Hi Jeff, Yes, I have a little bit more information on Co. K, 14th Tenn Infantry, CSA. It was organized at Camp Duncan, north of Clarksville, TN, in 1861. The 14th was in Virginia during the entire War. It was with Archer's Brigade, which was under the command of Stonewall Jackson until his death. The 14th penetrated the Union line at Gettysburg. I have heard they were inside the Yankee line as far as 75 yards before being recalled. This was when they were involved in the infamous "Pickett's Charge." Though I haven't verified it, I have heard that they were the only unit to do this. Yankee soldiers, after the war, in interviews, stated that a cold chill went over them when they realized they were facing these Tennesseans. On 12 July, 1861, the regiment left Clarksville en route to Virginia. They had to go through Chattanooga because the rails had been destroyed by the varmint Yankees elsewhere. Later that day, they arrived in Nashville and spent the night at the fairgrounds. On the 13th of July, they were once more loaded on the train and went on to Chattanooga. They left Chattanooga later and went to Knoxville in open rail cars in unseasonably cold weather. >From Knoxville, they went to Haynesville, Tennessee in a terrible rainstorm. Here, apparently, they were used for a short time to guard the railroad until late July. After being relieved of the task of guarding the rails, they went on to Lynchburg, Va, and changed trains to Manassas Junction, Va. The first winter was spent at Cross Roads, Virginia. This is now part of West Virginia. The baptism by fire came at the Battle of Cheat Mountain. This was on September 12, 1861. There is more information on the 14th available on the following web site: <A HREF="http://www.tngenweb.org/civilwar/csainf/csa14.html">TNGenWeb Project Tennesseans in the Civil War, 14TH TENNESSEE INFANTRY REGIMENT</A> http://www.tngenweb.org/civilwar/csainf/csa14.html I believe this is one of Mitzi Freeman's sites. She does an excellent job and we all appreciate her hard, hard work. There is another web site that will give you even more information, including the battles fought by this famous unit. Here is that site: <A HREF="http://www.fred.net/stevent/14TN/14tn.html">14th Tennessee Infantry Regiment</A> http://www.fred.net/stevent/14TN/14tn.html I hope this is the information you were looking for. Thanks for being part of the ROOTWALKER family. Sincerely, Stan Magnesen ROOTWALKER site/list coordinator ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In a message dated 4/14/01 10:59:19 PM Pacific Daylight Time, JBurton218@aol.com writes: > Subj: Re: [ROOTWALKER] Mark W. SWIFT > Date: 4/14/01 10:59:19 PM Pacific Daylight Time > From: JBurton218@aol.com > Reply-to: TN-ROOTWALKER-L@rootsweb.com > To: TN-ROOTWALKER-L@rootsweb.com > > Stan, > > Do you have more on this company? > > Jeff > >