33rd ALA flag  33rd Alabama Volunteers

Deceased

Survivors

Eye Witness

Monument

Butler Co Men

Oaklawn Cem

Links

Home

Email
This website is dedicated to the
17 casualties of war in the train wreck that occurred on November 4, 1862 at Cleveland, Tennessee.
ó ó ó ó ó

 On November 4, 1862, seventeen men of the 33rd Alabama Infantry lost their lives in the line of duty. In a freak railroad accident near Cleveland, TN, perished when the box car in which they were riding came loose, throwing them from the car when it derailed. Struck by another box car, the men were through from the car, some pinned underneath, some pinned inside. A mass grave beside the railroads where they perished served as their only monument until the above marker was erected on November 4, 1989... more than 100 years after their deaths.


33rd Memorial
Dedicated November 4, 1989

IN MEMORY
THE 33RD ALA. VOLUNTEERS
WHO DIED NOV. 4, 1862
IN A TRAIN WRECK
SOUT OF CLEVELAND,
ENROUTE TO CHATTANOOGA

CAPT. R. J. COOPER
LT CHARLES SCOTT
WM. M. WATSON

T. A. PRITCHARD

CLINTON EVANS

O. M. BROXTON

P. CHANDLER

JOHN HUGHS

T. Z. NICHOLS

G. L. SMITH
WM. M. SMITH
EDW. NIX
L. M. BUSH
J . G. LEWIS
LT CLARK
M. NOBLIN
B. LLOYD

 Killed on the Train

Cleveland, Tenn. Nov. 7, 1862

 

The following is a list of the killed on the train on the Cleveland and Chattanooga Railroad on the evening of the 4th inst., all of whom are buried at Cleveland., Bradley, County, Tenn. There are about 70 wounded, who are at the hospitals at this place, receiving all the attention that a well organized corps of army surgeons can give them: 33rd Regiment Alabama Volunteers Captain R. G. Cooper, Co. G; Private T. A. Pritchard, M. Noblin, L. M. Bush, John Hughes, L. G. Lewis, Wm. M. Watson, O. M. Broxton, H. Clark (died 6th), B. Lloyd, Co. H; Wm. M. Smith, G. L. Smith, T. Z. Nichols, Z. Chandler, Edward Nix, Co. C; Clinton Evans, Lieut. Scott, Co. E.

    
©1999-2010, Mildred Stinson Brown