Annotation:Zollie's Retreat: Difference between revisions
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'''ZOLLIE'S RETREAT'''. AKA - “Zolly’s Retreat.” Old Time, Breakdown. DDad tuning. The tune commemorates the death of Confederate General Felix Zollicoffer at the Battle of Mill Springs, fought in January, 1862, near the home of the family of source Clyde Davenport in Monticello, Ky. The General, formerly a near-sighted newspaperman, had become disoriented in the close fight in the pouring rain and, in the process of reconnoitring, came upon some troops he took to be his own men. They were not. A colonel of the Union troops realized the nearsighted general's mistake and, in plain view of Zollicoffer's men, killed him with a point-blank pistol shot to the chest. That was the turning point of the battle. | '''ZOLLIE'S RETREAT'''. AKA - “Zolly’s Retreat.” Old Time, Breakdown. DDad tuning. The tune commemorates the death of Confederate General Felix Zollicoffer at the Battle of Mill Springs, fought in January, 1862, near the home of the family of source Clyde Davenport in Monticello, Ky. The General, formerly a near-sighted newspaperman, had become disoriented in the close fight in the pouring rain and, in the process of reconnoitring, came upon some troops he took to be his own men. They were not. A colonel of the Union troops realized the nearsighted general's mistake and, in plain view of Zollicoffer's men, killed him with a point-blank pistol shot to the chest. That was the turning point of the battle. | ||
[[File:zollicoffer.jpg| | [[File:zollicoffer.jpg|500px|thumb|left|Death of General Zollicoffer]] | ||
Clyde's fiddling grandfather, Frank Davenport, was a Union soldier who fought at Mill Springs and witnessed the Confederates' defeat and retreat. | Clyde's fiddling grandfather, Frank Davenport, was a Union soldier who fought at Mill Springs and witnessed the Confederates' defeat and retreat. | ||
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Revision as of 23:29, 15 January 2020
X:1 T:Zollie's Retreat N:From the playing of fiddler Clyde Davenport (Wayne County, Ky.) N:Davenport (b. 1921) was born in Blue Hole Hollow, near Mt. Pisgah on the N:Cumberland Plateau in south-central Kentucky, not far from the border with N:Tennessee. M:3/4 L:1/8 R:Reel N:DDad tuning (fiddle) Q:"Moderate." D:https://www.slippery-hill.com/recording/zollies-retreat Z:Transcribed by Andrew Kuntz K:D +slide+[D,2F2]-[D,F]E|:SD2F2A2|BA G2[G2B2]|cB A2 +slide+ F2|+slide+[D,6F6]| +slide+[D,2F2]FE [D,2D2]-|[D,4D4]D-E|D2F2A2| BAG2[G2B2]|c-B A2F2| B-d [d4d4]| d-ef2d2|dB A2F2|A2 Ac BA| G2[G2B2]cB|[M:5/4]A2F2 +slide+[D,6F6] |[M:3/4][D,2F2]-[D,F]E +slide+[D,2D2]-|[D,4D4] [D,D]ES:|
ZOLLIE'S RETREAT. AKA - “Zolly’s Retreat.” Old Time, Breakdown. DDad tuning. The tune commemorates the death of Confederate General Felix Zollicoffer at the Battle of Mill Springs, fought in January, 1862, near the home of the family of source Clyde Davenport in Monticello, Ky. The General, formerly a near-sighted newspaperman, had become disoriented in the close fight in the pouring rain and, in the process of reconnoitring, came upon some troops he took to be his own men. They were not. A colonel of the Union troops realized the nearsighted general's mistake and, in plain view of Zollicoffer's men, killed him with a point-blank pistol shot to the chest. That was the turning point of the battle.
Clyde's fiddling grandfather, Frank Davenport, was a Union soldier who fought at Mill Springs and witnessed the Confederates' defeat and retreat.