Dodge’s troops. On April 30 at Day’s Gap on Sand Mountain, Confederate Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest caught up with Streight’s expedition and attacked Streight’s rearguard. Streight’s men managed to repulse this attack and as a result they continued their march to avoid any further delays and envelopments caused by the Confederate troops. This battle set off a chain of skirmishes and engagements at Crooked Creek (April 30), Hog Mountain (April 30), Blountsville (May 1), Black Creek/Gadsden (May 2), and Blount’s Plantation (May 2). Finally, on May 3 Forrest surrounded Streight’s exhausted men near Rome, Georgia and forced their surrender. Chronology of events of Streight's Raid in 1863
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