Details for Civil War Raid from Camp Boveda

Historical Marker — Atlas Number 5273001584

Data

Marker Number 1584
Atlas Number 5273001584
Marker Title Civil War Raid from Camp Boveda
Index Entry Camp Boveda, Civil War Raid from
Address
City Riviera
County Kleberg
UTM Zone 14
UTM Easting 617250
UTM Northing 3020019
Subject Codes Civil War; forts; military topics
Marker Year 1965
Recorded Texas Historic Landmark No
Marker Location Intersection of US 77 and FM 771, Riviera
Private Property No
Marker Condition In Situ
Marker Size 27" x 42"
Marker Text On December 23, 1863, Capt. Jas. Speed of Gen. Napoleon J. T. Dana's Brownsville-based Federal army force raided unguarded King Ranch. Objectives were to capture or kill Capt. Richard King and destroy the Confederate cotton trade. King, forewarned, evaded the enemy. At King Ranch, the raiders killed Francisco Alvarado; captured C.S.A. Captains John Brown, Alvin Dix, W. S. Gregory and Jas. McClearly and Chaplain Hiram Chamberlain; rifled all buildings; dispersed ranch employees; declared the slaves free; confiscated all horses and mules; impounded Confederate government cotton, promising that if it were moved or burned, King's life would be the forfeit; and threatened further raids from Boveda by Col. E. J. Davis, former South Texas attorney turned Federal officer. Mrs. King and children moved to San Antonio for the war's duration; soon Col. J. S. "RIP" Ford's Confederate cavalry came to protect the cotton road and ranch. At Camp (Rancho) Boveda, near a ford on Los Olmos Creek, were seven cypress-walled water wells, possibly used by Gen. Zachary Taylor in 1846. Campsite is 2-1/2 miles east of this point, on lot 2, block 15, Koch subdivision number one, present Poteet Ranch.

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