27th TENNESSEE CAVALRY BATTALIONLieutenant Colonel James E. Daniel
submitted by:
Greg Curtis

The only record of this organization was found in Special Order Number 52,
Adjutant and Inspector Generars Office at Richmond, Virginia, dated March 3,
1865 which read as follows:
"The following Companies of Tennessee Cavalry raised within the enemy lines
by Captain L. G. Mead under authority of the War Department are hereby
organized into a battalion to be known as the 27th Tennessee Cavalry
Battalion: Captains Jerome Root's, J.E. McColum's, J. C. Jenkins', J. P.
Henley's, Joel Cunningham's, J. T. Baxter's." The order went on to specify
that the Alabama companies raised under the same circumstance were to be
organized into a battalion Imown as the 25th Alabama Cavalry Battalion. No
muster rolls of the battalion organization were found, but these companies
were previously mustered as part of Mead's Cavalry, CSA, of which no rolls are
available in the Tennessee files. Their company letters in Mead's Cavalry were
as follows:
CAPTAINS-Joel Cunningham, Co. "B", Mead's Cavalry
J.E. McColum, Co. "D", Mead's Cavalry.
J.T. Baxter, Co. "H", Mead's Cavalry.
J.P. Henley, Co. "I", Mead's Cavalry men from Grundy
County
J.C. Jenkins, Co. "K", Mead's Cavalry.
Jerome Root, Co. "L", Mead's Cavalry.
Captain L. C. Mead was first reported on August 15, 1862, in command of
Partisan Rangers, when Major General E. Kirby Smith ordered him to operate in
North Alabama and Southern Tennessee, reporting to the general in command
nearest to him. Federal reports from that time until the end of the war make
frequent references to Mead's guerrillas, or bushwhackers, operating in North
Alabmaa and Middle Tennessee. One such report dated May 27, 1864, said Mead's
Regiment of Partisan Rangers, attached to General Roddey's command, was in
Franklin County, Tennessee with 500 well mounted men, many of whom had
enlisted since the regiment entered Tennessee. It is probable that some of the
Tennessee companies were enlisted at this time.
No record was found of what happened to the battalion after it was
organized except for the fact that I. P Henley was paroled at Chattanooga May
16, 1865 as lieutenant colonel of the 28th Tennessee Cavalry Regiment. From
this it would appear that either Captain Henley's Company never reported to
the battalion, or that it was later transferred to the 28th Regiment of which
Captain Henley became lieutenant colonel.
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