A camp of U.S. troops under Brigadier General Schoepf was established
on Wildcat Mountain in Laurel County to secure a ford across Rockcastle
Creek and to protect the Wilderness Road. Members of Brigadier
General Zollicoffer's Confederate Army had moved north from Cumberland
Ford in Bell County. The Confederates attacked in the morning under
a sunny sky, were repelled by the outnumbered U.S. troops, and
withdrew during the night. They arrived back at Cumberland Ford
on 26 October 1861. |
The Battle of Camp Wildcat in Laurel County, Kentucky was about
to begin. In Boyle County, Professor Ormond Beatty at Centre College
in Danville recorded that the night had been cool and by 7 a.m.
the temperature was 52°F. No rain had fallen since that on
the 16th and 17th. Since then, the warm days reached to or near
70°F during the afternoons and would have allowed the ground
surface to dry. This morning (21 October 1861) the sun was shining
with only a third of the sky covered with stratus clouds. The light
surface winds were from the east but the clouds were moving from
the southwest suggesting the approach of the system bringing the
rain that would fall the next day. By 2 p.m., the temperature had
reached 72°F. The barometric pressure had fallen to 29.00 inches
after a steady decrease over the past 31 hours. As the Confederate
force withdrew under cover of darkness, the temperature fell to
62°F under and overcast sky by 9 p.m. The rains began the next
day (22 October) but only 0.083 inch fell in Danville. The temperature
rose only to 68°F under a sky that was overcast. The rains
were brief. By the morning of the 23rd, the temperature had fallen
to 44°F as the west wind began to move the clouds away. By
the morning of the 24th, temperature was 41°F under a clear
sky and the frontal passage was apparent with the wind shift that
brought cold air from the north and northeast. The morning temperature
on the 25th was 45°F but, by the time the Confederate force
reached Cumberland Ford in Bell County on the 26th, the morning
low was 55°F. |