fbpx
Wikipedia

Franklin–Nashville campaign

Franklin–Nashville campaign
Part of the American Civil War

Union army at Nashville, Tennessee, December, 1864
DateSeptember–December 1864
Location
Result Union victory; end of large-scale fighting in the Western Theater.
Belligerents
 United States  Confederate States
Commanders and leaders
George H. Thomas
John Schofield
John Bell Hood
Units involved
Army of the Cumberland
Army of the Ohio
Army of Tennessee
Strength
  • 65,501 (Nov. 20)[1]
  • 75,194 (Nov. 30)[2]
  • 75,153 (Dec. 10)[3]
  • 44,719 (Nov. 6)[4]
  • 36,426 (Dec. 10)[4]
  • The Franklin–Nashville campaign, also known as Hood's Tennessee campaign, was a series of battles in the Western Theater, conducted from September 18 to December 27, 1864,[5][6] in Alabama, Tennessee, and northwestern Georgia during the American Civil War.

    The Confederate Army of Tennessee under Lieutenant General (Lt. Gen.) John Bell Hood drove north from Atlanta, threatening Major General (Maj. Gen.) William T. Sherman's lines of communications and central Tennessee. After a brief attempt to pursue Hood, Sherman returned to Atlanta and began his March to the Sea, leaving Union forces under Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas to deal with Hood's threat.

    Hood hoped to defeat the Union force under Maj. Gen. John Schofield before it could converge with Thomas's army and attempted to do so at the Battle of Spring Hill on Tuesday, November 29, but poorly coordinated Confederate attacks combined with effective U.S. forces leadership allowed Schofield to escape.[7] The following day, Hood launched a series of futile frontal assaults against Schofield's field fortifications in the Battle of Franklin, suffering heavy casualties; Schofield withdrew his force and successfully linked up with Thomas in Nashville, Tennessee. On December 15–16, Thomas's combined army attacked Hood's depleted army and routed it in the Battle of Nashville, sending it in retreat to Tupelo, Mississippi. Hood resigned his commission shortly thereafter and the Army of Tennessee ceased to exist as an effective fighting force.

    Background edit

     
    Kentucky-Northern Tennessee, 1864
     
    Southern Tennessee-Alabama, 1864

    At the conclusion of his successful Atlanta campaign, Sherman occupied the city of Atlanta on September 2, 1864, and Hood, who was forced to evacuate the city, regrouped at Lovejoy's Station. For almost a month, the normally aggressive Sherman took little action while his men sat about idly, and many left the army at the end of their enlistments. On September 21, Hood moved his forces to Palmetto, Georgia, where on September 25, he was visited by Confederate President Jefferson Davis. The two men planned their strategy, which called for Hood to move toward Chattanooga, Tennessee, and operate against Sherman's lines of communications. They hoped that Sherman would follow and that Hood would be able to maneuver Sherman into a decisive battle on terrain favorable to the Confederates.[8][6]

    During the conference, Davis expressed his disappointment in Hood's performance during the Atlanta campaign, losing tens of thousands of men in ill-advised frontal assaults for no significant gains, and implied that he was considering replacing Hood in command of the army. After the president's departure for Montgomery, Alabama, he telegraphed Hood that he had decided to retain him in command and, acceding to Hood's request, transferred Lt. Gen. William J. Hardee, one of Hood's corps commanders, out of the Army of Tennessee. He also established a new theater commander to supervise Hood and the department of Lt. Gen. Richard Taylor, although the officer selected for the assignment, Gen. P.G.T. Beauregard, was not expected to exert any real operational control of the armies in the field.[9]

    Although Sherman was planning to march east to seize the city of Savannah, Georgia, (the campaign that would be known as Sherman's March to the Sea) he was concerned about his lines of communications back to Chattanooga. One particular threat was the cavalry commander Nathan Bedford Forrest, who had long bedeviled Union expeditions with lightning raids into their rear areas. On September 29, Lieutenant General Ulysses S. Grant urged Sherman to dispose of Forrest and Sherman sent Thomas to Nashville, Tennessee, to organize all of the troops in the state. Sherman sent another division, under Brigadier General (Brig. Gen.) James D. Morgan, to Chattanooga.[10]

    Sherman had some advance notice of the nature of Hood's proposed campaign. In a series of speeches given at stops along his way back to Richmond, President Davis rallied his listeners by predicting success for Hood, speeches that were reported in the press and read avidly by Sherman. In Columbia, South Carolina, his speech included:

    General Hood's strategy has been good and his conduct has been gallant. His eye is now fixed upon a point far beyond that where he was assailed by the enemy. He hopes soon to have his hand upon Sherman's line of communications, and to fix it where he can hold it. ... I believe it is in the power of the men of the Confederacy to plant our banners on the banks of the Ohio, where we shall say to the Yankee, "be quiet or we shall teach you another lesson."[11][note 1]

    Opposing forces edit

    Confederate edit

    Principal Confederate commanders

    Lt. Gen. John Bell Hood's[12][note 2] Army of Tennessee, at 39,000 men, constituted the second-largest remaining army of the Confederacy, ranking in strength only after Gen. Robert E. Lee's Army of Northern Virginia. The army consisted of the corps of Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham, Lt. Gen. Stephen D. Lee, and Lt. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart, and cavalry forces under Maj. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest.[12] Confederate inspections produced after the fall of Atlanta, but before the start of the new campaign indicate that while the Confederate Army of Tennessee's soldiers were poorly clothed, they were well equipped with modern weapons.[13]

    Union edit

    Principal Union commanders

    At the beginning of the campaign, Union forces designated the Military Division of the Mississippi were commanded by Sherman in Atlanta, but his personal involvement in the campaign lasted only until the end of October. Reporting to Sherman was the Army of the Cumberland under Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas (the "Rock of Chickamauga"), the force previously commanded by Maj. Gen. William S. Rosecrans. Thomas was the principal Union commander after Sherman's departure. Subordinate to him was the Army of the Ohio, commanded by Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield. It consisted of 34,000 men, made up of the IV Corps under Maj. Gen. David S. Stanley, the XXIII Corps under Brig. Gen. Jacob D. Cox, and a Cavalry Corps commanded by Maj. Gen. James H. Wilson. Thomas had an additional 26,000 men at Nashville and scattered around his department.[14][note 3]

    Confederate attacks on Sherman's supply line edit

     
    Map of the Franklin–Nashville campaign
      Confederate
      Union

    So far, the Confederate strategy was working, because Sherman was being forced to disperse his strength to maintain his lines of communication. Hood's movements attracted a lot of attention in the press in the north and caused the War Department no small concern. Washington, DC insisted that Sherman deal with Hood's threat.[7] However, Sherman was not about to fall into Hood's trap completely. He intended to provide Thomas with sufficient strength to cope with Forrest and Hood, while he completed plans to strike out for Savannah. On September 29, Hood began his advance across the Chattahoochee River, heading to the northwest with 40,000 men to threaten the Western & Atlantic Railroad, Sherman's supply line. On October 1, Hood's cavalry was intercepted by Union cavalry under Brig. Gens. Judson Kilpatrick and Kenner Garrard in a raid on the railroad near Marietta, but Sherman was still uncertain of Hood's location. For the next three weeks, Sherman had difficulty keeping abreast of Hood's movements. Hood moved rapidly, screened his march, and maintained the initiative. The Union cavalry, which Sherman had neglected to train adequately, had a difficult time following Hood and reporting his movements.[15][note 4]

    On October 3, the day that Thomas arrived in Nashville, Stewart's corps captured Big Shanty (present-day Kennesaw) with its garrison of 175 men, and the following day Acworth, with an additional 250. Sherman left Maj. Gen. Henry W. Slocum in Atlanta and moved toward Marietta with a force of about 55,000 men. Hood split his force, sending the majority of his command to Dallas, Georgia. The remainder, a division under Maj. Gen. Samuel G. French, moved along the railroad toward Allatoona.[16]

    Allatoona (October 5) edit

    The small Federal garrison at Allatoona, a partial brigade, was commanded by Colonel (COL) John Tourtellotte. Before the Southern division arrived, Sherman sent a reinforcement brigade with Brig. Gen. John M. Corse, who took command of both brigades. The Federal troops occupied strong defensive positions in two earthen redoubts on each side of a 180-foot, 65 feet deep railroad cut and many of the men, including the entire 7th Illinois, were armed with Henry repeating rifles.[17][18]

    Major General Samuel Gibbs French's division arrived near Allatoona at sunrise on Wednesday, October 5. After a two-hour artillery bombardment, French sent a demand for surrender, which Corse refused. French then launched his brigades in an attack—one from the north (against the rear of the fortifications) and two from the west. Corse's men survived the sustained two-hour attack against the main fortification, the Star Fort on the western side of the railroad cut, but were pinned down and Tourtellotte sent reinforcements from the eastern fort. Under heavy pressure, it seemed inevitable that the Federals would be forced to surrender, but by noon French received a false report from his cavalry that a strong Union force was approaching from Acworth, so he reluctantly withdrew at 2:00 p.m. Allatoona was a relatively small, but bloody battle with high percentages of casualties.[19]

    Resaca, Dalton, and the movement into Alabama edit

    Hood then moved to the west and crossed the Coosa River in the vicinity of Rome, Georgia, near the Alabama state line. He turned north in the direction of Resaca, Georgia, and joined with Maj. Gen. Joseph Wheeler's cavalry, which had been previously raiding in Tennessee. On Wednesday, October 12 (a week after Allatoona ), Hood demanded the surrender of the Union brigade stationed at Resaca and left Lt. Gen. Stephen D. Lee's corps there to invest the city. The 700 Union men under Colonel Clark R. Weaver refused Hood's ultimatum to surrender, which warned that no prisoners would be taken. Weaver replied "In my opinion I can hold this post. If you want it, come and take it." Hood declined to attack the Union position because he believed that it would be too costly, instead bypassing the city, moving north, and continuing the destruction of the railroad.[20]

    Meanwhile, Sherman had learned of Hood's location and ordered reinforcements sent to Resaca, arriving there on October 13, too late to engage Hood in battle. Hood sent Lt. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart as far north as Tunnel Hill, near the Tennessee state line, to damage the railroad as much as possible. During this operation, on October 13, Stewart captured the Federal garrison at Dalton, Georgia, under ugly circumstances. The 751 men under Colonel Lewis Johnson included a large number of African-American soldiers, a sight that enraged many in Hood's army. In surrender negotiations, Johnson insisted that his black troops be treated as prisoners of war, but Hood replied that "all slaves belonging to persons in the Confederacy" would be returned to their masters. Unable to defend the garrison, Johnson surrendered and 600 black soldiers were stripped of their shoes and some clothing and marched to the railroad, where they were forced to tear up about 2 miles of track under the supervision of Maj. Gen. William B. Bate's division. Six of the Union soldiers were shot for refusing to work or being unable to keep up with the march. Colonel Johnson later wrote that the abuse his men received "exceeded anything in brutality I have ever witnessed." Johnson and his white officers were paroled the following day, but some of his black soldiers were returned to slavery.[21][note 5]

    From Resaca, Hood withdrew on a six-day march to the west toward Gadsden, Alabama, reaching it on Thursday, October 20. He had hoped to engage Sherman in battle near LaFayette, Georgia, but his subordinate commanders convinced him that their troops' morale was not ready to risk an attack. He considered his campaign a success so far, having destroyed 24 miles of railroad, although this turned out to be a fleeting advantage to the South. Sherman deployed as many as 10,000 men in reconstruction and by October 28 regular rail service resumed between Chattanooga and Atlanta. Sherman pursued Hood only as far as Gaylesville, Alabama, over 30 miles short of Gadsden.[22]

    Hood began to focus his strategy. He needed to prevent Thomas's army from reuniting with Sherman and overwhelming him, and he calculated that if he moved swiftly into Tennessee, he might be able to defeat Thomas before the Union forces could be reassembled. After Thomas was eliminated, Hood planned to move into central Kentucky and replenish his army with recruits from there and Tennessee.[20] He hoped to accomplish all of this before Sherman could reach him. His plan was that if Sherman followed him, Hood would fight him in Kentucky; from there he planned to move eastward through the Cumberland Gap to aid Robert E. Lee, who was besieged at Petersburg.[7] One of his goals was to take Nashville which had been under federal control since 1862. The historian, Eric Jacobson has written that by this time in the war, the Army of Tennessee also realized that the war had become a war of extermination for them.[7][note 6]On October 21, Hood's plan received the reluctant approval of Gen. Beauregard, who was concerned about the daunting logistical challenges of an invasion. Beauregard insisted that Wheeler's cavalry be detached to monitor Sherman, and assigned Nathan Bedford Forrest's cavalry to Hood's advance. Hood set out toward Decatur, Alabama, with the intention of meeting up with Forrest in the vicinity of Florence, from where they would march north into Tennessee.[23]

    By this time, Sherman had received an indication from Grant that he was favorably considering the march to Savannah. He set his mind on the short-term goal of pursuing the swiftly moving Hood. He directed Thomas to come forward from Nashville to block Hood's advance. To bolster Thomas's effort, Sherman ordered the IV Corps under Stanley to Chattanooga and the XXIII Corps under Schofield to Nashville, as well as Maj. Gen. Andrew J. Smith's XVI Corps from Missouri to Nashville. By November 10, the remainder of Sherman's troops were en route back to Atlanta.[23]

    Forrest's West Tennessee raid (October 16 – November 16) edit

    One of the critical Federal supply lines in Tennessee was to use the Tennessee River, offload supplies at Johnsonville,[24] and then ship them by rail to Nashville. Lt. Gen. Richard Taylor ordered Maj. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest on a cavalry raid through Western Tennessee to destroy that supply line. The first of Forrest's men began to ride on Sunday, October 16; Forrest himself began moving north eight days later, on Monday, October 24 and reached Fort Heiman on the Tennessee River on Friday, October 28, where he emplaced artillery. On October 29 and October 30, his artillery fire caused the capture of three steamers and two gunboats. Forrest repaired two of the boats, Undine and Venus, to use as a small flotilla to aid in his attack on Johnsonville. On November 2, Forrest's flotilla was challenged by two Union gunboats, Key West and Tawah, and Venus was run aground and captured. The Federals dispatched six more gunboats from Paducah, Kentucky, and on Wednesday, November 3 they engaged in artillery duels with strong Confederate positions on either end of Reynoldsburg Island, near Johnsonville. The Federal fleet had difficulty attempting to subdue these positions and were occupied as Forrest prepared his force for the attack on Johnsonville.[25]

    On the morning of November 4, Undine and the Confederate batteries were attacked by three Union gunboats from Johnsonville and the six Paducah gunboats. Undine was abandoned and set on fire, which caused her ammunition magazine to explode, ending Forrest's brief career as a naval commander. Despite this loss, the Confederate land artillery was completely effective in neutralizing the threat of the Federal fleets. Forrest's guns bombarded the Union supply depot and the 28 steamboats and barges positioned at the wharf. All three of the Union gunboats were disabled or destroyed. The Union garrison commander ordered that the supply vessels be burned to prevent their capture by the Confederates.[26]

    Forrest had caused enormous damage at very low cost. He reported only 2 men killed and 9 wounded. He described the Union losses as 4 gunboats, 14 transports, 20 barges, 26 pieces of artillery, $6,700,000 worth of property, and 150 prisoners. One Union officer described the monetary loss as about $2,200,000. Forrest's command, delayed by heavy rains, proceeded to Perryville, Tennessee, and eventually reached Corinth, Mississippi, on Thursday, November 10. During the raid, on November 3, Beauregard designated Forrest's cavalry for assignment to Hood's Army of Tennessee. Hood elected to delay his advance from Florence to Tuscumbia until Forrest was able to link up with him on November 16.[27]

    Decatur (October 26–29) edit

    Hood departed from Gadsden on Saturday, October 22, en route to Guntersville, Alabama, where he planned to cross the Tennessee River. Learning that that crossing place was strongly guarded, and concerned that Federal gunboats could destroy any pontoon bridge he might deploy, he impulsively changed his destination to Decatur, 40 miles west. When Hood arrived at Decatur on October 26, he found that a Federal infantry force of 3–5,000 men was defending an entrenched line that included two forts and 1,600 yards of rifle pits.[28] Two Federal wooden gunboats patrolled the river. On Friday, October 28, Confederate skirmishers advanced through a dense fog to a ravine within 800 yards of the main fortifications. Around noon, a small Federal detachment drove the sharpshooters and skirmishers out of the ravine, capturing 125 men. Hood, concluding that he could not afford the casualties that would ensue from a full-scale assault, withdrew his army. He decided once again to move to the west, to attempt another crossing near Tuscumbia, Alabama, where Muscle Shoals would prevent interference by Federal gunboats.[29]

    Columbia (November 24–29) edit

     
    Hood's advance from Florence to Columbia

    Hood waited for Forrest at Tuscumbia for almost three weeks while his commissary officers attempted to provide 20 days supply of rations for the upcoming campaign. This was a difficult assignment because the supply line was tenuous, requiring transport on two railroads, followed by 15 miles on poor roads to Tuscumbia, using wagons pulled by undernourished horses and oxen. Hood transferred his headquarters to Florence on the morning of November 13 and Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham's corps marched across the river that day with the army's supply trains and cattle following on Monday, November 14.[30] Heavy rains during this period made travel on the roads difficult.[31] The final corps, under Lt. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart, crossed the Tennessee on the following Sunday, November 20.[32]

    On November 16, Hood received word that Sherman was about to depart Atlanta for his March to the Sea. Beauregard urged Hood to take immediate action in an attempt to distract Sherman's advance, emphasizing the importance of moving before Thomas could consolidate his forces. Both Sherman and Thomas considered it likely that Hood would follow Sherman through Georgia. Although Thomas received intelligence that Hood was amassing supplies for a movement north, he discounted most of it—heavy rains during November made the roads almost impassable. By 8:00 a.m., Monday, November 21, however, Thomas had evidence that all three of Hood's corps were in motion and he directed Schofield to withdraw gradually to the north to protect Columbia before Hood could seize it.[33] Schofield arrived at Pulaski on the night of November 13 and assumed command of all forces there, including the IV Corps. Thomas remained concerned that 10,000 troops from the XVI Corps, commanded by Maj. Gen. Andrew J. Smith, had not arrived as promised reinforcements from Missouri.[34]

    In Tennessee [Hood] groped for some grandiose scheme—the capture of Nashville, a march on Cincinnati, a crossing of the Ohio. Repeatedly, since reaching North Georgia in October, he had changed his objective, not because of unexpected Federal moves as much as because he had no real objective save that long-lasting Confederate dream that victory—and perhaps fame as well—lay along the Ohio River.

    Thomas L. Connelly, Autumn of Glory[35]

    Hood's army departed Florence on November 21, marching in three columns, with Cheatham on the left, Lee in the center, and Stewart on the right, all screened by Forrest's cavalry. Hood's plan was to consolidate at Mount Pleasant and from there move to the east to cut off Schofield before he could reach Columbia and the Duck River. The rapid forced march 70 miles north was under miserable conditions, with freezing winds and sleet, which made progress difficult for the underfed and underclothed army. Nevertheless, Hood's men were in good spirits as they returned to Tennessee.[36]

    Because of Forrest's relentless screening, Schofield had no idea where the Confederate Army was headed. The aggressive Forrest had a slight advantage over his Union cavalry opponents, commanded by Maj. Gen. James H. Wilson. Wilson had arrived from the Eastern Theater in late October to reorganize and command Thomas's cavalry, but he possessed only 4,800 horsemen ready to oppose Forrest, compared to Forrest's between 5,000 and 6,000 men. The Confederate cavalry advanced to Mount Pleasant by November 23. Brig. Gen. John T. Croxton's brigade, the initial Federal cavalry force, was reinforced with a division under Brig. Gen. Edward Hatch and a brigade under Colonel Horace Capron.[37]

    Forrest kept up the pressure and on Wednesday, November 23, heavy skirmishing occurred from Henryville to the outskirts of Mount Pleasant. To the east, Forrest's divisions under Brig. Gens. Abraham Buford II and William H. Jackson forced Hatch's division out of the Lawrenceburg area and drove them back toward Pulaski. Early on November 24, Schofield began marching his two infantry corps north to Columbia. Forrest pursued aggressively with part of the division of Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers, who occupied Mount Pleasant and hit Capron's men repeatedly as he forced them north. Buford and Jackson drove Hatch north toward Lynnville and captured a number of prisoners, but the Confederate cavalry was unable to prevent the division of Brig. Gen. Cox from reaching Columbia. Stanley's corps completed a 30-mile march from Pulaski to reinforce him. Together they began constructing an arc of trenches just south of the town.[38]

    On the morning of November 24, Forrest's cavalry began probing attacks in an attempt to break through two lines of fortifications. The Confederates bombarded the lines with artillery and a number of skirmishes occurred, but it became apparent to the Union defenders that only a single infantry division with some dismounted cavalry were participating in the attacks and that Hood was merely demonstrating, intending to cross the Duck River either upstream or downstream and cut off the Union force from Thomas, who was assembling the remainder of his force in Nashville.[39]

    On the morning of November 26, Schofield received an order from Thomas to hold the north bank of the Duck River until reinforcements under A. J. Smith could arrive from Nashville. Schofield planned to move his trains during the day and his infantry overnight, using a railroad bridge and a recently installed pontoon bridge, but heavy rains that day made approaches to the bridge impassable. That evening, the bulk of the Army of Tennessee reached the fortifications south of Columbia.[40]

    Spring Hill (November 29) edit

     
    Actions at Spring Hill, afternoon, November 29, 1864

    On Monday, November 28, Forrest crossed the river east of town against little resistance from the Union cavalry; the Southern cavalrymen had deceived Wilson and drawn his force to the northeast and away from the action. On the same day, Thomas directed Schofield to begin preparations for a withdrawal north to Franklin. He was expecting (incorrectly) that A. J. Smith's arrival from Missouri was imminent and he wanted the combined force to defend against Hood on the line of the Harpeth River at Franklin instead of the Duck River. Schofield sent his 800-wagon supply train out in front, guarded by part of the IV Corps division of Brig. Gen. George D. Wagner.[41]

    On November 29 Hood sent Cheatham's and Stewart's corps on a flanking march north, crossing the Duck River at Davis's Ford east of Columbia while two divisions of Lee's corps and most of the army's artillery remained on the southern bank to deceive Schofield into thinking a general assault was planned against Columbia.[42] Hood, riding near the head of the column with Cheatham's corps, planned to interpose his army between Schofield and Thomas, hoping to defeat Schofield as the Federals retreated north from Columbia. Stewart's corps followed Cheatham, and they were followed by the division of Maj. Gen. Edward "Allegheny" Johnson (Lee's corps). The rest of Lee's corps remained south of Columbia, demonstrating with artillery fire against Schofield's men north of the Duck.[43][note 7]

    Cavalry skirmishing between Wilson's and Forrest's troopers had occurred throughout the day on Monday and continued on Tuesday. Forrest's wide turning movement with 4,000 troopers had forced Wilson north to Hurt's Corner, preventing the U.S. horsemen from interfering with Hood's infantry advance. By 10:00 a.m., on Tuesday, November 29, Forrest ordered his men to turn west toward Spring Hill. Wilson had sent multiple messages to Schofield warning of Hood's advance, but it was not until earlier that day, Tuesday, at dawn on November 29, that Schofield believed the reports and realized the predicament he was in. He sent Stanley north with portions of the IV Corps to protect the trains, but also to hold the crossroads at Spring Hill to allow the entire army to withdraw safely to Franklin. Forrest's cavalrymen ran into pickets from the IV Corps; Stanley had moved north rapidly and formed up positions with Wagner's division that protected the village of Spring Hill on three sides. The brigade of Colonel John Quincy Lane rushed forward and pushed back the dismounted cavalrymen. Forrest inexplicably never realized that his opponents had changed from cavalry to massed infantry, failing his mission as the eyes and ears of Hood. He also halted any further advance to wait for the arrival of Cheatham's infantry.[7]

    Maj. Gen. Patrick R. Cleburne's division of Cheatham's corps arrived around 3:45 p.m. on Forrest's left. His mission was to intercept the Columbia Pike to block Schofield's withdrawal. The cavalrymen, low on ammunition, pulled out of the line and moved north to be ready to cover a further advance of Hood's army.[44] As Cleburne advanced, despite Forrest's presence on the field, he had no knowledge that to his right was a brigade of U.S. infantry (Bradley's) in a battle line.[7] When his right flank was taken by surprise by heavy fire, he wheeled his division to the right, away from the road, to face the new threat.[45]

    Back in Columbia, Schofield became convinced at about 3:00 p.m. that the Confederates would not attack him there and he began marching his men to Spring Hill. As soon as the initial units departed, Stephen D. Lee coincidentally began an attack against the Union position. By the time the bulk of his two divisions were able to cross, the senior Union commander left behind at Columbia, Brig. Gen. Cox, began his withdrawal and the final troops departed up the Franklin Pike by 10:00 pm. .[46]

    Cleburne's 3,000 men began an attack against Bradley's brigade at about 4:00 p.m. Whereas Cheatham was expecting Cleburne to drive north into Spring Hill, Hood's intention was to use this formation to sweep toward the turnpike and wheel left to intercept Schofield's arriving units. Cleburne wheeled his brigades into a northern alignment against Bradley's right flank, causing Bradley and his outnumbered men to withdraw.[45] Cleburne's two brigades chased them vigorously, and they were stopped short of the turnpike only by heavy fire from the IV Corps artillery.[47]

    The first command miscommunication of the battle took place upon Hood's arrival. Cheatham had ordered his division under Maj. Gen. William B. Bate to move against Spring Hill in concert with Cleburne, forming up on the Irishman's left. Hood then personally ordered Bate to move towards the Columbia Pike and "sweep toward Columbia." Neither Bate nor Hood bothered to inform Cheatham of this change in orders. At about 5:30 p.m., Bate's lead element of sharpshooters fired on a Federal column approaching from their left— this was the lead brigade of Maj. Gen. Thomas H. Ruger's division of the XXIII Corps. Ruger was riding with Schofield and could see Bate's men drawn up in line to attack and occupy the pike. As the two generals watched unseen by the Rebels, they saw the enemy battle line withdraw in the dusk.[48] Before the Bate could engage in battle, an officer from Cheatham's staff arrived to insist that he follow Cheatham's original orders and join Cleburne's attack. Late that night, Bate reported the contact with the Federal column traveling up the Columbia Pike, but Cheatham discounted the importance of the encounter.[49]

    By this time, Cheatham's division under Maj. Gen. John C. Brown was moved into position for another attack on Spring Hill, on Cleburne's right. Brown did not attack, however. It was reported that there were Union troops in position on his right flank and front and that Forrest's cavalrymen, promised to protect his right flank, did not seem to be present. Brown decided to consult with his corps commander before proceeding, sending two staff officers to find Cheatham and halting his troops while he awaited a decision. By the time Cheatham and Brown were able to speak, the battlefield was in total darkness, and the two officers decided that an assault conducted then without knowing the condition of their right flank might be a disaster.[note 8] Hood was furious that the attack had not proceeded as he intended and that the pike was still open. He dispatched a staff officer to find Stewart to assist Cheatham. Having been up since 3:00 a.m., Hood went to bed at 9:00 p.m., confident that whatever setbacks his army had suffered during the day, they would be able to correct them in the morning and bag Schofield.[50]

    The Battle of Spring Hill was a minor affair in terms of casualties—about 350 Union and 500 Confederate—but the result of miscommunication, simple bad military management, and the capable leadership in the U.S. forces was that during the night all of Schofield's command, including Cox, passed from Columbia through Spring Hill while the Confederate commanders slept.[45] The passage of the army did not go unnoticed by some of the soldiers, but no concerted effort was made to block the pike. Confederate cavalry attempted to block the passage of the supply trains north of Spring Hill, at Thompson's Station, but accompanying Federal infantry drove them off. A private soldier woke up the commanding general at 2:00 a.m. and reported he saw the Union column moving north, but Hood did nothing beyond sending a dispatch to Cheatham to fire on passing traffic.[51]

    By 6:00 a.m. on Wednesday, November 30, all of Schofield's army was well north of Spring Hill and its vanguard had reached Franklin, where it began to build breastworks south of town. In the morning Hood discovered Schofield's escape, and after an angry conference with his subordinate commanders in which he blamed all but himself for the failure, ordered his army to resume its pursuit. Spring Hill had been, arguably, Hood's best chance to isolate and defeat the Union army and recriminations for the lost opportunity soon began flying. Hood believed that Cheatham was most responsible. Historians Thomas L. Connelly, Eric Jacobson, and Wiley Sword have each assigned blame to both Hood and Cheatham, but Jacobson has also stressed that equally, Schofield's and his subordinates' leadership and ability exploited these failures to wrest the initiative from Hood and complete their withdrawal.[52]

    Battle of Franklin (November 30) edit

     
    Hood's approach and attacks against Wagner's advanced line

    Schofield's advance guard arrived in Franklin at about 4:30 a.m. on Wednesday, November 30. Jacob Cox, a division commander temporarily commanding the XXIII Corps, immediately began preparing strong defensive positions around the deteriorated entrenchments originally constructed for a previous engagement in 1863. Schofield decided to defend at Franklin with his back to the river because he had no pontoon bridges available that would enable his men to cross the river. Many described the day with clear afternoon skies and temperatures in the high fifties as a beautiful “Indian summer afternoon.”[53] Schofield needed time to repair the permanent bridges spanning the river, but by mid-afternoon, nearly all the supply wagons were across the Harpeth and on the road to Nashville.

    By 12:00 p.m. the Union works formed an approximate semicircle around the town. A gap in the line occurred where the Columbia Pike entered the outskirts of the town, left open to allow passage of the wagons. Just behind the center of the formidable line stood the Carter House, appropriated as Cox's headquarters. Brig. Gen. Stanley had ordered Wagner to maintain a rear guard on Winstead Hill and relieve his third brigade under Colonel Emerson Opdycke who were further south. Wagner was to stay on the hill until dusk or pressed by the Rebels. Wagner, perhaps misunderstanding his orders, ordered his three brigades to stop halfway to the Union line and dig in as best they could on the flat ground a few hundred yards in front of the main line.[note 9] Colonel Emerson Opdycke considered Wagner's order to be ridiculous and had already been directed by Stanley into the works; he marched his brigade through the Union line and into a reserve position behind the gap through which the Columbia Pike passed, leaving the brigades of Colonels John Q. Lane, and Joseph Conrad in front.[55]

    Hood's army began to arrive on Winstead Hill, two miles (3 km) south of Franklin. Around 1:00 p.m. Hood ordered a frontal assault in the dwindling afternoon light—sunset would be at 4:30 p.m. that day—against the Union force, a decision that caused dismay among his top generals. Some popular histories, in the Lost Cause tradition, assert that Hood acted rashly in a fit of rage, resentful that the Federal army had slipped past his troops the night before at Spring Hill and that he wanted to discipline his army by ordering them to assault against strong odds. Recent scholarship by Eric Jacobson discounts this as unlikely, as it was not only militarily foolish, but Hood was observed to be determined, not angry, by the time he arrived in Franklin.[56][note 10]

    Regardless of Hood's personal motivations, his specific objective was to try to crush Schofield before he and his troops could escape to Nashville. In addition, his army, angry at the missed opportunity saw an opponent that for a change did not outnumber them and were eager to destroy them.[45][7] The Confederates began moving forward at 4:00 p.m., with Cheatham's corps on the left of the assault and Stewart's on the right. Lee's corps, and almost all of the army's artillery, had not yet arrived from Columbia. Hood's attacking force, about 19–20,000 men, was arguably understrength for the mission he assigned—traversing two miles of open ground uphill[54] with only two batteries of artillery support and then assaulting prepared, albeit hastily, fortifications.[57][54]

    Hood's attack initially enveloped the 3,000 men in Wagner's two brigades under Lane and Conrad, which attempted to stand their ground behind inadequate fieldworks and without anchored flanks, but quickly collapsed under the pressure. Many of the veteran soldiers of the two brigades stampeded back on the Columbia Pike to the main breastworks, while some untried replacements were reluctant to move under fire and were captured. The fleeing troops were closely pursued by the Confederates and the two sides became so intermingled that defenders in the breastworks had to hold their fire to avoid hitting their comrades.[58]

    The U.S. forces' momentary inability to defend the opening in the works caused a weak spot in its line at the Columbia Pike from the Carter House to the cotton gin. Hood's aggressiveness seemed to be paying off.[54][59] The Confederate divisions of Cleburne, Brown, and French converged on this front and a number of their troops broke through the now not-so-solid Federal defenses on either side. In a matter of minutes, the Confederates had penetrated 50 yards through the center of the Federal line.[60]

     
    Confederate attacks

    As the Confederates began their attack, Opdycke's brigade was in reserve. He quickly positioned his men into line of battle and ordered his brigade forward to the works. Hand-to-hand fighting around the Carter House and the pike was furious and desperate. Firing continued around the Carter house and gardens for hours. At the same time as Opdycke's counterattack west of the pike, the reserve elements of Reilly's division (the 12th Kentucky Infantry, 16th Kentucky Infantry, and 175th Ohio Infantry Regiment[note 11]) had stood their ground and served as a rally line for survivors of Strickland's and Wagner's divisions.[62][63] Together they sealed the breach. Hand-to-hand fighting around the Carter House and the pike was furious and desperate, employing such weapons as bayonets, rifle butts, entrenching tools, axes, and picks.[64] Many Confederates were driven back to the Federal earthworks, where many were pinned down for the remainder of the evening, unable to either advance or flee. Brown's division suffered significant losses, including Brown, who was wounded, and all four of his brigade commanders were casualties. Brown's brigade attack near the cotton gin was driven back from the breastworks and was then subjected to devastating cross fire from Reilly's brigade to their front and the brigade of Colonel John S. Casement, on Reilly's right. Cleburne was killed in the attack and 14 of his brigade and regimental commanders were casualties.[65]

    While fighting raged at the center of the Union line, Stewart's Corps also advanced against the Union left. Because the Harpeth River flowed in that area from southeast to northwest, the brigade found themselves moving through a space getting progressively narrower, squeezing brigades together into a compressed front, delaying their movements and reducing their unit cohesion. They were all subjected to fierce artillery fire not only from the main Union line, but also from the batteries across the river at Fort Granger. And they had significant difficulty pushing through the strong Osage-orange abatis.[66]

    Loring's division launched two attacks against the Union brigade of Colonel Israel N. Stiles and both were repulsed with heavy losses. Artillery firing canister rounds directly down the railroad cut prevented any attempt to flank the Union position. Brig. Gen. John Adams attempted to rally his brigade by galloping his horse directly onto the earthworks, but he and his horse were both shot and killed. The brigade of Brig. Gen. Winfield S. Featherston began falling back under heavy fire when its division commander, Maj. Gen. William W. Loring, confronted them, shouting, "Great God! Do I command cowards?" He attempted to inspire his men by sitting on his horse in full view of the Federal lines for over a minute and amazingly emerged unharmed, but the brigade made no further progress. Walthall's division struck Casement's and Reilly's brigades in multiple waves of brigade assaults—probably as many as six distinct attacks. All of these assaults were turned back with heavy losses.[67]

    Maj. Gen. William B. Bate's division attacked on the Union right flank. His left flank was not being protected as he expected by Chalmers's cavalry division, and they received enfilade fire. To protect the flank, Bate ordered the Florida Brigade to move from its reserve position to his left flank. This not only delayed the advance, but provided only a single line to attack the Union fortifications, leaving no reserve. Chalmers's troopers had actually engaged the Federal right by this time, fighting dismounted, but Bate was unaware of it because the two forces were separated by rolling ground and orchards. Neither Bate nor Chalmers made any progress and they withdrew. Hood was still convinced that he could pierce the Federal line. At about 7:00 p.m., he deployed the only division of Stephen D. Lee's corps that had arrived, commanded by Maj. Gen. Edward "Allegheny" Johnson, to assist Cheatham's effort. They were repulsed after a single assault with heavy losses.[68]

    In addition to Chalmers's actions in the west, across the river to the east Confederate cavalry commander Forrest attempted to turn the Union left. Union cavalry commander Brig. Gen. James H. Wilson learned at 3:00 p.m. that Forrest was crossing the river, he ordered his division under Brig. Gen. Edward Hatch to move south from his position on the Brentwood Turnpike and attack Forrest from the front. He ordered Brig. Gen. John T. Croxton's brigade to move against Forrest's flank and held Colonel Thomas J. Harrison's brigade in reserve. The dismounted cavalrymen of Hatch's division charged the Confederate cavalrymen, also dismounted, and drove them back across the river.[69]

    Following the failure of Johnson's assault, Hood decided to end offensive actions for the evening and began to plan for a resumed series of attacks in the morning. Schofield ordered his infantry to cross the river, starting at 11:00 p.m. Although there was a period in which the Union army was vulnerable, outside its works and straddling the river, Hood did not attempt to take advantage of it during the night. The Union army began entering the breastworks at Nashville at noon on December 1, with Hood's damaged army in pursuit.[70]

    The devastated Confederate force was left in control of Franklin, but its enemy had escaped again. Although he had briefly come close to breaking through in the vicinity of the Columbia Turnpike, Hood was unable to destroy Schofield or prevent his withdrawal to link up with Thomas in Nashville. And his unsuccessful result came with a frightful cost. The Confederates suffered 6,252 casualties, including 1,750 killed and 3,800 wounded. An estimated 2,000 others suffered less serious wounds and returned to duty before the Battle of Nashville. But more importantly, the military leadership in the West was decimated, including the loss of perhaps the best division commander of either side, Patrick Cleburne. Fourteen Confederate generals (six killed or mortally wounded, seven wounded, and one captured) and 55 regimental commanders were casualties.[71][note 12]

    Union losses were reported as only 189 killed, 1,033 wounded, and 1,104 missing. It is possible that the number of casualties was under-reported by Schofield because of the confusion during his army's hasty nighttime evacuation of Franklin.[note 13] The Union wounded were left behind in Franklin.

    Pursuit to Nashville edit

    The Army of Tennessee was all but destroyed at Franklin. Nevertheless, rather than retreat and risk the army dissolving through desertions, Hood advanced his 26,500 man force against the Union army now combined under Thomas, firmly entrenched at Nashville. This was a controversial move on Hood's part because his army was enervated and no longer ready for offensive operations. However, he believed that if he ordered a retreat, it would mean the complete disintegration of his army. Hood decided that destruction of the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad and disruption of the Union army supply depot at Murfreesboro would help his cause. On December 4 he sent Forrest, with two cavalry divisions and Maj. Gen. William B. Bate's infantry division, to Murfreesboro. Hood ordered Bate to destroy the railroad and blockhouses between Murfreesboro and Nashville and join Forrest for further operations.[72]

    Forrest at Murfreesboro (December 5–6) edit

    Forrest's combined command attacked Murfreesboro but was repulsed. They destroyed railroad track, blockhouses, and some homes and generally disrupted Union operations in the area, but they did not accomplish much else. The raid on Murfreesboro was a minor irritation. Bate was recalled to Nashville, but Forrest remained near Murfreesboro and thus was absent from the battle of Nashville. In retrospect, Hood's decision to detach Forrest from his main command was a major blunder.[73]

    Battle of Nashville (December 15–16) edit

     
    The Battle of Nashville, December 15–16

    Under the command of Thomas, who now had a combined force of approximately 55,000 men, the 7-mile-long semicircular Union defensive line surrounded Nashville from the west to the east; the remainder of the circle, to the north, was the Cumberland River, patrolled by U.S. Navy gunboats.[74]

    It took Thomas over two weeks to move, causing great anxiety in Washington, where it was anticipated that Hood was poised for an invasion of the North.[75] General Grant pressured Thomas to move, despite a bitter ice storm that struck on December 8 and stopped much fortification on both sides. A few days later, Grant sent an aide to relieve Thomas of command, believing that Hood would slip through his fingers.[76] On December 13, Maj. Gen. John A. Logan was directed to proceed to Nashville and assume command if, upon his arrival, Thomas had not yet initiated operations. He made it as far as Louisville by December 15, but on that day the Battle of Nashville had finally begun.[77]

    Thomas finally came out of his fortifications on December 15 to start a two-phase attack on the Confederates. The first, but secondary, attack was by Steedman on the Confederate right flank.[78] The main attack would be on the enemy's left, by Smith, Wood, and Brig. Gen. Edward Hatch (commanding a dismounted cavalry brigade). Steedman's attack kept Cheatham on the Confederate right occupied for the rest of the day. The main attack wheeled left to a line parallel to the Hillsboro Pike. By noon, the main advance had reached the pike, and Wood prepared to assault the Confederate outposts on Montgomery Hill, near the center of the line. Hood became concerned about the threat on his left flank and ordered Lee to send reinforcements to Stewart. Wood's corps took Montgomery Hill in a charge by Brig. Gen. Samuel Beatty's division.[79]

    At about 1:00 p.m., there was a salient in Hood's line at Stewart's front. Thomas ordered Wood to attack the salient, supported by Schofield and Wilson.[80] By 1:30 p.m., Stewart's position along the pike became untenable; the attacking force was overwhelming. Stewart's corps broke and began to retreat toward the Granny White Turnpike. However, Hood was able to regroup his men toward nightfall in preparation for the battle the next day. The Union cavalry under Wilson had been unable to put enough force on the turnpike to hamper the Confederate movement, since many of its troopers were participating as dismounted infantry in the assault. The exhausted Confederates dug in all night, awaiting the arrival of the Federals.[81]

    It took most of the morning on December 16 for the Federals to move into position against Hood's new line, which had been reduced to about 2 miles in length. Once again, Thomas planned a two-phase attack but concentrated on Hood's left. Schofield was to drive back Cheatham, and Wilson's cavalry was to swing to the rear to block the Franklin Pike, Hood's only remaining route of withdrawal. At noon, Wood and Steedman attacked Lee on Overton's Hill, but without success. On the left, Wilson's dismounted cavalry was exerting pressure on the line.[82]

    At 4:00 p.m., Cheatham, on Shy's Hill, was under assault from three sides, and his corps broke and fled to the rear. Wood took this opportunity to renew his attack on Lee on Overton's Hill, and this time the momentum was overwhelming. Darkness fell, and heavy rain began. Hood collected his forces and withdrew to the south toward Franklin.[83]

    Casualties from the two-day battle were 3,061 Union (387 killed, 2,558 wounded, and 112 missing or captured) and approximately 6,000 Confederate (1,500 killed or wounded, 4,500 missing or captured).[84] The Battle of Nashville was one of the most stunning victories achieved by the Union Army in the war. The formidable Army of Tennessee, the second largest Confederate force, was effectively destroyed as a fighting force. Hood's army entered Tennessee with over 30,000 men but left with 15–20,000.[85][note 14]

    Retreat and pursuit of Hood edit

    The Union army set off in pursuit of Hood from Nashville. The rainy weather became an ally to the Confederates, delaying the Union cavalry pursuit, and Forrest was able to rejoin Hood on December 18, screening the retreating force. The pursuit continued until the beaten and battered Army of Tennessee recrossed the Tennessee River on December 25. On Christmas Eve, Forrest turned back Wilson's pursuing cavalry at the Battle of Anthony's Hill.[86]

    Aftermath edit

    Although Hood blamed the entire debacle of his campaign on his subordinates and the soldiers themselves, his career was over. He retreated with his army to Tupelo, Mississippi, resigned his command on January 13, 1865, and was not given another field command. Forrest returned to Mississippi, but in 1865 he was driven into Alabama by James H. Wilson, and his command became dissipated and ineffective.[87]

    By the time of Hood's defeat in Nashville, Sherman's army had advanced to the outskirts of Savannah, which they captured just before Christmas. Five thousand men from the Army of Tennessee were later deployed under Joseph E. Johnston against Sherman in South Carolina during the Carolinas campaign, but to no avail.

    References edit

    Footnotes

    1. ^ Sherman discounts the specific nature of Davis's rhetoric and states that there is "little in Davis's several messages to indicate that any plan was in the making for leaving Sherman behind and invading Tennessee and the Ohio Valley. ... such comments had been made often by Confederate leaders attempting to whip up the western morale.
    2. ^ At the start of the Atlanta Campaign, Hood was appointed a temporary "full" general, but this appointment was never confirmed by the Confederate Congress and was later rescinded.
    3. ^ Although Thomas and Schofield were the commanders of the Army of the Cumberland and the Army of the Ohio, respectively, through 1865, historians of the campaign do not always use these designations for the combination of corps assembled against Hood, referring in some cases only to the "Federal Army." See, for example, Welcher, vol. II, pp. 599, 611; Sword, p. 448; Jacobson, p. 452.
    4. ^ Sword and Welcher state that the best horses were reserved by Sherman for his March to the Sea.
    5. ^ Again, the army was motivated to adhere to the existing social hierarchy of white supremacy anchored in slavery.
    6. ^ Extermination in the sense of not the extermination of the Confederate people but of the southern society in which, whether slave owners or not, all members of the Rebel armies had a stake in the hierarchy built on race.
    7. ^ Some sources conclude that Hood's actual plan was to outrace Schofield to Nashville, not intercept him. Jacobson and Rupp state official records show that he planned on attacking Schofield before he could unite with Thomas.[7]
    8. ^ Cheatham, Cleburne, and Brown had conducted a disastrous night attack at Chickamauga a year prior and were understandably wary of an attack in the dark, especially in light of the fact that the night was a new moon and very dark.[7]
    9. ^ Jacobson writes that Wagner actually was performing his proper duty as the army's rear guard. The position allowed him to observe Hood's forces whose infantry, through a feat of endurance, had managed to march to a point where they were close behind. Wagner's error, in his opinion, was that he waited too long to order a withdrawal to the main line. [54]
    10. ^ Jacobsob also cites that Hood's immediate attack was much in keeping with his experiences in the Army of Northern Virginia; aggressiveness always seemed to be rewarded with a retaking of the initiative.[7] In contrast, for examples of the popular view promoting Hood's anger and resentment, see Sword, p. 179, McPherson, pp. 188–189, and Nevin, pp. 95–96.
    11. ^ The 175th Ohio was a green regiment that had only been formed in October 1864.[61]
    12. ^ Jacobson presents a full list of all of the officers who were casualties during the battle.
    13. ^ Current unpublished research by Carter House historian David Fraley has identified Union killed at Franklin to be in excess of 600 and perhaps as many as 800. However, this list may include men who had fought at Franklin and died in captivity or in the Sultana explosion in April 1865.
    14. ^ the field returns for Hood's army on January 20, 1865, listed 20,700 effectives. Jacobson surmises that missing men from Franklin and Nashville gradually rejoined the army during and after its retreat.

    Citations

    1. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 53- Abstract from returns of the U. S. Forces under command of Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, for November 20, November 30, and December 10, 1864., pp 52-55
    2. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 54- Abstract from returns of the U. S. Forces under command of Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, for November 20, November 30, and December 10, 1864., pp 52-55
    3. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 55- Abstract from returns of the U. S. Forces under command of Maj. Gen. George H. Thomas, for November 20, November 30, and December 10, 1864., pp 52-55
    4. ^ a b U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 663- ADDENDA - Strength of the Army of Tennessee on the 6th of November and 10th of December, 1864., p 663
    5. ^ Welcher (1989), p. 583.
    6. ^ a b NPS Franklin-Nashville.
    7. ^ a b c d e f g h i j ACWRTUK, John Bell Hood and the Mysteris of Spring Hill, with Eric Jacobson, June 26, 2021.
    8. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 477–478; Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 736–737; Esposito (1959), p. 148; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 29–30; Sword (1993), pp. 45–46.
    9. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 472–477; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 30–32; Sword (1993), pp. 46–49.
    10. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 148; Welcher (1989), p. 583.
    11. ^ Connelly (2001), p. 479; Kennedy (1998), p. 389; Sword (1993), pp. 51–52.
    12. ^ a b Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 769.
    13. ^ Thrasher (2021), p. 284.
    14. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 770.
    15. ^ Esposito (1959), pp. 148, 149; Sword (1993), p. 84; Welcher (1989), p. 583.
    16. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 149; Sword (1993), p. 54; Welcher (1989), p. 583.
    17. ^ Kennedy (1998), p. 390; Welcher (1989), p. 584.
    18. ^ NPS Allatoona.
    19. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 738; Kennedy (1998), p. 390; Welcher (1989), p. 584.
    20. ^ a b Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 738–39; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), p. 38; Nevin (1986), p. 29; Sword (1993), p. 56.
    21. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 38–39; Kennedy (1998), p. 391; Sword (1993), pp. 56–57.
    22. ^ Esposito (1959), p. 150; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), p. 41; Kennedy (1998), p. 391; Nevin (1986), p. 391; Sword (1993), pp. 58–62.
    23. ^ a b Connelly (2001), p. 483; Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 769; Esposito (1959), p. 150; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 42–43; Nevin (1986), pp. 32–33; Sword (1993), pp. 63–64.
    24. ^ NPS Johnsonville.
    25. ^ Wills (1992), pp. 263–269.
    26. ^ Kennedy (1998), p. 389; Wills (1992), pp. 268–273.
    27. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 769; Kennedy (1998), p. 391; Nevin (1986), p. 34; Sword (1993), pp. 63–64; Wills (1992), pp. 272–273.
    28. ^ NPS Decatur.
    29. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), p. 43; Kennedy (1998), p. 391; Sword (1993), pp. 64–65.
    30. ^ NPS Columbia.
    31. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 935Correspondence from Major-General Thomas to Major-General Halleck, November 18, 1864
    32. ^ McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 180; Sword (1993), pp. 68–70, 74.
    33. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 970, 971
      Correspondence from Major-General Thomas to Major-General. Halleck, November 21, 1864
      Correspondence from Major-General Thomas to Major-General Schofield, November 21, 1864
    34. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), p. 44-47, 51, 58; Nevin (1986), pp. 82–84; Sword (1993), pp. 72–73, 81–82, 85.
    35. ^ Connelly (2001), p. 492.
    36. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 53, 55; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 180; Nevin (1986), pp. 82–83; Sword (1993), pp. 84, 89, 91; Welcher (1989), pp. 586.
    37. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, pp. 550, 752, 768
      - Reports of Brevet Major General James H. Wilson, U. S. Army, commanding Cavalry Corps, Military Division of the Mississippi, 0/ operations October 24, 1864-February 1, 1865, December 21, 1864, pp. 550-554.
      - Report of Major General Nathan B. Forrest, C. S. Army, commanding cavalry, of operations November 16, 1864-January 23, 1865, January 24, 1865, pp. 751-759
      - Report of Brigadier General. Lawrence 8. Ross, C. S. Army, commanding Ross’ brigade, of operations October 24-December 27, 1864, January 12, 1865, pp. 767-773
    38. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 59–61, 64–65; Kennedy (1998), p. 392; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 180; Nevin (1986), p. 85; Sword (1993), pp. 91, 93–95; Welcher (1989), pp. 586–587.
    39. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 770; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 181–182; Sword (1993), pp. 93–95.
    40. ^ McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 182; Nevin (1986), p. 88; Welcher (1989), p. 588.
    41. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 770; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 72–75; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 182; Nevin (1986), p. 88; Welcher (1989), p. 588.
    42. ^ NPS Spring Hill.
    43. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 491–492; Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 770; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 72–75; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 182; Nevin (1986), p. 88; Welcher (1989), p. 588.
    44. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 72–75, 88–96; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 182–183; Nevin (1986), p. 89; Welcher (1989), pp. 588–589.
    45. ^ a b c d ABT, Tour Stop 31: Spring Hill: The Prelude to Franklin, December 13, 2021.
    46. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 102–103, 137–138; Nevin (1986), p. 93; Sword (1993), pp. 140–44; Welcher (1989), pp. 590–591.
    47. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 495–496; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 105–115; Kennedy (1998), p. 394; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 183; Nevin (1986), p. 92; Sword (1993), pp. 126–131.
    48. ^ U.S. War Dept., Official Records, Vol. 45/1, p. 339
      Report of Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield, U.S. Army, commanding Army of the Ohio, December 31, 1864, pp.339-347
    49. ^ Connelly (2001), p. 496; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 102, 122–124; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 183; Sword (1993), pp. 136–137; Welcher (1989), pp. 589–590.
    50. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 497–500; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 130–136; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 183–184; Nevin (1986), p. 93; Sword (1993), pp. 135–139; Welcher (1989), p. 590.
    51. ^ Connelly (2001), p. 500; Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 771; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 185; Nevin (1986), pp. 95–96; Sword (1993), p. 152-155.
    52. ^ Connelly (2001), pp. 501; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 173–179; Kennedy (1998), p. 395; Sword (1993), pp. 152–155.
    53. ^ BoFT The Battle of Franklin.
    54. ^ a b c d BOFT, On The Battlefield: The Battle of Franklin, November 12, 2020.
    55. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 263; Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 198–203, 208–212, 219–221, 228, 230; Sword (1993), pp. 159–160, 167, 171–177; Welcher (1989), pp. 590–594.
    56. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 239–242.
    57. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 243–247; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 189; Sword (1993), p. 180; Welcher (1989), p. 595.
    58. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 259–260, 273–274, 278–282; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 189–191; Nevin (1986), p. 103; Sword (1993), pp. 189–196.
    59. ^ ABT Franklin: The Valley of Death.
    60. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 259–260, 273–274, 278–282; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 191; Nevin (1986), p. 105; Sword (1993), pp. 194–196; Welcher (1989), p. 595.
    61. ^ ABT Baptism of Fire, An Interview with Eric Jacobson.
    62. ^ BOFT, Franklin Myths.
    63. ^ ABT 10 Facts: The Battle of Franklin.
    64. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 3328–3329, 322; Nevin (1986), p. 112; Welcher (1989), pp. 595–596.
    65. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 286, 308, 315, 319–334; Nevin (1986), pp. 112–115; Sword (1993), pp. 199–206, 221–224; Welcher (1989), pp. 595–596.
    66. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 244, 262, 285; Sword (1993), p. 292; Welcher (1989), pp. 596–597.
    67. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 292–293, 299–305, 339–343; Nevin (1986), pp. 114–115; Sword (1993), pp. 216–219, 226–227; Welcher (1989), p. 597.
    68. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 356–358, 377–385; Sword (1993), pp. 238–242, 245–247.
    69. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 358–361; Nevin (1986), p. 117; Sword (1993), p. 241; Welcher (1989), p. 598.
    70. ^ Nevin (1986), pp. 117–118; Sword (1993), pp. 243, 248–251.
    71. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), pp. 418–420.
    72. ^ Kennedy (1998), p. 396; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), p. 195; Nevin (1986), pp. 125–126; Sword (1993), pp. 293–295.
    73. ^ NPS Murfreesboro.
    74. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 775–776; Sword (1993), p. 449; Welcher (1989), p. 600.
    75. ^ NPS Nashville.
    76. ^ ABT Nashville: The Crushing Blow of a Forlorn Hope.
    77. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 776; Esposito (1959), p. 153; Kennedy (1998), p. 397; Sword (1993), p. 312; Welcher (1989), p. 602.
    78. ^ ABT African Americans in the Civil War.
    79. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), pp. 776–777; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 196–197; Nevin (1986), p. 126; Sword (1993), pp. 321–329; Welcher (1989).
    80. ^ ABT Decisive Battle of Nashville.
    81. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 777; Esposito (1959), p. 153; Kennedy (1998), p. 397; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 197–203; Nevin (1986), pp. 130–133; Sword (1993), pp. 331–344; Welcher (1989), pp. 605–608.
    82. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 779; Esposito (1959), p. 153; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 203–205; Nevin (1986), pp. 134–137; Sword (1993), pp. 348–365; Welcher (1989), pp. 608–609.
    83. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 779; Kennedy (1998), p. 397; McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 205–207; Nevin (1986), pp. 137–144; Sword (1993), pp. 369–380; Welcher (1989), pp. 609–610.
    84. ^ Eicher, McPherson & McPherson (2001), p. 780.
    85. ^ Jacobson & Rupp (2007), p. 428.
    86. ^ McPherson & Gottlieb (1989), pp. 207–208; Welcher (1989), p. 610.
    87. ^ Esposito (1959), pp. 153; Kennedy (1998), p. 397; Nevin (1986), p. 144.

    Bibliography

    • Adelman, Garry; Jacobson, Eric A; Jacobson, Eric A (December 13, 2021). Tour Stop 31: Spring Hill: The Prelude to Franklin (YouTube). Washington, DC: American Battlefield Trust. Event occurs at 17:41.
    • Connelly, Thomas Lawrence (2001). Autumn of Glory: The Army of Tennessee, 1862--1865. Baton Rouge, LA: Louisiana State University Press. ISBN 978-0-8071-2738-4. OCLC 47948904.
    • Eicher, David J.; McPherson, James M.; McPherson, James Alan (2001). The Longest Night: A Military History of the Civil War (PDF) (1st ed.). New York, NY: Simon & Schuster. p. 990. ISBN 978-0-7432-1846-7. LCCN 2001034153. OCLC 231931020. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
    • Esposito, Vincent J. (1959). West Point Atlas of American Wars. New York, NY: Frederick A. Praeger Publishers. ISBN 978-0-8050-3391-5. OCLC 60298522. Retrieved 6 July 2020.
    • Jacobson, Eric A.; Rupp, Richard A. (2007). For Cause & for Country: A Study of the Affair at Spring Hill & the Battle of Franklin. Franklin, TN: O'More Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9717444-4-8. OCLC 428436180.
    • Jacobson, Eric A (June 26, 2021). John Bell Hood and the Mysteries of Spring Hill, with Eric Jacobson (YouTube). Lopndon, UK: ACWRTUK (American Civil War Round Table UK). Event occurs at 32:14. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
    • Jacobson, Eric A (November 12, 2020). On The Battlefield: The Battle of Franklin (YouTube). Franklin, TN: The Battle of Franklin Trust. Event occurs at 23:40. Retrieved May 27, 2023.
    • Kennedy, Frances H., ed. (1998). The Civil War Battlefield Guide (Kindle) (2nd ed.). Boston, MA: Houghton Mifflin Co. ISBN 0-395-74012-6. Retrieved June 24, 2020.
    • McPherson, James M.; Gottlieb, Richard (1989). Battle Chronicles of the Civil war. Vol. 4. New York, NY: Macmillan Publishing Company ; Collier Macmillan Publishers. ISBN 978-0-02-920661-4. OCLC 1164541109.
    • Nevin, David (1986). Sherman's March: Atlanta To The Sea. Alexandria, VA: Silver Burdett. OCLC 1003113620.
    • Sword, Wiley (1993). The Confederacy's Last Hurrah: Spring Hill, Franklin, and Nashville. Lawrence, KS: University Press of Kansas. OCLC 1285470936.
    • Thrasher, C.D. (2021). Suffering in the Army of Tennessee: A Social History of the Confederate Army of the Heartland from the Battles for Atlanta to the Retreat from Nashville. Voices of the Civil War series. Knoxville, TN: University of Tennessee Press. ISBN 978-1-62190-641-4. Retrieved 2023-05-26.
    • U.S. War Department (1889). Operations in Kentucky, Southwest Virginia, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama, and North Georgia. November 14, 1864-January 22, 1865., Part I - Reports, Union and Confederate Correspondence, etc. The War of the Rebellion: A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies. Vol. XLV-LVII-I. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. pp. 53–55, 663. hdl:2027/coo.31924077743031. OCLC 857196196.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • Welcher, Frank Johnson (1989). The Western Theater. The Union Army, 1861-1865: Organization and Operations. Vol. 2. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. ISBN 978-0-253-36454-8. OCLC 1089613807.
    • Wills, Brian Steel (1992). The Confederacy's greatest cavalryman : Nathan Bedford Forrest. Lawrence, Kans.: University Press of Kansas. ISBN 978-0-7006-0885-0. OCLC 229214710.
    • "10 Facts: The Battle of Franklin". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. October 8, 2022. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
    • Henderson, Steward (January 13, 2009). "African Americans in the Civil War". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved October 8, 2022.
    • "Book: Baptism of Fire, An Interview with Eric Jacobson". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. October 8, 2022. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
    • Cooling, B. Franklin, Dr (October 8, 2022). "The Decisive Battle of Nashville: December 15-16, 1864". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved May 28, 2023.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
    • Cartwright, Thomas Y. (October 8, 2022). "Franklin: The Valley of Death". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
    • Biggs, Greg (October 8, 2022). "The Battle of Nashville: The Crushing Blow of a Forlorn Hope". www.battlefields.org. American Battlefield Trust. Retrieved May 28, 2023.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2007. Archived from the original on July 28, 2005. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2004. Archived from the original on December 30, 2005. Retrieved December 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2004. Archived from the original on October 30, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2004. Archived from the original on October 6, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2004. Archived from the original on April 9, 2005. Retrieved December 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . nps.gov. U.S. National Park Service. January 19, 2004. Archived from the original on December 26, 2005. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . U.S. National Park Service. Archived from the original on October 30, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . U.S. National Park Service. Archived from the original on September 24, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • . U.S. National Park Service. Archived from the original on October 30, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2017.  This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
    • "The Battle of Franklin". The Battle of Franklin Trust. July 18, 2022. Retrieved May 31, 2023.
    • Jacobson, Eric A (May 4, 2023). Chalkboard History: Franklin Myths (YouTube). Franklin, TN: The Battle of Franklin Trust. Event occurs at 23:40. Retrieved May 31, 2023.

    Further reading

    • Hood, Stephen M. John Bell Hood: The Rise, Fall, and Resurrection of a Confederate General. El Dorado Hills, CA: Savas Beatie, 2013. ISBN 978-1-61121-140-5.
    • Knight, James R. Hood's Tennessee Campaign: The Desperate Venture of a Desperate Man. Charleston, SC: The History Press, 2014. ISBN 978-1-62619-597-4.

    External links edit

    • Franklin Battlefield Page: Battle maps, photos, history articles, and battlefield news (CWPT)
    • Animated history of the Franklin-Nashville Campaign

    franklin, nashville, campaign, part, american, civil, warunion, army, nashville, tennessee, december, 1864dateseptember, december, 1864locationtennessee, alabama, georgiaresultunion, victory, large, scale, fighting, western, theater, belligerents, united, stat. Franklin Nashville campaignPart of the American Civil WarUnion army at Nashville Tennessee December 1864DateSeptember December 1864LocationTennessee Alabama and GeorgiaResultUnion victory end of large scale fighting in the Western Theater Belligerents United States Confederate StatesCommanders and leadersGeorge H ThomasJohn SchofieldJohn Bell HoodUnits involvedArmy of the CumberlandArmy of the OhioArmy of TennesseeStrength65 501 Nov 20 1 75 194 Nov 30 2 75 153 Dec 10 3 44 719 Nov 6 4 36 426 Dec 10 4 The Franklin Nashville campaign also known as Hood s Tennessee campaign was a series of battles in the Western Theater conducted from September 18 to December 27 1864 5 6 in Alabama Tennessee and northwestern Georgia during the American Civil War The Confederate Army of Tennessee under Lieutenant General Lt Gen John Bell Hood drove north from Atlanta threatening Major General Maj Gen William T Sherman s lines of communications and central Tennessee After a brief attempt to pursue Hood Sherman returned to Atlanta and began his March to the Sea leaving Union forces under Maj Gen George H Thomas to deal with Hood s threat Hood hoped to defeat the Union force under Maj Gen John Schofield before it could converge with Thomas s army and attempted to do so at the Battle of Spring Hill on Tuesday November 29 but poorly coordinated Confederate attacks combined with effective U S forces leadership allowed Schofield to escape 7 The following day Hood launched a series of futile frontal assaults against Schofield s field fortifications in the Battle of Franklin suffering heavy casualties Schofield withdrew his force and successfully linked up with Thomas in Nashville Tennessee On December 15 16 Thomas s combined army attacked Hood s depleted army and routed it in the Battle of Nashville sending it in retreat to Tupelo Mississippi Hood resigned his commission shortly thereafter and the Army of Tennessee ceased to exist as an effective fighting force Contents 1 Background 2 Opposing forces 2 1 Confederate 2 2 Union 3 Confederate attacks on Sherman s supply line 4 Allatoona October 5 5 Resaca Dalton and the movement into Alabama 6 Forrest s West Tennessee raid October 16 November 16 7 Decatur October 26 29 8 Columbia November 24 29 9 Spring Hill November 29 10 Battle of Franklin November 30 11 Pursuit to Nashville 12 Forrest at Murfreesboro December 5 6 13 Battle of Nashville December 15 16 14 Retreat and pursuit of Hood 15 Aftermath 16 References 17 External linksBackground edit nbsp Kentucky Northern Tennessee 1864 nbsp Southern Tennessee Alabama 1864At the conclusion of his successful Atlanta campaign Sherman occupied the city of Atlanta on September 2 1864 and Hood who was forced to evacuate the city regrouped at Lovejoy s Station For almost a month the normally aggressive Sherman took little action while his men sat about idly and many left the army at the end of their enlistments On September 21 Hood moved his forces to Palmetto Georgia where on September 25 he was visited by Confederate President Jefferson Davis The two men planned their strategy which called for Hood to move toward Chattanooga Tennessee and operate against Sherman s lines of communications They hoped that Sherman would follow and that Hood would be able to maneuver Sherman into a decisive battle on terrain favorable to the Confederates 8 6 During the conference Davis expressed his disappointment in Hood s performance during the Atlanta campaign losing tens of thousands of men in ill advised frontal assaults for no significant gains and implied that he was considering replacing Hood in command of the army After the president s departure for Montgomery Alabama he telegraphed Hood that he had decided to retain him in command and acceding to Hood s request transferred Lt Gen William J Hardee one of Hood s corps commanders out of the Army of Tennessee He also established a new theater commander to supervise Hood and the department of Lt Gen Richard Taylor although the officer selected for the assignment Gen P G T Beauregard was not expected to exert any real operational control of the armies in the field 9 Although Sherman was planning to march east to seize the city of Savannah Georgia the campaign that would be known as Sherman s March to the Sea he was concerned about his lines of communications back to Chattanooga One particular threat was the cavalry commander Nathan Bedford Forrest who had long bedeviled Union expeditions with lightning raids into their rear areas On September 29 Lieutenant General Ulysses S Grant urged Sherman to dispose of Forrest and Sherman sent Thomas to Nashville Tennessee to organize all of the troops in the state Sherman sent another division under Brigadier General Brig Gen James D Morgan to Chattanooga 10 Sherman had some advance notice of the nature of Hood s proposed campaign In a series of speeches given at stops along his way back to Richmond President Davis rallied his listeners by predicting success for Hood speeches that were reported in the press and read avidly by Sherman In Columbia South Carolina his speech included General Hood s strategy has been good and his conduct has been gallant His eye is now fixed upon a point far beyond that where he was assailed by the enemy He hopes soon to have his hand upon Sherman s line of communications and to fix it where he can hold it I believe it is in the power of the men of the Confederacy to plant our banners on the banks of the Ohio where we shall say to the Yankee be quiet or we shall teach you another lesson 11 note 1 Opposing forces editConfederate edit Further information Confederate order of battle at Franklin at Nashville Principal Confederate commanders nbsp Lt Gen John Bell Hood nbsp Maj Gen Benjamin F Cheatham nbsp Lt Gen Stephen D Lee nbsp Lt Gen Alexander P Stewart nbsp Maj Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest nbsp Maj Gen Patrick CleburneLt Gen John Bell Hood s 12 note 2 Army of Tennessee at 39 000 men constituted the second largest remaining army of the Confederacy ranking in strength only after Gen Robert E Lee s Army of Northern Virginia The army consisted of the corps of Maj Gen Benjamin F Cheatham Lt Gen Stephen D Lee and Lt Gen Alexander P Stewart and cavalry forces under Maj Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest 12 Confederate inspections produced after the fall of Atlanta but before the start of the new campaign indicate that while the Confederate Army of Tennessee s soldiers were poorly clothed they were well equipped with modern weapons 13 Union edit Further information Union order of battle at Franklin at Nashville Principal Union commanders nbsp Maj Gen George H Thomas nbsp Maj Gen John Schofield nbsp Maj Gen David S Stanley nbsp Brig Gen Jacob D Cox nbsp Maj Gen James H WilsonAt the beginning of the campaign Union forces designated the Military Division of the Mississippi were commanded by Sherman in Atlanta but his personal involvement in the campaign lasted only until the end of October Reporting to Sherman was the Army of the Cumberland under Maj Gen George H Thomas the Rock of Chickamauga the force previously commanded by Maj Gen William S Rosecrans Thomas was the principal Union commander after Sherman s departure Subordinate to him was the Army of the Ohio commanded by Maj Gen John M Schofield It consisted of 34 000 men made up of the IV Corps under Maj Gen David S Stanley the XXIII Corps under Brig Gen Jacob D Cox and a Cavalry Corps commanded by Maj Gen James H Wilson Thomas had an additional 26 000 men at Nashville and scattered around his department 14 note 3 Confederate attacks on Sherman s supply line edit nbsp Map of the Franklin Nashville campaign Confederate UnionSo far the Confederate strategy was working because Sherman was being forced to disperse his strength to maintain his lines of communication Hood s movements attracted a lot of attention in the press in the north and caused the War Department no small concern Washington DC insisted that Sherman deal with Hood s threat 7 However Sherman was not about to fall into Hood s trap completely He intended to provide Thomas with sufficient strength to cope with Forrest and Hood while he completed plans to strike out for Savannah On September 29 Hood began his advance across the Chattahoochee River heading to the northwest with 40 000 men to threaten the Western amp Atlantic Railroad Sherman s supply line On October 1 Hood s cavalry was intercepted by Union cavalry under Brig Gens Judson Kilpatrick and Kenner Garrard in a raid on the railroad near Marietta but Sherman was still uncertain of Hood s location For the next three weeks Sherman had difficulty keeping abreast of Hood s movements Hood moved rapidly screened his march and maintained the initiative The Union cavalry which Sherman had neglected to train adequately had a difficult time following Hood and reporting his movements 15 note 4 On October 3 the day that Thomas arrived in Nashville Stewart s corps captured Big Shanty present day Kennesaw with its garrison of 175 men and the following day Acworth with an additional 250 Sherman left Maj Gen Henry W Slocum in Atlanta and moved toward Marietta with a force of about 55 000 men Hood split his force sending the majority of his command to Dallas Georgia The remainder a division under Maj Gen Samuel G French moved along the railroad toward Allatoona 16 Allatoona October 5 editFurther information Battle of Allatoona The small Federal garrison at Allatoona a partial brigade was commanded by Colonel COL John Tourtellotte Before the Southern division arrived Sherman sent a reinforcement brigade with Brig Gen John M Corse who took command of both brigades The Federal troops occupied strong defensive positions in two earthen redoubts on each side of a 180 foot 65 feet deep railroad cut and many of the men including the entire 7th Illinois were armed with Henry repeating rifles 17 18 Major General Samuel Gibbs French s division arrived near Allatoona at sunrise on Wednesday October 5 After a two hour artillery bombardment French sent a demand for surrender which Corse refused French then launched his brigades in an attack one from the north against the rear of the fortifications and two from the west Corse s men survived the sustained two hour attack against the main fortification the Star Fort on the western side of the railroad cut but were pinned down and Tourtellotte sent reinforcements from the eastern fort Under heavy pressure it seemed inevitable that the Federals would be forced to surrender but by noon French received a false report from his cavalry that a strong Union force was approaching from Acworth so he reluctantly withdrew at 2 00 p m Allatoona was a relatively small but bloody battle with high percentages of casualties 19 Resaca Dalton and the movement into Alabama editHood then moved to the west and crossed the Coosa River in the vicinity of Rome Georgia near the Alabama state line He turned north in the direction of Resaca Georgia and joined with Maj Gen Joseph Wheeler s cavalry which had been previously raiding in Tennessee On Wednesday October 12 a week after Allatoona Hood demanded the surrender of the Union brigade stationed at Resaca and left Lt Gen Stephen D Lee s corps there to invest the city The 700 Union men under Colonel Clark R Weaver refused Hood s ultimatum to surrender which warned that no prisoners would be taken Weaver replied In my opinion I can hold this post If you want it come and take it Hood declined to attack the Union position because he believed that it would be too costly instead bypassing the city moving north and continuing the destruction of the railroad 20 Meanwhile Sherman had learned of Hood s location and ordered reinforcements sent to Resaca arriving there on October 13 too late to engage Hood in battle Hood sent Lt Gen Alexander P Stewart as far north as Tunnel Hill near the Tennessee state line to damage the railroad as much as possible During this operation on October 13 Stewart captured the Federal garrison at Dalton Georgia under ugly circumstances The 751 men under Colonel Lewis Johnson included a large number of African American soldiers a sight that enraged many in Hood s army In surrender negotiations Johnson insisted that his black troops be treated as prisoners of war but Hood replied that all slaves belonging to persons in the Confederacy would be returned to their masters Unable to defend the garrison Johnson surrendered and 600 black soldiers were stripped of their shoes and some clothing and marched to the railroad where they were forced to tear up about 2 miles of track under the supervision of Maj Gen William B Bate s division Six of the Union soldiers were shot for refusing to work or being unable to keep up with the march Colonel Johnson later wrote that the abuse his men received exceeded anything in brutality I have ever witnessed Johnson and his white officers were paroled the following day but some of his black soldiers were returned to slavery 21 note 5 From Resaca Hood withdrew on a six day march to the west toward Gadsden Alabama reaching it on Thursday October 20 He had hoped to engage Sherman in battle near LaFayette Georgia but his subordinate commanders convinced him that their troops morale was not ready to risk an attack He considered his campaign a success so far having destroyed 24 miles of railroad although this turned out to be a fleeting advantage to the South Sherman deployed as many as 10 000 men in reconstruction and by October 28 regular rail service resumed between Chattanooga and Atlanta Sherman pursued Hood only as far as Gaylesville Alabama over 30 miles short of Gadsden 22 Hood began to focus his strategy He needed to prevent Thomas s army from reuniting with Sherman and overwhelming him and he calculated that if he moved swiftly into Tennessee he might be able to defeat Thomas before the Union forces could be reassembled After Thomas was eliminated Hood planned to move into central Kentucky and replenish his army with recruits from there and Tennessee 20 He hoped to accomplish all of this before Sherman could reach him His plan was that if Sherman followed him Hood would fight him in Kentucky from there he planned to move eastward through the Cumberland Gap to aid Robert E Lee who was besieged at Petersburg 7 One of his goals was to take Nashville which had been under federal control since 1862 The historian Eric Jacobson has written that by this time in the war the Army of Tennessee also realized that the war had become a war of extermination for them 7 note 6 On October 21 Hood s plan received the reluctant approval of Gen Beauregard who was concerned about the daunting logistical challenges of an invasion Beauregard insisted that Wheeler s cavalry be detached to monitor Sherman and assigned Nathan Bedford Forrest s cavalry to Hood s advance Hood set out toward Decatur Alabama with the intention of meeting up with Forrest in the vicinity of Florence from where they would march north into Tennessee 23 By this time Sherman had received an indication from Grant that he was favorably considering the march to Savannah He set his mind on the short term goal of pursuing the swiftly moving Hood He directed Thomas to come forward from Nashville to block Hood s advance To bolster Thomas s effort Sherman ordered the IV Corps under Stanley to Chattanooga and the XXIII Corps under Schofield to Nashville as well as Maj Gen Andrew J Smith s XVI Corps from Missouri to Nashville By November 10 the remainder of Sherman s troops were en route back to Atlanta 23 Forrest s West Tennessee raid October 16 November 16 editFurther information Battle of Johnsonville One of the critical Federal supply lines in Tennessee was to use the Tennessee River offload supplies at Johnsonville 24 and then ship them by rail to Nashville Lt Gen Richard Taylor ordered Maj Gen Nathan Bedford Forrest on a cavalry raid through Western Tennessee to destroy that supply line The first of Forrest s men began to ride on Sunday October 16 Forrest himself began moving north eight days later on Monday October 24 and reached Fort Heiman on the Tennessee River on Friday October 28 where he emplaced artillery On October 29 and October 30 his artillery fire caused the capture of three steamers and two gunboats Forrest repaired two of the boats Undine and Venus to use as a small flotilla to aid in his attack on Johnsonville On November 2 Forrest s flotilla was challenged by two Union gunboats Key West and Tawah and Venus was run aground and captured The Federals dispatched six more gunboats from Paducah Kentucky and on Wednesday November 3 they engaged in artillery duels with strong Confederate positions on either end of Reynoldsburg Island near Johnsonville The Federal fleet had difficulty attempting to subdue these positions and were occupied as Forrest prepared his force for the attack on Johnsonville 25 On the morning of November 4 Undine and the Confederate batteries were attacked by three Union gunboats from Johnsonville and the six Paducah gunboats Undine was abandoned and set on fire which caused her ammunition magazine to explode ending Forrest s brief career as a naval commander Despite this loss the Confederate land artillery was completely effective in neutralizing the threat of the Federal fleets Forrest s guns bombarded the Union supply depot and the 28 steamboats and barges positioned at the wharf All three of the Union gunboats were disabled or destroyed The Union garrison commander ordered that the supply vessels be burned to prevent their capture by the Confederates 26 Forrest had caused enormous damage at very low cost He reported only 2 men killed and 9 wounded He described the Union losses as 4 gunboats 14 transports 20 barges 26 pieces of artillery 6 700 000 worth of property and 150 prisoners One Union officer described the monetary loss as about 2 200 000 Forrest s command delayed by heavy rains proceeded to Perryville Tennessee and eventually reached Corinth Mississippi on Thursday November 10 During the raid on November 3 Beauregard designated Forrest s cavalry for assignment to Hood s Army of Tennessee Hood elected to delay his advance from Florence to Tuscumbia until Forrest was able to link up with him on November 16 27 Decatur October 26 29 editFurther information Battle of Decatur Hood departed from Gadsden on Saturday October 22 en route to Guntersville Alabama where he planned to cross the Tennessee River Learning that that crossing place was strongly guarded and concerned that Federal gunboats could destroy any pontoon bridge he might deploy he impulsively changed his destination to Decatur 40 miles west When Hood arrived at Decatur on October 26 he found that a Federal infantry force of 3 5 000 men was defending an entrenched line that included two forts and 1 600 yards of rifle pits 28 Two Federal wooden gunboats patrolled the river On Friday October 28 Confederate skirmishers advanced through a dense fog to a ravine within 800 yards of the main fortifications Around noon a small Federal detachment drove the sharpshooters and skirmishers out of the ravine capturing 125 men Hood concluding that he could not afford the casualties that would ensue from a full scale assault withdrew his army He decided once again to move to the west to attempt another crossing near Tuscumbia Alabama where Muscle Shoals would prevent interference by Federal gunboats 29 Columbia November 24 29 editFurther information Battle of Columbia nbsp Hood s advance from Florence to ColumbiaHood waited for Forrest at Tuscumbia for almost three weeks while his commissary officers attempted to provide 20 days supply of rations for the upcoming campaign This was a difficult assignment because the supply line was tenuous requiring transport on two railroads followed by 15 miles on poor roads to Tuscumbia using wagons pulled by undernourished horses and oxen Hood transferred his headquarters to Florence on the morning of November 13 and Maj Gen Benjamin F Cheatham s corps marched across the river that day with the army s supply trains and cattle following on Monday November 14 30 Heavy rains during this period made travel on the roads difficult 31 The final corps under Lt Gen Alexander P Stewart crossed the Tennessee on the following Sunday November 20 32 On November 16 Hood received word that Sherman was about to depart Atlanta for his March to the Sea Beauregard urged Hood to take immediate action in an attempt to distract Sherman s advance emphasizing the importance of moving before Thomas could consolidate his forces Both Sherman and Thomas considered it likely that Hood would follow Sherman through Georgia Although Thomas received intelligence that Hood was amassing supplies for a movement north he discounted most of it heavy rains during November made the roads almost impassable By 8 00 a m Monday November 21 however Thomas had evidence that all three of Hood s corps were in motion and he directed Schofield to withdraw gradually to the north to protect Columbia before Hood could seize it 33 Schofield arrived at Pulaski on the night of November 13 and assumed command of all forces there including the IV Corps Thomas remained concerned that 10 000 troops from the XVI Corps commanded by Maj Gen Andrew J Smith had not arrived as promised reinforcements from Missouri 34 In Tennessee Hood groped for some grandiose scheme the capture of Nashville a march on Cincinnati a crossing of the Ohio Repeatedly since reaching North Georgia in October he had changed his objective not because of unexpected Federal moves as much as because he had no real objective save that long lasting Confederate dream that victory and perhaps fame as well lay along the Ohio River Thomas L Connelly Autumn of Glory 35 Hood s army departed Florence on November 21 marching in three columns with Cheatham on the left Lee in the center and Stewart on the right all screened by Forrest s cavalry Hood s plan was to consolidate at Mount Pleasant and from there move to the east to cut off Schofield before he could reach Columbia and the Duck River The rapid forced march 70 miles north was under miserable conditions with freezing winds and sleet which made progress difficult for the underfed and underclothed army Nevertheless Hood s men were in good spirits as they returned to Tennessee 36 Because of Forrest s relentless screening Schofield had no idea where the Confederate Army was headed The aggressive Forrest had a slight advantage over his Union cavalry opponents commanded by Maj Gen James H Wilson Wilson had arrived from the Eastern Theater in late October to reorganize and command Thomas s cavalry but he possessed only 4 800 horsemen ready to oppose Forrest compared to Forrest s between 5 000 and 6 000 men The Confederate cavalry advanced to Mount Pleasant by November 23 Brig Gen John T Croxton s brigade the initial Federal cavalry force was reinforced with a division under Brig Gen Edward Hatch and a brigade under Colonel Horace Capron 37 Forrest kept up the pressure and on Wednesday November 23 heavy skirmishing occurred from Henryville to the outskirts of Mount Pleasant To the east Forrest s divisions under Brig Gens Abraham Buford II and William H Jackson forced Hatch s division out of the Lawrenceburg area and drove them back toward Pulaski Early on November 24 Schofield began marching his two infantry corps north to Columbia Forrest pursued aggressively with part of the division of Brig Gen James R Chalmers who occupied Mount Pleasant and hit Capron s men repeatedly as he forced them north Buford and Jackson drove Hatch north toward Lynnville and captured a number of prisoners but the Confederate cavalry was unable to prevent the division of Brig Gen Cox from reaching Columbia Stanley s corps completed a 30 mile march from Pulaski to reinforce him Together they began constructing an arc of trenches just south of the town 38 On the morning of November 24 Forrest s cavalry began probing attacks in an attempt to break through two lines of fortifications The Confederates bombarded the lines with artillery and a number of skirmishes occurred but it became apparent to the Union defenders that only a single infantry division with some dismounted cavalry were participating in the attacks and that Hood was merely demonstrating intending to cross the Duck River either upstream or downstream and cut off the Union force from Thomas who was assembling the remainder of his force in Nashville 39 On the morning of November 26 Schofield received an order from Thomas to hold the north bank of the Duck River until reinforcements under A J Smith could arrive from Nashville Schofield planned to move his trains during the day and his infantry overnight using a railroad bridge and a recently installed pontoon bridge but heavy rains that day made approaches to the bridge impassable That evening the bulk of the Army of Tennessee reached the fortifications south of Columbia 40 Spring Hill November 29 editFurther information Battle of Spring Hill nbsp Actions at Spring Hill afternoon November 29 1864On Monday November 28 Forrest crossed the river east of town against little resistance from the Union cavalry the Southern cavalrymen had deceived Wilson and drawn his force to the northeast and away from the action On the same day Thomas directed Schofield to begin preparations for a withdrawal north to Franklin He was expecting incorrectly that A J Smith s arrival from Missouri was imminent and he wanted the combined force to defend against Hood on the line of the Harpeth River at Franklin instead of the Duck River Schofield sent his 800 wagon supply train out in front guarded by part of the IV Corps division of Brig Gen George D Wagner 41 On November 29 Hood sent Cheatham s and Stewart s corps on a flanking march north crossing the Duck River at Davis s Ford east of Columbia while two divisions of Lee s corps and most of the army s artillery remained on the southern bank to deceive Schofield into thinking a general assault was planned against Columbia 42 Hood riding near the head of the column with Cheatham s corps planned to interpose his army between Schofield and Thomas hoping to defeat Schofield as the Federals retreated north from Columbia Stewart s corps followed Cheatham and they were followed by the division of Maj Gen Edward Allegheny Johnson Lee s corps The rest of Lee s corps remained south of Columbia demonstrating with artillery fire against Schofield s men north of the Duck 43 note 7 Cavalry skirmishing between Wilson s and Forrest s troopers had occurred throughout the day on Monday and continued on Tuesday Forrest s wide turning movement with 4 000 troopers had forced Wilson north to Hurt s Corner preventing the U S horsemen from interfering with Hood s infantry advance By 10 00 a m on Tuesday November 29 Forrest ordered his men to turn west toward Spring Hill Wilson had sent multiple messages to Schofield warning of Hood s advance but it was not until earlier that day Tuesday at dawn on November 29 that Schofield believed the reports and realized the predicament he was in He sent Stanley north with portions of the IV Corps to protect the trains but also to hold the crossroads at Spring Hill to allow the entire army to withdraw safely to Franklin Forrest s cavalrymen ran into pickets from the IV Corps Stanley had moved north rapidly and formed up positions with Wagner s division that protected the village of Spring Hill on three sides The brigade of Colonel John Quincy Lane rushed forward and pushed back the dismounted cavalrymen Forrest inexplicably never realized that his opponents had changed from cavalry to massed infantry failing his mission as the eyes and ears of Hood He also halted any further advance to wait for the arrival of Cheatham s infantry 7 Maj Gen Patrick R Cleburne s division of Cheatham s corps arrived around 3 45 p m on Forrest s left His mission was to intercept the Columbia Pike to block Schofield s withdrawal The cavalrymen low on ammunition pulled out of the line and moved north to be ready to cover a further advance of Hood s army 44 As Cleburne advanced despite Forrest s presence on the field he had no knowledge that to his right was a brigade of U S infantry Bradley s in a battle line 7 When his right flank was taken by surprise by heavy fire he wheeled his division to the right away from the road to face the new threat 45 Back in Columbia Schofield became convinced at about 3 00 p m that the Confederates would not attack him there and he began marching his men to Spring Hill As soon as the initial units departed Stephen D Lee coincidentally began an attack against the Union position By the time the bulk of his two divisions were able to cross the senior Union commander left behind at Columbia Brig Gen Cox began his withdrawal and the final troops departed up the Franklin Pike by 10 00 pm 46 Cleburne s 3 000 men began an attack against Bradley s brigade at about 4 00 p m Whereas Cheatham was expecting Cleburne to drive north into Spring Hill Hood s intention was to use this formation to sweep toward the turnpike and wheel left to intercept Schofield s arriving units Cleburne wheeled his brigades into a northern alignment against Bradley s right flank causing Bradley and his outnumbered men to withdraw 45 Cleburne s two brigades chased them vigorously and they were stopped short of the turnpike only by heavy fire from the IV Corps artillery 47 The first command miscommunication of the battle took place upon Hood s arrival Cheatham had ordered his division under Maj Gen William B Bate to move against Spring Hill in concert with Cleburne forming up on the Irishman s left Hood then personally ordered Bate to move towards the Columbia Pike and sweep toward Columbia Neither Bate nor Hood bothered to inform Cheatham of this change in orders At about 5 30 p m Bate s lead element of sharpshooters fired on a Federal column approaching from their left this was the lead brigade of Maj Gen Thomas H Ruger s division of the XXIII Corps Ruger was riding with Schofield and could see Bate s men drawn up in line to attack and occupy the pike As the two generals watched unseen by the Rebels they saw the enemy battle line withdraw in the dusk 48 Before the Bate could engage in battle an officer from Cheatham s staff arrived to insist that he follow Cheatham s original orders and join Cleburne s attack Late that night Bate reported the contact with the Federal column traveling up the Columbia Pike but Cheatham discounted the importance of the encounter 49 By this time Cheatham s division under Maj Gen John C Brown was moved into position for another attack on Spring Hill on Cleburne s right Brown did not attack however It was reported that there were Union troops in position on his right flank and front and that Forrest s cavalrymen promised to protect his right flank did not seem to be present Brown decided to consult with his corps commander before proceeding sending two staff officers to find Cheatham and halting his troops while he awaited a decision By the time Cheatham and Brown were able to speak the battlefield was in total darkness and the two officers decided that an assault conducted then without knowing the condition of their right flank might be a disaster note 8 Hood was furious that the attack had not proceeded as he intended and that the pike was still open He dispatched a staff officer to find Stewart to assist Cheatham Having been up since 3 00 a m Hood went to bed at 9 00 p m confident that whatever setbacks his army had suffered during the day they would be able to correct them in the morning and bag Schofield 50 The Battle of Spring Hill was a minor affair in terms of casualties about 350 Union and 500 Confederate but the result of miscommunication simple bad military management and the capable leadership in the U S forces was that during the night all of Schofield s command including Cox passed from Columbia through Spring Hill while the Confederate commanders slept 45 The passage of the army did not go unnoticed by some of the soldiers but no concerted effort was made to block the pike Confederate cavalry attempted to block the passage of the supply trains north of Spring Hill at Thompson s Station but accompanying Federal infantry drove them off A private soldier woke up the commanding general at 2 00 a m and reported he saw the Union column moving north but Hood did nothing beyond sending a dispatch to Cheatham to fire on passing traffic 51 By 6 00 a m on Wednesday November 30 all of Schofield s army was well north of Spring Hill and its vanguard had reached Franklin where it began to build breastworks south of town In the morning Hood discovered Schofield s escape and after an angry conference with his subordinate commanders in which he blamed all but himself for the failure ordered his army to resume its pursuit Spring Hill had been arguably Hood s best chance to isolate and defeat the Union army and recriminations for the lost opportunity soon began flying Hood believed that Cheatham was most responsible Historians Thomas L Connelly Eric Jacobson and Wiley Sword have each assigned blame to both Hood and Cheatham but Jacobson has also stressed that equally Schofield s and his subordinates leadership and ability exploited these failures to wrest the initiative from Hood and complete their withdrawal 52 Battle of Franklin November 30 editFurther information Battle of Franklin 1864 nbsp Hood s approach and attacks against Wagner s advanced lineSchofield s advance guard arrived in Franklin at about 4 30 a m on Wednesday November 30 Jacob Cox a division commander temporarily commanding the XXIII Corps immediately began preparing strong defensive positions around the deteriorated entrenchments originally constructed for a previous engagement in 1863 Schofield decided to defend at Franklin with his back to the river because he had no pontoon bridges available that would enable his men to cross the river Many described the day with clear afternoon skies and temperatures in the high fifties as a beautiful Indian summer afternoon 53 Schofield needed time to repair the permanent bridges spanning the river but by mid afternoon nearly all the supply wagons were across the Harpeth and on the road to Nashville By 12 00 p m the Union works formed an approximate semicircle around the town A gap in the line occurred where the Columbia Pike entered the outskirts of the town left open to allow passage of the wagons Just behind the center of the formidable line stood the Carter House appropriated as Cox s headquarters Brig Gen Stanley had ordered Wagner to maintain a rear guard on Winstead Hill and relieve his third brigade under Colonel Emerson Opdycke who were further south Wagner was to stay on the hill until dusk or pressed by the Rebels Wagner perhaps misunderstanding his orders ordered his three brigades to stop halfway to the Union line and dig in as best they could on the flat ground a few hundred yards in front of the main line note 9 Colonel Emerson Opdycke considered Wagner s order to be ridiculous and had already been directed by Stanley into the works he marched his brigade through the Union line and into a reserve position behind the gap through which the Columbia Pike passed leaving the brigades of Colonels John Q Lane and Joseph Conrad in front 55 Hood s army began to arrive on Winstead Hill two miles 3 km south of Franklin Around 1 00 p m Hood ordered a frontal assault in the dwindling afternoon light sunset would be at 4 30 p m that day against the Union force a decision that caused dismay among his top generals Some popular histories in the Lost Cause tradition assert that Hood acted rashly in a fit of rage resentful that the Federal army had slipped past his troops the night before at Spring Hill and that he wanted to discipline his army by ordering them to assault against strong odds Recent scholarship by Eric Jacobson discounts this as unlikely as it was not only militarily foolish but Hood was observed to be determined not angry by the time he arrived in Franklin 56 note 10 Regardless of Hood s personal motivations his specific objective was to try to crush Schofield before he and his troops could escape to Nashville In addition his army angry at the missed opportunity saw an opponent that for a change did not outnumber them and were eager to destroy them 45 7 The Confederates began moving forward at 4 00 p m with Cheatham s corps on the left of the assault and Stewart s on the right Lee s corps and almost all of the army s artillery had not yet arrived from Columbia Hood s attacking force about 19 20 000 men was arguably understrength for the mission he assigned traversing two miles of open ground uphill 54 with only two batteries of artillery support and then assaulting prepared albeit hastily fortifications 57 54 Hood s attack initially enveloped the 3 000 men in Wagner s two brigades under Lane and Conrad which attempted to stand their ground behind inadequate fieldworks and without anchored flanks but quickly collapsed under the pressure Many of the veteran soldiers of the two brigades stampeded back on the Columbia Pike to the main breastworks while some untried replacements were reluctant to move under fire and were captured The fleeing troops were closely pursued by the Confederates and the two sides became so intermingled that defenders in the breastworks had to hold their fire to avoid hitting their comrades 58 The U S forces momentary inability to defend the opening in the works caused a weak spot in its line at the Columbia Pike from the Carter House to the cotton gin Hood s aggressiveness seemed to be paying off 54 59 The Confederate divisions of Cleburne Brown and French converged on this front and a number of their troops broke through the now not so solid Federal defenses on either side In a matter of minutes the Confederates had penetrated 50 yards through the center of the Federal line 60 nbsp Confederate attacksAs the Confederates began their attack Opdycke s brigade was in reserve He quickly positioned his men into line of battle and ordered his brigade forward to the works Hand to hand fighting around the Carter House and the pike was furious and desperate Firing continued around the Carter house and gardens for hours At the same time as Opdycke s counterattack west of the pike the reserve elements of Reilly s division the 12th Kentucky Infantry 16th Kentucky Infantry and 175th Ohio Infantry Regiment note 11 had stood their ground and served as a rally line for survivors of Strickland s and Wagner s divisions 62 63 Together they sealed the breach Hand to hand fighting around the Carter House and the pike was furious and desperate employing such weapons as bayonets rifle butts entrenching tools axes and picks 64 Many Confederates were driven back to the Federal earthworks where many were pinned down for the remainder of the evening unable to either advance or flee Brown s division suffered significant losses including Brown who was wounded and all four of his brigade commanders were casualties Brown s brigade attack near the cotton gin was driven back from the breastworks and was then subjected to devastating cross fire from Reilly s brigade to their front and the brigade of Colonel John S Casement on Reilly s right Cleburne was killed in the attack and 14 of his brigade and regimental commanders were casualties 65 While fighting raged at the center of the Union line Stewart s Corps also advanced against the Union left Because the Harpeth River flowed in that area from southeast to northwest the brigade found themselves moving through a space getting progressively narrower squeezing brigades together into a compressed front delaying their movements and reducing their unit cohesion They were all subjected to fierce artillery fire not only from the main Union line but also from the batteries across the river at Fort Granger And they had significant difficulty pushing through the strong Osage orange abatis 66 Loring s division launched two attacks against the Union brigade of Colonel Israel N Stiles and both were repulsed with heavy losses Artillery firing canister rounds directly down the railroad cut prevented any attempt to flank the Union position Brig Gen John Adams attempted to rally his brigade by galloping his horse directly onto the earthworks but he and his horse were both shot and killed The brigade of Brig Gen Winfield S Featherston began falling back under heavy fire when its division commander Maj Gen William W Loring confronted them shouting Great God Do I command cowards He attempted to inspire his men by sitting on his horse in full view of the Federal lines for over a minute and amazingly emerged unharmed but the brigade made no further progress Walthall s division struck Casement s and Reilly s brigades in multiple waves of brigade assaults probably as many as six distinct attacks All of these assaults were turned back with heavy losses 67 Maj Gen William B Bate s division attacked on the Union right flank His left flank was not being protected as he expected by Chalmers s cavalry division and they received enfilade fire To protect the flank Bate ordered the Florida Brigade to move from its reserve position to his left flank This not only delayed the advance but provided only a single line to attack the Union fortifications leaving no reserve Chalmers s troopers had actually engaged the Federal right by this time fighting dismounted but Bate was unaware of it because the two forces were separated by rolling ground and orchards Neither Bate nor Chalmers made any progress and they withdrew Hood was still convinced that he could pierce the Federal line At about 7 00 p m he deployed the only division of Stephen D Lee s corps that had arrived commanded by Maj Gen Edward Allegheny Johnson to assist Cheatham s effort They were repulsed after a single assault with heavy losses 68 In addition to Chalmers s actions in the west across the river to the east Confederate cavalry commander Forrest attempted to turn the Union left Union cavalry commander Brig Gen James H Wilson learned at 3 00 p m that Forrest was crossing the river he ordered his division under Brig Gen Edward Hatch to move south from his position on the Brentwood Turnpike and attack Forrest from the front He ordered Brig Gen John T Croxton s brigade to move against Forrest s flank and held Colonel Thomas J Harrison s brigade in reserve The dismounted cavalrymen of Hatch s division charged the Confederate cavalrymen also dismounted and drove them back across the river 69 Following the failure of Johnson s assault Hood decided to end offensive actions for the evening and began to plan for a resumed series of attacks in the morning Schofield ordered his infantry to cross the river starting at 11 00 p m Although there was a period in which the Union army was vulnerable outside its works and straddling the river Hood did not attempt to take advantage of it during the night The Union army began entering the breastworks at Nashville at noon on December 1 with Hood s damaged army in pursuit 70 The devastated Confederate force was left in control of Franklin but its enemy had escaped again Although he had briefly come close to breaking through in the vicinity of the Columbia Turnpike Hood was unable to destroy Schofield or prevent his withdrawal to link up with Thomas in Nashville And his unsuccessful result came with a frightful cost The Confederates suffered 6 252 casualties including 1 750 killed and 3 800 wounded An estimated 2 000 others suffered less serious wounds and returned to duty before the Battle of Nashville But more importantly the military leadership in the West was decimated including the loss of perhaps the best division commander of either side Patrick Cleburne Fourteen Confederate generals six killed or mortally wounded seven wounded and one captured and 55 regimental commanders were casualties 71 note 12 Union losses were reported as only 189 killed 1 033 wounded and 1 104 missing It is possible that the number of casualties was under reported by Schofield because of the confusion during his army s hasty nighttime evacuation of Franklin note 13 The Union wounded were left behind in Franklin Pursuit to Nashville editThe Army of Tennessee was all but destroyed at Franklin Nevertheless rather than retreat and risk the army dissolving through desertions Hood advanced his 26 500 man force against the Union army now combined under Thomas firmly entrenched at Nashville This was a controversial move on Hood s part because his army was enervated and no longer ready for offensive operations However he believed that if he ordered a retreat it would mean the complete disintegration of his army Hood decided that destruction of the Nashville amp Chattanooga Railroad and disruption of the Union army supply depot at Murfreesboro would help his cause On December 4 he sent Forrest with two cavalry divisions and Maj Gen William B Bate s infantry division to Murfreesboro Hood ordered Bate to destroy the railroad and blockhouses between Murfreesboro and Nashville and join Forrest for further operations 72 Forrest at Murfreesboro December 5 6 editFurther information Third Battle of Murfreesboro Forrest s combined command attacked Murfreesboro but was repulsed They destroyed railroad track blockhouses and some homes and generally disrupted Union operations in the area but they did not accomplish much else The raid on Murfreesboro was a minor irritation Bate was recalled to Nashville but Forrest remained near Murfreesboro and thus was absent from the battle of Nashville In retrospect Hood s decision to detach Forrest from his main command was a major blunder 73 Battle of Nashville December 15 16 editFurther information Battle of Nashville nbsp The Battle of Nashville December 15 16Under the command of Thomas who now had a combined force of approximately 55 000 men the 7 mile long semicircular Union defensive line surrounded Nashville from the west to the east the remainder of the circle to the north was the Cumberland River patrolled by U S Navy gunboats 74 It took Thomas over two weeks to move causing great anxiety in Washington where it was anticipated that Hood was poised for an invasion of the North 75 General Grant pressured Thomas to move despite a bitter ice storm that struck on December 8 and stopped much fortification on both sides A few days later Grant sent an aide to relieve Thomas of command believing that Hood would slip through his fingers 76 On December 13 Maj Gen John A Logan was directed to proceed to Nashville and assume command if upon his arrival Thomas had not yet initiated operations He made it as far as Louisville by December 15 but on that day the Battle of Nashville had finally begun 77 Thomas finally came out of his fortifications on December 15 to start a two phase attack on the Confederates The first but secondary attack was by Steedman on the Confederate right flank 78 The main attack would be on the enemy s left by Smith Wood and Brig Gen Edward Hatch commanding a dismounted cavalry brigade Steedman s attack kept Cheatham on the Confederate right occupied for the rest of the day The main attack wheeled left to a line parallel to the Hillsboro Pike By noon the main advance had reached the pike and Wood prepared to assault the Confederate outposts on Montgomery Hill near the center of the line Hood became concerned about the threat on his left flank and ordered Lee to send reinforcements to Stewart Wood s corps took Montgomery Hill in a charge by Brig Gen Samuel Beatty s division 79 At about 1 00 p m there was a salient in Hood s line at Stewart s front Thomas ordered Wood to attack the salient supported by Schofield and Wilson 80 By 1 30 p m Stewart s position along the pike became untenable the attacking force was overwhelming Stewart s corps broke and began to retreat toward the Granny White Turnpike However Hood was able to regroup his men toward nightfall in preparation for the battle the next day The Union cavalry under Wilson had been unable to put enough force on the turnpike to hamper the Confederate movement since many of its troopers were participating as dismounted infantry in the assault The exhausted Confederates dug in all night awaiting the arrival of the Federals 81 It took most of the morning on December 16 for the Federals to move into position against Hood s new line which had been reduced to about 2 miles in length Once again Thomas planned a two phase attack but concentrated on Hood s left Schofield was to drive back Cheatham and Wilson s cavalry was to swing to the rear to block the Franklin Pike Hood s only remaining route of withdrawal At noon Wood and Steedman attacked Lee on Overton s Hill but without success On the left Wilson s dismounted cavalry was exerting pressure on the line 82 At 4 00 p m Cheatham on Shy s Hill was under assault from three sides and his corps broke and fled to the rear Wood took this opportunity to renew his attack on Lee on Overton s Hill and this time the momentum was overwhelming Darkness fell and heavy rain began Hood collected his forces and withdrew to the south toward Franklin 83 Casualties from the two day battle were 3 061 Union 387 killed 2 558 wounded and 112 missing or captured and approximately 6 000 Confederate 1 500 killed or wounded 4 500 missing or captured 84 The Battle of Nashville was one of the most stunning victories achieved by the Union Army in the war The formidable Army of Tennessee the second largest Confederate force was effectively destroyed as a fighting force Hood s army entered Tennessee with over 30 000 men but left with 15 20 000 85 note 14 Retreat and pursuit of Hood editThe Union army set off in pursuit of Hood from Nashville The rainy weather became an ally to the Confederates delaying the Union cavalry pursuit and Forrest was able to rejoin Hood on December 18 screening the retreating force The pursuit continued until the beaten and battered Army of Tennessee recrossed the Tennessee River on December 25 On Christmas Eve Forrest turned back Wilson s pursuing cavalry at the Battle of Anthony s Hill 86 Aftermath editAlthough Hood blamed the entire debacle of his campaign on his subordinates and the soldiers themselves his career was over He retreated with his army to Tupelo Mississippi resigned his command on January 13 1865 and was not given another field command Forrest returned to Mississippi but in 1865 he was driven into Alabama by James H Wilson and his command became dissipated and ineffective 87 By the time of Hood s defeat in Nashville Sherman s army had advanced to the outskirts of Savannah which they captured just before Christmas Five thousand men from the Army of Tennessee were later deployed under Joseph E Johnston against Sherman in South Carolina during the Carolinas campaign but to no avail References editFootnotes Sherman discounts the specific nature of Davis s rhetoric and states that there is little in Davis s several messages to indicate that any plan was in the making for leaving Sherman behind and invading Tennessee and the Ohio Valley such comments had been made often by Confederate leaders attempting to whip up the western morale At the start of the Atlanta Campaign Hood was appointed a temporary full general but this appointment was never confirmed by the Confederate Congress and was later rescinded Although Thomas and Schofield were the commanders of the Army of the Cumberland and the Army of the Ohio respectively through 1865 historians of the campaign do not always use these designations for the combination of corps assembled against Hood referring in some cases only to the Federal Army See for example Welcher vol II pp 599 611 Sword p 448 Jacobson p 452 Sword and Welcher state that the best horses were reserved by Sherman for his March to the Sea Again the army was motivated to adhere to the existing social hierarchy of white supremacy anchored in slavery Extermination in the sense of not the extermination of the Confederate people but of the southern society in which whether slave owners or not all members of the Rebel armies had a stake in the hierarchy built on race Some sources conclude that Hood s actual plan was to outrace Schofield to Nashville not intercept him Jacobson and Rupp state official records show that he planned on attacking Schofield before he could unite with Thomas 7 Cheatham Cleburne and Brown had conducted a disastrous night attack at Chickamauga a year prior and were understandably wary of an attack in the dark especially in light of the fact that the night was a new moon and very dark 7 Jacobson writes that Wagner actually was performing his proper duty as the army s rear guard The position allowed him to observe Hood s forces whose infantry through a feat of endurance had managed to march to a point where they were close behind Wagner s error in his opinion was that he waited too long to order a withdrawal to the main line 54 Jacobsob also cites that Hood s immediate attack was much in keeping with his experiences in the Army of Northern Virginia aggressiveness always seemed to be rewarded with a retaking of the initiative 7 In contrast for examples of the popular view promoting Hood s anger and resentment see Sword p 179 McPherson pp 188 189 and Nevin pp 95 96 The 175th Ohio was a green regiment that had only been formed in October 1864 61 Jacobson presents a full list of all of the officers who were casualties during the battle Current unpublished research by Carter House historian David Fraley has identified Union killed at Franklin to be in excess of 600 and perhaps as many as 800 However this list may include men who had fought at Franklin and died in captivity or in the Sultana explosion in April 1865 the field returns for Hood s army on January 20 1865 listed 20 700 effectives Jacobson surmises that missing men from Franklin and Nashville gradually rejoined the army during and after its retreat Citations U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 53 Abstract from returns of the U S Forces under command of Maj Gen George H Thomas for November 20 November 30 and December 10 1864 pp 52 55 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 54 Abstract from returns of the U S Forces under command of Maj Gen George H Thomas for November 20 November 30 and December 10 1864 pp 52 55 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 55 Abstract from returns of the U S Forces under command of Maj Gen George H Thomas for November 20 November 30 and December 10 1864 pp 52 55 a b U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 663 ADDENDA Strength of the Army of Tennessee on the 6th of November and 10th of December 1864 p 663 Welcher 1989 p 583 a b NPS Franklin Nashville a b c d e f g h i j ACWRTUK John Bell Hood and the Mysteris of Spring Hill with Eric Jacobson June 26 2021 Connelly 2001 pp 477 478 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 736 737 Esposito 1959 p 148 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 29 30 Sword 1993 pp 45 46 Connelly 2001 pp 472 477 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 30 32 Sword 1993 pp 46 49 Esposito 1959 p 148 Welcher 1989 p 583 Connelly 2001 p 479 Kennedy 1998 p 389 Sword 1993 pp 51 52 a b Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 769 Thrasher 2021 p 284 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 770 Esposito 1959 pp 148 149 Sword 1993 p 84 Welcher 1989 p 583 Esposito 1959 p 149 Sword 1993 p 54 Welcher 1989 p 583 Kennedy 1998 p 390 Welcher 1989 p 584 NPS Allatoona Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 738 Kennedy 1998 p 390 Welcher 1989 p 584 a b Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 738 39 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 p 38 Nevin 1986 p 29 Sword 1993 p 56 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 38 39 Kennedy 1998 p 391 Sword 1993 pp 56 57 Esposito 1959 p 150 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 p 41 Kennedy 1998 p 391 Nevin 1986 p 391 Sword 1993 pp 58 62 a b Connelly 2001 p 483 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 769 Esposito 1959 p 150 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 42 43 Nevin 1986 pp 32 33 Sword 1993 pp 63 64 NPS Johnsonville Wills 1992 pp 263 269 Kennedy 1998 p 389 Wills 1992 pp 268 273 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 769 Kennedy 1998 p 391 Nevin 1986 p 34 Sword 1993 pp 63 64 Wills 1992 pp 272 273 NPS Decatur Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 p 43 Kennedy 1998 p 391 Sword 1993 pp 64 65 NPS Columbia U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 935Correspondence from Major General Thomas to Major General Halleck November 18 1864 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 180 Sword 1993 pp 68 70 74 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 970 971Correspondence from Major General Thomas to Major General Halleck November 21 1864Correspondence from Major General Thomas to Major General Schofield November 21 1864 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 p 44 47 51 58 Nevin 1986 pp 82 84 Sword 1993 pp 72 73 81 82 85 Connelly 2001 p 492 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 53 55 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 180 Nevin 1986 pp 82 83 Sword 1993 pp 84 89 91 Welcher 1989 pp 586 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 pp 550 752 768 Reports of Brevet Major General James H Wilson U S Army commanding Cavalry Corps Military Division of the Mississippi 0 operations October 24 1864 February 1 1865 December 21 1864 pp 550 554 Report of Major General Nathan B Forrest C S Army commanding cavalry of operations November 16 1864 January 23 1865 January 24 1865 pp 751 759 Report of Brigadier General Lawrence 8 Ross C S Army commanding Ross brigade of operations October 24 December 27 1864 January 12 1865 pp 767 773 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 59 61 64 65 Kennedy 1998 p 392 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 180 Nevin 1986 p 85 Sword 1993 pp 91 93 95 Welcher 1989 pp 586 587 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 770 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 181 182 Sword 1993 pp 93 95 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 182 Nevin 1986 p 88 Welcher 1989 p 588 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 770 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 72 75 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 182 Nevin 1986 p 88 Welcher 1989 p 588 NPS Spring Hill Connelly 2001 pp 491 492 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 770 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 72 75 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 182 Nevin 1986 p 88 Welcher 1989 p 588 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 72 75 88 96 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 182 183 Nevin 1986 p 89 Welcher 1989 pp 588 589 a b c d ABT Tour Stop 31 Spring Hill The Prelude to Franklin December 13 2021 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 102 103 137 138 Nevin 1986 p 93 Sword 1993 pp 140 44 Welcher 1989 pp 590 591 Connelly 2001 pp 495 496 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 105 115 Kennedy 1998 p 394 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 183 Nevin 1986 p 92 Sword 1993 pp 126 131 U S War Dept Official Records Vol 45 1 p 339Report of Maj Gen John M Schofield U S Army commanding Army of the Ohio December 31 1864 pp 339 347 Connelly 2001 p 496 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 102 122 124 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 183 Sword 1993 pp 136 137 Welcher 1989 pp 589 590 Connelly 2001 pp 497 500 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 130 136 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 183 184 Nevin 1986 p 93 Sword 1993 pp 135 139 Welcher 1989 p 590 Connelly 2001 p 500 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 771 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 185 Nevin 1986 pp 95 96 Sword 1993 p 152 155 Connelly 2001 pp 501 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 173 179 Kennedy 1998 p 395 Sword 1993 pp 152 155 BoFT The Battle of Franklin a b c d BOFT On The Battlefield The Battle of Franklin November 12 2020 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 263 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 198 203 208 212 219 221 228 230 Sword 1993 pp 159 160 167 171 177 Welcher 1989 pp 590 594 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 239 242 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 243 247 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 189 Sword 1993 p 180 Welcher 1989 p 595 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 259 260 273 274 278 282 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 189 191 Nevin 1986 p 103 Sword 1993 pp 189 196 ABT Franklin The Valley of Death Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 259 260 273 274 278 282 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 191 Nevin 1986 p 105 Sword 1993 pp 194 196 Welcher 1989 p 595 ABT Baptism of Fire An Interview with Eric Jacobson BOFT Franklin Myths ABT 10 Facts The Battle of Franklin Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 3328 3329 322 Nevin 1986 p 112 Welcher 1989 pp 595 596 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 286 308 315 319 334 Nevin 1986 pp 112 115 Sword 1993 pp 199 206 221 224 Welcher 1989 pp 595 596 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 244 262 285 Sword 1993 p 292 Welcher 1989 pp 596 597 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 292 293 299 305 339 343 Nevin 1986 pp 114 115 Sword 1993 pp 216 219 226 227 Welcher 1989 p 597 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 356 358 377 385 Sword 1993 pp 238 242 245 247 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 358 361 Nevin 1986 p 117 Sword 1993 p 241 Welcher 1989 p 598 Nevin 1986 pp 117 118 Sword 1993 pp 243 248 251 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 pp 418 420 Kennedy 1998 p 396 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 p 195 Nevin 1986 pp 125 126 Sword 1993 pp 293 295 NPS Murfreesboro Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 775 776 Sword 1993 p 449 Welcher 1989 p 600 NPS Nashville ABT Nashville The Crushing Blow of a Forlorn Hope Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 776 Esposito 1959 p 153 Kennedy 1998 p 397 Sword 1993 p 312 Welcher 1989 p 602 ABT African Americans in the Civil War Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 pp 776 777 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 196 197 Nevin 1986 p 126 Sword 1993 pp 321 329 Welcher 1989 ABT Decisive Battle of Nashville Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 777 Esposito 1959 p 153 Kennedy 1998 p 397 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 197 203 Nevin 1986 pp 130 133 Sword 1993 pp 331 344 Welcher 1989 pp 605 608 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 779 Esposito 1959 p 153 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 203 205 Nevin 1986 pp 134 137 Sword 1993 pp 348 365 Welcher 1989 pp 608 609 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 779 Kennedy 1998 p 397 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 205 207 Nevin 1986 pp 137 144 Sword 1993 pp 369 380 Welcher 1989 pp 609 610 Eicher McPherson amp McPherson 2001 p 780 Jacobson amp Rupp 2007 p 428 McPherson amp Gottlieb 1989 pp 207 208 Welcher 1989 p 610 Esposito 1959 pp 153 Kennedy 1998 p 397 Nevin 1986 p 144 Bibliography Adelman Garry Jacobson Eric A Jacobson Eric A December 13 2021 Tour Stop 31 Spring Hill The Prelude to Franklin YouTube Washington DC American Battlefield Trust Event occurs at 17 41 Connelly Thomas Lawrence 2001 Autumn of Glory The Army of Tennessee 1862 1865 Baton Rouge LA Louisiana State University Press ISBN 978 0 8071 2738 4 OCLC 47948904 Eicher David J McPherson James M McPherson James Alan 2001 The Longest Night A Military History of the Civil War PDF 1st ed New York NY Simon amp Schuster p 990 ISBN 978 0 7432 1846 7 LCCN 2001034153 OCLC 231931020 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Esposito Vincent J 1959 West Point Atlas of American Wars New York NY Frederick A Praeger Publishers ISBN 978 0 8050 3391 5 OCLC 60298522 Retrieved 6 July 2020 Jacobson Eric A Rupp Richard A 2007 For Cause amp for Country A Study of the Affair at Spring Hill amp the Battle of Franklin Franklin TN O More Publishing ISBN 978 0 9717444 4 8 OCLC 428436180 Jacobson Eric A June 26 2021 John Bell Hood and the Mysteries of Spring Hill with Eric Jacobson YouTube Lopndon UK ACWRTUK American Civil War Round Table UK Event occurs at 32 14 Retrieved May 27 2023 Jacobson Eric A November 12 2020 On The Battlefield The Battle of Franklin YouTube Franklin TN The Battle of Franklin Trust Event occurs at 23 40 Retrieved May 27 2023 Kennedy Frances H ed 1998 The Civil War Battlefield Guide Kindle 2nd ed Boston MA Houghton Mifflin Co ISBN 0 395 74012 6 Retrieved June 24 2020 McPherson James M Gottlieb Richard 1989 Battle Chronicles of the Civil war Vol 4 New York NY Macmillan Publishing Company Collier Macmillan Publishers ISBN 978 0 02 920661 4 OCLC 1164541109 Nevin David 1986 Sherman s March Atlanta To The Sea Alexandria VA Silver Burdett OCLC 1003113620 Sword Wiley 1993 The Confederacy s Last Hurrah Spring Hill Franklin and Nashville Lawrence KS University Press of Kansas OCLC 1285470936 Thrasher C D 2021 Suffering in the Army of Tennessee A Social History of the Confederate Army of the Heartland from the Battles for Atlanta to the Retreat from Nashville Voices of the Civil War series Knoxville TN University of Tennessee Press ISBN 978 1 62190 641 4 Retrieved 2023 05 26 U S War Department 1889 Operations in Kentucky Southwest Virginia Tennessee Mississippi Alabama and North Georgia November 14 1864 January 22 1865 Part I Reports Union and Confederate Correspondence etc The War of the Rebellion A Compilation of the Official Records of the Union and Confederate Armies Vol XLV LVII I Washington DC U S Government Printing Office pp 53 55 663 hdl 2027 coo 31924077743031 OCLC 857196196 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Welcher Frank Johnson 1989 The Western Theater The Union Army 1861 1865 Organization and Operations Vol 2 Bloomington Indiana University Press ISBN 978 0 253 36454 8 OCLC 1089613807 Wills Brian Steel 1992 The Confederacy s greatest cavalryman Nathan Bedford Forrest Lawrence Kans University Press of Kansas ISBN 978 0 7006 0885 0 OCLC 229214710 10 Facts The Battle of Franklin www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust October 8 2022 Retrieved May 28 2023 Henderson Steward January 13 2009 African Americans in the Civil War www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust Retrieved October 8 2022 Book Baptism of Fire An Interview with Eric Jacobson www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust October 8 2022 Retrieved May 28 2023 Cooling B Franklin Dr October 8 2022 The Decisive Battle of Nashville December 15 16 1864 www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust Retrieved May 28 2023 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Cartwright Thomas Y October 8 2022 Franklin The Valley of Death www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust Retrieved May 28 2023 Biggs Greg October 8 2022 The Battle of Nashville The Crushing Blow of a Forlorn Hope www battlefields org American Battlefield Trust Retrieved May 28 2023 Allatoona nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2007 Archived from the original on July 28 2005 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Columbia nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2004 Archived from the original on December 30 2005 Retrieved December 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Decatur nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2004 Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Franklin nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2004 Archived from the original on October 6 2014 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Civil War Battle Summaries by Campaign nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2004 Archived from the original on April 9 2005 Retrieved December 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Johnsonville nps gov U S National Park Service January 19 2004 Archived from the original on December 26 2005 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Decatur U S National Park Service Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Nashville U S National Park Service Archived from the original on September 24 2014 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain Spring Hill U S National Park Service Archived from the original on October 30 2014 Retrieved September 14 2017 nbsp This article incorporates text from this source which is in the public domain The Battle of Franklin The Battle of Franklin Trust July 18 2022 Retrieved May 31 2023 Jacobson Eric A May 4 2023 Chalkboard History Franklin Myths YouTube Franklin TN The Battle of Franklin Trust Event occurs at 23 40 Retrieved May 31 2023 Further reading Hood Stephen M John Bell Hood The Rise Fall and Resurrection of a Confederate General El Dorado Hills CA Savas Beatie 2013 ISBN 978 1 61121 140 5 Knight James R Hood s Tennessee Campaign The Desperate Venture of a Desperate Man Charleston SC The History Press 2014 ISBN 978 1 62619 597 4 External links editFranklin Battlefield Page Battle maps photos history articles and battlefield news CWPT Animated history of the Franklin Nashville Campaign John Bell Hood Society s defense of Hood s 1864 Tennessee campaign Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Franklin Nashville campaign amp oldid 1189258133, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

    article

    , read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.