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Battle of Kennesaw Mountain

Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
Part of the American Civil War

The Army of the Cumberland swinging around Kennesaw Mountain
DateJune 27, 1864 (1864-06-27)
Location
Result Confederate victory[1]
Belligerents
 United States (Union) CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
William T. Sherman Joseph E. Johnston
Units involved

Military Division of the Mississippi:

Army of Tennessee
Strength
16,225[2] 17,733[2]
Casualties and losses
3,000[3] 1,000[3]

The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain was fought on June 27, 1864, during the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War. It was the most significant frontal assault launched by Union Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman against the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, ending in a tactical defeat for the Union forces. Strategically, however, the battle failed to deliver the result that the Confederacy desperately needed—namely a halt to Sherman's advance on Atlanta.

Sherman's 1864 campaign against Atlanta, Georgia, was initially characterized by a series of flanking maneuvers against Johnston, each of which compelled the Confederate army to withdraw from heavily fortified positions with minimal casualties on either side. After two months and 70 miles (110 km) of such maneuvering, Sherman's path was blocked by imposing fortifications on Kennesaw Mountain, near Marietta, Georgia, and the Union general chose to change his tactics and ordered a large-scale frontal assault on June 27. Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson feinted against the northern end of Kennesaw Mountain, while his corps under Maj. Gen. John A. Logan assaulted Pigeon Hill on its southwest corner. At the same time, Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas launched strong attacks against Cheatham Hill at the center of the Confederate line. Both attacks were repulsed with heavy losses, but a demonstration by Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield achieved a strategic success by threatening the Confederate army's left flank, prompting yet another Confederate withdrawal toward Atlanta and the removal of General Johnston from command of the army.

Background edit

In March 1864, Ulysses S. Grant was promoted to lieutenant general and named general in chief of the Union Army. He devised a strategy of multiple, simultaneous offensives against the Confederacy, hoping to prevent any of the rebel armies from reinforcing the others over interior lines. The two most significant of these were by Maj. Gen. George G. Meade's Army of the Potomac, accompanied by Grant himself, which would attack Robert E. Lee's army directly and advance toward the Confederate capital of Richmond, Virginia; and Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, replacing Grant in his role as commander of the Military Division of the Mississippi, who would advance from Chattanooga, Tennessee, to Atlanta.[4]

Both Grant and Sherman initially had objectives to engage with and destroy the two principal armies of the Confederacy, relegating the capture of important enemy cities to a secondary, supporting role. This was a strategy that President Abraham Lincoln had emphasized throughout the war, but Grant was the first general who actively cooperated with it. As their campaigns progressed, however, the political importance of the cities of Richmond and Atlanta began to dominate their strategy. By 1864, Atlanta was a critical target. The city of 20,000 was founded at the intersection of four important railroad lines that supplied the Confederacy and was a military manufacturing arsenal in its own right. Atlanta's nickname of "Gate City of the South" was apt—its capture would open virtually the entire Deep South to Union conquest. Grant's orders to Sherman were to "move against Johnston's Army, to break it up and to get into the interior of the enemy's country as far as you can, inflicting all the damage you can against their war resources."[5]

Sherman's force of about 100,000 men was composed of three subordinate armies: the Army of the Tennessee (Grant's and later Sherman's army of 1862–63) under Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson; the Army of the Cumberland under Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas; and the relatively small Army of the Ohio (composed of only the XXIII Corps) under Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield. Their principal opponent was the Confederate Army of Tennessee, commanded by Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, who had replaced the unpopular Braxton Bragg after his defeat in Chattanooga in November 1863. The 50,000-man army consisted of the infantry corps of Lt. Gens. William J. Hardee, John Bell Hood, and Leonidas Polk, and a cavalry corps under Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler.[6]

Start of the Atlanta campaign edit

 
Confederate troops dragging guns up Kennesaw Mountain
 
The Atlanta Campaign from Dalton to Kennesaw Mountain
  Confederate
  Union

Sherman's campaign began on May 7, as his three armies departed from the vicinity of Chattanooga. He launched demonstration attacks against Johnston's position on the long, high mountain named Rocky Face Ridge while McPherson's Army of the Tennessee advanced stealthily around Johnston's left flank toward the town of Resaca and Johnston's supply line on the Western & Atlantic Railroad. Unfortunately for Sherman, McPherson encountered a small Confederate force entrenched in the outskirts of Resaca and cautiously pulled back to Snake Creek Gap, squandering the opportunity to trap the Confederate army. As Sherman swung his entire army in the direction of Resaca, Johnston retired to take up positions there. Full scale fighting erupted in the Battle of Resaca on May 14–15 but there was no conclusive result and Sherman flanked Johnston for a second time by crossing the Oostanaula River. As Johnston withdrew again, skirmishing erupted at Adairsville on May 17 and more general fighting on Johnston's Cassville line May 18–19. Johnston planned to defeat part of Sherman's force as it approached on multiple routes, but Hood became uncharacteristically cautious and feared encirclement, failing to attack as ordered. Encouraged by Hood and Polk, Johnston ordered another withdrawal, this time across the Etowah River.[7]

Johnston's army took up defensive positions at Allatoona Pass south of Cartersville, but Sherman once again turned Johnston's left as he temporarily abandoned his railroad supply line and advanced on Dallas. Johnston was forced to move from his strong position and meet Sherman's army in the open. Fierce but inconclusive fighting occurred on May 25 at New Hope Church, May 27 at Pickett's Mill, and May 28 at Dallas. By June 1, heavy rains turned the roads to quagmires and Sherman was forced to return to the railroad to supply his men. Johnston's new line (called the Brushy Mountain Line) was established by June 4 northwest of Marietta, along Lost Mountain, Pine Mountain, and Brush Mountain. On June 14, following eleven days of steady rain, Sherman was ready to move again. While on a personal reconnaissance, he spotted a group of Confederate officers on Pine Mountain and ordered one of his artillery batteries to open fire. Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk, the "Fighting Bishop," was killed and Johnston withdrew his men from Pine Mountain, establishing a new line in an arc-shaped defensive position from Kennesaw Mountain to Little Kennesaw Mountain. Hood's corps attempted an unsuccessful attack at Peter Kolb's farm (the Battle of Kolb's Farm) south of Little Kennesaw Mountain on June 22. Maj. Gen. William W. Loring succeeded to temporarily command Polk's corps.[8]

Sherman was in a difficult position, stalled 15 miles (24 km) north of Atlanta. He could not continue his strategy of moving around Johnston's flank because of the impassable roads, and his railroad supply line was dominated by Johnston's position on the top of 691 feet (211 m) Kennesaw Mountain. He reported to Washington "The whole country is one vast fort, and Johnston must have at least 50 miles (80 km) of connected trenches with abatis and finished batteries. We gain ground daily, fighting all the time. ... Our lines are now in close contact and the fighting incessant, with a good deal of artillery. As fast as we gain one position the enemy has another all ready. ... Kennesaw ... is the key to the whole country." Sherman decided to break the stalemate by attacking Johnston's position on Kennesaw Mountain. He issued orders on June 24 for an 8 a.m. attack on June 27.[9]

Battle edit

 
Battle of Kennesaw Mountain

Sherman's plan was first to induce Johnston to thin out and weaken his line by ordering Schofield to extend his army to the right. Then McPherson was to make a feint on his extreme left—the northern outskirts of Marietta and the northeastern end of Kennesaw Mountain—with his cavalry and a division of infantry, and to make a major assault on the southwestern end of Little Kennesaw Mountain. Meanwhile, Thomas's army was to conduct the principal attack against the Confederate fortifications in the center of their line, and Schofield was to demonstrate on the Confederate left flank and attack somewhere near the Powder Springs Road "as he can with the prospect of success."[10]

At 8 a.m. on June 27, Union artillery opened a furious bombardment with over 200 guns on the Confederate works and the Rebel artillery responded in kind. Lt. Col. Joseph S. Fullerton wrote, "Kennesaw smoked and blazed with fire, a volcano as grand as Etna." As the Federal infantry began moving soon afterward, the Confederates quickly determined that much of the 8 miles (13 km) wide advance consisted of demonstrations rather than concerted assaults. The first of those assaults began at around 8:30 a.m., with three brigades of Brig. Gen. Morgan L. Smith's division (Maj. Gen. John A. Logan's XV Corps, Army of the Tennessee) moving against Loring's corps on the southern end of Little Kennesaw Mountain and the spur known as Pigeon Hill near the Burnt Hickory Road. If the attack were successful, capturing Pigeon Hill would isolate Loring's corps on Kennesaw Mountain. All three brigades were disadvantaged by the approach through dense thickets, steep and rocky slopes, and a lack of knowledge of the terrain. About 5,500 Union troops in two columns of regiments moved against about 5,000 Confederate soldiers, well entrenched.[11]

 
Confederate position at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
 
"Federal entrenchments at the foot of Kenesaw Mountain"

On the right of Smith's attack, the brigade of Brig. Gen. Joseph A. J. Lightburn was forced to advance through a knee-deep swamp, and were stopped short of the Confederate breastworks on the southern end of Pigeon Hill by enfilading fire. They were able to overrun the rifle pits in front of the works, but could not pierce the main Confederate line. To their left, the brigades of Col. Charles C. Walcutt and Brig. Gen. Giles A. Smith crossed difficult terrain interrupted by steep cliffs and scattered with huge rocks to approach the Missouri brigade of Brig. Gen. Francis Cockrell. Some of the troops were able to reach as far as the abatis, but most were not and they were forced to remain stationary, firing behind trees and rocks. When General Logan rode forward to judge their progress, he determined that many of his men were being "uselessly slain" and ordered Walcutt and Smith to withdraw and entrench behind the gorge that separated the lines.[12]

About 2 miles (3.2 km) to the south, Thomas's troops were behind schedule, but began their main attack against Hardee's corps at 9 a.m. Two divisions of the Army of the Cumberland—about 9,000 men under Brig. Gen. John Newton (Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard's IV Corps) and Brig. Gen. Jefferson C. Davis (Maj. Gen. John M. Palmer's XIV Corps)—advanced in column formation rather than the typical broad line of battle against the Confederate divisions of Maj. Gens. Benjamin F. Cheatham and Patrick R. Cleburne, entrenched on what is now known as "Cheatham Hill." On Newton's left, his brigade under Brig. Gen. George D. Wagner attacked through dense undergrowth, but was unable to break through the abatis and fierce rifle fire. On his right, the brigade of Brig. Gen. Charles G. Harker charged the Tennessee brigade of Brig. Gen. Alfred Vaughan and was repulsed. During a second charge, Harker was mortally wounded.[13]

Davis's division, to the right of Newton's, also advanced in column formation. While such a movement offered the opportunity for a quick breakthrough by massing power against a narrow point, it also had the disadvantage of offering a large concentrated target to enemy guns. Their orders were to advance silently, capture the works, and then cheer to give a signal to the reserve divisions to move forward to secure the railroad and cut the Confederate army in two. Col. Daniel McCook's brigade advanced down a slope to a creek and then crossed a wheat field to ascend the slope of Cheatham Hill. When they reached within a few yards of the Confederate works, the line halted, crouched, and began firing. But the Confederate counter fire was too strong and McCook's brigade lost two commanders (McCook and his replacement, Col. Oscar F. Harmon), nearly all of its field officers, and a third of its men. McCook was killed on the Confederate parapet as he slashed with his sword and shouted "Surrender, you traitors!" Col. John G. Mitchell's brigade on McCook's right suffered similar losses. After ferocious hand-to-hand fighting, the Union troops dug in across from the Confederates, ending the fighting around 10:45 a.m. Both sides nicknamed this place the "Dead Angle."[14]

To the right of Davis's division, Maj. Gen. John W. Geary's division of Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker's XX Corps advanced, but did not join in Davis's attack. Considerably farther to the right, however, was the site of the only success of the day. Schofield's army had been assigned to demonstrate against the Confederate left and he was able to put two brigades across Olley's Creek without resistance. That movement, along with an advance by Maj. Gen. George Stoneman's cavalry division on Schofield's right, put Union troops within 5 miles (8.0 km) of the Chattahoochee River, closer to the last river protecting Atlanta than any unit in Johnston's army.[15]

Aftermath edit

 
Map of Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection Program

Sherman's armies suffered about 3,000 casualties in comparison to Johnston's 1,000.[3] The Union general was not initially deterred by these losses and he twice asked Thomas to renew the assault. "Our loss is small, compared to some of those [battles in the] East." The Rock of Chickamauga replied, however, "One or two more such assaults would use up this army." A few days later Sherman wrote to his wife, "I begin to regard the death and mangling of couple thousand men as a small affair, a kind of morning dash."[16]

Kennesaw Mountain was not Sherman's first large-scale frontal assault of the war,[17] but it was his last. He interrupted his string of successful flanking maneuvers in the Atlanta campaign for the logistical reasons mentioned earlier, but also so that he could keep Johnston guessing about the tactics he would employ in the future. In his report of the battle, Sherman wrote, "I perceived that the enemy and our officers had settled down into a conviction that I would not assault fortified lines. All looked to me to outflank. An army to be efficient, must not settle down to a single mode of offence, but must be prepared to execute any plan which promises success. I wanted, therefore, for the moral effect, to make a successful assault against the enemy behind his breastworks, and resolved to attempt it at that point where success would give the largest fruits of victory."[18]

Kennesaw Mountain is usually considered a significant Union tactical defeat, but Richard M. McMurry wrote, "Tactically Johnston had won a minor defensive triumph on Loring's and Hardee's lines. Schofield's success, however, gave Sherman a great advantage, and the federal commander quickly decided to exploit it." The opposing forces spent five days facing each other at close range, but on July 2, with good summer weather at hand, Sherman sent the Army of the Tennessee and Stoneman's cavalry around the Confederate left flank and Johnston was forced to withdraw from Kennesaw Mountain to prepared positions at Smyrna.[19]

On July 8, Sherman outflanked Johnston again—for the first time on his right—by sending Schofield to cross the Chattahoochee near the mouth of Sope Creek. The last major geographic barrier to entering Atlanta had been overcome. Alarmed at the imminent danger posed to the city of Atlanta, and frustrated with the strategy of continual withdrawals, Confederate President Jefferson Davis relieved Johnston of command on July 17, replacing him with the aggressive John Bell Hood, who was temporarily promoted to full general. Hood proceeded to attack Sherman in battles at Peachtree Creek (July 20), Atlanta/Decatur (July 22), and Ezra Church (July 28), in all of which he suffered enormous casualties without tactical advantage. Sherman besieged Atlanta for the month of August, but sent almost his entire force swinging to the south to cut off the city's last remaining railroad connection. In the Battle of Jonesboro (August 31 and September 1), Hood attacked again to save his railroad, but was unsuccessful and was forced to evacuate Atlanta. Sherman's men entered the city on September 2 and Sherman telegraphed President Lincoln, "Atlanta is ours, and fairly won." This milestone was arguably one of the key factors enabling Lincoln's reelection in November.[20]

A soldier's perspective edit

The battle is described from the perspective of Sam Watkins, a volunteer in the 1st Tennessee Infantry Regiment of the Confederate Army, in the book "Company Aytch" (see the section entitled "Dead Angle, on the Kennesaw Line").[21][22]

Battlefield today edit

The site of the battle is now part of Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, where both Confederate deliberate trenches on top of the mountain and some Union rifle pits are still visible today.[23] The American Battlefield Trust and its partners have saved almost four acres of battlefield land outside the park as of mid-2023.[24]

Notes edit

  1. ^ NPS
  2. ^ a b Livermore, pp. 120–21. Eicher, pp. 696–97, gives total army strengths at the beginning of the campaign as 98,500 Union, 50,000 Confederate.
  3. ^ a b c NPS; McMurry, p. 109; Bailey, p. 74. Albert Castel's definitive campaign history lists (p. 319) Union casualties broken down as Logan's corps 586, Newton's 654, and Davis's 824; 17 missing from Logan's corps and approximately 300 prisoners from Newton's and Davis's divisions; 57 and 200 casualties respectively in the XVI and XVII Corps while demonstrating against the Confederate right; and approximately 300 for backup units of the IV and XIV Corps and skirmishers of the XX and XXIII Corps.
  4. ^ Eicher, p. 661; McPherson, p. 722.
  5. ^ Bailey, pp. 20–21; Eicher, pp. 696–97.
  6. ^ Eicher, pp. 696–97.
  7. ^ Kennedy, pp. 326–31.
  8. ^ Luvaas and Nelson, pp. 173–246; Kennedy, p. 336.
  9. ^ Kennedy, p. 336; Welcher, pp. 447–48.
  10. ^ Welcher, p. 449: Brig. Gen. Kenner Garrard's cavalry and Brig. Gen. Mortimer D. Leggett's infantry division of Maj. Gen. Francis P. Blair, Jr.'s XVII Corps.
  11. ^ Bailey, p. 66; Welcher, p. 449.
  12. ^ Castel, pp. 311–13; Kennedy, p. 338.
  13. ^ Kennedy, p. 338; Bailey, pp. 69–70.
  14. ^ Welcher, pp. 450–51; Kennedy, p. 338; Bailey, p. 74.
  15. ^ Welcher, p. 451.
  16. ^ McMurry, p. 111.
  17. ^ Sherman frontal-assaulted at Chickasaw Bayou and at Vicksburg during the Vicksburg Campaign and on the northern end of Missionary Ridge in Chattanooga. All these efforts were unsuccessful.
  18. ^ Liddell Hart, p. 266.
  19. ^ McMurry, pp. 110, 113.
  20. ^ Kennedy, pp. 339–43; McPherson, pp. 774–75. The other two significant factors contributing to Lincoln's reelection were the capture of Mobile Bay by Adm. David Farragut and the defeat of Lt. Gen. Jubal Early's Confederate army in the Shenandoah Valley by Philip Sheridan.
  21. ^ "Well, on the fatal morning of June 27th, the sun rose clear and cloudless, the heavens seemed made of brass, and the earth of hot iron, and as the sun began to mount toward the zenith, everything became quiet, and no sound was heard save a peckerwood on a neighboring tree...."Watkins, Samuel. "Co. Aytch": Maury Grays, First Tennessee Regiment; or, A Side Show of the Big Show. p. 136.
  22. ^ Leigh, Phil (March 15, 2013). "Private Watkins's War". The New York Times. Disunion. Retrieved August 23, 2016.
  23. ^ Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park
  24. ^ "Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield". American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved June 20, 2023.

References edit

  • Bailey, Ronald H., and the Editors of Time-Life Books. Battles for Atlanta: Sherman Moves East. Alexandria, VA: Time-Life Books, 1985. ISBN 0-8094-4773-8.
  • Castel, Albert. Decision in the West: The Atlanta Campaign of 1864. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 1992. ISBN 0-7006-0748-X.
  • Eicher, David J. The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War. New York: Simon & Schuster, 2001. ISBN 0-684-84944-5.
  • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. The Civil War Battlefield Guide[permanent dead link]. 2nd ed. Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998. ISBN 0-395-74012-6.
  • 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 1901 by Houghton Mifflin.
  • Luvaas, Jay, and Harold W. Nelson, eds. Guide to the Atlanta Campaign: Rocky Face Ridge to Kennesaw Mountain. Lawrence: University Press of Kansas, 2008. ISBN 978-0-7006-1570-4.
  • McDonough, James Lee, and James Pickett Jones. War So Terrible: Sherman and Atlanta. New York: W. W. Norton & Co., 1987, ISBN 0-393-02497-0.
  • McMurry, Richard M. Atlanta 1864: Last Chance for the Confederacy. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 2000. ISBN 0-8032-8278-8.
  • McPherson, James M. Battle Cry of Freedom: The Civil War Era. Oxford History of the United States. New York: Oxford University Press, 1988. ISBN 0-19-503863-0.
  • Welcher, Frank J. The Union Army, 1861–1865 Organization and Operations. Vol. 2, The Western Theater. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1993. ISBN 0-253-36454-X.
  • National Park Service battle description

Further reading edit

  • Hess, Earl J. Kennesaw Mountain: Sherman, Johnston, and the Atlanta Campaign. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2013. ISBN 978-1-4696-0211-0.
  • Strong, Robert Hale (1961). Halsey, Ashley (ed.). A Yankee Private's Civil War. Chicago: Henry Regnery Company. pp. 33–41. LCCN 61-10744. OCLC 1058411.
  • Vermilya, Daniel J. The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1-62619-388-8.

External links edit

  • The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain: Battle maps, history articles, and preservation news (Civil War Trust)

33°56′11″N 84°35′52″W / 33.9363°N 84.5979°W / 33.9363; -84.5979

battle, kennesaw, mountain, part, american, civil, warthe, army, cumberland, swinging, around, kennesaw, mountaindatejune, 1864, 1864, locationcobb, county, georgiaresultconfederate, victory, belligerents, united, states, union, confederacy, commanders, leader. Battle of Kennesaw MountainPart of the American Civil WarThe Army of the Cumberland swinging around Kennesaw MountainDateJune 27 1864 1864 06 27 LocationCobb County GeorgiaResultConfederate victory 1 Belligerents United States Union CSA Confederacy Commanders and leadersWilliam T ShermanJoseph E JohnstonUnits involvedMilitary Division of the Mississippi Army of the Cumberland Army of the Ohio Army of the TennesseeArmy of TennesseeStrength16 225 2 17 733 2 Casualties and losses3 000 3 1 000 3 The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain was fought on June 27 1864 during the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War It was the most significant frontal assault launched by Union Maj Gen William T Sherman against the Confederate Army of Tennessee under Gen Joseph E Johnston ending in a tactical defeat for the Union forces Strategically however the battle failed to deliver the result that the Confederacy desperately needed namely a halt to Sherman s advance on Atlanta Sherman s 1864 campaign against Atlanta Georgia was initially characterized by a series of flanking maneuvers against Johnston each of which compelled the Confederate army to withdraw from heavily fortified positions with minimal casualties on either side After two months and 70 miles 110 km of such maneuvering Sherman s path was blocked by imposing fortifications on Kennesaw Mountain near Marietta Georgia and the Union general chose to change his tactics and ordered a large scale frontal assault on June 27 Maj Gen James B McPherson feinted against the northern end of Kennesaw Mountain while his corps under Maj Gen John A Logan assaulted Pigeon Hill on its southwest corner At the same time Maj Gen George H Thomas launched strong attacks against Cheatham Hill at the center of the Confederate line Both attacks were repulsed with heavy losses but a demonstration by Maj Gen John M Schofield achieved a strategic success by threatening the Confederate army s left flank prompting yet another Confederate withdrawal toward Atlanta and the removal of General Johnston from command of the army Contents 1 Background 2 Start of the Atlanta campaign 3 Battle 4 Aftermath 5 A soldier s perspective 6 Battlefield today 7 Notes 8 References 9 Further reading 10 External linksBackground editIn March 1864 Ulysses S Grant was promoted to lieutenant general and named general in chief of the Union Army He devised a strategy of multiple simultaneous offensives against the Confederacy hoping to prevent any of the rebel armies from reinforcing the others over interior lines The two most significant of these were by Maj Gen George G Meade s Army of the Potomac accompanied by Grant himself which would attack Robert E Lee s army directly and advance toward the Confederate capital of Richmond Virginia and Maj Gen William T Sherman replacing Grant in his role as commander of the Military Division of the Mississippi who would advance from Chattanooga Tennessee to Atlanta 4 Both Grant and Sherman initially had objectives to engage with and destroy the two principal armies of the Confederacy relegating the capture of important enemy cities to a secondary supporting role This was a strategy that President Abraham Lincoln had emphasized throughout the war but Grant was the first general who actively cooperated with it As their campaigns progressed however the political importance of the cities of Richmond and Atlanta began to dominate their strategy By 1864 Atlanta was a critical target The city of 20 000 was founded at the intersection of four important railroad lines that supplied the Confederacy and was a military manufacturing arsenal in its own right Atlanta s nickname of Gate City of the South was apt its capture would open virtually the entire Deep South to Union conquest Grant s orders to Sherman were to move against Johnston s Army to break it up and to get into the interior of the enemy s country as far as you can inflicting all the damage you can against their war resources 5 Sherman s force of about 100 000 men was composed of three subordinate armies the Army of the Tennessee Grant s and later Sherman s army of 1862 63 under Maj Gen James B McPherson the Army of the Cumberland under Maj Gen George H Thomas and the relatively small Army of the Ohio composed of only the XXIII Corps under Maj Gen John M Schofield Their principal opponent was the Confederate Army of Tennessee commanded by Gen Joseph E Johnston who had replaced the unpopular Braxton Bragg after his defeat in Chattanooga in November 1863 The 50 000 man army consisted of the infantry corps of Lt Gens William J Hardee John Bell Hood and Leonidas Polk and a cavalry corps under Maj Gen Joseph Wheeler 6 Start of the Atlanta campaign edit nbsp Confederate troops dragging guns up Kennesaw Mountain nbsp The Atlanta Campaign from Dalton to Kennesaw Mountain Confederate UnionSherman s campaign began on May 7 as his three armies departed from the vicinity of Chattanooga He launched demonstration attacks against Johnston s position on the long high mountain named Rocky Face Ridge while McPherson s Army of the Tennessee advanced stealthily around Johnston s left flank toward the town of Resaca and Johnston s supply line on the Western amp Atlantic Railroad Unfortunately for Sherman McPherson encountered a small Confederate force entrenched in the outskirts of Resaca and cautiously pulled back to Snake Creek Gap squandering the opportunity to trap the Confederate army As Sherman swung his entire army in the direction of Resaca Johnston retired to take up positions there Full scale fighting erupted in the Battle of Resaca on May 14 15 but there was no conclusive result and Sherman flanked Johnston for a second time by crossing the Oostanaula River As Johnston withdrew again skirmishing erupted at Adairsville on May 17 and more general fighting on Johnston s Cassville line May 18 19 Johnston planned to defeat part of Sherman s force as it approached on multiple routes but Hood became uncharacteristically cautious and feared encirclement failing to attack as ordered Encouraged by Hood and Polk Johnston ordered another withdrawal this time across the Etowah River 7 Johnston s army took up defensive positions at Allatoona Pass south of Cartersville but Sherman once again turned Johnston s left as he temporarily abandoned his railroad supply line and advanced on Dallas Johnston was forced to move from his strong position and meet Sherman s army in the open Fierce but inconclusive fighting occurred on May 25 at New Hope Church May 27 at Pickett s Mill and May 28 at Dallas By June 1 heavy rains turned the roads to quagmires and Sherman was forced to return to the railroad to supply his men Johnston s new line called the Brushy Mountain Line was established by June 4 northwest of Marietta along Lost Mountain Pine Mountain and Brush Mountain On June 14 following eleven days of steady rain Sherman was ready to move again While on a personal reconnaissance he spotted a group of Confederate officers on Pine Mountain and ordered one of his artillery batteries to open fire Lt Gen Leonidas Polk the Fighting Bishop was killed and Johnston withdrew his men from Pine Mountain establishing a new line in an arc shaped defensive position from Kennesaw Mountain to Little Kennesaw Mountain Hood s corps attempted an unsuccessful attack at Peter Kolb s farm the Battle of Kolb s Farm south of Little Kennesaw Mountain on June 22 Maj Gen William W Loring succeeded to temporarily command Polk s corps 8 Sherman was in a difficult position stalled 15 miles 24 km north of Atlanta He could not continue his strategy of moving around Johnston s flank because of the impassable roads and his railroad supply line was dominated by Johnston s position on the top of 691 feet 211 m Kennesaw Mountain He reported to Washington The whole country is one vast fort and Johnston must have at least 50 miles 80 km of connected trenches with abatis and finished batteries We gain ground daily fighting all the time Our lines are now in close contact and the fighting incessant with a good deal of artillery As fast as we gain one position the enemy has another all ready Kennesaw is the key to the whole country Sherman decided to break the stalemate by attacking Johnston s position on Kennesaw Mountain He issued orders on June 24 for an 8 a m attack on June 27 9 Battle edit nbsp Battle of Kennesaw MountainSherman s plan was first to induce Johnston to thin out and weaken his line by ordering Schofield to extend his army to the right Then McPherson was to make a feint on his extreme left the northern outskirts of Marietta and the northeastern end of Kennesaw Mountain with his cavalry and a division of infantry and to make a major assault on the southwestern end of Little Kennesaw Mountain Meanwhile Thomas s army was to conduct the principal attack against the Confederate fortifications in the center of their line and Schofield was to demonstrate on the Confederate left flank and attack somewhere near the Powder Springs Road as he can with the prospect of success 10 At 8 a m on June 27 Union artillery opened a furious bombardment with over 200 guns on the Confederate works and the Rebel artillery responded in kind Lt Col Joseph S Fullerton wrote Kennesaw smoked and blazed with fire a volcano as grand as Etna As the Federal infantry began moving soon afterward the Confederates quickly determined that much of the 8 miles 13 km wide advance consisted of demonstrations rather than concerted assaults The first of those assaults began at around 8 30 a m with three brigades of Brig Gen Morgan L Smith s division Maj Gen John A Logan s XV Corps Army of the Tennessee moving against Loring s corps on the southern end of Little Kennesaw Mountain and the spur known as Pigeon Hill near the Burnt Hickory Road If the attack were successful capturing Pigeon Hill would isolate Loring s corps on Kennesaw Mountain All three brigades were disadvantaged by the approach through dense thickets steep and rocky slopes and a lack of knowledge of the terrain About 5 500 Union troops in two columns of regiments moved against about 5 000 Confederate soldiers well entrenched 11 nbsp Confederate position at the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain nbsp Federal entrenchments at the foot of Kenesaw Mountain On the right of Smith s attack the brigade of Brig Gen Joseph A J Lightburn was forced to advance through a knee deep swamp and were stopped short of the Confederate breastworks on the southern end of Pigeon Hill by enfilading fire They were able to overrun the rifle pits in front of the works but could not pierce the main Confederate line To their left the brigades of Col Charles C Walcutt and Brig Gen Giles A Smith crossed difficult terrain interrupted by steep cliffs and scattered with huge rocks to approach the Missouri brigade of Brig Gen Francis Cockrell Some of the troops were able to reach as far as the abatis but most were not and they were forced to remain stationary firing behind trees and rocks When General Logan rode forward to judge their progress he determined that many of his men were being uselessly slain and ordered Walcutt and Smith to withdraw and entrench behind the gorge that separated the lines 12 About 2 miles 3 2 km to the south Thomas s troops were behind schedule but began their main attack against Hardee s corps at 9 a m Two divisions of the Army of the Cumberland about 9 000 men under Brig Gen John Newton Maj Gen Oliver O Howard s IV Corps and Brig Gen Jefferson C Davis Maj Gen John M Palmer s XIV Corps advanced in column formation rather than the typical broad line of battle against the Confederate divisions of Maj Gens Benjamin F Cheatham and Patrick R Cleburne entrenched on what is now known as Cheatham Hill On Newton s left his brigade under Brig Gen George D Wagner attacked through dense undergrowth but was unable to break through the abatis and fierce rifle fire On his right the brigade of Brig Gen Charles G Harker charged the Tennessee brigade of Brig Gen Alfred Vaughan and was repulsed During a second charge Harker was mortally wounded 13 Davis s division to the right of Newton s also advanced in column formation While such a movement offered the opportunity for a quick breakthrough by massing power against a narrow point it also had the disadvantage of offering a large concentrated target to enemy guns Their orders were to advance silently capture the works and then cheer to give a signal to the reserve divisions to move forward to secure the railroad and cut the Confederate army in two Col Daniel McCook s brigade advanced down a slope to a creek and then crossed a wheat field to ascend the slope of Cheatham Hill When they reached within a few yards of the Confederate works the line halted crouched and began firing But the Confederate counter fire was too strong and McCook s brigade lost two commanders McCook and his replacement Col Oscar F Harmon nearly all of its field officers and a third of its men McCook was killed on the Confederate parapet as he slashed with his sword and shouted Surrender you traitors Col John G Mitchell s brigade on McCook s right suffered similar losses After ferocious hand to hand fighting the Union troops dug in across from the Confederates ending the fighting around 10 45 a m Both sides nicknamed this place the Dead Angle 14 To the right of Davis s division Maj Gen John W Geary s division of Maj Gen Joseph Hooker s XX Corps advanced but did not join in Davis s attack Considerably farther to the right however was the site of the only success of the day Schofield s army had been assigned to demonstrate against the Confederate left and he was able to put two brigades across Olley s Creek without resistance That movement along with an advance by Maj Gen George Stoneman s cavalry division on Schofield s right put Union troops within 5 miles 8 0 km of the Chattahoochee River closer to the last river protecting Atlanta than any unit in Johnston s army 15 Aftermath edit nbsp Map of Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield core and study areas by the American Battlefield Protection ProgramSherman s armies suffered about 3 000 casualties in comparison to Johnston s 1 000 3 The Union general was not initially deterred by these losses and he twice asked Thomas to renew the assault Our loss is small compared to some of those battles in the East The Rock of Chickamauga replied however One or two more such assaults would use up this army A few days later Sherman wrote to his wife I begin to regard the death and mangling of couple thousand men as a small affair a kind of morning dash 16 Kennesaw Mountain was not Sherman s first large scale frontal assault of the war 17 but it was his last He interrupted his string of successful flanking maneuvers in the Atlanta campaign for the logistical reasons mentioned earlier but also so that he could keep Johnston guessing about the tactics he would employ in the future In his report of the battle Sherman wrote I perceived that the enemy and our officers had settled down into a conviction that I would not assault fortified lines All looked to me to outflank An army to be efficient must not settle down to a single mode of offence but must be prepared to execute any plan which promises success I wanted therefore for the moral effect to make a successful assault against the enemy behind his breastworks and resolved to attempt it at that point where success would give the largest fruits of victory 18 Kennesaw Mountain is usually considered a significant Union tactical defeat but Richard M McMurry wrote Tactically Johnston had won a minor defensive triumph on Loring s and Hardee s lines Schofield s success however gave Sherman a great advantage and the federal commander quickly decided to exploit it The opposing forces spent five days facing each other at close range but on July 2 with good summer weather at hand Sherman sent the Army of the Tennessee and Stoneman s cavalry around the Confederate left flank and Johnston was forced to withdraw from Kennesaw Mountain to prepared positions at Smyrna 19 On July 8 Sherman outflanked Johnston again for the first time on his right by sending Schofield to cross the Chattahoochee near the mouth of Sope Creek The last major geographic barrier to entering Atlanta had been overcome Alarmed at the imminent danger posed to the city of Atlanta and frustrated with the strategy of continual withdrawals Confederate President Jefferson Davis relieved Johnston of command on July 17 replacing him with the aggressive John Bell Hood who was temporarily promoted to full general Hood proceeded to attack Sherman in battles at Peachtree Creek July 20 Atlanta Decatur July 22 and Ezra Church July 28 in all of which he suffered enormous casualties without tactical advantage Sherman besieged Atlanta for the month of August but sent almost his entire force swinging to the south to cut off the city s last remaining railroad connection In the Battle of Jonesboro August 31 and September 1 Hood attacked again to save his railroad but was unsuccessful and was forced to evacuate Atlanta Sherman s men entered the city on September 2 and Sherman telegraphed President Lincoln Atlanta is ours and fairly won This milestone was arguably one of the key factors enabling Lincoln s reelection in November 20 A soldier s perspective editThe battle is described from the perspective of Sam Watkins a volunteer in the 1st Tennessee Infantry Regiment of the Confederate Army in the book Company Aytch see the section entitled Dead Angle on the Kennesaw Line 21 22 Battlefield today editThe site of the battle is now part of Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park where both Confederate deliberate trenches on top of the mountain and some Union rifle pits are still visible today 23 The American Battlefield Trust and its partners have saved almost four acres of battlefield land outside the park as of mid 2023 24 nbsp Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield Monument nbsp Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield Cannon nbsp Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield Approach nbsp Illinois MonumentNotes edit NPS a b Livermore pp 120 21 Eicher pp 696 97 gives total army strengths at the beginning of the campaign as 98 500 Union 50 000 Confederate a b c NPS McMurry p 109 Bailey p 74 Albert Castel s definitive campaign history lists p 319 Union casualties broken down as Logan s corps 586 Newton s 654 and Davis s 824 17 missing from Logan s corps and approximately 300 prisoners from Newton s and Davis s divisions 57 and 200 casualties respectively in the XVI and XVII Corps while demonstrating against the Confederate right and approximately 300 for backup units of the IV and XIV Corps and skirmishers of the XX and XXIII Corps Eicher p 661 McPherson p 722 Bailey pp 20 21 Eicher pp 696 97 Eicher pp 696 97 Kennedy pp 326 31 Luvaas and Nelson pp 173 246 Kennedy p 336 Kennedy p 336 Welcher pp 447 48 Welcher p 449 Brig Gen Kenner Garrard s cavalry and Brig Gen Mortimer D Leggett s infantry division of Maj Gen Francis P Blair Jr s XVII Corps Bailey p 66 Welcher p 449 Castel pp 311 13 Kennedy p 338 Kennedy p 338 Bailey pp 69 70 Welcher pp 450 51 Kennedy p 338 Bailey p 74 Welcher p 451 McMurry p 111 Sherman frontal assaulted at Chickasaw Bayou and at Vicksburg during the Vicksburg Campaign and on the northern end of Missionary Ridge in Chattanooga All these efforts were unsuccessful Liddell Hart p 266 McMurry pp 110 113 Kennedy pp 339 43 McPherson pp 774 75 The other two significant factors contributing to Lincoln s reelection were the capture of Mobile Bay by Adm David Farragut and the defeat of Lt Gen Jubal Early s Confederate army in the Shenandoah Valley by Philip Sheridan Well on the fatal morning of June 27th the sun rose clear and cloudless the heavens seemed made of brass and the earth of hot iron and as the sun began to mount toward the zenith everything became quiet and no sound was heard save a peckerwood on a neighboring tree Watkins Samuel Co Aytch Maury Grays First Tennessee Regiment or A Side Show of the Big Show p 136 Leigh Phil March 15 2013 Private Watkins s War The New York Times Disunion Retrieved August 23 2016 Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park Kennesaw Mountain Battlefield American Battlefield Trust Retrieved June 20 2023 References editBailey Ronald H and the Editors of Time Life Books Battles for Atlanta Sherman Moves East Alexandria VA Time Life Books 1985 ISBN 0 8094 4773 8 Castel Albert Decision in the West The Atlanta Campaign of 1864 Lawrence University Press of Kansas 1992 ISBN 0 7006 0748 X Eicher David J The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War New York Simon amp Schuster 2001 ISBN 0 684 84944 5 Kennedy Frances H ed The Civil War Battlefield Guide permanent dead link 2nd ed Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1998 ISBN 0 395 74012 6 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 1901 by Houghton Mifflin Luvaas Jay and Harold W Nelson eds Guide to the Atlanta Campaign Rocky Face Ridge to Kennesaw Mountain Lawrence University Press of Kansas 2008 ISBN 978 0 7006 1570 4 McDonough James Lee and James Pickett Jones War So Terrible Sherman and Atlanta New York W W Norton amp Co 1987 ISBN 0 393 02497 0 McMurry Richard M Atlanta 1864 Last Chance for the Confederacy Lincoln University of Nebraska Press 2000 ISBN 0 8032 8278 8 McPherson James M Battle Cry of Freedom The Civil War Era Oxford History of the United States New York Oxford University Press 1988 ISBN 0 19 503863 0 Welcher Frank J The Union Army 1861 1865 Organization and Operations Vol 2 The Western Theater Bloomington Indiana University Press 1993 ISBN 0 253 36454 X National Park Service battle descriptionFurther reading editHess Earl J Kennesaw Mountain Sherman Johnston and the Atlanta Campaign Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2013 ISBN 978 1 4696 0211 0 Strong Robert Hale 1961 Halsey Ashley ed A Yankee Private s Civil War Chicago Henry Regnery Company pp 33 41 LCCN 61 10744 OCLC 1058411 Vermilya Daniel J The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain Charleston SC The History Press 2014 ISBN 978 1 62619 388 8 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Battle of Kennesaw Mountain The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain Battle maps history articles and preservation news Civil War Trust 33 56 11 N 84 35 52 W 33 9363 N 84 5979 W 33 9363 84 5979 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Kennesaw Mountain amp oldid 1187345200, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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