Confederate Storehouse (Trussville): Difference between revisions

From Bhamwiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
m (added category)
No edit summary
 
(4 intermediate revisions by 2 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[Image:Confederate Storehouse.jpg|right|175px|thumb|Historic marker, 2007]]
The '''Confederate Storehouse''' was a Civil War-era stone warehouse located in what is now present-day downtown [[Trussville]]. Built by [[Thomas Truss]] and [[Marcus Worthington]], this served as a storehouse for items such as meats, grains and clothing that were collected by the Confederate government as a war tax. During its operation, [[Felix M. Wood]] served as its operator during the war. It was destroyed by fire in [[1865]] by a regiment of [[Wilson’s Raiders]] under the command of Union officer John T. Croxton.
The '''Confederate Storehouse''' was a Civil War-era stone warehouse located in what is now present-day downtown [[Trussville]]. Built by [[Thomas Truss]] and [[Marcus Worthington]], this served as a storehouse for items such as meats, grains and clothing that were collected by the Confederate government as a war tax. During its operation, [[Felix M. Wood]] served as its operator during the war. It was destroyed by fire in [[1865]] by a regiment of [[Wilson’s Raiders]] under the command of Union officer John T. Croxton.


The warehouse occupied what has since become a prominent block of downtown Trussville at the intersection of North Chalkville Road and [[U.S. Highway 11]] where [[Braden's Furniture]] is currently located. Currently a historic marker, erected in [[1995]], can be found noting the event at the approximate site of where the warehouse once stood.
The warehouse occupied what has since become a prominent block of downtown Trussville at the intersection of North Chalkville Road and [[U.S. Highway 11]] where [[Braden's Furniture]] was located. Currently a historic marker, erected in [[1995]], can be found noting the event at the approximate site of where the warehouse once stood.


==Reference==
==Reference==
* Alabama Historical Marker, viewed on-site by [[User:Patriarca12]] in December 2006.
* Trussville Historical Board (1995) "Confederate Storehouse Burned by Federal Troops". Historical Marker located on site. Accessible in the Alabama Historical Commission's [http://www.preserveala.org/DOCUMENTS/PDF/markerlog.pdf Historical Markers Research Guide] (PDF).  


[[Category:Trussville]]
[[Category:Trussville]]
[[Category:Demolished buildings]]
[[Category:Wilson's Raid sites]]
[[Category:Wilson's Raid sites]]
[[Category:Civil War]]
[[Category:Civil War]]
[[Category:Burned buildings]]
[[Category:1865 demolitions]]

Latest revision as of 14:12, 16 December 2020

Historic marker, 2007

The Confederate Storehouse was a Civil War-era stone warehouse located in what is now present-day downtown Trussville. Built by Thomas Truss and Marcus Worthington, this served as a storehouse for items such as meats, grains and clothing that were collected by the Confederate government as a war tax. During its operation, Felix M. Wood served as its operator during the war. It was destroyed by fire in 1865 by a regiment of Wilson’s Raiders under the command of Union officer John T. Croxton.

The warehouse occupied what has since become a prominent block of downtown Trussville at the intersection of North Chalkville Road and U.S. Highway 11 where Braden's Furniture was located. Currently a historic marker, erected in 1995, can be found noting the event at the approximate site of where the warehouse once stood.

Reference

  • Trussville Historical Board (1995) "Confederate Storehouse Burned by Federal Troops". Historical Marker located on site. Accessible in the Alabama Historical Commission's Historical Markers Research Guide (PDF).