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Chattanooga campaign

The Chattanooga campaign[7] was a series of maneuvers and battles in October and November 1863, during the American Civil War. Following the defeat of Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans's Union Army of the Cumberland at the Battle of Chickamauga in September, the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen. Braxton Bragg besieged Rosecrans and his men by occupying key high terrain around Chattanooga, Tennessee. Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant was given command of Union forces in the West, now consolidated under the Division of the Mississippi. Significant reinforcements also began to arrive with him in Chattanooga from Mississippi and the Eastern Theater. On October 18, Grant removed Rosecrans from command of the Army of the Cumberland and replaced him with Major General George Henry Thomas.

Chattanooga campaign
Part of the American Civil War

Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Gen. Braxton Bragg, commanding generals of the Chattanooga campaign
DateSeptember 21 – November 25, 1863[1]
(2 months and 4 days)
Location
Result Union victory
Belligerents
United States (Union) CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
Ulysses S. Grant
William S. Rosecrans
George Henry Thomas
William Tecumseh Sherman
Joseph Hooker
Braxton Bragg
James Longstreet
John C. Breckinridge
William J. Hardee
Units involved
Army of the Cumberland
Military Division of the Mississippi
Army of Tennessee
Strength
72,533 "present for duty equipped"[2] 48,948 "present for duty"[3]
Casualties and losses
5,824 total
(753 killed
4,722 wounded
349 missing)[4]
6,000–8,000 (estimated)[5]
(8,684 men killed, wounded or prisoners)[6]

During the opening of a supply line (the "Cracker Line") to feed the starving men and animals in Chattanooga, a force under Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker fought off a Confederate counterattack at the Battle of Wauhatchie on October 28–29, 1863. On November 23, the Army of the Cumberland advanced from the fortifications around Chattanooga to seize the strategic high ground at Orchard Knob while elements of the Union Army of the Tennessee under Maj. Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman maneuvered to launch a surprise attack against Bragg's right flank on Missionary Ridge. On November 24, Sherman's men crossed the Tennessee River in the morning and then advanced to occupy high ground at the northern end of Missionary Ridge in the afternoon. The same day, a mixed force of almost three divisions under Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker defeated the Confederates in the Battle of Lookout Mountain. The next day they began a movement toward Bragg's left flank at Rossville.

On November 25, Sherman's attack on Bragg's right flank made little progress. Hoping to distract Bragg's attention, Grant ordered Thomas's army to advance in the center and take the Confederate positions at the base of Missionary Ridge. The untenability of these newly captured entrenchments caused Thomas's men to surge to the top of Missionary Ridge and, with the help of Hooker's force advancing north from Rossville, routed the Confederate Army of Tennessee. The Confederates retreated to Dalton, Georgia, successfully fighting off the Union pursuit at the Battle of Ringgold Gap. Bragg's defeat eliminated the last significant Confederate control of Tennessee and opened the door to an invasion of the Deep South, leading to Sherman's Atlanta campaign of 1864.

Background edit

Military situation edit

 
Chattanooga viewed from the north bank of the Tennessee River, 1863. The Union Army pontoon bridge is shown on the left, Lookout Mountain at the right rear. The small hill in front of Lookout Mountain is Cameron Hill, which was significantly flattened during 20th century development of the city.
 
Federal supply lines and Wheeler's October 1863 raid
  Confederate
  Union
 
Federal supply lines before and after opening Grant's Cracker Line

Chattanooga was a vital rail hub (with lines going north toward Nashville and Knoxville and south toward Atlanta), and an important manufacturing center for the production of iron and coal, located on the navigable Tennessee River. In September 1863, the Union Army of the Cumberland under Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans executed a series of maneuvers that forced Confederate Gen. Braxton Bragg and his Army of Tennessee to abandon Chattanooga and withdraw into northern Georgia. Rosecrans pursued Bragg and the two armies collided at the Battle of Chickamauga on September 19–20. Bragg achieved a major victory when a gap was opened mistakenly in the Union line and a strong assaulting force commanded by Lt. Gen. James Longstreet serendipitously drove through it and routed a good portion of the Union army. A determined defensive stand by Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas on Snodgrass Hill saved the army from total destruction, earning him the nickname "Rock of Chickamauga" and allowing time for most of Rosecrans's army to retreat to Chattanooga. Bragg did not cut off the escape routes to Chattanooga and did not organize a pursuit that might have seriously damaged the Union army before it could regroup and prepare its defenses in the city. The Union forces took advantage of previous Confederate works to erect strong defensive positions in a tight, 3-mile-long semicircle around the city.[8]

 
Union reinforcements, destined for the Army of the Cumberland, being moved by train through Louisville-Nashville to Chattanooga, October 1863 as part of the preparation for operations against Confederate forces based around Chattanooga.

Bragg had three courses of action. He could outflank Rosecrans by crossing the Tennessee either below or above the city, assault the Union force directly in their fortifications, or starve the Federals by establishing a siege line. The flanking option was deemed to be impracticable because Bragg's army was short on ammunition, they had no pontoons for river crossing, and Longstreet's corps from Virginia had arrived at Chickamauga without wagons. A direct assault was too costly against a well-fortified enemy. Receiving intelligence that Rosecrans's men had only six days of rations, Bragg chose the siege option, while attempting to accumulate sufficient logistical capability to cross the Tennessee.[9]

 
View of Chattanooga from the northern side of the Tennessee, looking southwards towards Georgia, showing the town in the foreground across the river. On the left in the distance is Missionary ridge along the horizon. In the distance to the right is Lookout Mountain. These natural formations offered excellent defensive positions, and bottled the Union army in Chattanooga.

Bragg's army besieged the city, threatening to starve the Union forces into surrender. The Confederates established themselves on Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain, both of which had excellent views of the city, the Tennessee River flowing north of the city, and the Union's supply lines. Bragg also had little inclination to take offensive action against the Federal army because he was occupied in leadership quarrels within his army. On September 29, Bragg relieved from command two of his subordinates who had disappointed him in the Chickamauga campaign: Maj. Gen. Thomas C. Hindman (who had failed to destroy part of the Union army at McLemore's Cove) and Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk (who had delayed attacking on September 20 at Chickamauga). On October 4, twelve of his most senior generals sent a petition to Confederate President Jefferson Davis, demanding that Bragg be relieved of command. Davis personally visited Chattanooga to hear the complaints. After he decided to retain Bragg in command, Bragg retaliated against some of those generals by relieving Lt. Gen. D.H. Hill and Maj. Gen. Simon B. Buckner.[10]

Never in the history of the Army of the Cumberland had the spirit of its officers and men been more depressed. The battle of Chickamauga had not only been fought and lost, but we also lost what was more than losing the battle. We had lost confidence in our commander.

Capt. George Lewis, 124th Ohio[11]

In Chattanooga, Rosecrans was stunned by the defeat of his army and became psychologically unable to take decisive action to lift the siege.[12] President Abraham Lincoln remarked that Rosecrans seemed "confused and stunned like a duck hit on the head."[13] Union soldiers began to feel the effect of extremely short rations and many of their horses and mules died. The only supply line that was not controlled by the Confederates was a roundabout, tortuous course nearly 60 miles long over Walden's Ridge from Bridgeport, Alabama. Heavy rains began to fall in late September, washing away long stretches of the mountain roads. On October 1, Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler's Confederate cavalry intercepted and severely damaged a train of 800 wagons—burning hundreds of the wagons, and shooting or sabering hundreds of mules—at the start of his October 1863 Raid through Tennessee to sever Rosecrans's supply line. Toward the end of October, typical Federal soldiers' rations were "four cakes of hard bread and a quarter pound of pork" every three days.[14]

  
Grant and Thomas headquarters, October 23.

The Union high command began immediate preparations to relieve the city. Only hours after the defeat at Chickamauga, Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton ordered Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker to Chattanooga with 20,000 men in two small corps from the Army of the Potomac in Virginia. Even before the Union defeat, Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant had been ordered to send his available force to assist Rosecrans, and it departed under his chief subordinate, Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, from Vicksburg, Mississippi. On September 29, Stanton ordered Grant to go to Chattanooga himself,[15] as commander of the newly created Military Division of the Mississippi, bringing the territory from the Appalachian Mountains to the Mississippi River (and much of the state of Arkansas) under a single commander for the first time. Grant was given the option of replacing the demoralized Rosecrans with Thomas. Although Grant did not have good personal relations with Thomas, he had previously determined that he "could not make [Rosecrans] do as I wished" in the capacity as a subordinate. Grant selected Thomas to command the Army of the Cumberland. Hearing an inaccurate report that Rosecrans had been preparing to abandon Chattanooga, Grant telegraphed to Thomas, "Hold Chattanooga at all hazards. I will be there as soon as possible." The Rock of Chickamauga replied immediately, "I will hold the town till we starve." Grant traveled over the treacherous mountain supply line roads and arrived in Chattanooga on October 23.[16]

Reopening the Tennessee River edit

Opening the Cracker Line edit

 
Engraving of the view north from Point Lookout on Lookout Mountain over the Chattanooga region, from Battles and Leaders, 1885

The chief engineer of the Army of the Cumberland, Brig. Gen. William F. "Baldy" Smith, had devised a plan with Rosecrans to open a more reliable supply line to the troops in Chattanooga. General Thomas put the plan afoot immediately upon taking command. Smith briefed Grant immediately after the new commander's arrival and Grant enthusiastically concurred with the plan. Brown's Ferry crossed the Tennessee River from Moccasin Point where the road followed a gap through the foothills, turned south through Lookout Valley to Wauhatchie Station, and then west to Kelley's Ferry, a navigable point on the Tennessee that could be reached by Union supply boats. If the Army of the Cumberland could seize Brown's Ferry and link up with Hooker's force arriving from Bridgeport, Alabama, through Lookout Valley, a reliable, efficient supply line—soon to become known as the "Cracker Line"—would be open. In addition, a force at Brown's Ferry would threaten the right flank of any Confederate movement into the valley.[17]

 
USS Chattanooga, Cracker Liner
 
Hazen's men land at Brown's Ferry

Hooker left Maj. Gen. Henry W. Slocum with one of his divisions of the XII Corps to guard the railroad line from Murfreesboro to Bridgeport. Slocum's remaining division, under Brig. Gen. John W. Geary, and the two divisions of Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard's XI Corps were ordered to move quickly to Lookout Valley. However, weather conditions delayed the movement, so Grant decided to move ahead with the Brown's Ferry operation even before Hooker could arrive. Smith's plan for the assault on Brown's Ferry was to send most of one brigade (Brig. Gen. William B. Hazen's) traveling stealthily downriver on pontoons and a raft at night to capture the gap and hills on the west bank of the Tennessee while a second brigade (Brig. Gen. John B. Turchin's) marched across Moccasin Point in support.[18]

Braxton Bragg had no idea that this operation was being planned, but he was aware of Hooker's pending river crossing at Bridgeport, so was concerned about his left flank. He ordered Longstreet to move additional units into Lookout Valley, but, unknown to Bragg, the order was ignored. Furthermore, Longstreet's lack of diligence allowed command mixups to leave only two regiments near Brown's Ferry.[19]

Early on the morning of October 27, Hazen's men floated unnoticed past the Confederate position on Lookout Mountain, aided by low fog and no moonlight. They were able to seize the ground above Brown's Ferry by 4:40 a.m. A counterattack by the 15th Alabama Infantry, commanded by Col. William C. Oates (of Little Round Top fame) was repulsed and Oates was wounded. Oates's brigade commander, Brig. Gen. Evander M. Law, placed his brigade blocking the road over Lookout Mountain and reported the Union success to Longstreet. Longstreet dismissed the importance of the report, considering the Union move to be only a feint, and did not bother passing the information on to Bragg. When Bragg learned of it, he ordered Longstreet to retake the ground immediately, but Longstreet once again did nothing and Smith's men spent the day consolidating their bridgehead without interference.[20]

Hooker's column marched through Lookout Valley and linked up with Hazen and Turchin at Brown's Ferry at 3:45 p.m., October 28. Thomas's staff began the preparations to bring supplies over the Cracker Line and he telegraphed General in Chief Henry W. Halleck that he expected "in a few days to be pretty well supplied."[21]

Wauhatchie edit

 
Battle of Wauhatchie

Having ignored several direct orders from Bragg to attack Brown's Ferry, Longstreet was ordered by Bragg to attack Hooker's concentration at Wauhatchie instead. There, Hooker had neglected to arrange his force into effective defensive positions, instructing them merely to find good cover for the troops and bivouac. He detached Brig. Gen. John W. Geary's division at Wauhatchie Station, a stop on the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, to protect the line of communications to the south as well as the road west to Kelley's Ferry. Longstreet was amazed to see Geary's bivouacking soldiers with their large wagon train parked directly in front of him.[22]

Longstreet ordered a night attack, a relatively rare occurrence in the Civil War,[23] using only the brigade of Brig. Gen. Evander M. Law and Brig. Gen. Micah Jenkins's division from Lookout Mountain, far fewer troops than Bragg had authorized. The attack was scheduled for 10:00 p.m. on October 28, but confusion delayed it until midnight. Although Geary and his officers expected an attack and had thrown out pickets, its suddenness took them by surprise. Enveloped from the north by Col. John Bratton's brigade, the Union defenders formed into a V-shaped battle line, facing north and east. Geary's son Edward, an artillery lieutenant, was killed in the battle, dying in his father's arms.[24]

Hearing the sounds of battle, Hooker, at Brown's Ferry, sent Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard with two XI Corps divisions as reinforcements. Orders of march were confused and delayed the movement. Hooker mistakenly deployed units from both XI Corps divisions against Law's and Brig. Gen. Henry L. Benning's brigades, leaving no one to go to Geary's aid. Law's 2,000 men were greatly outnumbered by Hooker's men, but the hilltop position was naturally strong and several vigorous Union assaults were repulsed.[25]

Receiving an erroneous report that Bratton was retreating, Law decided to pull back. Just as his men left their entrenchments, Col. Orland Smith's brigade (Brig. Gen. Adolph von Steinwehr's division) spilled over them, capturing some stragglers and scattering a regiment that failed to get the order to retreat. Meanwhile, Hooker agreed to let Howard proceed to Wauhatchie with some cavalry. Geary's men continued to hold fast, although they began to run low on ammunition. Just as Bratton began to sense victory, he received a note from Jenkins to retreat because Union reinforcements were arriving at his rear. He withdrew to Lookout Mountain, successfully covered by Benning's brigade.[26]

Both sides had planned poorly for the battle. Hooker's carelessness in placing his men had left them at risk. Grant was disgusted at Hooker's performance and considered relieving him. Longstreet committed too few men for an assault of this importance and Bragg was also disgusted with his subordinate. Bragg's biographer, Judith L. Hallock, wrote that Wauhatchie was, for Longstreet, an "ill-conceived, ill-planned, and poorly coordinated attack" that "resulted in a shambles."[27]

Longstreet departs edit

Bragg had committed the most egregious error of his checkered career. In all too typical fashion, he had allowed rancor to crowd out rational thought. Without a coherent plan or even the desire for close coordination between the two segments, he had divided his army in the face of a now numerically superior foe who was about to receive even more reinforcements.

The view of Peter Cozzens, The Shipwreck of Their Hopes[28]

The opening of the cracker line changed the strategic situation completely. Bragg knew the siege was effectively broken. Considering his options—retreating from the area; assaulting the Union fortifications at Chattanooga; waiting for Grant to attack; attempting to move around Grant's right flank; attempting to move around Grant's left flank—Bragg realized that movement around Grant's left flank was the only promising option. It would potentially allow him to re-establish an additional badly needed rail supply line (to Virginia via Knoxville) and join forces with about 10,000 men operating in southwestern Virginia under the command of Maj. Gen. Samuel Jones. An impediment to this plan was the operation of Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside's Union Army of the Ohio, currently occupying Knoxville and blocking the railroad. On October 17, Bragg had ordered the division of Maj. Gen. Carter L. Stevenson and two cavalry brigades to extend his right flank toward Knoxville. On October 22, Bragg added the division of Brig. Gen. John K. Jackson to the expedition, bringing the total to about 11,000 men, and considered sending Stevenson's corps commander, John C. Breckinridge, as well. In early November, Bragg ordered additional reinforcements and changed the orders from simply extending the right flank to actually pushing Burnside away from Knoxville and reestablish communications with Virginia.[29]

But events in Virginia caused Bragg to change his plan. Responding to a suggestion from President Davis, Bragg announced in a council of war on November 3 that he was sending Longstreet and his two divisions into East Tennessee to deal with Burnside, replacing the Stevenson/Jackson force. Davis had suggested Longstreet for this assignment because he intended Longstreet's divisions to return to the Army of Northern Virginia at the end of the campaign and Knoxville was on the route back to Virginia. In the face of a rapidly expanding enemy force, Bragg chose to divide his army and decrease his net defensive force by about 4,000 men (less than 10%) in order to facilitate the move on Knoxville. Campaign historian Steven E. Woodworth judged, however, that "even the flat loss of the number of good soldiers in Longstreet's divisions would have been a gain to the army in ridding it of their general's feuding and blundering."[30]

Preparations for battle edit

Grant had two weeks following Wauhatchie before Sherman was to arrive, and he charged Thomas and Smith with the responsibility for planning an assault against Bragg, starting with an attack by Sherman on the Confederate right flank, emphasizing that he would not approve the plan until Sherman had an opportunity to review it. After considerable reconnaissance the two generals presented their plan on November 14. Sherman's arriving troops would use newly improved roads to pass through the hills north of Chattanooga, taking a route that was not visible from Lookout Mountain, hoping that Bragg would not know for certain whether Sherman was targeting Chattanooga or Knoxville. Smith would assemble every available boat and pontoon to allow Sherman's corps to cross the Tennessee River near the mouth of the South Chickamauga Creek and attack Bragg's right flank on Missionary Ridge. If the attack were successful, the Union would control the two key railroad lines that supplied Bragg's army, forcing him to withdraw. Thomas's army would simultaneously pin down the Confederate center on Missionary Ridge. The plan also called for Hooker to assault and seize Lookout Mountain, Bragg's left flank, and continue on to Rossville, where he would be positioned to cut off a potential Confederate retreat to the south.[31]

Sherman arrived ahead of his troops on the evening of November 15. He observed the end of Missionary Ridge that he was designated to attack and remarked that he could seize it successfully by 9 a.m. on the assigned day. Grant approved Thomas's and Smith's plan, although he withdrew support for the attack by Hooker on Lookout Mountain, intending the mass of his attack to be by Sherman. Sherman's men were still a considerable distance from Chattanooga because they had been under orders from Halleck to repair the railroad as they marched the 330 miles from Vicksburg (an order countermanded by Grant on October 27) and their commander had ignored advice from Thomas that he march rapidly without the impediment of his trains, as Hooker had done. Although Grant had hoped to begin offensive operations on November 21, by November 20 only one of Sherman's brigades had crossed over Brown's Ferry and the attack had to be postponed. Grant was coming under pressure from Washington to react to Longstreet's advance against Burnside at Knoxville.[32]

Bragg, having dispatched most of his cavalry, had little means of gathering intelligence. He assumed that Sherman's corps would be heading toward his department's extreme right flank at Knoxville, not Chattanooga. Therefore, he believed that the main Union assault would occur on his left flank, Lookout Mountain. On November 12, Bragg placed Carter Stevenson in overall command for the defense of the mountain, with Stevenson's division placed on the summit. The brigades of Brig. Gens. John K. Jackson, Edward C. Walthall, and John C. Moore were placed on the "bench" of the mountain (a narrow and relatively flat shelf that wrapped around the northern end of the mountain approximately halfway to the summit). Jackson later wrote about the dissatisfaction of the commanders assigned to this area, "Indeed, it was agreed on all hands that the position was one extremely difficult to defense against a strong force of the enemy advancing under cover of a heavy fire."[33] Thomas L. Connelly, historian of the Army of Tennessee, wrote that despite the imposing appearance of Lookout Mountain, "the mountain's strength was a myth. ... It was impossible to hold [the bench, which] was commanded by Federal artillery at Moccasin Bend." Although Stevenson placed an artillery battery on the crest of the mountain, the guns could not be depressed enough to reach the bench, which was accessible from numerous trails on the west side of the mountain.[34]

Dissatisfaction also prevailed in the Chattanooga Valley and on Missionary Ridge, where Breckinridge, commanding Bragg's center and right, had only 16,000 men to defend a line 5 miles long. Brig. Gen. Patton Anderson, whose division was assigned to the Confederate works along the western base of the ridge, wrote "This line of defense, following its sinuosities, was over two miles in length—nearly twice as long as a number of bayonets in the division could adequately defend."[35] Bragg exacerbated the situation on November 22 by ordering Maj. Gen. Patrick R. Cleburne to withdraw his and Simon B. Buckner's divisions from the line and march to Chickamauga Station, for railroad transport to Knoxville, removing 11,000 more men from the defense of Chattanooga. This move was apparently made because, as Grant had hoped, Bragg concluded that Sherman's troops were moving on to Knoxville, in which case Longstreet would need the reinforcements, for which he had been constantly clamoring since he was first given the assignment.[36]

Opposing forces edit

Union edit

Union subordinate commanders

Grant's Military Division of the Mississippi assembled the following forces at Chattanooga:[37]

Confederate edit

Confederate corps commanders

Bragg's Army of Tennessee had the following forces available in Chattanooga:[38]

On November 5, Bragg seriously weakened his forces by sending Longstreet's Corps against Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside near Knoxville. On November 22, Bragg further weakened his forces by ordering the division of Maj. Gen. Simon B. Buckner to reinforce Longstreet at Knoxville.[39]

The Battles for Chattanooga edit

Orchard Knob edit

 
Orchard Knob in 1864
 
Battle monuments on Orchard Knob
 
Orchard Knob, c1900-1915

On November 23, the Union army observed columns of Cleburne's and Buckner's men marching away from Missionary Ridge and also heard claims from Confederate deserters that the entire army was falling back. Grant became concerned that Bragg was massively reinforcing Longstreet and sought to disrupt the movement. Thomas ordered his division under Brig. Gen. Thomas J. Wood to advance in a reconnaissance in force, instructing him to avoid an engagement with the enemy and return to his fortifications when the strength of the Confederate line was revealed. Wood's men assembled outside of their entrenchments and observed their objective approximately 2,000 yards to the east, a small knoll 100 feet high known as Orchard Knob (also known as Indian Hill). Maj. Gen. Philip Sheridan's division lined up similarly to protect Wood's right flank, and Howard's XI Corps extended the line to the left, presenting over 20,000 soldiers arrayed in almost parade-ground alignment.[40]

I never saw troops move into action in finer style than Thomas's did today. They are entitled to the highest praise for their soldierly bearing and splendid bravery.

Grant's chief of staff, John Rawlins[41]

At 1:30 p.m., 14,000 Union soldiers moved forward at the double quick, sweeping across the plain, stunning the 600 Confederate defenders, who were able to fire only a single volley before they were overrun. Casualties were relatively small on both sides. Grant and Thomas decided to order the men to hold their position and entrench, rather than following the original orders to withdraw. Orchard Knob became Grant's and Thomas's headquarters for the remainder of the battles.[42]

Bragg quickly readjusted his strategy, recalling all units that were within a day's march. Cleburne's division returned after dark from Chickamauga Station, interrupting the process of boarding the trains to Knoxville. Bragg began to reduce the strength on his left by withdrawing Maj. Gen. William H. T. Walker's division from the base of Lookout Mountain and placing them on the far right of Missionary Ridge, just south of Tunnel Hill. He assigned Hardee to command his now critical right flank, turning over the left flank to Carter Stevenson. In the center, Breckinridge ordered his men to begin fortifying the crest of Missionary Ridge, a task that Bragg had somehow neglected for weeks. Unable to decide whether to defend the base or the crest of the Ridge, the divisions of Brig. Gens. William B. Bate and Patton Anderson were ordered to move half of their divisions to the crest, leaving the remainder in the rifle pits along the base. James L. McDonough wrote of the upper entrenchments, "Placed along the physical crest rather than what is termed the military crest ... these works severely handicapped the defenders."[43]

The Union side also changed plans. Sherman had three divisions ready to cross the Tennessee, but the pontoon bridge at Brown's Ferry had torn apart and Brig. Gen. Peter J. Osterhaus's division was stranded in Lookout Valley. After receiving assurances from Sherman that he could proceed with three divisions, Grant decided to revive the previously rejected plan for an attack on Lookout Mountain and reassigned Osterhaus to Hooker's command.[44]

Lookout Mountain edit

 
Cravens house on Lookout Mountain
 
Battles for Chattanooga, November 24–25, 1863

Grant's battle plan of November 18 merely assigned Hooker the task of holding Lookout Valley. Six days later, however, Hooker had about 10,000 men[45] in three divisions at his disposal, because Brig. Gen. Peter J. Osterhaus's (XV Corps) could not cross the Tennessee due to disruption of the pontoon bridges. With Brig. Gen. John W. Geary's (XII Corps) and Brig. Gen. Charles Cruft's (XIV Corps, but missing one brigade) divisions, Hooker had too large a force to be wasted on guard duty. Thomas authorized a demonstration against the mountain, with the possibility of a full-scale assault. Hooker was ordered to "take the point only if his demonstration should develop its practicability."[46] "Fighting Joe" ignored this subtlety and ordered Geary "to cross Lookout Creek and to assault Lookout Mountain, marching down the valley and sweeping every rebel from it."[47]

While the advance of Cruft and Osterhaus demonstrated at Lookout Creek, Geary crossed the stream unopposed further south and found that the defile between the mountain and the river had not been secured. The Union troops were opposed by Brig. Gen. Edward C. Walthall's brigade of Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham's division (temporarily under the command of Brig. Gen. John K. Jackson). Geary swept northeast along the base of Lookout Mountain and pushed Walthall's completely outflanked and badly outnumbered men back to the Cravens House, just below the northern end of the mountain.[48]

The men of Brig. Gen. John C. Brown's Confederate brigade on the mountain top found themselves powerless to intervene in the battle raging below the cliffs. Geary's success allowed the other two divisions to cross the creek and push aside the Confederate skirmishers in front of them. Brig. Gen. John C. Moore brought his brigade up around 1:00 p.m. to become embroiled in a fight with Geary and Brig. Gen. Walter C. Whitaker's brigade of Cruft's division. Moore was pushed back and soon joined by Brig. Gen. Edmund Pettus's brigade.[49]

By about 3:00 p.m., thick fog enveloped the mountain. Brig. Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs, quartermaster general of the Union Army, observing from Orchard Knob, was the first writer to name the action on Lookout Mountain the "Battle Above the Clouds".[50] The two sides blazed away blindly in the fog the rest of the afternoon but few men were hit. During the fight, Hooker sent a stream of "alternate whimpering and blustering" messages to Grant, but got it exactly right when he predicted, "In all probability the enemy will evacuate tonight."[51] Realizing the battle was lost, Bragg ordered the position abandoned. At midnight the fog cleared and, under a lunar eclipse, the divisions of Stevenson and Cheatham retreated behind Chattanooga Creek, burning the bridges behind them.[52]

That night Bragg asked his two corps commanders whether to retreat or to stand and fight. Hardee counseled retreat, but Breckinridge convinced Bragg to fight it out on the strong position of Missionary Ridge.[53] Accordingly, the troops withdrawn from Lookout Mountain were ordered to the right flank.[54]

Missionary Ridge edit

 
Battle of Chattanooga by Thure de Thulstrup. Ulysses S. Grant uses a field glass to follow the Union assault on Missionary Ridge. Grant is joined by Generals Gordon Granger (left) and George H. Thomas.
 
Battle of Missionary Ridge, November 25, 1863
  Confederate
  Union

Sherman's remaining three divisions crossed the Tennessee River successfully on the morning of November 24, with an Army of the Cumberland division that was assigned to him following later, then occupied what the general thought—due to faulty intelligence—was the north end of Missionary Ridge but was actually a completely separate rise known as Billy Goat Hill. Sherman was dismayed to see that, across a deep ravine, the Confederates had fortified Tunnel Hill, the northernmost portion of the ridge. Although his goal was the railroad tunnel, on the far side, he took no further offensive action for the day. Sherman ordered his men to dig in on Billy Goat Hill.[55]

On November 25, Grant's plan called for a continued effort by Sherman to ascend Missionary Ridge from the north and move southward toward the center of the Confederate position. Grant gave a supporting role to Thomas:

I have instructed Sherman to advance as soon as it is light in the morning, and your attack, which will be simultaneous, will be in cooperation. Your command will either carry the rifle pits and ridge directly in front of them or move to the left, as the presence of the enemy may require.[56]

Grant had no particular expectation for Hooker other than to divert Bragg's attention by ascending to the plateau of Lookout Mountain. Thomas wanted support on his flank, however, and called Hooker to cross the valley and advance against Bragg's left flank directly at the Rossville Gap.[57] As the morning progressed, Sherman launched multiple direct assaults against Cleburne's line on Tunnel Hill but, despite his significantly larger force, committed only four brigades to the attacks and made no headway. At the southern end of the battlefield, Hooker's advance was slowed for hours by the burned bridges on Chattanooga Creek.[58]

Seeing the lack of progress on the flanks, around 3:30 p.m. Grant ordered Thomas to move forward in the center in a demonstration meant to help Sherman. The men of the Army of the Cumberland advanced and quickly pushed the Confederates from their rifle pits, fulfilling their orders, but were then subjected to a punishing fire from the Confederate positions up the ridge. Most of Thomas's troops had been in the disastrous loss at Chickamauga and had suffered taunts by Sherman's and Hooker's newly arrived forces. Now they were under fire from above with no apparent plan to advance or move back. At this point, the Union soldiers continued the attack against the remaining lines. This second advance was taken up by the commanders on the spot, but also by some of the soldiers who, on their own, sought shelter from the fire further up the slope.[59] Bragg had placed his artillery and trenches of the infantry along the actual crest of the ridge, rather than the military crest further down the slope, and they were unable to provide effective fire. The Union advance was disorganized but effective, finally overwhelming and scattering what ought to have been an impregnable Confederate line.[60] As such, the Army of the Cumberland's ascent of Missionary Ridge was one of the war's most dramatic events. Military historians Herman Hattaway and Archer Jones contend that the Battle of Missionary Ridge was "the war's most notable example of a frontal assault succeeding against intrenched defenders holding high ground."[61] A Union officer remembered that

Little regard to formation was observed. Each battalion assumed a triangular shape, the colors at the apex. ... [a] color-bearer dashes ahead of the line and falls. A comrade grasps the flag. ... He, too, falls. Then another[62] picks it up ... waves it defiantly, and as if bearing a charmed life, he advances steadily towards the top ...[63]

Grant was initially furious that his orders to advance only as far as the rifle pits had not been followed and threatened his subordinates from the Army of the Cumberland if the assault failed. But it succeeded. By 4:30 p.m. the center of Bragg's line had broken completely and fled in panic, requiring the abandonment of Missionary Ridge and a headlong retreat eastward to South Chickamauga Creek. The exception to the panicked flight was Hardee's command on the Confederate right, facing Sherman. Cleburne's division, augmented by two other brigades, formed the rearguard of Bragg's army as it retreated eastward.[64]

Rossville Gap edit

After Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's command left Lookout Mountain at about 10 a.m. and moved east, they encountered a significant obstacle. The bridge across Chattanooga Creek, about a mile from Rossville Gap, had been burned by the Confederates as they withdrew the night before and the creek was running high. Brig. Gen. Peter J. Osterhaus assigned a 70-man pioneer unit to start rebuilding the bridge while men of the 27th Missouri created a rickety footbridge and began crossing one by one. Hooker decided to leave his guns and wagons behind so that all of his infantry could cross first, but his advance was delayed about three hours and he did not reach Rossville Gap until 3:30 p.m.[65]

Breckinridge was absent while the Union attack wrecked his corps. Worried about his left flank, he rode to the end of his line in the early afternoon. At 3:30 p.m., about the time Thomas launched his four-division attack on Missionary Ridge, Breckinridge visited Stewart's left flank brigade of Col. James T. Holtzclaw, whose commander pointed to the southwest where Hooker's men were busily bridging Chattanooga Creek. Concerned about Rossville Gap, which lay undefended beyond his left flank, Breckinridge ordered Holtzclaw to send a couple of regiments to hold the position. It was too late; by the time the Southerners reached the gap, Osterhaus's division had already marched through. Lt. J. Cabell Breckinridge, the general's son and aide-de-camp, rode into a group from the 9th Iowa and was captured.[66]

Hooker quickly faced his troops to the north and organized a three-pronged attack. He sent Osterhaus along a trail east of Missionary Ridge, Cruft onto the ridge itself, and Geary along the western face of the ridge. Holtzclaw faced his men south and put up a fight, but Cruft and Osterhaus soon began herding the outnumbered Confederates north along Missionary Ridge. Hearing a tremendous racket to the north, Breckinridge finally rode off to find out what was wrong. As Holtzclaw retreated before Hooker's command, he eventually bumped into Col. Anson G. McCook's 2nd Ohio of Carlin's brigade, now astride the ridge. Surrounded by superior forces on four sides, approximately 700 of Holtzclaw's men surrendered.[67]

Retreat and pursuit edit

During the night, Bragg ordered his army to withdraw toward Chickamauga Station on the Western and Atlantic Railroad (currently the site of Lovell Air Field) and on November 26 began retreating toward Dalton, Georgia, in two columns taking two routes. Only Sheridan tried to pursue beyond Missionary Ridge, but he finally gave up late that night when it was clear that he was not being supported by either Granger or Thomas.[68]

Ringgold Gap edit

The pursuit ordered by Grant was effectively thwarted at the Battle of Ringgold Gap. At 3 a.m. on November 27, Cleburne readied his men and waited until the Union force was almost upon them before opening fire with artillery and rifles. Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's force was taken utterly by surprise, but he tried to use his numbers to regain the initiative. He attempted to outflank the Confederates both on the right and on the left, but the Confederates held their positions. For five hours the slaughter continued, Cleburne's 4,100 soldiers against Hooker's 12,000, with Hooker gaining little ground. Cleburne's men stayed to about noon, then retreated, successfully allowing the wagons and artillery to pass through the gap unharmed.[69]

Grant called off the remaining pursuit because his army was low on rations and he decided he needed to stay close to his supply line. Furthermore, Washington was still clamoring for the rescue of Burnside in Knoxville and Grant was told that the Union troops there had rations that would last only until December 3. President Lincoln's message of congratulations to Grant after Missionary Ridge had said "Well done. Many thanks to all. Remember Burnside."[70]

Aftermath edit

 
Captured artillery, c. 1865

Casualties for the Union Army amounted to 5,824 (753 killed, 4,722 wounded, and 349 missing) of about 56,000 engaged; Bragg reported Confederate casualties of 6,667 (361 killed, 2,160 wounded, and 4,146 missing, mostly prisoners) of about 44,000.[71] Southern losses may have been higher; Grant claimed 6,142 prisoners. When a chaplain asked General Thomas whether the dead should be sorted and buried by state, Thomas replied "Mix 'em up. I'm tired of States' rights."[72]

One of the Confederacy's two major armies was routed. Bragg relieved Breckinridge from command, accusing him of drunkenness during the period November 23–27. Bragg chose to blame Breckinridge and the cowardice of his army for the defeat. He resigned from command of the Army of Tennessee on December 1 and was replaced temporarily by Hardee. (Gen. Joseph E. Johnston assumed command of the army on December 27.)[73]

In East Tennessee, Longstreet's offensive against Burnside (the Knoxville campaign) fell apart at the Battle of Fort Sanders on November 29. Although he was ordered to rejoin Bragg, Longstreet considered the order impracticable and informed Bragg that he would return with his command to Virginia but would maintain the siege on Knoxville as long as possible in the hopes that Burnside and Grant could be prevented from joining forces and annihilating the Army of Tennessee. This plan turned out to be effective because Grant sent Sherman with 25,000 men to relieve the siege at Knoxville. Longstreet abandoned his siege on December 4, went into winter quarters, and returned to Virginia in the spring of 1864.[74]

The Confederate enthusiasm that had risen so high after Chickamauga had been dashed at Chattanooga.[75] The Union now held undisputed control of the state of Tennessee, including Chattanooga, the "Gateway to the Lower South." The city became the supply and logistics base for Sherman's 1864 Atlanta campaign, as well as for the Army of the Cumberland.[76] Grant had won his final battle in the West prior to receiving command of all Union armies in March 1864.[77]

Battlefield preservation edit

 
National cemetery at Chattanooga with a view of Lookout Mountain in the distance

Portions of the Chattanooga battlefields, including 3,000 acres (1,200 ha) at Lookout Mountain, are preserved by the National Park Service as part of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park. The American Battlefield Trust and its partners have acquired and preserved more than 405 acres (1.64 km2) of the Chattanooga battlefield as of mid-2023.[78]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ ""The Battle of Chattanooga"". CivilWarHome.com. Retrieved June 25, 2016.
  2. ^ Abstract from returns of the Union forces at and about Chattanooga November 20, 1863 (Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 2, pages 12-13)
  3. ^ Abstract from returns of the Army of Tennessee for October 31 and December 10, 1863 (Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 2, page 656)
  4. ^ Return of casualties in the Union forces (see also note at bottom of page 80): Official Records, Series I, Volume XXXI, Part 2, pages 80-90
  5. ^ See Confederate casualties: Battle of Lookout Mountain and Battle of Missionary Ridge.
  6. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Chattanooga" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 6 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 7–9.
  7. ^ The National Park Service's Civil War Sites Advisory Commission November 6, 2013, at the Wayback Machine classifies two campaigns for this period: Reopening the Tennessee River (Battle of Wauhatchie) and Chattanooga-Ringgold (the Third Battle of Chattanooga, frequently known as the Battles for Chattanooga, and the Battle of Ringgold Gap).
  8. ^ Eicher, pp. 577–90; Esposito, text to map 115; McDonough, pp. 3–12, 23–25; Hallock, pp. 82–84; Connelly, pp. 232–33; Cleaves, pp. 178–79; Korn, pp. 35, 45–73.
  9. ^ Connelly, pp. 232–33; Esposito, map 115.
  10. ^ Cozzens, pp. 23–26, 8–9; McDonough, pp. 25–40; Hallock, pp. 88–108; Connelly, pp. 233–50; Eicher, pp. 593–96; Korn, pp. 81, 84–85.
  11. ^ Cozzens, p. 11.
  12. ^ McDonough, pp. 41–48, 68–70.
  13. ^ Korn, p. 83; Cleaves, p. 182; McDonough, p. 45.
  14. ^ Lamers, pp. 375–76; Korn, pp. 78–80; Cozzens, pp. 11, 17–19; Esposito, map 115; Eicher, pp. 596, 600.
  15. ^ Cozzens, pp. 2–3. The order, written by general in chief Henry W. Halleck, directed Grant to travel to Memphis, Tennessee. He arrived there on October 16 and received new orders to continue to Louisville, Kentucky. He met personally with Stanton on October 17 and learned of his new command.
  16. ^ Cleaves, p. 182; McDonough, pp. 49–54; Liddell Hart, p. 212; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 151; Smith, pp. 264–65; Lamers, p. 393; Eicher, p. 595; Korn, pp. 83–89; Cozzens, pp. 18, 2–6; Esposito, map 115.
  17. ^ Cozzens, pp. 18, 39–42; McDonough, pp. 55–58; Kennedy, p. 241; Smith, pp. 266–67; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 154–55; Cleaves, p. 188; Korn, p. 89; Eicher, p. 602.
  18. ^ Cozzens, pp. 51–56; Cleaves, pp. 189–90; Eicher, p. 602.
  19. ^ Hallock, p. 122; Connelly, pp. 255–58; Cozzens, pp. 57–58; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 156.
  20. ^ McDonough, pp. 76–85; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 158–60; Connelly, pp. 258–59; Korn, pp. 90–91; Eicher, p. 602; Esposito, map 116; Cozzens, pp. 61–65.
  21. ^ Eicher, pp. 602–603; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 160; McDonough, pp. 87–88; Kennedy, p. 242; Cozzens, pp. 72–73; Korn, p. 91.
  22. ^ Korn, p. 92; McDonough, pp. 88–89; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 163–64; Kennedy, p. 242; Cozzens, pp. 78–79.
  23. ^ Eicher, p. 603.
  24. ^ McDonough, pp. 89–94; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 164–66; Korn, p. 93; Hallock, p. 123; Cozzens, pp. 80–89.
  25. ^ Korn, p. 93; Cozzens, pp. 90–97; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 166.
  26. ^ Korn, pp. 93–94; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 167; Cozzens, pp. 97–99.
  27. ^ Halleck, pp. 123–24; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 167; Connelly, pp. 260–61; Cozzens, pp. 100–101; Korn, p. 242.
  28. ^ Cozzens, p. 105.
  29. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 174–76.
  30. ^ McDonough, pp. 98–101; Hallock, pp. 125–26; Connelly, pp. 262–64; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 177–79; Cozzens, pp. 103–105; Korn, p. 99.
  31. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 172; McDonough, pp. 108–109; Kennedy, p. 245; Liddell Hart, pp. 213–14.
  32. ^ Hallock, p. 212; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 169–70; Woodworth, Nothing but Victory, pp. 460–62; Liddell Hart, p. 214; McDonough, pp. 109, 117–18; Cozzens, pp. 109–10, 112, 114; Eicher, p. 116; Korn, p. 97.
  33. ^ Cozzens, p. 117.
  34. ^ Connelly, p. 270.
  35. ^ Cozzens, p. 119.
  36. ^ Cozzens, p. 125; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 176–79; Connelly, p. 272.
  37. ^ Eicher, pp. 601–602.
  38. ^ Cozzens, pp. 408–15.
  39. ^ Eicher, p. 602; Cozzens, pp. 104, 125.
  40. ^ McDonough, pp. 110–11; Cozzens, pp. 128–29; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 180.
  41. ^ Cozzens, p. 135.
  42. ^ Smith, p. 275; McDonough, pp. 111–13; Cleaves, pp. 194–95; Cozzens, pp. 130–35, 203. Grant did not move to Orchard Knob until 9:30 a.m., November 25.
  43. ^ McDonough, pp. 124–28, 183; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 181; Korn, p. 143; Connelly, pp. 270–72; Cozzens, pp. 140–42.
  44. ^ McDonough, pp. 129–30; Cozzens, pp. 143–44; Woodworth, Nothing but Victory, p. 465.
  45. ^ McDonough, p. 130.
  46. ^ Cozzens, p. 144.
  47. ^ Cozzens, p. 160; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 185–86; McDonough, pp. 130–37.
  48. ^ Cozzens, pp. 171–78; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 186; Korn, p. 130.
  49. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 186–87; Cozzens, p. 182.
  50. ^ McDonough, p. 129.
  51. ^ Cozzens, p. 191.
  52. ^ McDonough, pp. 137–40, 160; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 187–88; Korn, pp. 131–36.
  53. ^ Cozzens, p. 196; Hallock, p. 136.
  54. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 190–91.
  55. ^ Woodworth, Nothing but Victory, pp. 468–69; McDonough, 117–24; Liddell Hart, p. 215; Cozzens pp. 148–50.
  56. ^ Cozzens, p. 200.
  57. ^ Cozzens, pp. 200–203.
  58. ^ Eicher, p. 610; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 189–96; Woodworth, Nothing but Victory, pp. 471–78; Korn, pp. 137–41; McDonough, pp. 143–59, 162–64; Cozzens, pp. 199–243.
  59. ^ Catton, p. 82; Eicher, p. 116.
  60. ^ McDonough, pp. 167–205; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 195–202; Liddell Hart, p. 217; Cleaves, pp. 198–99; Korn, p. 145.
  61. ^ Hattaway and Jones, p. 461.
  62. ^ Smith, p. 280; McDonough, pp. 199–200; Cozzens, p. 308; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 201. The last flag-bearer mentioned in the quotation, an eighteen-year-old lieutenant, was awarded the Medal of Honor for this action. He was Arthur MacArthur, Jr., and would later become the father of Douglas MacArthur.
  63. ^ Catton, American Heritage, p. 439.
  64. ^ McDonough, pp. 206–209; Kennedy, p. 245; Cleaves, p. 199; Cozzens, pp. 282, 366–69; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 204–205; Korn, p. 145.
  65. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 193; McDonough, pp. 159–60; Korn, p. 142; Cozzens, pp. 244–45.
  66. ^ Cozzens, p. 315; O.R., Series 1, Vol. XXXI, Part 2, p. 615.
  67. ^ McDonough, pp. 211–12; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 202; Cozzens, p. 319.
  68. ^ Korn, p. 150; McDonough, pp. 214–15; Cozzens, pp. 348, 350–52.
  69. ^ Kennedy, pp. 246–48; Woodworth, Nothing but Victory, p. 478; Cozzens, pp. 370–84; McDonough, pp. 220–25.
  70. ^ Cozzens, p. 386; Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 205; Korn, p. 154.
  71. ^ Eicher, p. 613; Livermore, pp. 106–108; Cozzens, p. 389, cites Union casualties of 684 killed, 4,329 wounded, and 322 captured or missing for the battles of November 23–25.
  72. ^ Eicher, p. 613.
  73. ^ Connelly, p. 277; Hallock, p. 149; Cozzens, p. 397; Kennedy, 246; McDonough, 225.
  74. ^ Smith, 282; Liddell Hart, pp. 217–18; Woodworth, Six Armies, pp. 206–11; Korn, pp. 105–17.
  75. ^ Hattaway and Jones, p. 462.
  76. ^ The Army of the Ohio was based in Knoxville, the Army of the Tennessee in Nashville.
  77. ^ Woodworth, Six Armies, p. 213; Cozzens, p. 391; Korn, p. 155.
  78. ^ [1] American Battlefield Trust "Chattanooga Battlefield" webpage. Accessed May 15, 2023.

References edit

  • Catton, Bruce. Grant Takes Command. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1968. ISBN 0-316-13210-1.
  • Cleaves, Freeman. Rock of Chickamauga: The Life of General George H. Thomas. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1948. ISBN 0-8061-1978-0.
  • Connelly, Thomas L. Autumn of Glory: The Army of Tennessee 1862–1865. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1971. ISBN 0-8071-2738-8.
  • Cozzens, Peter. The Shipwreck of Their Hopes: The Battles for Chattanooga. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1994. ISBN 0-252-01922-9.
  • Eicher, David J. The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001. ISBN 0-684-84944-5.
  • Esposito, Vincent J. West Point Atlas of American Wars. New York: Frederick A. Praeger, 1959. OCLC 5890637. The collection of maps (without explanatory text) is available online at the .
  • Hallock, Judith Lee. Braxton Bragg and Confederate Defeat. Vol. 2. Tuscaloosa: University of Alabama Press, 1991. ISBN 0-8173-0543-2.
  • Hattaway, Herman, and Archer Jones. How the North Won: A Military History of the Civil War. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1983. ISBN 0-252-00918-5.
  • Kagan, Neil, and Stephen G. Hyslop. National Geographic Atlas of the Civil War: A Comprehensive Guide to the Tactics and Terrain of Battle. National Geographic, 2008. ISBN 978-1-4262-0347-3.
  • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. The Civil War Battlefield Guide[permanent dead link]. 2nd ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998. ISBN 0-395-74012-6.
  • Korn, Jerry, and the Editors of Time-Life Books. The Fight for Chattanooga: Chickamauga to Missionary Ridge. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1985. ISBN 0-8094-4816-5.
  • Lamers, William M. The Edge of Glory: A Biography of General William S. Rosecrans, U.S.A. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 1961. ISBN 0-8071-2396-X.
  • Liddell Hart, B. H. Sherman: Soldier, Realist, American. New York: Da Capo Press, 1993. ISBN 0-306-80507-3. First published in 1929 by Dodd, Mead & Co.
  • Livermore, Thomas L. Numbers and Losses in the Civil War in America 1861-65. Reprinted with errata, Dayton, OH: Morninside House, 1986. ISBN 0-527-57600-X. First published in 1901 by Houghton Mifflin.
  • McDonough, James Lee. Chattanooga—A Death Grip on the Confederacy. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press, 1984. ISBN 0-87049-425-2.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. Nothing but Victory: The Army of the Tennessee, 1861–1865. New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 2005. ISBN 0-375-41218-2.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. Six Armies in Tennessee: The Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1998. ISBN 0-8032-9813-7.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. and Charles D. Grear, eds. The Chattanooga Campaign (Southern Illinois University Press; 2012) 226 pages; essays by scholars

Memoirs and primary sources edit

  • Johnson, Robert Underwood, and Clarence C. Buel, eds. Battles and Leaders of the Civil War December 12, 2008, at the Wayback Machine. 4 vols. New York: Century Co., 1884–1888. OCLC 2048818.
  • U.S. War Department, The War of the Rebellion September 13, 2009, at the Wayback Machine: a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1880–1901.

Further reading edit

  • Horn, Stanley F. The Army of Tennessee: A Military History. Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1941. OCLC 2153322.
  • Jones, Evan C., and Wiley Sword, eds. Gateway to the Confederacy: New Perspectives on the Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns, 1862–1863. Baton Rouge: Louisiana State University Press, 2014. ISBN 978-0-8071-5509-7.
  • Sword, Wiley. Mountains Touched with Fire: Chattanooga Besieged, 1863. New York: St. Martin's Press, 1995. ISBN 0-312-15593-X.
  • Powell, David A. Battle Above the Clouds: Lifting the Siege of Chattanooga and the Battle of Lookout Mountain, October 16–November 24, 1863. Emerging Civil War Series. El Dorado Hills, CA: Savas Beatie, 2017. ISBN 978-1-61121-377-5.
  • Watkins, Sam. Co. Aytch Maury Grays, First Tennessee Regiment or, A Side Show of the Big Show. Cumberland Presbyterian Publishing House, 1882. OCLC 43511251.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. Jefferson Davis and His Generals: The Failure of Confederate Command in the West. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1990. ISBN 0-7006-0461-8.
  • Woodworth, Steven E. This Grand Spectacle: The Battle of Chattanooga. Abilene, TX: McWhiney Foundation, 1999. ISBN 978-0-585-35007-3.

External links edit

  • : , histories, photos, and preservation news (Civil War Trust)
  • Period images of the Chattanooga battlefield
  • Extensive analysis of the battle of Chattanooga Includes the major reports, period maps, and recent photos. Emphasis on Hooker's turning Bragg's left flank.

35°02′42″N 85°18′32″W / 35.045°N 85.309°W / 35.045; -85.309

chattanooga, campaign, battles, chattanooga, redirects, here, other, battles, battle, chattanooga, disambiguation, series, maneuvers, battles, october, november, 1863, during, american, civil, following, defeat, william, rosecrans, union, army, cumberland, bat. Battles for Chattanooga redirects here For other battles see Battle of Chattanooga disambiguation The Chattanooga campaign 7 was a series of maneuvers and battles in October and November 1863 during the American Civil War Following the defeat of Maj Gen William S Rosecrans s Union Army of the Cumberland at the Battle of Chickamauga in September the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen Braxton Bragg besieged Rosecrans and his men by occupying key high terrain around Chattanooga Tennessee Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant was given command of Union forces in the West now consolidated under the Division of the Mississippi Significant reinforcements also began to arrive with him in Chattanooga from Mississippi and the Eastern Theater On October 18 Grant removed Rosecrans from command of the Army of the Cumberland and replaced him with Major General George Henry Thomas Chattanooga campaignPart of the American Civil WarMaj Gen Ulysses S Grant and Gen Braxton Bragg commanding generals of the Chattanooga campaignDateSeptember 21 November 25 1863 1 2 months and 4 days LocationChattanooga TennesseeResultUnion victoryBelligerentsUnited States Union CSA Confederacy Commanders and leadersUlysses S GrantWilliam S RosecransGeorge Henry ThomasWilliam Tecumseh ShermanJoseph HookerBraxton BraggJames LongstreetJohn C BreckinridgeWilliam J HardeeUnits involvedArmy of the CumberlandMilitary Division of the MississippiArmy of TennesseeStrength72 533 present for duty equipped 2 48 948 present for duty 3 Casualties and losses5 824 total 753 killed 4 722 wounded 349 missing 4 6 000 8 000 estimated 5 8 684 men killed wounded or prisoners 6 During the opening of a supply line the Cracker Line to feed the starving men and animals in Chattanooga a force under Maj Gen Joseph Hooker fought off a Confederate counterattack at the Battle of Wauhatchie on October 28 29 1863 On November 23 the Army of the Cumberland advanced from the fortifications around Chattanooga to seize the strategic high ground at Orchard Knob while elements of the Union Army of the Tennessee under Maj Gen William Tecumseh Sherman maneuvered to launch a surprise attack against Bragg s right flank on Missionary Ridge On November 24 Sherman s men crossed the Tennessee River in the morning and then advanced to occupy high ground at the northern end of Missionary Ridge in the afternoon The same day a mixed force of almost three divisions under Maj Gen Joseph Hooker defeated the Confederates in the Battle of Lookout Mountain The next day they began a movement toward Bragg s left flank at Rossville On November 25 Sherman s attack on Bragg s right flank made little progress Hoping to distract Bragg s attention Grant ordered Thomas s army to advance in the center and take the Confederate positions at the base of Missionary Ridge The untenability of these newly captured entrenchments caused Thomas s men to surge to the top of Missionary Ridge and with the help of Hooker s force advancing north from Rossville routed the Confederate Army of Tennessee The Confederates retreated to Dalton Georgia successfully fighting off the Union pursuit at the Battle of Ringgold Gap Bragg s defeat eliminated the last significant Confederate control of Tennessee and opened the door to an invasion of the Deep South leading to Sherman s Atlanta campaign of 1864 Contents 1 Background 1 1 Military situation 1 2 Reopening the Tennessee River 1 2 1 Opening the Cracker Line 1 2 2 Wauhatchie 1 2 3 Longstreet departs 1 3 Preparations for battle 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Union 2 2 Confederate 3 The Battles for Chattanooga 3 1 Orchard Knob 3 2 Lookout Mountain 3 3 Missionary Ridge 3 4 Rossville Gap 4 Retreat and pursuit 4 1 Ringgold Gap 5 Aftermath 6 Battlefield preservation 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 9 1 Memoirs and primary sources 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground editMilitary situation edit Main article Battle of Chickamauga Further information American Civil War Western Theater of the American Civil War Battle of Stones River Tullahoma campaign Chickamauga campaign and Chattanooga in the American Civil War nbsp Chattanooga viewed from the north bank of the Tennessee River 1863 The Union Army pontoon bridge is shown on the left Lookout Mountain at the right rear The small hill in front of Lookout Mountain is Cameron Hill which was significantly flattened during 20th century development of the city nbsp Federal supply lines and Wheeler s October 1863 raid Confederate Union nbsp Federal supply lines before and after opening Grant s Cracker LineChattanooga was a vital rail hub with lines going north toward Nashville and Knoxville and south toward Atlanta and an important manufacturing center for the production of iron and coal located on the navigable Tennessee River In September 1863 the Union Army of the Cumberland under Maj Gen William S Rosecrans executed a series of maneuvers that forced Confederate Gen Braxton Bragg and his Army of Tennessee to abandon Chattanooga and withdraw into northern Georgia Rosecrans pursued Bragg and the two armies collided at the Battle of Chickamauga on September 19 20 Bragg achieved a major victory when a gap was opened mistakenly in the Union line and a strong assaulting force commanded by Lt Gen James Longstreet serendipitously drove through it and routed a good portion of the Union army A determined defensive stand by Maj Gen George H Thomas on Snodgrass Hill saved the army from total destruction earning him the nickname Rock of Chickamauga and allowing time for most of Rosecrans s army to retreat to Chattanooga Bragg did not cut off the escape routes to Chattanooga and did not organize a pursuit that might have seriously damaged the Union army before it could regroup and prepare its defenses in the city The Union forces took advantage of previous Confederate works to erect strong defensive positions in a tight 3 mile long semicircle around the city 8 nbsp Union reinforcements destined for the Army of the Cumberland being moved by train through Louisville Nashville to Chattanooga October 1863 as part of the preparation for operations against Confederate forces based around Chattanooga Bragg had three courses of action He could outflank Rosecrans by crossing the Tennessee either below or above the city assault the Union force directly in their fortifications or starve the Federals by establishing a siege line The flanking option was deemed to be impracticable because Bragg s army was short on ammunition they had no pontoons for river crossing and Longstreet s corps from Virginia had arrived at Chickamauga without wagons A direct assault was too costly against a well fortified enemy Receiving intelligence that Rosecrans s men had only six days of rations Bragg chose the siege option while attempting to accumulate sufficient logistical capability to cross the Tennessee 9 nbsp View of Chattanooga from the northern side of the Tennessee looking southwards towards Georgia showing the town in the foreground across the river On the left in the distance is Missionary ridge along the horizon In the distance to the right is Lookout Mountain These natural formations offered excellent defensive positions and bottled the Union army in Chattanooga Bragg s army besieged the city threatening to starve the Union forces into surrender The Confederates established themselves on Missionary Ridge and Lookout Mountain both of which had excellent views of the city the Tennessee River flowing north of the city and the Union s supply lines Bragg also had little inclination to take offensive action against the Federal army because he was occupied in leadership quarrels within his army On September 29 Bragg relieved from command two of his subordinates who had disappointed him in the Chickamauga campaign Maj Gen Thomas C Hindman who had failed to destroy part of the Union army at McLemore s Cove and Lt Gen Leonidas Polk who had delayed attacking on September 20 at Chickamauga On October 4 twelve of his most senior generals sent a petition to Confederate President Jefferson Davis demanding that Bragg be relieved of command Davis personally visited Chattanooga to hear the complaints After he decided to retain Bragg in command Bragg retaliated against some of those generals by relieving Lt Gen D H Hill and Maj Gen Simon B Buckner 10 Never in the history of the Army of the Cumberland had the spirit of its officers and men been more depressed The battle of Chickamauga had not only been fought and lost but we also lost what was more than losing the battle We had lost confidence in our commander Capt George Lewis 124th Ohio 11 In Chattanooga Rosecrans was stunned by the defeat of his army and became psychologically unable to take decisive action to lift the siege 12 President Abraham Lincoln remarked that Rosecrans seemed confused and stunned like a duck hit on the head 13 Union soldiers began to feel the effect of extremely short rations and many of their horses and mules died The only supply line that was not controlled by the Confederates was a roundabout tortuous course nearly 60 miles long over Walden s Ridge from Bridgeport Alabama Heavy rains began to fall in late September washing away long stretches of the mountain roads On October 1 Maj Gen Joseph Wheeler s Confederate cavalry intercepted and severely damaged a train of 800 wagons burning hundreds of the wagons and shooting or sabering hundreds of mules at the start of his October 1863 Raid through Tennessee to sever Rosecrans s supply line Toward the end of October typical Federal soldiers rations were four cakes of hard bread and a quarter pound of pork every three days 14 nbsp nbsp Grant and Thomas headquarters October 23 The Union high command began immediate preparations to relieve the city Only hours after the defeat at Chickamauga Secretary of War Edwin M Stanton ordered Maj Gen Joseph Hooker to Chattanooga with 20 000 men in two small corps from the Army of the Potomac in Virginia Even before the Union defeat Maj Gen Ulysses S Grant had been ordered to send his available force to assist Rosecrans and it departed under his chief subordinate Maj Gen William T Sherman from Vicksburg Mississippi On September 29 Stanton ordered Grant to go to Chattanooga himself 15 as commander of the newly created Military Division of the Mississippi bringing the territory from the Appalachian Mountains to the Mississippi River and much of the state of Arkansas under a single commander for the first time Grant was given the option of replacing the demoralized Rosecrans with Thomas Although Grant did not have good personal relations with Thomas he had previously determined that he could not make Rosecrans do as I wished in the capacity as a subordinate Grant selected Thomas to command the Army of the Cumberland Hearing an inaccurate report that Rosecrans had been preparing to abandon Chattanooga Grant telegraphed to Thomas Hold Chattanooga at all hazards I will be there as soon as possible The Rock of Chickamauga replied immediately I will hold the town till we starve Grant traveled over the treacherous mountain supply line roads and arrived in Chattanooga on October 23 16 Reopening the Tennessee River edit Opening the Cracker Line edit nbsp Engraving of the view north from Point Lookout on Lookout Mountain over the Chattanooga region from Battles and Leaders 1885The chief engineer of the Army of the Cumberland Brig Gen William F Baldy Smith had devised a plan with Rosecrans to open a more reliable supply line to the troops in Chattanooga General Thomas put the plan afoot immediately upon taking command Smith briefed Grant immediately after the new commander s arrival and Grant enthusiastically concurred with the plan Brown s Ferry crossed the Tennessee River from Moccasin Point where the road followed a gap through the foothills turned south through Lookout Valley to Wauhatchie Station and then west to Kelley s Ferry a navigable point on the Tennessee that could be reached by Union supply boats If the Army of the Cumberland could seize Brown s Ferry and link up with Hooker s force arriving from Bridgeport Alabama through Lookout Valley a reliable efficient supply line soon to become known as the Cracker Line would be open In addition a force at Brown s Ferry would threaten the right flank of any Confederate movement into the valley 17 nbsp USS Chattanooga Cracker Liner nbsp Hazen s men land at Brown s FerryHooker left Maj Gen Henry W Slocum with one of his divisions of the XII Corps to guard the railroad line from Murfreesboro to Bridgeport Slocum s remaining division under Brig Gen John W Geary and the two divisions of Maj Gen Oliver O Howard s XI Corps were ordered to move quickly to Lookout Valley However weather conditions delayed the movement so Grant decided to move ahead with the Brown s Ferry operation even before Hooker could arrive Smith s plan for the assault on Brown s Ferry was to send most of one brigade Brig Gen William B Hazen s traveling stealthily downriver on pontoons and a raft at night to capture the gap and hills on the west bank of the Tennessee while a second brigade Brig Gen John B Turchin s marched across Moccasin Point in support 18 Braxton Bragg had no idea that this operation was being planned but he was aware of Hooker s pending river crossing at Bridgeport so was concerned about his left flank He ordered Longstreet to move additional units into Lookout Valley but unknown to Bragg the order was ignored Furthermore Longstreet s lack of diligence allowed command mixups to leave only two regiments near Brown s Ferry 19 Early on the morning of October 27 Hazen s men floated unnoticed past the Confederate position on Lookout Mountain aided by low fog and no moonlight They were able to seize the ground above Brown s Ferry by 4 40 a m A counterattack by the 15th Alabama Infantry commanded by Col William C Oates of Little Round Top fame was repulsed and Oates was wounded Oates s brigade commander Brig Gen Evander M Law placed his brigade blocking the road over Lookout Mountain and reported the Union success to Longstreet Longstreet dismissed the importance of the report considering the Union move to be only a feint and did not bother passing the information on to Bragg When Bragg learned of it he ordered Longstreet to retake the ground immediately but Longstreet once again did nothing and Smith s men spent the day consolidating their bridgehead without interference 20 Hooker s column marched through Lookout Valley and linked up with Hazen and Turchin at Brown s Ferry at 3 45 p m October 28 Thomas s staff began the preparations to bring supplies over the Cracker Line and he telegraphed General in Chief Henry W Halleck that he expected in a few days to be pretty well supplied 21 Wauhatchie edit Further information Battle of Wauhatchie nbsp Battle of WauhatchieHaving ignored several direct orders from Bragg to attack Brown s Ferry Longstreet was ordered by Bragg to attack Hooker s concentration at Wauhatchie instead There Hooker had neglected to arrange his force into effective defensive positions instructing them merely to find good cover for the troops and bivouac He detached Brig Gen John W Geary s division at Wauhatchie Station a stop on the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad to protect the line of communications to the south as well as the road west to Kelley s Ferry Longstreet was amazed to see Geary s bivouacking soldiers with their large wagon train parked directly in front of him 22 Longstreet ordered a night attack a relatively rare occurrence in the Civil War 23 using only the brigade of Brig Gen Evander M Law and Brig Gen Micah Jenkins s division from Lookout Mountain far fewer troops than Bragg had authorized The attack was scheduled for 10 00 p m on October 28 but confusion delayed it until midnight Although Geary and his officers expected an attack and had thrown out pickets its suddenness took them by surprise Enveloped from the north by Col John Bratton s brigade the Union defenders formed into a V shaped battle line facing north and east Geary s son Edward an artillery lieutenant was killed in the battle dying in his father s arms 24 Hearing the sounds of battle Hooker at Brown s Ferry sent Maj Gen Oliver O Howard with two XI Corps divisions as reinforcements Orders of march were confused and delayed the movement Hooker mistakenly deployed units from both XI Corps divisions against Law s and Brig Gen Henry L Benning s brigades leaving no one to go to Geary s aid Law s 2 000 men were greatly outnumbered by Hooker s men but the hilltop position was naturally strong and several vigorous Union assaults were repulsed 25 Receiving an erroneous report that Bratton was retreating Law decided to pull back Just as his men left their entrenchments Col Orland Smith s brigade Brig Gen Adolph von Steinwehr s division spilled over them capturing some stragglers and scattering a regiment that failed to get the order to retreat Meanwhile Hooker agreed to let Howard proceed to Wauhatchie with some cavalry Geary s men continued to hold fast although they began to run low on ammunition Just as Bratton began to sense victory he received a note from Jenkins to retreat because Union reinforcements were arriving at his rear He withdrew to Lookout Mountain successfully covered by Benning s brigade 26 Both sides had planned poorly for the battle Hooker s carelessness in placing his men had left them at risk Grant was disgusted at Hooker s performance and considered relieving him Longstreet committed too few men for an assault of this importance and Bragg was also disgusted with his subordinate Bragg s biographer Judith L Hallock wrote that Wauhatchie was for Longstreet an ill conceived ill planned and poorly coordinated attack that resulted in a shambles 27 Longstreet departs edit Bragg had committed the most egregious error of his checkered career In all too typical fashion he had allowed rancor to crowd out rational thought Without a coherent plan or even the desire for close coordination between the two segments he had divided his army in the face of a now numerically superior foe who was about to receive even more reinforcements The view of Peter Cozzens The Shipwreck of Their Hopes 28 The opening of the cracker line changed the strategic situation completely Bragg knew the siege was effectively broken Considering his options retreating from the area assaulting the Union fortifications at Chattanooga waiting for Grant to attack attempting to move around Grant s right flank attempting to move around Grant s left flank Bragg realized that movement around Grant s left flank was the only promising option It would potentially allow him to re establish an additional badly needed rail supply line to Virginia via Knoxville and join forces with about 10 000 men operating in southwestern Virginia under the command of Maj Gen Samuel Jones An impediment to this plan was the operation of Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside s Union Army of the Ohio currently occupying Knoxville and blocking the railroad On October 17 Bragg had ordered the division of Maj Gen Carter L Stevenson and two cavalry brigades to extend his right flank toward Knoxville On October 22 Bragg added the division of Brig Gen John K Jackson to the expedition bringing the total to about 11 000 men and considered sending Stevenson s corps commander John C Breckinridge as well In early November Bragg ordered additional reinforcements and changed the orders from simply extending the right flank to actually pushing Burnside away from Knoxville and reestablish communications with Virginia 29 But events in Virginia caused Bragg to change his plan Responding to a suggestion from President Davis Bragg announced in a council of war on November 3 that he was sending Longstreet and his two divisions into East Tennessee to deal with Burnside replacing the Stevenson Jackson force Davis had suggested Longstreet for this assignment because he intended Longstreet s divisions to return to the Army of Northern Virginia at the end of the campaign and Knoxville was on the route back to Virginia In the face of a rapidly expanding enemy force Bragg chose to divide his army and decrease his net defensive force by about 4 000 men less than 10 in order to facilitate the move on Knoxville Campaign historian Steven E Woodworth judged however that even the flat loss of the number of good soldiers in Longstreet s divisions would have been a gain to the army in ridding it of their general s feuding and blundering 30 Preparations for battle edit Grant had two weeks following Wauhatchie before Sherman was to arrive and he charged Thomas and Smith with the responsibility for planning an assault against Bragg starting with an attack by Sherman on the Confederate right flank emphasizing that he would not approve the plan until Sherman had an opportunity to review it After considerable reconnaissance the two generals presented their plan on November 14 Sherman s arriving troops would use newly improved roads to pass through the hills north of Chattanooga taking a route that was not visible from Lookout Mountain hoping that Bragg would not know for certain whether Sherman was targeting Chattanooga or Knoxville Smith would assemble every available boat and pontoon to allow Sherman s corps to cross the Tennessee River near the mouth of the South Chickamauga Creek and attack Bragg s right flank on Missionary Ridge If the attack were successful the Union would control the two key railroad lines that supplied Bragg s army forcing him to withdraw Thomas s army would simultaneously pin down the Confederate center on Missionary Ridge The plan also called for Hooker to assault and seize Lookout Mountain Bragg s left flank and continue on to Rossville where he would be positioned to cut off a potential Confederate retreat to the south 31 Sherman arrived ahead of his troops on the evening of November 15 He observed the end of Missionary Ridge that he was designated to attack and remarked that he could seize it successfully by 9 a m on the assigned day Grant approved Thomas s and Smith s plan although he withdrew support for the attack by Hooker on Lookout Mountain intending the mass of his attack to be by Sherman Sherman s men were still a considerable distance from Chattanooga because they had been under orders from Halleck to repair the railroad as they marched the 330 miles from Vicksburg an order countermanded by Grant on October 27 and their commander had ignored advice from Thomas that he march rapidly without the impediment of his trains as Hooker had done Although Grant had hoped to begin offensive operations on November 21 by November 20 only one of Sherman s brigades had crossed over Brown s Ferry and the attack had to be postponed Grant was coming under pressure from Washington to react to Longstreet s advance against Burnside at Knoxville 32 Bragg having dispatched most of his cavalry had little means of gathering intelligence He assumed that Sherman s corps would be heading toward his department s extreme right flank at Knoxville not Chattanooga Therefore he believed that the main Union assault would occur on his left flank Lookout Mountain On November 12 Bragg placed Carter Stevenson in overall command for the defense of the mountain with Stevenson s division placed on the summit The brigades of Brig Gens John K Jackson Edward C Walthall and John C Moore were placed on the bench of the mountain a narrow and relatively flat shelf that wrapped around the northern end of the mountain approximately halfway to the summit Jackson later wrote about the dissatisfaction of the commanders assigned to this area Indeed it was agreed on all hands that the position was one extremely difficult to defense against a strong force of the enemy advancing under cover of a heavy fire 33 Thomas L Connelly historian of the Army of Tennessee wrote that despite the imposing appearance of Lookout Mountain the mountain s strength was a myth It was impossible to hold the bench which was commanded by Federal artillery at Moccasin Bend Although Stevenson placed an artillery battery on the crest of the mountain the guns could not be depressed enough to reach the bench which was accessible from numerous trails on the west side of the mountain 34 Dissatisfaction also prevailed in the Chattanooga Valley and on Missionary Ridge where Breckinridge commanding Bragg s center and right had only 16 000 men to defend a line 5 miles long Brig Gen Patton Anderson whose division was assigned to the Confederate works along the western base of the ridge wrote This line of defense following its sinuosities was over two miles in length nearly twice as long as a number of bayonets in the division could adequately defend 35 Bragg exacerbated the situation on November 22 by ordering Maj Gen Patrick R Cleburne to withdraw his and Simon B Buckner s divisions from the line and march to Chickamauga Station for railroad transport to Knoxville removing 11 000 more men from the defense of Chattanooga This move was apparently made because as Grant had hoped Bragg concluded that Sherman s troops were moving on to Knoxville in which case Longstreet would need the reinforcements for which he had been constantly clamoring since he was first given the assignment 36 Opposing forces editUnion edit Union subordinate commanders nbsp Maj Gen William T Sherman nbsp Maj Gen George H Thomas nbsp Maj Gen Joseph HookerFurther information Union order of battle Grant s Military Division of the Mississippi assembled the following forces at Chattanooga 37 The Army of the Tennessee commanded by Maj Gen William T Sherman consisting of the XV Corps under Maj Gen Frank P Blair Jr and the 2nd Division of the XVII Corps under Brig Gen John E Smith The Army of the Cumberland commanded by Maj Gen George H Thomas consisting of the IV Corps under Maj Gen Gordon Granger and the XIV Corps under Maj Gen John M Palmer The command of Maj Gen Joseph Hooker which was part of the Army of the Cumberland during the battle consisting of the XI Corps under Maj Gen Oliver O Howard and the 2nd Division of the XII Corps under Brig Gen John W Geary On November 24 and 25 Hooker was in direct command of the 2nd Division of the XII Corps along with Charles Cruft s division detached from the IV Corps and Peter J Osterhaus division detached from the XV Corps Confederate edit Confederate corps commanders nbsp Lt Gen James Longstreet nbsp Lt Gen William J Hardee nbsp Maj Gen John C BreckinridgeFurther information Confederate order of battle Bragg s Army of Tennessee had the following forces available in Chattanooga 38 Longstreet s Corps under Lt Gen James Longstreet consisting of the divisions under Maj Gen Lafayette McLaws and Brig Gen Micah Jenkins replacing John Bell Hood wounded at Chickamauga Longstreet s Corps was dispatched to Knoxville on November 5 Hardee s Corps under Lt Gen William J Hardee consisting of the divisions under Brig Gen John K Jackson Cheatham s Division Brig Gen J Patton Anderson Hindman s Division Brig Gen States Rights Gist Walker s Division and Maj Gen Simon B Buckner detached November 22 to Knoxville Breckinridge s Corps commanded by Maj Gen John C Breckinridge consisting of the divisions of Maj Gens Patrick R Cleburne Alexander P Stewart Carter L Stevenson and Brig Gen William B Bate Breckinridge s Division On November 5 Bragg seriously weakened his forces by sending Longstreet s Corps against Maj Gen Ambrose Burnside near Knoxville On November 22 Bragg further weakened his forces by ordering the division of Maj Gen Simon B Buckner to reinforce Longstreet at Knoxville 39 The Battles for Chattanooga editOrchard Knob edit nbsp Orchard Knob in 1864 nbsp Battle monuments on Orchard Knob nbsp Orchard Knob c1900 1915On November 23 the Union army observed columns of Cleburne s and Buckner s men marching away from Missionary Ridge and also heard claims from Confederate deserters that the entire army was falling back Grant became concerned that Bragg was massively reinforcing Longstreet and sought to disrupt the movement Thomas ordered his division under Brig Gen Thomas J Wood to advance in a reconnaissance in force instructing him to avoid an engagement with the enemy and return to his fortifications when the strength of the Confederate line was revealed Wood s men assembled outside of their entrenchments and observed their objective approximately 2 000 yards to the east a small knoll 100 feet high known as Orchard Knob also known as Indian Hill Maj Gen Philip Sheridan s division lined up similarly to protect Wood s right flank and Howard s XI Corps extended the line to the left presenting over 20 000 soldiers arrayed in almost parade ground alignment 40 I never saw troops move into action in finer style than Thomas s did today They are entitled to the highest praise for their soldierly bearing and splendid bravery Grant s chief of staff John Rawlins 41 At 1 30 p m 14 000 Union soldiers moved forward at the double quick sweeping across the plain stunning the 600 Confederate defenders who were able to fire only a single volley before they were overrun Casualties were relatively small on both sides Grant and Thomas decided to order the men to hold their position and entrench rather than following the original orders to withdraw Orchard Knob became Grant s and Thomas s headquarters for the remainder of the battles 42 Bragg quickly readjusted his strategy recalling all units that were within a day s march Cleburne s division returned after dark from Chickamauga Station interrupting the process of boarding the trains to Knoxville Bragg began to reduce the strength on his left by withdrawing Maj Gen William H T Walker s division from the base of Lookout Mountain and placing them on the far right of Missionary Ridge just south of Tunnel Hill He assigned Hardee to command his now critical right flank turning over the left flank to Carter Stevenson In the center Breckinridge ordered his men to begin fortifying the crest of Missionary Ridge a task that Bragg had somehow neglected for weeks Unable to decide whether to defend the base or the crest of the Ridge the divisions of Brig Gens William B Bate and Patton Anderson were ordered to move half of their divisions to the crest leaving the remainder in the rifle pits along the base James L McDonough wrote of the upper entrenchments Placed along the physical crest rather than what is termed the military crest these works severely handicapped the defenders 43 The Union side also changed plans Sherman had three divisions ready to cross the Tennessee but the pontoon bridge at Brown s Ferry had torn apart and Brig Gen Peter J Osterhaus s division was stranded in Lookout Valley After receiving assurances from Sherman that he could proceed with three divisions Grant decided to revive the previously rejected plan for an attack on Lookout Mountain and reassigned Osterhaus to Hooker s command 44 Lookout Mountain edit Main article Battle of Lookout Mountain nbsp Cravens house on Lookout Mountain nbsp Battles for Chattanooga November 24 25 1863Grant s battle plan of November 18 merely assigned Hooker the task of holding Lookout Valley Six days later however Hooker had about 10 000 men 45 in three divisions at his disposal because Brig Gen Peter J Osterhaus s XV Corps could not cross the Tennessee due to disruption of the pontoon bridges With Brig Gen John W Geary s XII Corps and Brig Gen Charles Cruft s XIV Corps but missing one brigade divisions Hooker had too large a force to be wasted on guard duty Thomas authorized a demonstration against the mountain with the possibility of a full scale assault Hooker was ordered to take the point only if his demonstration should develop its practicability 46 Fighting Joe ignored this subtlety and ordered Geary to cross Lookout Creek and to assault Lookout Mountain marching down the valley and sweeping every rebel from it 47 While the advance of Cruft and Osterhaus demonstrated at Lookout Creek Geary crossed the stream unopposed further south and found that the defile between the mountain and the river had not been secured The Union troops were opposed by Brig Gen Edward C Walthall s brigade of Maj Gen Benjamin F Cheatham s division temporarily under the command of Brig Gen John K Jackson Geary swept northeast along the base of Lookout Mountain and pushed Walthall s completely outflanked and badly outnumbered men back to the Cravens House just below the northern end of the mountain 48 The men of Brig Gen John C Brown s Confederate brigade on the mountain top found themselves powerless to intervene in the battle raging below the cliffs Geary s success allowed the other two divisions to cross the creek and push aside the Confederate skirmishers in front of them Brig Gen John C Moore brought his brigade up around 1 00 p m to become embroiled in a fight with Geary and Brig Gen Walter C Whitaker s brigade of Cruft s division Moore was pushed back and soon joined by Brig Gen Edmund Pettus s brigade 49 By about 3 00 p m thick fog enveloped the mountain Brig Gen Montgomery C Meigs quartermaster general of the Union Army observing from Orchard Knob was the first writer to name the action on Lookout Mountain the Battle Above the Clouds 50 The two sides blazed away blindly in the fog the rest of the afternoon but few men were hit During the fight Hooker sent a stream of alternate whimpering and blustering messages to Grant but got it exactly right when he predicted In all probability the enemy will evacuate tonight 51 Realizing the battle was lost Bragg ordered the position abandoned At midnight the fog cleared and under a lunar eclipse the divisions of Stevenson and Cheatham retreated behind Chattanooga Creek burning the bridges behind them 52 That night Bragg asked his two corps commanders whether to retreat or to stand and fight Hardee counseled retreat but Breckinridge convinced Bragg to fight it out on the strong position of Missionary Ridge 53 Accordingly the troops withdrawn from Lookout Mountain were ordered to the right flank 54 Missionary Ridge edit Main article Battle of Missionary Ridge nbsp Battle of Chattanooga by Thure de Thulstrup Ulysses S Grant uses a field glass to follow the Union assault on Missionary Ridge Grant is joined by Generals Gordon Granger left and George H Thomas nbsp Battle of Missionary Ridge November 25 1863 Confederate UnionSherman s remaining three divisions crossed the Tennessee River successfully on the morning of November 24 with an Army of the Cumberland division that was assigned to him following later then occupied what the general thought due to faulty intelligence was the north end of Missionary Ridge but was actually a completely separate rise known as Billy Goat Hill Sherman was dismayed to see that across a deep ravine the Confederates had fortified Tunnel Hill the northernmost portion of the ridge Although his goal was the railroad tunnel on the far side he took no further offensive action for the day Sherman ordered his men to dig in on Billy Goat Hill 55 On November 25 Grant s plan called for a continued effort by Sherman to ascend Missionary Ridge from the north and move southward toward the center of the Confederate position Grant gave a supporting role to Thomas I have instructed Sherman to advance as soon as it is light in the morning and your attack which will be simultaneous will be in cooperation Your command will either carry the rifle pits and ridge directly in front of them or move to the left as the presence of the enemy may require 56 Grant had no particular expectation for Hooker other than to divert Bragg s attention by ascending to the plateau of Lookout Mountain Thomas wanted support on his flank however and called Hooker to cross the valley and advance against Bragg s left flank directly at the Rossville Gap 57 As the morning progressed Sherman launched multiple direct assaults against Cleburne s line on Tunnel Hill but despite his significantly larger force committed only four brigades to the attacks and made no headway At the southern end of the battlefield Hooker s advance was slowed for hours by the burned bridges on Chattanooga Creek 58 Seeing the lack of progress on the flanks around 3 30 p m Grant ordered Thomas to move forward in the center in a demonstration meant to help Sherman The men of the Army of the Cumberland advanced and quickly pushed the Confederates from their rifle pits fulfilling their orders but were then subjected to a punishing fire from the Confederate positions up the ridge Most of Thomas s troops had been in the disastrous loss at Chickamauga and had suffered taunts by Sherman s and Hooker s newly arrived forces Now they were under fire from above with no apparent plan to advance or move back At this point the Union soldiers continued the attack against the remaining lines This second advance was taken up by the commanders on the spot but also by some of the soldiers who on their own sought shelter from the fire further up the slope 59 Bragg had placed his artillery and trenches of the infantry along the actual crest of the ridge rather than the military crest further down the slope and they were unable to provide effective fire The Union advance was disorganized but effective finally overwhelming and scattering what ought to have been an impregnable Confederate line 60 As such the Army of the Cumberland s ascent of Missionary Ridge was one of the war s most dramatic events Military historians Herman Hattaway and Archer Jones contend that the Battle of Missionary Ridge was the war s most notable example of a frontal assault succeeding against intrenched defenders holding high ground 61 A Union officer remembered that Little regard to formation was observed Each battalion assumed a triangular shape the colors at the apex a color bearer dashes ahead of the line and falls A comrade grasps the flag He too falls Then another 62 picks it up waves it defiantly and as if bearing a charmed life he advances steadily towards the top 63 Grant was initially furious that his orders to advance only as far as the rifle pits had not been followed and threatened his subordinates from the Army of the Cumberland if the assault failed But it succeeded By 4 30 p m the center of Bragg s line had broken completely and fled in panic requiring the abandonment of Missionary Ridge and a headlong retreat eastward to South Chickamauga Creek The exception to the panicked flight was Hardee s command on the Confederate right facing Sherman Cleburne s division augmented by two other brigades formed the rearguard of Bragg s army as it retreated eastward 64 Rossville Gap edit After Maj Gen Joseph Hooker s command left Lookout Mountain at about 10 a m and moved east they encountered a significant obstacle The bridge across Chattanooga Creek about a mile from Rossville Gap had been burned by the Confederates as they withdrew the night before and the creek was running high Brig Gen Peter J Osterhaus assigned a 70 man pioneer unit to start rebuilding the bridge while men of the 27th Missouri created a rickety footbridge and began crossing one by one Hooker decided to leave his guns and wagons behind so that all of his infantry could cross first but his advance was delayed about three hours and he did not reach Rossville Gap until 3 30 p m 65 Breckinridge was absent while the Union attack wrecked his corps Worried about his left flank he rode to the end of his line in the early afternoon At 3 30 p m about the time Thomas launched his four division attack on Missionary Ridge Breckinridge visited Stewart s left flank brigade of Col James T Holtzclaw whose commander pointed to the southwest where Hooker s men were busily bridging Chattanooga Creek Concerned about Rossville Gap which lay undefended beyond his left flank Breckinridge ordered Holtzclaw to send a couple of regiments to hold the position It was too late by the time the Southerners reached the gap Osterhaus s division had already marched through Lt J Cabell Breckinridge the general s son and aide de camp rode into a group from the 9th Iowa and was captured 66 Hooker quickly faced his troops to the north and organized a three pronged attack He sent Osterhaus along a trail east of Missionary Ridge Cruft onto the ridge itself and Geary along the western face of the ridge Holtzclaw faced his men south and put up a fight but Cruft and Osterhaus soon began herding the outnumbered Confederates north along Missionary Ridge Hearing a tremendous racket to the north Breckinridge finally rode off to find out what was wrong As Holtzclaw retreated before Hooker s command he eventually bumped into Col Anson G McCook s 2nd Ohio of Carlin s brigade now astride the ridge Surrounded by superior forces on four sides approximately 700 of Holtzclaw s men surrendered 67 Retreat and pursuit editDuring the night Bragg ordered his army to withdraw toward Chickamauga Station on the Western and Atlantic Railroad currently the site of Lovell Air Field and on November 26 began retreating toward Dalton Georgia in two columns taking two routes Only Sheridan tried to pursue beyond Missionary Ridge but he finally gave up late that night when it was clear that he was not being supported by either Granger or Thomas 68 Ringgold Gap edit The pursuit ordered by Grant was effectively thwarted at the Battle of Ringgold Gap At 3 a m on November 27 Cleburne readied his men and waited until the Union force was almost upon them before opening fire with artillery and rifles Maj Gen Joseph Hooker s force was taken utterly by surprise but he tried to use his numbers to regain the initiative He attempted to outflank the Confederates both on the right and on the left but the Confederates held their positions For five hours the slaughter continued Cleburne s 4 100 soldiers against Hooker s 12 000 with Hooker gaining little ground Cleburne s men stayed to about noon then retreated successfully allowing the wagons and artillery to pass through the gap unharmed 69 Grant called off the remaining pursuit because his army was low on rations and he decided he needed to stay close to his supply line Furthermore Washington was still clamoring for the rescue of Burnside in Knoxville and Grant was told that the Union troops there had rations that would last only until December 3 President Lincoln s message of congratulations to Grant after Missionary Ridge had said Well done Many thanks to all Remember Burnside 70 Aftermath edit nbsp Captured artillery c 1865Casualties for the Union Army amounted to 5 824 753 killed 4 722 wounded and 349 missing of about 56 000 engaged Bragg reported Confederate casualties of 6 667 361 killed 2 160 wounded and 4 146 missing mostly prisoners of about 44 000 71 Southern losses may have been higher Grant claimed 6 142 prisoners When a chaplain asked General Thomas whether the dead should be sorted and buried by state Thomas replied Mix em up I m tired of States rights 72 One of the Confederacy s two major armies was routed Bragg relieved Breckinridge from command accusing him of drunkenness during the period November 23 27 Bragg chose to blame Breckinridge and the cowardice of his army for the defeat He resigned from command of the Army of Tennessee on December 1 and was replaced temporarily by Hardee Gen Joseph E Johnston assumed command of the army on December 27 73 In East Tennessee Longstreet s offensive against Burnside the Knoxville campaign fell apart at the Battle of Fort Sanders on November 29 Although he was ordered to rejoin Bragg Longstreet considered the order impracticable and informed Bragg that he would return with his command to Virginia but would maintain the siege on Knoxville as long as possible in the hopes that Burnside and Grant could be prevented from joining forces and annihilating the Army of Tennessee This plan turned out to be effective because Grant sent Sherman with 25 000 men to relieve the siege at Knoxville Longstreet abandoned his siege on December 4 went into winter quarters and returned to Virginia in the spring of 1864 74 The Confederate enthusiasm that had risen so high after Chickamauga had been dashed at Chattanooga 75 The Union now held undisputed control of the state of Tennessee including Chattanooga the Gateway to the Lower South The city became the supply and logistics base for Sherman s 1864 Atlanta campaign as well as for the Army of the Cumberland 76 Grant had won his final battle in the West prior to receiving command of all Union armies in March 1864 77 Battlefield preservation edit nbsp National cemetery at Chattanooga with a view of Lookout Mountain in the distancePortions of the Chattanooga battlefields including 3 000 acres 1 200 ha at Lookout Mountain are preserved by the National Park Service as part of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park The American Battlefield Trust and its partners have acquired and preserved more than 405 acres 1 64 km2 of the Chattanooga battlefield as of mid 2023 78 See also editTroop engagements of the American Civil War 1863 List of costliest American Civil War land battles Battle of Chickamauga First Battle of Chattanooga Second Battle of Chattanooga Armies in the American Civil War nbsp American Civil War portalNotes edit The Battle of Chattanooga CivilWarHome com Retrieved June 25 2016 Abstract from returns of the Union forces at and about Chattanooga November 20 1863 Official Records Series I Volume XXXI Part 2 pages 12 13 Abstract from returns of the Army of Tennessee for October 31 and December 10 1863 Official Records Series I Volume XXXI Part 2 page 656 Return of casualties in the Union forces see also note at bottom of page 80 Official Records Series I Volume XXXI Part 2 pages 80 90 See Confederate casualties Battle of Lookout Mountain and Battle of Missionary Ridge Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Chattanooga Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 6 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 7 9 The National Park Service s Civil War Sites Advisory Commission Archived November 6 2013 at the Wayback Machine classifies two campaigns for this period Reopening the Tennessee River Battle of Wauhatchie and Chattanooga Ringgold the Third Battle of Chattanooga frequently known as the Battles for Chattanooga and the Battle of Ringgold Gap Eicher pp 577 90 Esposito text to map 115 McDonough pp 3 12 23 25 Hallock pp 82 84 Connelly pp 232 33 Cleaves pp 178 79 Korn pp 35 45 73 Connelly pp 232 33 Esposito map 115 Cozzens pp 23 26 8 9 McDonough pp 25 40 Hallock pp 88 108 Connelly pp 233 50 Eicher pp 593 96 Korn pp 81 84 85 Cozzens p 11 McDonough pp 41 48 68 70 Korn p 83 Cleaves p 182 McDonough p 45 Lamers pp 375 76 Korn pp 78 80 Cozzens pp 11 17 19 Esposito map 115 Eicher pp 596 600 Cozzens pp 2 3 The order written by general in chief Henry W Halleck directed Grant to travel to Memphis Tennessee He arrived there on October 16 and received new orders to continue to Louisville Kentucky He met personally with Stanton on October 17 and learned of his new command Cleaves p 182 McDonough pp 49 54 Liddell Hart p 212 Woodworth Six Armies p 151 Smith pp 264 65 Lamers p 393 Eicher p 595 Korn pp 83 89 Cozzens pp 18 2 6 Esposito map 115 Cozzens pp 18 39 42 McDonough pp 55 58 Kennedy p 241 Smith pp 266 67 Woodworth Six Armies pp 154 55 Cleaves p 188 Korn p 89 Eicher p 602 Cozzens pp 51 56 Cleaves pp 189 90 Eicher p 602 Hallock p 122 Connelly pp 255 58 Cozzens pp 57 58 Woodworth Six Armies p 156 McDonough pp 76 85 Woodworth Six Armies pp 158 60 Connelly pp 258 59 Korn pp 90 91 Eicher p 602 Esposito map 116 Cozzens pp 61 65 Eicher pp 602 603 Woodworth Six Armies p 160 McDonough pp 87 88 Kennedy p 242 Cozzens pp 72 73 Korn p 91 Korn p 92 McDonough pp 88 89 Woodworth Six Armies pp 163 64 Kennedy p 242 Cozzens pp 78 79 Eicher p 603 McDonough pp 89 94 Woodworth Six Armies pp 164 66 Korn p 93 Hallock p 123 Cozzens pp 80 89 Korn p 93 Cozzens pp 90 97 Woodworth Six Armies p 166 Korn pp 93 94 Woodworth Six Armies p 167 Cozzens pp 97 99 Halleck pp 123 24 Woodworth Six Armies p 167 Connelly pp 260 61 Cozzens pp 100 101 Korn p 242 Cozzens p 105 Woodworth Six Armies pp 174 76 McDonough pp 98 101 Hallock pp 125 26 Connelly pp 262 64 Woodworth Six Armies pp 177 79 Cozzens pp 103 105 Korn p 99 Woodworth Six Armies p 172 McDonough pp 108 109 Kennedy p 245 Liddell Hart pp 213 14 Hallock p 212 Woodworth Six Armies pp 169 70 Woodworth Nothing but Victory pp 460 62 Liddell Hart p 214 McDonough pp 109 117 18 Cozzens pp 109 10 112 114 Eicher p 116 Korn p 97 Cozzens p 117 Connelly p 270 Cozzens p 119 Cozzens p 125 Woodworth Six Armies pp 176 79 Connelly p 272 Eicher pp 601 602 Cozzens pp 408 15 Eicher p 602 Cozzens pp 104 125 McDonough pp 110 11 Cozzens pp 128 29 Woodworth Six Armies p 180 Cozzens p 135 Smith p 275 McDonough pp 111 13 Cleaves pp 194 95 Cozzens pp 130 35 203 Grant did not move to Orchard Knob until 9 30 a m November 25 McDonough pp 124 28 183 Woodworth Six Armies p 181 Korn p 143 Connelly pp 270 72 Cozzens pp 140 42 McDonough pp 129 30 Cozzens pp 143 44 Woodworth Nothing but Victory p 465 McDonough p 130 Cozzens p 144 Cozzens p 160 Woodworth Six Armies pp 185 86 McDonough pp 130 37 Cozzens pp 171 78 Woodworth Six Armies p 186 Korn p 130 Woodworth Six Armies pp 186 87 Cozzens p 182 McDonough p 129 Cozzens p 191 McDonough pp 137 40 160 Woodworth Six Armies pp 187 88 Korn pp 131 36 Cozzens p 196 Hallock p 136 Woodworth Six Armies pp 190 91 Woodworth Nothing but Victory pp 468 69 McDonough 117 24 Liddell Hart p 215 Cozzens pp 148 50 Cozzens p 200 Cozzens pp 200 203 Eicher p 610 Woodworth Six Armies pp 189 96 Woodworth Nothing but Victory pp 471 78 Korn pp 137 41 McDonough pp 143 59 162 64 Cozzens pp 199 243 Catton p 82 Eicher p 116 McDonough pp 167 205 Woodworth Six Armies pp 195 202 Liddell Hart p 217 Cleaves pp 198 99 Korn p 145 Hattaway and Jones p 461 Smith p 280 McDonough pp 199 200 Cozzens p 308 Woodworth Six Armies p 201 The last flag bearer mentioned in the quotation an eighteen year old lieutenant was awarded the Medal of Honor for this action He was Arthur MacArthur Jr and would later become the father of Douglas MacArthur Catton American Heritage p 439 McDonough pp 206 209 Kennedy p 245 Cleaves p 199 Cozzens pp 282 366 69 Woodworth Six Armies pp 204 205 Korn p 145 Woodworth Six Armies p 193 McDonough pp 159 60 Korn p 142 Cozzens pp 244 45 Cozzens p 315 O R Series 1 Vol XXXI Part 2 p 615 McDonough pp 211 12 Woodworth Six Armies p 202 Cozzens p 319 Korn p 150 McDonough pp 214 15 Cozzens pp 348 350 52 Kennedy pp 246 48 Woodworth Nothing but Victory p 478 Cozzens pp 370 84 McDonough pp 220 25 Cozzens p 386 Woodworth Six Armies p 205 Korn p 154 Eicher p 613 Livermore pp 106 108 Cozzens p 389 cites Union casualties of 684 killed 4 329 wounded and 322 captured or missing for the battles of November 23 25 Eicher p 613 Connelly p 277 Hallock p 149 Cozzens p 397 Kennedy 246 McDonough 225 Smith 282 Liddell Hart pp 217 18 Woodworth Six Armies pp 206 11 Korn pp 105 17 Hattaway and Jones p 462 The Army of the Ohio was based in Knoxville the Army of the Tennessee in Nashville Woodworth Six Armies p 213 Cozzens p 391 Korn p 155 1 American Battlefield Trust Chattanooga Battlefield webpage Accessed May 15 2023 References editCatton Bruce Grant Takes Command Boston Little Brown amp Co 1968 ISBN 0 316 13210 1 Cleaves Freeman Rock of Chickamauga The Life of General George H Thomas Norman University of Oklahoma Press 1948 ISBN 0 8061 1978 0 Connelly Thomas L Autumn of Glory The Army of Tennessee 1862 1865 Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1971 ISBN 0 8071 2738 8 Cozzens Peter The Shipwreck of Their Hopes The Battles for Chattanooga Urbana University of Illinois Press 1994 ISBN 0 252 01922 9 Eicher David J The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War New York Simon amp Schuster 2001 ISBN 0 684 84944 5 Esposito Vincent J West Point Atlas of American Wars New York Frederick A Praeger 1959 OCLC 5890637 The collection of maps without explanatory text is available online at the West Point website Hallock Judith Lee Braxton Bragg and Confederate Defeat Vol 2 Tuscaloosa University of Alabama Press 1991 ISBN 0 8173 0543 2 Hattaway Herman and Archer Jones How the North Won A Military History of the Civil War Urbana University of Illinois Press 1983 ISBN 0 252 00918 5 Kagan Neil and Stephen G Hyslop National Geographic Atlas of the Civil War A Comprehensive Guide to the Tactics and Terrain of Battle National Geographic 2008 ISBN 978 1 4262 0347 3 Kennedy Frances H ed The Civil War Battlefield Guide permanent dead link 2nd ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1998 ISBN 0 395 74012 6 Korn Jerry and the Editors of Time Life Books The Fight for Chattanooga Chickamauga to Missionary Ridge Alexandria VA Time Life Books 1985 ISBN 0 8094 4816 5 Lamers William M The Edge of Glory A Biography of General William S Rosecrans U S A Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 1961 ISBN 0 8071 2396 X Liddell Hart B H Sherman Soldier Realist American New York Da Capo Press 1993 ISBN 0 306 80507 3 First published in 1929 by Dodd Mead amp Co Livermore Thomas L Numbers and Losses in the Civil War in America 1861 65 Reprinted with errata Dayton OH Morninside House 1986 ISBN 0 527 57600 X First published in 1901 by Houghton Mifflin McDonough James Lee Chattanooga A Death Grip on the Confederacy Knoxville University of Tennessee Press 1984 ISBN 0 87049 425 2 Woodworth Steven E Nothing but Victory The Army of the Tennessee 1861 1865 New York Alfred A Knopf 2005 ISBN 0 375 41218 2 Woodworth Steven E Six Armies in Tennessee The Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 1998 ISBN 0 8032 9813 7 Woodworth Steven E and Charles D Grear eds The Chattanooga Campaign Southern Illinois University Press 2012 226 pages essays by scholarsMemoirs and primary sources edit Johnson Robert Underwood and Clarence C Buel eds Battles and Leaders of the Civil War Archived December 12 2008 at the Wayback Machine 4 vols New York Century Co 1884 1888 OCLC 2048818 U S War Department The War of the Rebellion Archived September 13 2009 at the Wayback Machine a Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Washington DC U S Government Printing Office 1880 1901 Further reading editHorn Stanley F The Army of Tennessee A Military History Indianapolis Bobbs Merrill 1941 OCLC 2153322 Jones Evan C and Wiley Sword eds Gateway to the Confederacy New Perspectives on the Chickamauga and Chattanooga Campaigns 1862 1863 Baton Rouge Louisiana State University Press 2014 ISBN 978 0 8071 5509 7 Sword Wiley Mountains Touched with Fire Chattanooga Besieged 1863 New York St Martin s Press 1995 ISBN 0 312 15593 X Powell David A Battle Above the Clouds Lifting the Siege of Chattanooga and the Battle of Lookout Mountain October 16 November 24 1863 Emerging Civil War Series El Dorado Hills CA Savas Beatie 2017 ISBN 978 1 61121 377 5 Watkins Sam Co Aytch Maury Grays First Tennessee Regiment or A Side Show of the Big Show Cumberland Presbyterian Publishing House 1882 OCLC 43511251 Woodworth Steven E Jefferson Davis and His Generals The Failure of Confederate Command in the West Lawrence University Press of Kansas 1990 ISBN 0 7006 0461 8 Woodworth Steven E This Grand Spectacle The Battle of Chattanooga Abilene TX McWhiney Foundation 1999 ISBN 978 0 585 35007 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chattanooga Campaign Chattanooga Campaign Battle Maps histories photos and preservation news Civil War Trust Period images of the Chattanooga battlefield Animated History of the Battles for Chattanooga Extensive analysis of the battle of Chattanooga Includes the major reports period maps and recent photos Emphasis on Hooker s turning Bragg s left flank 35 02 42 N 85 18 32 W 35 045 N 85 309 W 35 045 85 309 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chattanooga campaign amp oldid 1187468446, wikipedia, wiki, 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