Chattanooga Times Free Press - ChattanoogaNow

Siege at Bridgeport marks 25th re-enactment anniversar­y

- STAFF REPORT

Founded in the late 1840s, the community of Bridgeport, Alabama, became a hotbed of activity during the Civil War. A key railroad bridge spanned the Tennessee River at Bridgeport connecting Alabama to Chattanoog­a as well as all points north and south.

During the early part of the war, the Confederac­y controlled Bridgeport and its strategic bridge. Confederat­e Brig. Gen. Danville Leadbetter commanded 450 troops to defend the city at a fort approximat­ely 500 yards from the bridge.

In April 1862, Federal forces seized Bridgeport in a fierce battle that lasted over an hour. Union Gen. O.M. Mitchell led more than 5,000 troops into Bridgeport forcing Ledbetter to retreat toward Chattanoog­a.

Over the remaining years of the war, Confederat­e troops unsuccessf­ully attempted on numerous occasions to regain control of Bridgeport. With the Union controllin­g the bridge, Bridgeport became a major shipping center for troops and supplies supporting Gen. William T. Sherman’s infamous “March to the Sea.” The shipping route from Bridgeport to Chattanoog­a became known as the “Cracker Line.”

This weekend, an expected 1,000 soldiers will again converge on Bridgeport when the 25th anniversar­y re-enactment of the Siege at Bridgeport is held Saturday and Sunday. This living history event has become the largest Civil War re-enactment in Alabama, according to organizers.

Before gates open to the public on Saturday, a day for schoolchil­dren will be held Friday. Students from Alabama, Tennessee and Georgia will travel to Bridgeport to learn Civil War history, gain a better understand­ing about the life of soldiers and watch demonstrat­ions.

“The re-enactment teaches children what life was like during war – and there wasn’t anything ‘civil’ about it. We want today’s generation­s to realize what conditions were like and what our forefather­s endured to secure the freedom we enjoy today,” says Glenn Hill, one of the organizers of the event.

Visitors on Saturday and Sunday are invited to tour Confederat­e and Union camps, see suttlers’ wares and watch the popular anvil shoot at noon each day. An anvil shoot involves launching a 100-pound anvil more than 100 feet into the air.

The battle reenactmen­t will begin at 2 p.m. CDT each day and last about one hour.

For more informatio­n: www.siegeatbri­dgeport. com.

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