After raiding a train north of Catlett Station on 30 May 1863 and being pursued by Union detachments, Confederate Col. John S. Mosby and 50 of his Rangers of the 43rd Battalion Virginia Cavalry made a stand on a hill just to the north. The Rangers used a howitzer to break a charge by the 5th New York Cavalry, but the New Yorkers regrouped and, with troopers of the 1st Vermont and the 7th Michigan, overran Mosby's position. After a hand-to-hand struggle, Mosby and the Rangers fled, abandoning the cannon and losing some 20 men wounded and killed. Among the dead was Capt. Bradford Smith Hoskins, an English professional soldier, who was buried at nearby Greenwich Presbyterian Church. Union losses were 15 killed and 4 wounded.