Mass graves of Black Union soldiers slaughtered by Confederate guerrillas possibly identified in Kentucky

by oqtey
A series of white military-style headstones are placed close to one another in the ground against a fence and bushes. A state historical marker is seen in the foreground.

Archaeologists believe they have found two mass graves of Black Union soldiers in Kentucky thanks to remote sensing techniques and the dogged work of a local historian, allowing them to tell the story of a forgotten Civil War tragedy.

On Jan. 25, 1865, a company of Black Union soldiers was ambushed by Confederate guerrillas in Simpsonville, Kentucky. Kentucky was technically neutral during the Civil War, but it was also home to Company E of the United States Colored Cavalry (USCC). This company was based at Camp Nelson, a Union Army depot where many enslaved men enlisted in order to be freed. The soldiers there had been driving 900 head of cattle toward Louisville as part of the Union supply chain when, unexpectedly, they were attacked by better-armed Confederate guerrillas.

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