In the spring and summer of 1864, Union Gen. William T. Sherman's thundering herd was descending on the prize
of Atlanta, but first it had to negotiate the Chattahoochee River.
On July 5, 1864, Brig. Gen. Kenner Garrard and his Union troopers were battling the home guard for a vital bridge
at Roswell, but the Rebels set it afire.
Garrard was surprised to see a most unexpected banner above the Ivy Woolen Mill at the river.
It was a French national flag. Another French tricolor waved in downtown Roswell above Bulloch Hall, built in 1839.
Garrard rode in to investigate and was met by mill workers claiming to be English or French citizens.
"They were scratching for ideas to save the factory," said Hitt.
Roche, a journeyman weaver from Paris who claimed at least part ownership of the mill, had concocted the idea of
flying the French flags, to show the mill was not part of the Confederacy and subject to seizure or destruction.
"He thought it might work," Hitt said of Roche. "If it didn't work, what did they have to lose?"
A lot, apparently.
We'll get to the rest of the amazing story but for now, here's how the mill drama went down.
Roswell is an old town north of Atlanta. Today it's associated with suburbia, but back in 1864 it was known for its mill complex that spun clothing and items for the Confederacy. Some say the workers were akin to indentured servants, earning low wages that went back to the mill owners for housing, food and goods.
Michael D. Hitt, is a Roswell police officer, historian and author of a 1991 book, "Charged With Treason," that details this peculiar footnote of the Atlanta Campaign.