By September, the Confederates still occupied the Commonwealth
over much of the Bluegrass. The Confederate Army under General
Bragg invaded from Tennessee and attacked a much smaller force
of U.S. troops under Colonel Wilder defending Munfordville in Hart
County. On 16 September, Colonel Wilder under a truce was given
an escorted tour of the much superior Confederate Army. After negotiations,
the three U.S. Regiments surrendered on 17 September 1862 giving
the Confederates control of the railroad bridge. The drought had
allowed rapid movement of a large Confederate army over dry roads. |
The summer drought had not relented and water supplies were
failing. Spring branches stopped flowing and many farm ponds dried
up. The Battle of Munfordville began with an attack by the Confederate
force about dawn on Sunday, 14 September 1862. At about that same
time in Louisville at the corner of Second and Chestnut, Druggist
E. N. Woodruff was taking the morning climate observations for
the Smithsonian Institution. He recorded a warm 62°F at 7 a.m.,
the relative humidity was 88%, the sky was clear, very light surface
winds were from the north, and the barometer measured 29.81 inches.
After the morning battle, a truce was called while the dead were
buried and the wounded were removed to hospitals. At two p.m. the
temperature in Louisville in Jefferson County was 88°F and
the relative humidity was 50%. The work under the truce continued
through the night and into Monday morning (15 September 1862).
At 7 a.m. that morning, Mr. Woodruff entered the temperature as
70°F with a relative humidity of 90%. The sky was still clear
and the surface wind was from the west. The pressure was steady
at 29.82 inches. By 2 p.m., the temperature reached 83°F as
scattered cirrocumulus clouds appeared from the southwest. On 16
September, during Colonel Wilder's escorted inspection. Temperature
rose from 70°F at 7 a.m. to 86°F at 2 p.m. as clouds covered
nine-tenths of the sky. Relative humidity fell to 58% and winds
shifted to come from the northwest. By 9 p.m. that evening, the
temperature cooled to 74°F. By the next morning (17 September
1862), it had cooled only to 71°F with a relative humidity
of 85%. The falling barometer read 29.63 inches. The battle was
over but the rather hot September day was not. |