"Morgan's Men," a Narrative of Personal Experiences

audiobook

"Morgan's Men," a Narrative of Personal Experiences

by Henry Lane Stone

EN·~52 minutes·28 chapters

Chapters

28 total
1

“MORGAN’S MEN”

0:14
2

PREFACE

0:14
3

“MORGAN’S MEN.”

3:53
4

EARLY TRAINING. ADVOCATE OF STATE RIGHTS.

1:05
5

LEAVING INDIANA TO JOIN THE CONFEDERATE ARMY.

1:01
6

DUKE’S FIGHT AT AUGUSTA. KY.

1:13
7

ENLISTMENT IN THE CONFEDERATE ARMY.

0:49
8

THE BATTLE AT HARTSVILLE.

3:39
9

THE CHRISTMAS RAID INTO KENTUCKY.

0:54
10

THE INDIANA AND OHIO RAID.

4:21

Description

Delivered before a gathering of Confederate veterans in 1919, this first‑hand account follows Henry L. Stone as he recalls the excitement and peril of serving in General John H. Morgan’s famed cavalry. From the moment Morgan’s squadron slipped out of Lexington on a moonlit September night, Stone paints the raids, rapid horse‑back maneuvers, and the fierce loyalty that bound the men together. His storytelling captures the raw energy of youthful volunteers thrust into a war that tested both courage and ingenuity.

In the opening chapters, Stone traces his own path from a Kentucky boyhood to a politically active teenager campaigning for Breckinridge, then into the ranks of Morgan’s “little squadron.” He describes the rigorous training, the daring tactics that made the command a legend, and the deep bonds forged amid danger. The narrative offers listeners a vivid glimpse into the life of a Confederate cavalryman and the lasting imprint his comrades left on the communities they later returned to.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~52 minutes (50K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Emmy and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2015-09-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HL

Henry Lane Stone

A Civil War memoirist and Kentucky lawyer, he is best remembered for a vivid firsthand account of riding with Morgan’s Confederate cavalry. His writing carries the immediacy of lived experience while reflecting the long afterlife of the war in memory.

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