Tuesday, March 19, 2019

Sherman's Atlanta Campaign


Map illustrating the Atlanta Campaign
The days of guard duty along the Tennessee railroad were no more. On April 4, 1864, the 11th and William's 12th corps were combined into a new Twentieth Army Corps. Together with other army corps, they would form an army of 100,000 under General William T. Sherman, which would become of one of the most famous armies in the history of warfare. 

The map to the left (Click to enlarge) graphically represents the movements of Sherman's new army from May to September 1864. Hopefully it will help the reader follow the Campaign's progress as discussed in the letters and commentary that follow.

Sherman's army was part of the plan to devastate the underbelly of the Confederacy. Starting on May 4, 1864, the Twentieth Corps joined the Atlanta campaign, participating during the next four months in all the important battles. 

During the first month, the hardest fighting occurring at Resaca on May 15, 1864 and at New Hope Church on May 25, 1864. 

William's 107th Regiment fought hard in the many skirmishes and battles on its way to Atlanta, losing a great many men in the battle of New Hope Church. The 107th would be among the first troops to enter Atlanta, ultimately becoming its police force and guard against any future Confederate attacks. 

 

Commentary


Cassville is sometimes referred to as the "Battle that never was", as Johnston had hoped to isolate and destroy part of Sherman’s army here. However, the trap was not sprung after John Bell Hood hesitated in the face of what he believed was a much larger Union force. Cassville was destroyed by Sherman (11/5/64) in retaliation for Southern guerrilla activity in the area. It was not rebuilt until the 20th century.

Rocky Face Ridge (May 7-12)


At Rocky Face Ridge, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston had entrenched his army on the long, high mountain of Rocky Face Ridge and eastward across Crow Valley. 

General Joseph Johnston
When Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman approached the trenches he decided to make contact against the position with two columns while he sent a third one to the right through Snake Creek Gap to hit the Western & Atlantic Railroad at Resaca. 

The two remaining Union columns under Sherman's direct command engaged the enemy at Buzzard Roost (Mill Creek Gap) and at Dug Gap. In the meantime, the third column, under Maj. Gen. James Birdseye McPherson, passed through Snake Creek Gap and on May 9th advanced to the outskirts of Resaca where it found Confederates entrenched. 

Fearing defeat, McPherson pulled his column back to Snake Creek Gap. On the 10th, Sherman decided to take most of his men and join McPherson to take Resaca. The next morning, Sherman’s army withdrew from in front of Rocky Face Ridge. Discovering Sherman’s movement, Johnston retired south towards Resaca on the 12th.

Resaca (May 13-15)


In the Battle of Resaca casualties were about equal on both sides. This is the battle William Graham describes in his letter.

Gen. Joseph E. Johnston had withdrawn from Rocky Face Ridge to the hills around Resaca. On the 13th, the Union troops tested the Rebel lines to pinpoint their whereabouts. The next day full scale fighting occurred, and the Union troops were generally repulsed except on the Rebel right flank where Sherman did not fully exploit his advantage. On the 15th, the battle continued with no advantage to either side until Sherman sent a force across the Oostanula River, at Lay’s Ferry, towards Johnston’s railroad supply line. Unable to halt this Union movement, Johnston was forced to retire.

Battle of Resaca

New Hope Church and Dallas (May 25-June 1) 

 

The Battles of New Hope Church and Dallas occurred as a series of engagements beginning after William's May 21 letter was sent. Prior to the battle, Johnston’s army fell back from the vicinity of Cassville-Kinston, first to Allatoona Pass and then to the Dallas area and entrenched. Sherman’s army tested the Rebel line while entrenching themselves.

The Battle of New Hope Church occurred with intense trench warfare and skirmishing associated with an attack on May 25 and 26 under Hooker's 20th Corps command. It was reported that 703 Union soldiers were killed and 350 taken prisoner as a result of this battle. The Battle of Dallas occurred on May 28 when Confederate Lt. Gen. William J. Hardee’s forces, looking for any weakness, probed the Union defensive line held by Maj. Gen. John A. Logan’s forces. Fighting ensued at two different points. The Rebels were repulsed, suffering some 600 more casualties than the Union forces.

Sherman looked for a way around Johnston’s line, and, on June 1, his cavalry occupied Allatoona Pass, which had a railroad and would allow his men and supplies to reach him by train. Sherman abandoned his lines at Dallas on June 5 and moved toward the railhead at Allatoona Pass forcing Johnston to follow soon afterwards. Since Sherman took great pains to ensure security measures for his supply and communications lines, he could be fairly confident that supplies would continue to flow without interruption. The battle resulted in a Union victory.

Confederate Strategic Error 

 

The unwillingness of Confederate authorities in Richmond to temporarily abandon Mississippi and to utilize the substantial forces available there to counter the primary Union threat against Atlanta demonstrated the flaws in Confederate President Davis’ command system. Union diversionary operations in Mississippi effectively kept Forrest – probably the only cavalry leader who could have seriously threatened Sherman’s logistics – away from the Union commander’s railroad lifeline. Because of Sherman’s detailed advance planning, the railroad from Chattanooga to Atlanta (the part of the line in Union hands) was well defended, and the Union army well maintained.

Commentary


William Tecumseh Sherman received recognition for his outstanding command of military strategy as well as criticism for the harshness of the "scorched earth" policies that he implemented in conducting total war against the Confederate States. Military historian Basil Liddell Hart famously declared that Sherman was "the first modern general".[1]

General William Tecumseh Sherman
Sherman served under General Ulysses S. Grant in 1862 and 1863 during the campaigns that led to the fall of the Confederate stronghold of Vicksburg on the Mississippi River and culminated with the routing of the Confederate armies in the state of Tennessee. In 1864, Sherman succeeded Grant as the Union commander in the western theater of the war. 

He proceeded to lead his troops to the capture of the city of Atlanta, a military success that contributed to the re-election of President Abraham Lincoln. Sherman's subsequent march through Georgia and the Carolinas further undermined the Confederacy's ability to continue fighting. He accepted the surrender of all the Confederate armies in the Carolinas, Georgia, and Florida in April 1865.

Prior to Atlanta, William Graham's 107th Regiment participated in two more battles after Dallas; Kennesaw Mountain at the end of June and Peachtree Creek two days after this letter was written.

Kennesaw Mountain (June 27)


The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain took place on June 27, 1864. On the night of June 18-19, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, fearing envelopment, withdrew his army to a new, previously selected position astride Kennesaw Mountain. This entrenched arc-shaped line, to the north and west of Marietta, protected the Western & Atlantic Railroad, the supply link to Atlanta. Having defeated General John B. Hood troops at Kolb’s Farm on the 22nd, Sherman was sure that Johnston had stretched his line too thin and, therefore, decided on a frontal attack with some diversions on the flanks. On the morning of June 27, Sherman sent his troops forward after an artillery bombardment. At first they made some headway overrunning Confederate pickets. However, attacking an enemy that was well dug in is usually futile. The fighting ended by noon, and Sherman suffered high casualties - 3000 to 1000 for the Rebels.

Major General Joseph Hooker
Joseph Hooker became known as "Fighting Joe" during the Civil War. He gained a reputation as a solid commander when he was transferred westward to reinforce the Army of the Cumberland around Chattanooga, Tennessee. Hooker was in command at the Battle of Lookout Mountain, playing an important role in Lt. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant's decisive victory at the Battle of Chattanooga. He was brevetted to major general in the regular army for his success at Chattanooga, but he was disappointed to find that Grant's official report of the battle credited his friend William Tecumseh Sherman's contribution over Hooker's.

Hooker led his now 20th Corps (William Graham's Corps) competently in the 1864 Atlanta Campaign under Sherman, but asked to be relieved before the capture of the city because of his dissatisfaction with the promotion of Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard to command of the Army of the Tennessee, upon the death of Maj. Gen. James B. McPherson.

 

Chattahoochee River Line  (July 8 - 9)



Example of pontoon bridge used to quickly cross rivers
The Chattahoochee River Line was revolutionary in its design and formidable in its strength. Sherman called it "one of the strongest pieces of field fortifications I ever saw". It stretched about seven miles along a ridge on the northern bank of the Chattahoochee River. The fortifications included 36 distinctive small forts called Shoupades after their designer, Confederate Brigadier General Francis A. Shoup. A network of trenches connected them.

General Joseph Johnston's Confederates took up the line as a defensive position following the battle of Kennesaw Mountain. The River Line was such a well-engineered defensive system that Union forces declined a direct assault; instead they dug themselves in to engage in daily artillery duels.

At the River Line on July 8 and 9, Union forces feigned to the right, but crossed the Chattahoochee by the left. Rapidly assembled bridges soon spanned the Chattahoochee, and wagons and men of Sherman’s army were pouring across the waterway to flank the Confederate position. This was the pontoon bridge mentioned in William's letter. Johnston abandoned the River Line on the evening of July 9, 1864.

To secure the real prize – the city of Atlanta – the Federals had to sever its railroads; four lines radiating out of the city to various vital points of the Confederacy. Once across the Chattahoochee, Sherman controlled the first, the Western & Atlantic railroad. Johnston was forced once more to retreat.

Johnston's strategy throughout the Atlanta Campaign seemed to be withdrawal. He would prepare strong defensive positions, only to see Sherman maneuver around them, causing Johnston to fall back in the general direction of Atlanta. Johnston saw the preservation of his army as most important. He handled his army well, slowing the Union advance and inflicting heavier losses than he sustained. However, given the Union's advantage in numbers, it was not enough.

Peachtree Creek (July 20)



By noon of July 17th Johnston's forces waited behind his first line of entrenchments (prepared in advance for this very occasion) south of Peach Tree Creek, an east to west flowing stream, about three miles north of Atlanta. Confederate President Jefferson Davis becoming increasingly irritated by Johnston's withdrawal strategy removed Johnston from command on July 17, 1864.  Lt. General John Bell Hood was substituted to command the Confederate army on July 18, 1864, the date of William Graham's letter. 

Sherman split his army into three columns for the assault with George H. Thomas’s Army of the Cumberland moving from the north. Johnston had decided to attack Thomas, but it was Hood who actually attacked on July 20, 1864 after Thomas's army crossed Peach Tree Creek. The determined assault threatened to overrun the Union troops at various locations. Ultimately, though, the Yankees held, and the Rebels fell back. Victory went to the Union with the Confederates suffering a level of casualties which they could not long sustain: 4,796 to the Union's 1,710.

Clement Vallandigham
Clement Laird Vallandigham was an Ohio member of the Copperhead faction of anti-war, pro-Confederate Democrats during the American Civil War. Vallandigham was a vigorous supporter of Constitutional "States' Rights" and although personally opposed to slavery, believed that the federal government had no power to regulate the institution. He further believed that the Confederacy had a right to secede and could not constitutionally be conquered militarily.

He supported the Crittenden Compromise and proposed (February 20, 1861) a division of the Senate and of the electoral college into four sections, each with a veto. He strongly opposed every military bill, leading his opponents to allege that he wanted the Confederacy to win the war. He was the acknowledged leader of the Copperheads and in May 1862 coined their slogan, "To maintain the Constitution as it is, and to restore the Union as it was."

Monday, March 11, 2019

Wartrace

View from the railroad tracks of Wartrace's downtown area. This area of the town is listed
on the National Register of Historic Places as the Wartrace Historic District.

Commentary


The name Wartrace came from a Cherokee Indian trail that once passed through the area. Wartrace is connected to Shelbyville by the Walking Horse and Eastern Railroad, a historic rail line that is still in part-time operation. The town, initially known as "Wartrace Depot," was established in the early 1850s as a stop on the newly constructed Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad.

During the Civil War, the rail line was strategic to both the Union and Confederate armies. The Tennessee campaigns of 1862 and 1863 saw Union troops force the Confederates from Nashville all the way to Chattanooga along the line of the railroad. The tracks and bridges were repeatedly damaged and repaired, and the rolling stock was largely destroyed. At different times the trains carried supplies for both armies.

During the Civil War, the town was the winter headquarters of Confederate General William J. Hardee following the Battle of Stones River. The Old Chockley Tavern in Wartrace was a gathering place for Confederate officers during the Tullahoma Campaign. A skirmish was fought at Wartrace on April 11, 1862. The town eventually came under Union control toward the end of 1863.

With the increase in rail travel in the late 19th century, Wartrace experienced a boom period. At its height, the town had six inns and hotels, and serviced 13 trains per day. One hotel, the Walking Horse Hotel, is still in business today.

William did not have an ordinary peasant's taste in newspapers. He hungered for knowledge, not sensationalism. He sided with those wronged by a slave owning society. He was an abolitionist.

Horace Greeley
The New York Tribune was one of the major newspapers of the day. The Tribune was created by Horace Greeley in 1841 to provide a trustworthy media source in an era when newspapers such as the New York Sun and New York Herald thrived on sensationalism. Although considered the least partisan of the leading newspapers, the Tribune did reflect some of Horace Greeley's idealist views. During the Civil War the Tribune was radical Republican in view, supporting abolition of slavery and subjection of the Confederacy instead of negotiated peace.

Harriet Beecher Stowe, a strong abolitionist wrote for both the New York Evangelist and the Independent...”

The NY Evangelist was published from 1830 to 1902. To give a sense of the opinion of the publications read by William Graham, a writer for the New York Evangelist wrote on July 25, 1861: We are now opening our eyes to the unwelcome fact that they are enemies of the country, and must be dealt with as TRAITORS. This once settled, scruples fast vanish about the mode of conducting the war. We feel bound to use every means in our power to put down a rebellion which is striking at the very life of the nation.

In the same issue the Evangelist asked: why not make a speedy end of this dreadful business by at once proclaiming freedom to the slaves?…Whatever rights they [southerners] had before as loyal citizens, they have forfeited by their treason and rebellion.

There are 74 Comstock’s with NY regiments, none with the 107th. In the 1860 Census the only male Comstock of young man age in Schuyler County (Town of Reading) was John age 13, which would have made him 17 in 1864.

Davids' Island is a 78 acre island off the coast of New Rochelle, New York. It is about 5 miles north of Throg's Point, the location of Fort Schuyler, on the western end of Long Island Sound. Currently uninhabited, the island has been owned by the City of New Rochelle for more than 30 years. After a number of false starts, including a brief attempt by Donald Trump to develop the island, its future use remains undetermined. Remaining structures on the island were demolished by the city in 2008. So much for history.

The U.S. Government in April, 1862 rented the island for hospital purposes from the then owner, Thaddeus Davids. Wooden structures were immediately erected which housed thousands of wounded prisoners from the battlefields of the Civil War. At the end of the war, Congress authorized its purchase for military purposes and it was conveyed to the United States in 1867. It was later converted to a coastal artillery defense post and was given the name Fort Slocum after Major General Henry W. Slocum, U.S. Volunteers.

Fort Slocum on David's Island in 1968

Uncle Bell was the father of Dr. Robert Bell. Uncle Bell's first wife Elizabeth died in 1846 and was the sister of William Graham's father.

The writing of love letters for another is one practice that seems to have disappeared in our society. It still occurs in societies on this planet where literacy is less universal. Not sure who was the Boyes for whom William was writing love letters.

 

Commentary

 

William Graham's comments about living in "the midst of sin" and his frequent references to the Lord indicate he was a religious man of the stricter sort. At the same time, his comments about slave owners and his preferences in newspapers would indicate that he was an abolitionist.

Abolitionism had a strong religious base including Quakers, and people converted by the revivalist fervor of the Second Great Awakening in the North in the 1830s. Belief in abolition contributed to the breaking away of some small denominations, such as the Free Methodist Church. 

Evangelical abolitionists founded some colleges, most notably Bates College in Maine and Oberlin College in Ohio. In the North, most opponents of slavery supported other modernizing reform movements such as the temperance movement, public schooling, and prison- and asylum-building. They split bitterly on the role of women's activism.

William was raised a Presbyterian in Ireland. The Free Methodist Church was founded in 1860 in western New York near where William Graham worked as a farmer. They opposed slavery, supporting freedom for all slaves in the United States.

The denomination was more conservative than the regular Methodists with regards to drinking, smoking, gambling, jewelry and modern dancing. Given these beliefs, and the association of his descendants in Schuyler County with the Methodist Church, there is a strong possibility that William was a Free Methodist.

Methodist camp revival meeting in the 1830s
Guy C. Adams is recorded as being with the 107th by the Nat’l Park Service database. Like William, he went in as a private and out as a Sergeant. Guy Adams, age 15 is listed in 1860 Census living in the Town of Dix. Guy, who would have been 19 in 1864, is mentioned in a number of William Graham's letters.

Dr. Robert Bell - Detailed information on his life may be found in William's Letter Correspondents.

This mention of a shilling is the only indication in William Graham's surviving letters of his Irish origins.

Anna is mentioned in a number of William Graham's letters. In 2008 one might call her a girl friend, but his comments about her to his sister convey an ambivalent feeling on both sides. Whatever transpired in their relationship, he eventually married another woman, Mary Platt.

Blockhouse at Union camp guarding the Nashville & Chattanooga Railroad

 

Commentary


Rural New Yorker, a farm paper founded in 1850 as Moore's Rural New Yorker, dedicated "to home interests of both country and town residents."

Interesting the importance placed on the photo, the picture of loved person as a representation of that loved one. Photography was then a new technology and had a fascination and significance which has diminished today.

The rumors about heading to Kentucky were wrong. William's suspicion in that regard was correct. However, change was indeed afoot. The Atlanta Campaign which would culminate in the fall and burning of that city would begin in a little over a month - on May 7, 1864.

William and the 107th Regiment would again experience the stress, fear and excitement of battle. The boredom and sins of the last six months would be no more. Now a different sort of horror would bathe the land of Georgia.