Captain Benjamin F. Eddins, 1813-1865

eddins.JPG

Title

Captain Benjamin F. Eddins, 1813-1865

Subject

Civil War

Description

A historical marker on the Black Warrior River near the Hugh Thomas Bridge reads:

Captain Benjamin F. Eddins

Born in South Carolina in 1813, Benjamin Farrar Eddins raised and led a company of volunteers that served in the 41st Alabama Infantry Regiment. Retired due to ill health, he returned to lead the Home Guards, a militia made up of old men and young boys. While trying to render the covered bridge impassable to Federal troops on the night of April 3, 1865, he and 15-year-old John Carson were wounded in a skirmish with Croxton's Raiders. Later that evening, Mayor Obediah Berry and Catholic priest William McDonough surrendered the city on this site. Carson was disabled for life. On April 10, 1865, Capt. Eddins became the only local citizen to die defending the city. He is buried in Greenwood Cemetery. Alabama Historical Association

Source

Betty Slowe

Date

April 12, 2017

Contributor

Betty Slowe (Description)

Type

Photograph

Identifier

2342

Coverage

Tuscaloosa (AL)

Original Format

Photograph