Everything about The Army Of Tennessee totally explained
The
Army of Tennessee was the principal
Confederate army operating between the
Appalachians and the
Mississippi (the
Western Theater) during the
American Civil War. It is named after the State of
Tennessee, unlike the
Army of the Tennessee, which was a
Union army, named for the
Tennessee River.
History
The army was formed on
November 20,
1862, renaming the
Army of Mississippi. Its first commander was General
Braxton Bragg, who fought Union
Maj. Gen. William Rosecrans's
Army of the Cumberland to a draw at the
Battle of Stones River on
December 31,
1862. However, Bragg was forced to withdraw from
Murfreesboro and fall back on
Tullahoma.
In the summer of 1863, Rosecrans began an offensive, generally known as the
Tullahoma Campaign, after the Confederate headquarters. Union forces gradually forced Bragg to fall back into northern
Georgia, abandoning the important railroad hub of
Chattanooga. However, reinforced by
Lt. Gen. James Longstreet's
corps from the
Army of Northern Virginia, the Army of Tennessee was able to inflict a significant defeat on Rosecrans at
Chickamauga in September 1863, advancing to besiege Chattanooga. The Army of the Cumberland was, however, reinforced by the troops of Maj. Gen.
Ulysses S. Grant's Army of the Tennessee, along with two corps from the
Army of the Potomac under Maj. Gen.
Joseph Hooker, which combined with the Army of the Cumberland to inflict a significant defeat on Bragg at the
Battle of Missionary Ridge on
November 25, forcing Bragg to abandon the siege of Chattanooga and withdraw again into northern Georgia.
Shortly thereafter, Bragg was dismissed and replaced as commander of the army by Gen.
Joseph E. Johnston, who was much better liked by both troops and high level subordinates than the sour Bragg. In the 1864
Atlanta Campaign, Johnston faced the combined Northern armies of Maj. Gen.
William T. Sherman, whose orders were to destroy the Army of Tennessee, with the capture of Atlanta as the secondary objective. Johnston, who felt the continued existence of his army was more important than protecting territory, tended to avoid battle with Sherman, executing a skillful withdrawal, which caused impatience among the Confederate leadership in
Richmond, particularly
Confederate President Jefferson Davis, who had never gotten on well with Johnston. Following Sherman's outflanking of Johnston at the
Chattahoochee River, forcing Johnston back on Atlanta itself, Johnston was replaced by Lt. Gen.
John Bell Hood.
Hood's tenure as commander proved disastrous. After several unsuccessful attempts to force Sherman's withdrawal from Atlanta, the city fell to Union troops on
September 2,
1864. Instead of continuing to parry against Sherman's forces, Hood now turned west and headed back north into Tennessee, allowing Sherman to turn south unopposed for the
March to the Sea. In the meantime, Hood was faced in Tennessee by the army's old enemy, the Army of the Cumberland, under Maj. Gen.
George H. Thomas, as well as the
Army of the Ohio under Maj. Gen.
John Schofield. On
November 30,
1864, Hood attacked Schofield's smaller army at the
Battle of Franklin, losing almost a quarter of his troops, but continued to advance north into central Tennessee, where he attempted to besiege
Nashville. On
December 15, Thomas's troops launched their attack, completely routing the Confederates in the most decisive tactical engagement of the war. The Federals pursued the retreating Army of Tennessee, which left stragglers, cannon, and small arms its wake. When the army stopped its retreat in
Tupelo just before the new year, barely half of the men remained who had set out at the beginning of the campaign.
Thereafter, the Army of Tennessee ceased to be an effective fighting force, although its remnants were sent to the
Carolinas to provide some opposition to Sherman's continuing advance in that area. The army surrendered to Sherman on
April 26,
1865.
Corps organization
Major battles and campaigns
(Bragg)
Battle of Stones River (Bragg)
Chickamauga Campaign (Bragg)
Battle of Chattanooga (Bragg)
Atlanta Campaign (Johnston, relieved/Hood)
Franklin-Nashville Campaign (Hood)
Carolinas Campaign (Johnston)Further Information
Get more info on 'Army Of Tennessee'.
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