Interesting Visit
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05-17-2017, 02:47 PM
(This post was last modified: 05-17-2017 03:44 PM by L Verge.)
Post: #53
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RE: Interesting Visit
(05-17-2017 02:02 PM)SSlater Wrote:(05-17-2017 04:17 AM)RJNorton Wrote:Someone in Kentucky verified - for me - that there was a session where the Lady was honored for her services to the Raiders, at the time stated. I wrote again for her name. Their reply was that the Legislature met during a short recess called for this purpose and that the their activity is classified and not available for publication.(05-16-2017 10:51 PM)SSlater Wrote: New question. Who was it that invited her to the proposed Honorarium in Kentucky in 1867? Olivia's story also includes that she attended the reunion in Kentucky. And, 150+ years after that Kentucky honor it is still classified? What a crock! Where's the Freedom of Information Act when you need it? More on Olivia and those papers: In furtherance of this proof, a message was started in the South requesting a copy of their commissions. This message passed from hand-to-hand, from Southern sympathizer to sympathizer, all the way from Canada to the state of Maryland. Here at Charles County, it finally reached Olivia Floyd, who was the last person in the chain of communications into Confederate territory. However, the Union troops were suspicious of Miss Floyd, and just when she had received this message, Union soldiers were on their way to Rose Hill to search it. Looking for a place to hide the message, she thought of the pair of brass andirons, remembering that the brass balls at the top were hollow. She immediately placed the message in one of the hollow balls, not long before the Union soldiers arrived. Once there, the union soldiers searched the house, and finding nothing, stopped in the parlor to sit and relax for a short time by the fire, resting their feet on the very andirons that contained the message. Once the soldiers had gone, Olivia then retrieved the message, and hiding it in her hair, left Rose Hill. She soon arrived at the signal station at Popes Creek, Virginia where the message was then sent to Richmond. The authorities there received the message in time to forward the commissions for Young and his men in time to save their lives. Many years after the war ended, Olivia was invited to attend a Confederate Reunion held in Louisville, Kentucky as a personal guest of Colonel Bennet Young. With the help of a man named Adrian Posey, she was able to attend the reunion. At the gathering, Olivia was treated as an honored guest. Prior to this reunion, but after the war ended, Olivia Floyd sent the boat model and the andirons that she used to hide the many messages to Colonel Young. Olivia Floyd died at Rose Hill. Copyright© John T. Marck. All Rights Reserved. This article and their accompanying pictures, photographs, and line art, may not be resold, reprinted, or redistributed for compensation of any kind without prior written permission from the author. Similar information is given on a website for the Port Tobacco Archaeological Survey, since Olivia's home at Rose Hill is in Port Tobacco. I made an interesting discovery today. Our James O. Hall Research Center at Surratt House inherited not only Hall's papers, but also those of Gen. Tidwell. A number of years ago, Wild Bill spent several weeks here cataloging the Tidwell Papers. I went to that catalog today to see what I could find about Cameron and Headley. Nary a page, which seems strange considering Tidwell's expertise in Confederate covert affairs. |
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