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Guarding the Cumberland — where Thomas watched for Hood at the Nashville bridge |
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Perched on a hill overlooking
Nashville stood
Fort Negley--a large, complex citadel ready for action at any time.
Though it was little called upon, its very aspect would have caused an enemy much reflection are deciding to attack.
Within the work were two casemates (one of which is shown in the fine photograph above) covered with
railroad iron and made bomb-proof with earth.
Fort Negley was designed and built on the German polygonal system early in 1862 and was regarded as satisfying the most exacting of the Old World standards as an up-to-date fortification.
By the middle of November, 1864, with
Sherman well on his march to the sea, the struggle in
middle Tennessee had reached a crisis.
Hood had invaded the
State and
Thomas had confided to
Schofield the task of checking the
Southern army.
Thomas himself sent out his couriers and drew in all the available Federal forces to
Nashville.
There he meant to give battle to
Hood when the
Confederate leader, racing
Schofield, should reach the
State capital.
The dramatic running fight between
Hood and
Schofield from
Columbia to
Nashville is graphically described in the accompanying text.
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The Army of Tennessee under General Hood, pursuing its march northward late in November and early in December, came upon the Federal forces under General Schofield at Franklin, and General Thomas at Nashville, Tennessee, where desperate battles were fought, until Hood's army was reduced to skeleton commands and forced to retreat. --Lieutenant-General James Longstreet, C. S.A., in From Manassas to Appomattox.
While
Hood was turning back from
Atlanta in the great northward movement, which, in the hopes of the
Confederacy, would bring the Army of Tennessee to the banks of the
Ohio, there was gathering at and around
Nashville a force to dispute the progress of
Hood.
General Thomas was sent by
Sherman “to take care of
Tennessee,” and he was preparing to weld many fragmentary bodies of troops into a fighting army.
After a month of bold maneuvering, the advance of
Hood's army appeared, on the 26th of October, at
Decatur, on the south side of the
Tennessee.
It had been a time of perplexity to the
Federal authorities and of intense alarm throughout the
North.
Hood had twice thrown his army between
Sherman and the latter's base; had captured four garrisons, and destroyed thirty miles of railroad.
His movements had been bold and brilliantly executed.
At
Decatur,
Hood found himself too far east to join with
Forrest, whose cooperation was absolutely necessary to him. So he moved westward to
Florence where the first division of his army, with but little opposition from
Croxton's cavalry, crossed the
Tennessee on the 31st.
Forrest had gone down the river to intercept the
Federal line of supplies.
At
Johnsonville
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When
Hood made his audacious movement upon
Sherman's communications, by invading
Tennessee--without however tempting the
Northern commander from his grim course —
Chattanooga was the only point in
Thomas' Department, south of
Nashville, which was heavily garrisoned.
This town became the supply center for all the
Federal posts maintained in
eastern Tennessee.
Therefore it had been well fortified, so strongly in fact that
Thomas, who had just begun his great concentration movement, was able by December 1st to draw
Steedman away to the
Elk River and thence to
Nashville.
It was from a point on the hill a little to the right of the scene shown in the lower photograph on this page that the picture of
Chattanooga fortified was taken.
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he disabled the gunboats to such an extent that they were burned to prevent their falling into his hands.
The fire spread to the
Federal stores on the levee and $1,500,000 of Government property thereby was destroyed.
The garrison held firm.
Forrest withdrew his troops and crossed the river above the town.
He had received orders to join
Hood as quickly as possible and reached
Florence on November 14th.
General Hood was now free to invade
Tennessee.
Sherman had sent the Fourth Corps, under
Stanley, and the Twenty-third, under
Schofield, the latter in command of both, back to
Thomas, and this force was now at
Pulaski to oppose
Hood.
On the morning of November 19th, the army of
Hood was put in motion.
The day was disagreeable.
It snowed and rained, and there was sleet and ice for the men to face.
Over the slippery roads the army trudged, led by the cavalry of the daring
Forrest.
The wary
Hood did not choose to be “checked at
Pulaski,” but passed adroitly by on the other side, urging his ranks forward toward
Columbia on the
Duck River.
At midnight of the 23d,
General Schofield learned of the movements of
Hood.
He knew that if the latter reached
Columbia he could easily capture the garrison at that place and then be free to cross the river and cut him off from
Thomas.
The sleeping troops were quickly aroused and in an hour were making their way through the night to
Columbia, twenty-one miles distant. Another column, led by
General Cox, starting somewhat later, was pushing rapidly over another road to the same point.
It was a race between the armies of
Hood and
Schofield for the crossing at
Columbia.
The weary, footsore Federals barely won.
Cox, by taking a cross-road, came to the rescue only a few miles south of
Columbia, as
Forrest was driving the
Federal cavalry back, and the little army was saved.
The Union army entrenched itself for battle.
Works were thrown up while the wagon trains were retreating beyond the river.
But it was found impracticable to hold the position.
All during the night of the 27th, there was a steady stream of
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The “business of war” at an Alabama railroad station — federals concentrating at Stevenson before the Nashville battle
Early in the winter of 1864, this station in the little Alabama town fairly hummed with the movement of men and horses and supplies.
Schofield's division of Thomas' army was being concentrated there for the campaign which culminated, in the middle of December, at the bloody battle of Nashville.
A businesslike crowd is shown in this picture, of soldiers and citizens, with more than one commanding figure in the foreground.
The railroad played a part most important and most vulnerable in the Western campaigns. |
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men, wagons, and artillery, passing over to the north side of
Duck River.
Not until daylight did the rear guard burn the railroad bridge and scuttle the pontoon boats, behind them.
The 28th of November was a suspiciously quiet day in front of
Columbia.
Not so, along other parts of the river bank.
About noon, at various points, squads of Confederate cavalry appeared, indicating their purpose to cross, which was finally accomplished.
At daybreak the next morning, with
Hood himself in the lead, the Confederate army, headed by one of its most courageous divisions, was quickly marching again to intercept the retreat of
Schofield.
Spring Hill, fifteen miles north of
Columbia, was the objective of
Hood.
This was a brilliant piece of strategy, and the
Confederate general hurried his columns along that he might reach the point first.
Succeeding in this he could easily turn the
Union flank, and nothing could save that army.
It all depended on who should win the race.
The Confederates marched lightly.
It was a beautiful, crisp morning and the men were in high hopes.
There was every prospect of their winning, since the
Union army was heavy and it moved sluggishly.
To save the
Federal wagon train, and its contents of food, clothing, and ammunition, which was slowly moving along the roads to the north, with only the little force of warriors in blue interposing between them and the eager Confederate legions,
General Stanley was ordered forward, to make a dash to the rescue.
As he neared the town he saw on his right the
Confederate columns abreast of him on a parallel road.
A little further on, he was informed that
Forrest's cavalry was approaching rapidly from the east.
No time was now to be lost.
Although his men were weary from their hurried march, they were pushed forward at the double-quick into town.
The opposing forces met on the edge of the village; a light skirmish followed, in which the
Federals secured the main approaches to the town.
Schofield's army was in a splendid position to invite attack.
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Rushing a Federal battery out of Johnsonville
When Thomas began to draw together his forces to meet Hood at Nashville, he ordered the garrison at Johnsonville, on the Tennessee, eighty miles due west of Nashville, to leave that place and hasten north.
It was the garrison at this same Johnsonville that, a month earlier, had been frightened into panic and flight when the bold Confederate raider, Forrest, appeared on the west bank of the river and began a noisy cannonade.
New troops had been sent to the post.
They appear well coated and equipped.
The day after the photograph was taken (November 23d) the encampment in the picture was broken. |
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The forces were widely scattered, and the situation was indeed critical.
The afternoon of November 29th records a series of lost opportunities to the
Confederates.
From noon until seven o'clock in the evening the little force of
Stanley was completely isolated from the main army.
Hood had sufficient troops literally to crush him, to cut off the retreat of
Schofield, and thereby to defeat that wing of the
Federal army.
During the afternoon and evening there were various attempts made on the
Union lines, which were stoutly resisted.
The vigor of the repulse, the lack of concentration in the attack and, perhaps, the coming of evening saved the day for the
Federals.
The Confederates bivouacked for the night near the pike.
Brightly their camp-fires gleamed, as the
Federal wagon trains and the columns of Northern soldiers trudged along through a moonless night, within a few rods of the resting Confederates.
The Southern troops were plainly visible to the
Federals, as they were seen moving about the camp.
There was constant apprehension lest the
Southern army should fall upon the passing army, but the officer who was ordered to block the
Federal march made but a feeble and partial attack.
Hood realized that he had lost the best opportunity for crushing
Schofield that the campaign had offered, and deplored the failure most bitterly.
Schofield reached
Spring Hill about seven in the evening. At the same hour the last company of his troops was leaving
Columbia, about eleven miles away.
All through the night the procession continued.
The intrepid
Stanley stood guard at a narrow bridge, as the long train wended its way in the darkness over the hills in the direction of
Nashville.
At daybreak, as the rear wagons safely passed, and the skirmishers were called in, the advance columns, under
Cox, were reaching the outskirts of
Franklin.
This village, situated on a bend of the
Harpeth River, was admirably located for a great battle.
On the north and west, it was protected by the river.
Beyond the stream, to the
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Battle of Nashville.
It was
Hood's hope that, when he had advanced his line to the left of the position shown in this photograph, he might catch a weak spot in
Thomas' forces.
But
Thomas had no weak spots.
From the casemate, armored with
railroad iron, shown here, the hills might be easily seen on which the
Confederate center and left were posted at the opening of the great
battle of Nashville.
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Fort Negley, looking toward the Confederate center and left, as Hood's veterans threatened the city |
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The prize of the Nashville campaign — the state capitol |
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north, were three prominent hills, giving excellent elevations for batteries, and commanding a broad plain that lay in front of the town.
These were utilized by the
Federals.
To the south were low ridges on which an attacking party might entrench.
Schofield had not expected to give
battle at Franklin.
He was hurrying his men to reach the protecting entrenchments of
Nashville.
But he would not be taken unawares.
Though his men had marched and fought by turns for a week, by day and night, until they were on the point of exhaustion, yet the tired and hungry troops, before they had prepared their morning meal, laid down the musket and took up the spade.
Soon entrenchments stretched along on two sides of the town.
Batteries of artillery were placed at the front and in the rear, guarding the lines of probable attack.
To this protecting haven, the weary regiments, one by one, filed, until, by noon, the last one had safely found its way to the entrenched walls of
Franklin.
The wagon trains passed over the
Harpeth and the troops would soon follow after.
But this was not to be. Even then, the
Confederate vanguard was close at hand.
It was a glorious Indian summer afternoon.
For two hours the
Federal troops had been looking through the hazy atmosphere to the eastward hills.
The day was already beginning to wane, when from the wooded ridge there emerged the stately columns of the army of
Hood.
On a rise in front of the
Union lines stood
Wagner's two brigades, in uniforms of blue.
They were stationed, unsupported, directly in front of the
Confederate approach.
It was evident that “some one had blundered.”
But there they stood, waiting for the impact of the line in gray.
A concentrated roar of musketry burst forth and they were engulfed in the on-sweeping torrent.
The Confederate ranks plunged on, carrying the helpless brigades along.
With tremendous momentum they rushed toward the works.
The guns along the
Federal line were silent.
They dare not fire on their own routed men. The weight of the oncoming mass of humanity broke through the first line of
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Shortly after the occupation of
Nashville by the
Union forces in February, 1862,
General Morton, of the U. S. Corps of Engineers, began work on its fortifications.
Around the
capitol were built earth parapets and stockades, and enough room was provided to mount fifteen guns.
The strong, massive structure, plentifully supplied with water, could easily accommodate a regiment of infantry — enough in such a citadel to hold an entire army at bay. This, however, was but a part of the entire line of defenses he planned.
He was intending to fortify
Morton and Houston Hills, and a third on which
Fort Negley was actually constructed.
The pictures show the city which the works were built to defend, but which
Morton was prepared to leave to the enemy if forced to retreat within his lines.
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A state house stockaded |
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The stockade and the parapet |
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Federal infantry. The center of the
Union front had been pierced.
Like a wedge the
Southern troops thrust themselves through the opening.
Two captured batteries began an enfilading fire upon the broken Union lines, and from the right and the left the pitiless fire poured upon their flanks.
The shattered regiments were past re-forming for the emergency.
The teams from the captured batteries galloped to the rear.
The day was nearly lost to the
Union army.
Colonel Opdycke of
Wagner's division had brought his brigade within the lines and was ready for the emergency.
Turning toward his men to give the order to charge, he found they had already fixed their bayonets for the desperate encounter.
Behind these men stood the Twelfth and Sixteenth Kentucky regiments in the same attitude.
“First Brigade, forward to the works,” came the ringing words of the colonel.
His men scarcely needed the order.
Following their gallant leader, they saw him ride forward, empty his revolver, then use it as a club in a hand-to-hand fight, and finally dismount and grasp a musket.
The men fought like demons, in their desperate endeavor to stem the tide of gray.
Stanley, at his headquarters beyond the river, had seen the impending disaster to the troops.
Galloping to the scene of battle, he was about to order
Opdycke to the attack.
He was too late to give the command but not too late to enter the conflict.
Cheering his men, he rode into the death-dealing contest in which he was presently severely wounded.
The bayonet and the clubbed musket were freely used.
The breach was closed, and the day was all but won by the
Federals.
The recaptured guns now poured their charges of death into the shattered ranks in gray.
But the courageous Southerners were not to be thus outdone.
The cloud of smoke had hardly cleared from the field when they again took up the gage of battle.
In sheer desperation and with an appalling recklessness of life, they thrust themselves upon the
Union lines again and again, only to recoil, battered and bleeding.
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Thomas — the “rock of Chickamauga” who became the “sledge of Nashville”
Major-General George Henry Thomas, Virginia-born soldier loyal to the Union; commended for gallantry in the Seminole War, and for service in Mexico; won the battle of Mill Spring, January 19, 1862; commanded the right wing of the Army of the Tennessee against Corinth and at Perryville, and the center at Stone's River.
Only his stability averted overwhelming defeat for the Federals at Chickamauga.
At Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge he was a host in himself.
After Sherman had taken Atlanta he sent Thomas back to Tennessee to grapple with Hood.
How he crushed Hood by his sledge-hammer blows is told in the accompanying text.
Thomas, sitting down in Nashville, bearing the brunt of Grant's impatience, and ignoring completely the proddings from Washington to advance before he was ready, while he waited grimly for the psychological moment to strike the oncoming Confederate host under Hood, is one of the really big dramatic figures of the entire war. It has been well said of Thomas that every promotion he received was a reward of merit; and that during his long and varied career as a soldier no crisis ever arose too great for his ability. |
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Evening fell upon the battling hosts, and long into the night there was heard the sharp volleys of musketry.
Thus closed one of the fiercest of the minor struggles of the
Civil War. At midnight,
Schofield withdrew from the trenches of
Franklin and fell back to
Thomas at
Nashville.
Many gallant Southern leaders fell on the battlefield of
Franklin, whose loss to the
Confederacy was irreparable.
Five generals and a long list of field-officers were among the killed.
General Patrick Cleburne, a native of
Ireland and a veteran of the
British army, and
General John Adams, both fell in the desperate charges at the breach in the
Federal lines when
Wagner's brigades were swept headlong from the front of the battle-line.
Hood appeared before the army of
Thomas, on December 2d.
Preparations at once began in both camps for the decisive contest.
Hood was furnishing his army with supplies and with shoes, and throwing up entrenchments parallel to those of the
Union army.
Thomas was remounting his cavalry and increasing the strength of his works.
The city was well fortified.
On the surrounding hills the forts bristled with cannon.
But the
Federal commander was not ready for battle.
Thomas was not a born military strategist.
But he was a remarkable tactician.
No battle of the war was better planned and none was so nearly carried out to the letter of the plan as the
battle of Nashville.
It has been said that this plan of
Thomas is the only one of the entire war that is now studied as a model in
European military schools.
But
Thomas was not acting quickly enough to satisfy
Grant and the
Washington authorities.
Day after day, telegrams and messages poured in on him, giving advice and urging immediate action.
Thomas stood firm.
Finally an order for his removal was issued but never delivered.
In a telegram to
Halleck,
Thomas stated that if it was desirable to relieve him of his command he would submit without a murmur.
Finally, preparations were completed.
But, just then a
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Thirty-two Ohio regiments fought at Nashville
Ohio's part in 1861-65 was a large one, promptly and bravely played.
Thirty-two regiments, besides cavalry companies and artillery batteries from that State, were in service in the operations around
Nashville.
Colonel Emerson Opdycke, afterwards brevetted major-general, commanded the One-Hundred-and-Twenty-fifth Ohio as part of the rear-guard at
Spring Hill.
Some of these troops are shown above The lads in the lower picture made up the band of the One-Hundred-and-Twenty-fifth.
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A typical group of veterans, from the one-hundred-and-twenty-fifth Ohio--“Opdycke's tigers” |
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The “tiger band” of the one-hundred-and-twenty-fifth Ohio before Nashville |
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severe storm of freezing rain poured down upon the waiting armies and held the country in its frigid grasp.
The ground was covered with a glare of ice. Horses and men slid and sprawled on the slippery surface.
It was impossible to move an army under such conditions.
Still the bombardment of messages from the
East continued.
On December 14th, the ice began to melt.
That night
Thomas called a council of his corps commanders and laid before them his well-matured plans for the morrow's battle.
Then he telegraphed to
Grant that the ice had melted and the attack would be made in the morning.
Had the storm continued, the attack must have been postponed and
Thomas probably would not have been the hero of
Nashville.
Even as it was,
Logan was hurrying from the
East toward that city to take command of the army.
When he reached
Louisville, in Kentucky, on the 17th, he heard that the battle was over and he came no farther.
At four on the morning of December 15th, reveille sounded through the
Union Camp of fifty-five thousand soldiers.
Two hours later, the men were standing in array of battle.
The air was soft and even balmy.
A heavy river-fog hung over the lowlands and across the city.
In the dense pall, regiments of soldiers, like phantom warriors, moved across the country.
By nine o'clock the sun had pierced the mist and to the observers on the hilltops it was a brilliant spectacle.
The battle-lines were rapidly forming.
With the precision of a well-oiled machine, the battalions were moving to their places.
Squadrons of cavalry were passing along the lowlands to take their position in the battle-line.
Great guns glinted through embrasures ready to vomit forth their missiles of destruction.
The plan of the
battle of Nashville as formed by
Thomas was simple — a feint attack on the opposing army's right, the striking of a sudden and irresistible blow on his left, followed by successive attacks until the
Southern army was battered into
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Camp-fires were still smouldering along the side of the abatis where the lens caught the field of
Nashville, while
Thomas' concentric forward movement was in progress.
Note the abatis to the right of the picture, the wagons moving and ready to move in the background, and the artillery on the left.
White tents gleam from the distant hills.
A few straggling soldiers remain.
The Federals are closing with
Hood's army a couple of miles to the right of the scene in the picture.
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Guarding the line during the advance |
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disorganization and routed.
About forty-five thousand Federals were actually engaged at
Nashville.
Against them
Hood mustered some thirty-eight thousand Confederates.
At eight o'clock,
Steedman sent
Colonels Morgan and
Grosvenor to demonstrate on the
Confederate right.
This was gallantly done, in the face of a severe fire, and so closely did it resemble a genuine attack that
Hood was completely deceived.
At once, he drew troops from his center to strengthen the endangered flank.
Then on the
Union right, infantry and dismounted cavalry moved out against the weakened Confederate left.
The cooperation of these two arms of the service was almost perfect.
Soon, the battle was raging along the entire front.
The Federal forces were gradually converging.
The Confederate lines were being crowded from their first position.
Montgomery Hill, the salient point of the
Confederate defense, was a strong position commanding a view of the surrounding country.
It was here that one of the most daring assaults of the day was made.
At one o'clock,
Colonel Post's brigade dashed up the hill, direct at the works on the summit.
The color-bearers forged rapidly ahead.
At the top, without a moment's hesitation, the troops plunged across the works, capturing guns and men.
Still, the flail of war kept pounding at the
Confederate center.
Hour after hour, the
Union lines, compact and unyielding, battered the ranks of the
Southern troops.
As the sun set on the evening of that day, the army of
Hood found itself more than two miles from the place it occupied in the morning.
The new day found the
Confederate general still undaunted.
During the night he had formed a new line of battle.
It was shorter, stronger, and more compact than that of the preceding day. Works had been thrown up in front, while behind rose a range of hills.
These were strongly fortified.
The second position was stronger than the first.
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When
Hood attacked
Nashville, early in December, 1834, the
Union army, under
Thomas, was entrenched in a semi-circle on the wooded hills about the city, both flanks resting on the
Cumberland River.
Hundreds of spectators watched the fighting from the other hills.
The picture at the top of this page was taken on the heights to the east, on December 15th.
The view at the bottom was looking northwest.
The spectators caught by the alert photographer might not have realized the tremendous significance of the struggle going on before them, but they could all witness the mathematical precision of
Thomas' tactics.
The checking of
Hood at
Nashville made
Sherman's position secure in the heart of the
Confederacy.
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The battlefield from the military college |
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It was past noon before
Thomas was ready to repeat the tactics of the preceding day. On the
Confederate right was Overton's Hill, a strongly fortified position.
Colonel Post was designated to lead the
Federal attack.
Supported by a brigade of negro troops, the assaulting columns moved up the steep ascent.
With precision the lines marched toward the crest of the hill.
All was well until the final dash was to be made, when a withering fire drove them back to the foot of the hill.
The extreme Confederate left also rested upon a hill.
To
Colonel McMillen was given the task of wresting it from the possession of the
Southern troops.
Forming his regiments,--the One hundred and fourteenth Illinois, the Ninety-third Indiana, the Tenth Minnesota, the Seventy-second Ohio and the Ninety-fifth Ohio--into two lines, he rapidly moved forward.
The approaching lines of attack were received with a hail of musketry, and grape and canister from the Confederate artillery.
But unwaveringly the cheering ranks carried the position.
The success of this charge on the right inspired the left, and again the attempt to carry Overton's Hill was made, this time successfully.
These successes of the
Union lines became contagious.
A general forward movement was made along the entire front.
It was irresistible.
No troops could withstand such an impact.
Hood's splendid and courageous army was routed.
From thirty-eight thousand men who entered the fight it was reduced to a remnant.
Flinging aside muskets and everything that would impede progress, the army that was to revivify the hopes of the failing Confederacy was fleeing in utter confusion along the
Franklin pike through Brentwood Pass.
This Confederate Army of
Tennessee had had a glorious history.
It had fought with honor from
Donelson and
Shiloh to
Atlanta and
Nashville.
It had been at
Murfreesboro,
Chickamauga,
Lookout Mountain, and
Missionary Ridge.
Now, shattered and demoralized, it was relentlessly pursued beyond the
Tennessee River, never again to emerge as a fighting army in the
Southwest.