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Battle of Trevilian Station, VA 11-12 June 1864, US Civil War

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  • Marlboro Jones (c.1817 - aft.1867)
    Marlboro Jones (c. 1817 - aft. 1867) Marlboro Jones , manservant of Confederate captain Randall Fleming Jones of the 7th Georgia Cavalry, sits for an ambrotype dressed in Confederate uniform. During th...
  • Lt. Colonel (CSA) William R. Carter (1833 - 1864)
    R. Carter was a Confederate cavalry officer and diarist, whose observations of his experiences riding with J. E. B. Stuart during the American Civil War (1861–1865) became a boon to researchers after t...
  • Col. (CSA) Thomas Marshall, Jr. (1826 - 1864)
    Lieutenant-Colonel of the 7th Virginia Cavalry, C.S.A.∼Of Oak Hill in Fauquier County. The grandson of the great Chief Justice. Lieutenant Colonel Marshall of the Seventh Virginia Cavalry served as an ...
  • Lt. Gen. Wade Hampton, III, (CSA), 77th Governor of South Carolina (1818 - 1902)
    • Hampton was one of only three Southern officers to achieve the rank of Lieutenant General in the Confederate States Army without any military training. • Hampton was defeated in the 1865 gubernatori...
  • Colonel Edward Clifford Anderson, Jr., (CSA) (1839 - 1876)
    Colonel Edward Clifford Anderson, Jr., (CSA) Son of George W. Anderson and Eliza C. Wayne Stites. Graduate University of Virginia. Living with his father. A Bank President in Savannah, Georgia...

The Battle of Trevilian Station (also called Trevilians) was fought on June 11–12, 1864, in Union Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's Overland Campaign against Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. Union cavalry under Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan fought against Confederate cavalry under Maj. Gens. Wade Hampton and Fitzhugh Lee in the bloodiest and largest all-cavalry battle of the war.

Sheridan's objectives for his raid were to destroy stretches of the Virginia Central Railroad, provide a diversion that would occupy Confederate cavalry from understanding Grant's planned crossing of the James River, and to link up with the army of Maj. Gen. David Hunter at Charlottesville. Hampton's cavalry beat Sheridan to the railroad at Trevilian Station and on June 11 they fought to a standstill. Brig. Gen. George A. Custer entered the Confederate rear area and captured Hampton's supply train, but soon became surrounded and fought desperately to avoid destruction.

On June 12, the cavalry forces clashed again to the northwest of Trevilian Station, and seven assaults by Brig. Gen. Alfred T. A. Torbert's Union division were repulsed with heavy losses. Sheridan withdrew his force to rejoin Grant's army. The battle was a tactical victory for the Confederates and Sheridan failed to achieve his goal of permanently destroying the Virginia Central Railroad or of linking up with Hunter. Its distraction, however, may have contributed to Grant's successful crossing of the James River.

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