Battle of Kanawha Gap
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| Battle of Kanawha Gap | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Part of the American Civil War | |||||||
Marker commemorating the Battle of Kanawha Gap | |||||||
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| Belligerents | |||||||
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| Commanders and leaders | |||||||
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Col. Abram S. Piatt Lt-Col. David A. Enyart Lt-Col. John Toland | Col. J. Lucius Davis (w&c) | ||||||
| Units involved | |||||||
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34th Ohio Infantry 1st Kentucky Infantry | Logan County Militia | ||||||
| Strength | |||||||
| 750+ | 200+ | ||||||
| Casualties and losses | |||||||
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4 killed 10+ wounded |
60 killed and wounded 70+ captured | ||||||
The Battle of Kanawha Gap, also known as the Battle of Chapmanville, was a Civil War battle fought near Chapmanville, West Virginia on September 25, 1861, as part of the Western Virginia campaign.[1] A column of Union soldiers from the Kanawha Brigade commanded by Col. Piatt and Col. Enyart, set out on an expedition from Camp Enyart to attack a Confederate camp near Chapmanville and drive Confederate forces from the Kanawha valley.
Throughout the summer of 1861, Union forces under General Rosecrans had been fighting to gain control of the vital Kanawha Valley along western Virginia's border with Kentucky. The Kanawha valley was home to many southern sympathizers and secessionists and the Union wanted to take and hold the areas in Kanawha County around Charleston.[2]
At the Battle of Scary Creek and Carnifex Ferry, Union forces had defeated the Confederates, and wanting to aid the operations of Jacob D. Cox, Colonel Abram Piatt decided to launch an expedition to attack the Confederate positions at Chapmanville.
Order of Battle
Union Kanawha Brigade[3]
- 34th Ohio Infantry (500 men)
- 1st Kentucky Infantry (300 men)
- Virginia Union Home Guards (100+ men)
Confederate Army of the Kanawha
- Logan County Militia (300 men)