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- [S106] The Mountain Press, 3 Dec 2012.
Upland Chronicles: Jonathan Mize killed guarding courthouseUpland Chronicles: Jonathan Mize killed guarding courthouse
CARROLL McMAHAN
The Sevier County Courthouse in 1863 where members of Thomas’ Legion were imprisoned in the basement.
Confederate veterans of Thomas’ Legion at a 1903 convention in New Orleans.
Jonathan Mize died as a result of a gunshot wound inflicted by Confederate forces while he was guarding the Sevier County Courthouse in 1863. He is buried in Middle Creek Cemetery.
When the Civil War erupted, William Holland Thomas felt the citizens in the isolated mountains of his native western North Carolina would fare better as part of the Confederacy than they had in the United States.
He was appointed to the rank of Colonel in the Confederate Army and rallied companies of men to fight with him.
Col. Thomas, who was adopted into the Cherokee tribe by Yonaguska and appointed chief of the Quallatown Cherokee when the great chief died, had no trouble soliciting both white and Cherokee troops. The force he formed was called Thomas’s Legion.
In 1863 Thomas’ Legion crossed the Smoky Mountains and occupied Gatlinburg. During their stay in Gatlinburg a few of Thomas’ men, out on a scouting mission, were captured by the Federal Home Guard in Sevierville and thrown into a makeshift jail in the basement of the Sevier County Courthouse.
Col. Thomas was furious. Immediately rushing 200 men to Sevierville on Dec. 8, they surprised the guard, broke open the jail and released the prisoners. He captured 60 federal home guards, six regular Federal Army soldiers as well as their guns and ammunition.
During the raid, Jonathan Mize, 59, and his 17-year-old son James Harold were guarding the Sevier County Courthouse along with several other Federal home guards. Six men were shot, of whom only two survived. Jonathan Mize was critically wounded and died on Dec. 14. His son James was wounded but survived.
Jonathan Mize lived on a big farm just a few miles south of Sevierville. His landholdings, located on the east side of the West Prong of the Little Pigeon River, stretched from acreage south of present- day Governor’s Crossing all the way northward to the spot where the Sevierville City Park is now located.
Mize was born in Rockingham County, N.C., in 1804. He moved to Tennessee and married Nancy Chambers on Sept. 19, 1829 in Greene County. The couple later moved their growing family to Tuckeleechee Cove in Blount County before settling in Sevier County sometime in the 1850s.
Two of their sons, 32-year-old William Alexander and 24-year-old Rufus Lee, enlisted together in Company K of the 2nd Tennessee Calvary. Their son John Clark, 25, enlisted in Company M while another son Robert joined Company G of the 3rd Tennessee Infantry.
Jonathan was considered too old to serve in the regular Army and his youngest son James Harold was too young.
The attending physician, J.W. Hammer, reported that he “attended Jonathan Mize after he was wounded by the Rebels and Indians in the town of Sevierville … and that his wound was a gunshot or pistol shot inflicted while engaged as National Guard under order of Major C. Inman.”
Jonathan Mize was laid to rest in the Middle Creek Methodist Church Cemetery.
All of his sons returned from the war, although Sgt. Rufus Lee was wounded in the shoulder at the Battle of Decatur, Ala., Pvt. John Clark was hospitalized in Michigan and Pvt. Robert received severe eye injuries.
The following month after the raid by Thomas’ Legion, the Sevier County Courthouse was used as a hospital during the Battle of Fair Garden.
When the federal troops in Knoxville received word of the alarming incident in Sevierville, Col. William Palmer with the 15th Pennsylvania Cavalry was dispatched to recover the property taken by Thomas’ Legion.
Led by Col. Palmer, 150 Union soldiers headed from Wear’s Valley by mountain trails to Gatlinburg.
A Wear’s Valley native, Rev. J.D. Lawson, led them over Rich Mountain, down Laurel Branch, through Fighting Creek Gap and down Fighting Creek Gap to Gatlinburg.
Lt. Col. C.D. Lamborn led 50 soldiers from Sevierville by way of Pigeon Forge. These two forces met in Gatlinburg and camped near the river where the Riverside Hotel was later built.
On the morning of Dec. 20, 1863 the Union forces advanced on the blockhouse built by Col. Thomas on what was known as Burg Hill, near the spot where Andy Huff later built the Mountain View Hotel. A small skirmish ensued and the surprised Confederate forces fled toward Roaring Fork and Dudley Creek.
They hastily crossed the mountains toward their homes in North Carolina. A story circulated around Gatlinburg after their departure that Col. Thomas was in such a hurry to leave that he left his black hat on the table. The Union soldiers were delighted to have the hat as a souvenir.
Although a major battle was never fought on Sevier County soil, the Civil War was a very pivotal time in its history. As a stronghold for Union loyalist in a Confederate state, everyone was suspicious and cautious. It was not uncommon for a farm to be pillaged by both sides.
The raid on the courthouse by Thomas’ Legion and the subsequent death of Jonathan Mize is only one tragic incident among many that occured in Sevier County during the dark days of the Civil War.
Carroll McMahan is the special projects facilitator for the Sevierville Chamber of Commerce. The Upland Chronicles series celebrates the heritage and past of Sevier County. If you have suggestions for future topics, would like to submit a column or have comments; please contact Carroll McMahan at 453-6411 or email to cmcmahan@scoc.org or Ron Rader at 604-9161 or email to ron@ronraderproperties.com.
- [S147] Find a Grave, (Memorial: 15151223).
Killed in front of the Sevier County Court house
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