'James J. Andrews' (
c. 1829 –
June 7,
1862) was an
American Civil War civilian
espionage agent for the
Union Army who led a daring raid on the
Western and Atlantic Railroad that became famous as the
Great Locomotive Chase. The raid failed and Andrews and seven followers were executed.
Andrews was born in Holiday's Cove, Virginia (now
Weirton, West Virginia). He moved to
Kentucky, where he found employment as a house painter and singing coach. During the Civil War, he was engaged in buying contraband merchandise (including
quinine) and smuggling it between the military lines. While serving as a secret agent and scout in
Nashville, Tennessee, for
Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell in the spring of
1862, he devised a plan to take eight men to steal a
train in
Atlanta, Georgia, and drive it Northward. They would disrupt
Confederate communications in western
Tennessee and burn the long railroad bridge over the
Tennessee River at Bridgeport. The mission failed when the required engineer failed to show up at the designated meeting place.
In April, Andrews proposed a new scheme to Maj. Gen.
Ormsby M. Mitchel to seize a
locomotive in northern
Georgia and drive it to
Chattanooga, Tennessee, where he would rendezvous with Mitchel's attacking Union army. On
April 12,
1862, Andrews, another civilian, William "Bill" Campbell, and 22 volunteers from three
Ohio infantry regiments garbed in civilian clothes, stole a
locomotive known as ''
The General'' at Big Shanty, near
Kennesaw, Georgia. They headed North, destroying tracks and
telegraph wires along the way in an effort to discourage pursuers and render the railroad useless for supplying the Confederate troops in Tennessee.
William Allen Fuller, the
conductor of the stolen train pursued the train hijackers on foot, by handcar, and in a variety of other locomotives, most notably the "Texas" which gave chase for 51 miles in reverse. After an 87-mile chase, the ''General'' lost power just North of Ringgold, Georgia, and Andrews and his raiders scattered. He was captured soon afterwards and identified as the leader.
He was
court-martialed in Chattanooga and sentenced to
hang in one week as a spy. Andrews escaped from Swims Jail on
June 1, but was quickly recaptured the next day. Fleeing the advancing Union army, he was taken to Atlanta, by train over the same tracks that he had used during the raid, on
June 7. Andrews was ineptly hanged at about 5:00 that afternoon (the scaffold was so low that his feet touched the ground and he most likely died of strangulation as opposed to a broken neck), near the present day intersection of 3rd and Juniper Streets, NE. Andrews' body was temporarily buried at the site of execution. His remains were removed to the
Chattanooga National Cemetery on
October 16,
1887, and a gravestone and monument to the raid was erected near the Ohio Memorial (Section H, Grave No. 12,982).
He was engaged to Elizabeth Layton of
Flemingsburg, Kentucky at the time of his execution.
As a civilian, Andrews was ineligible for the
Medal of Honor that was presented to most of the raiders.
Walt Disney made a movie of Andrews' exploits in 1956 called ''
The Great Locomotive Chase'' starring
Fess "Davy Crockett" Parker as Andrews.
Buster Keaton's 1927 feature-length comedy masterpiece ''
The General'' was also loosely based on the incident.
External links
★
Stealing the General: The Great Locomotive Chase and the First Medal of Honor by Russell S. Bonds
★
Railfanning.org: The Andrews Raid