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Historic Sites

The
Battle of Vernon, Florida
On
September 28, 1864, the men
of Captain
W.B. Jones'
Company, Florida Home Guard,
collided with the large
Union force of Brigadier
General Alexander Asboth on
the
banks of Hard Labor Creek in
Washington County. The
resulting skirmish has been
remembered locally as the
Battle of Vernon,Florida.
The encounter took place
during the deepest
penetration of Florida by
Union troops during
the entire Civil War.
General As both and his men
had left Pensacola on
September 18,
1864. Leaving a wide swath
of destruction in their
wake, they skirmished with
Southern
troops near Campbellton in
Jackson County on September
26th and then attacked the
city of Marianna the next
day.
Following the bloody Battle
of Marianna, the Union
troops turned southwest on
the
Vernon road shortly after
midnight on the morning of
September 28, 1864. After
stopping for their midday
meal at Orange Hill, they
came down into Holmes Valley
and
soon approached the crossing
of Hard Labor Creek.
Meanwhile, Captain W.B.
Jones of the Vernon Home
Guard learned that Marianna
had been attacked. The 30-50
men of his company were
either too young or too old
to
serve in the regular army or
had been released from
service due to wounds and
other disabilities. Mounting
their horses at Vernon, they
headed out for Marianna to
help
their neighbors in Jackson
County.Neither force knew
it, but they were
approaching each other via
the same road.
On the afternoon of
September 28, 1864, the two
forces collided unexpectedly
at Hard
Labor Creek near today's
Washington Church. Believing
they were being pursued
by Confederate cavalry, the
hundreds of Union soldiers
were in no mood to be
delayed. They ordered
Captain Jones and his men to
disperse and go home.
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HISTORIC SITES
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