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Author Topic: Shiloh: First mass slaughter at 'place of peace'  (Read 5025 times)
Henry Moon
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« on: April 25, 2007, 11:21:40 am »

 

 By Francis P. Sempa
SPECIAL TO THE WASHINGTON TIMES
Published April 15, 2006

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
 
 
The word Shiloh, which in Hebrew means place of peace, instead evokes images and reflections of the violence and slaughter of war.
 
    For two days in April 1862, Union and Confederate armies clashed in fields and wooded areas near a religious meeting-house called Shiloh in southwestern Tennessee. It was the first mass-casualty battle of the Civil War.
 
    More Americans fell at Shiloh than in all previous American wars combined. The Union commander, Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, concluded after the battle that the Union could be saved only by the "complete conquest" of the Confederacy.
 
    After the capture by the Union of Tennessee forts Henry and Donelson in February 1862, Confederate forces under the command of Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston concentrated at Corinth, Miss., just below the Tennessee border. Union forces, meanwhile, traveled down the Tennessee River and disembarked on the western bank of the river at Pittsburg Landing.
 
    Union troops under the command of Gen. William T. Sherman camped near Shiloh Chapel, about four miles inland of Pittsburg Landing. Grant planned to attack Confederate forces at Corinth, an important railroad hub, after Union reinforcements under Gen. Don Carlos Buell arrived from the north. Johnston, however, ordered Confederate forces to leave Corinth and attack the Union Army in Tennessee before Buell's reinforcements could arrive.
 
    The battle began on April 6 at about 5 a.m., when a Union reconnaissance force ran into Confederate skirmishers in a clearing known as Fraley Field. When word of the initial clash reached Johnston, he ordered the Confederate army forward to attack. About an hour later, Sherman's forces near Shiloh Chapel, caught somewhat off guard, were under heavy assault by Confederate troops.
 
    Union troops gradually gave way under the fierce Confederate charges. Some soldiers, and even whole regiments, panicked and took flight toward Pittsburg Landing. Sherman, attempting to rally his forces, was twice wounded.
 
    Grant arrived on the battlefield at midmorning and observed firsthand the precarious position of his army. Union troops were falling back across a four-mile front. On the left, Gen. Benjamin Prentiss occupied an "eroded wagon trail" later described as a "sunken road," and Grant ordered him to hold the position "at all hazards."
 
    This area became the scene of some of the fiercest fighting of the battle and of the entire war. Prentiss' troops held the position for several hours in the face of repeated Confederate assaults. Union firing from the position was so fierce that Confederate soldiers reportedly cried, "It's a hornet's nest in there," thus giving the place its historic name.
 
    Twelve times the Southern forces attacked the Hornet's Nest, and each time they were repulsed, creating what historian Shelby Foote called "a thickening carpet of dead and wounded." The Confederates then massed 62 cannons and fired grape and canister across the "sunken road."
 
    "It was as if," wrote Mr. Foote, "the Hornet's Nest exploded, inclosing its defenders in a smoky, flame-cracked din of flying clods, splintered trees, uprooted brush, and whirring metal." The toll of repeated Confederate assaults combined with the fury of Confederate cannons resulted in Prentiss' surrender of more than 2,000 troops. But Union resistance in the Hornet's Nest bought Grant precious time.
 
    All along the front, the Union Army was in retreat. By about 4 p.m., a defensive perimeter had formed near Pittsburg Landing. Grant knew that if he could hold his position for a while, darkness would bring an end to the fighting that day and reinforcements would arrive before morning.
 
    Earlier in the day's fighting, Confederate commander Albert Sidney Johnston had been killed when a bullet tore through the femoral artery just above his right knee. Had Johnston's staff physician been present and made aware of the wound, he could have used a tourniquet to stop the flow of blood and save Johnston's life. Johnston, however, had ordered the physician to attend to Union wounded that he had encountered on the battlefield.
 
    Johnston's replacement in command, Gen. Pierre G.T. Beauregard, called off the fighting at dusk despite vehement protests from Confederate cavalry Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest. Beauregard wired Richmond that a great and complete victory had been won. Forrest wanted to launch a night attack, and warned: "If the enemy comes on us in the morning, we'll be whipped like hell."

    There was no night attack. Grant held his tenuous defensive position near Pittsburg Landing. When a Union officer asked Grant if preparations should be made for a retreat, Grant responded: "Retreat? No! I propose to attack at daylight and whip them." When Grant met with Sherman later that evening, Sherman commented, "We've had the devil's own day, haven't we?" Grant responded, "Yes, lick 'em tomorrow, though."
 
    The next morning, after a heavy overnight rainstorm, Grant went on the offensive after receiving about 25,000 reinforcements from Buell and Gen. Lew Wallace (who later gained fame as the author of "Ben Hur"). Slowly, Union forces moved forward, gaining back ground lost the day before, but at a heavy price. There was heavy fighting near a peach orchard and, again, near Shiloh Chapel. By midafternoon, the Confederates were in full retreat toward Corinth. The Battle of Shiloh was over.
 
    The appalling losses plus reports that Union forces were taken by surprise the first day resulted in calls for Grant's dismissal. President Lincoln, however, was more impressed with Grant's tenaciousness in overcoming the first day's defeat and regaining the field on the second day. "I can't spare this man," Lincoln said of Grant. "He fights."

    The number of casualties at Shiloh made the previous "big" battles of Manassas and Wilson's Creek look like minor engagements. Approximately 100,000 soldiers fought at Shiloh, and when it was over more than 24,000 had become casualties (dead, wounded or missing). Shiloh, wrote Shelby Foote, "was the first great modern battle. It was Wilson's Creek and Manassas rolled together, quadrupled, and compressed into an area smaller than either. From the inside it resembled Armageddon."
 
    The bloodbath begun at Shiloh would be replicated at the Seven Days Battles, Second Manassas, Antietam, Fredericksburg, Stones River, Chancellorsville, Gettysburg, Chickamauga, the Wilderness, Spotsylvania, and Petersburg. In the words of historian James McPherson, "Shiloh launched the country onto the floodtide of total war."
     
    • Francis P. Sempa, author of "Geopolitics: From the Cold War to the 21st Century," is an assistant U.S. attorney for the Middle District of Pennsylvania and an adjunct professor of political science at Wilkes University.

http://www.washingtontimes.com/civilwar/20060414-103617-4980r_page2.htm

Terry
   


« Last Edit: May 16, 2007, 01:39:54 am by William42 » Logged
Henry Moon
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« Reply #1 on: June 23, 2007, 10:14:44 pm »

               ************************* Shiloh **************************

April 6-7, 1862
Estimated Casualties: 23,746 total (US 13,047; CS 10,699)

 
 

Pvt. Sampson Altman, Jr.
Company C, 29th Regiment,
Georgia Volunteers, C.S.A.

Pvt. Altman fought in the battle of Shiloh.
He died April 23, 1863 from disease.
« Last Edit: June 23, 2007, 10:22:51 pm by William42 » Logged
Henry Moon
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« Reply #2 on: June 23, 2007, 10:26:17 pm »



Re-constructed Shiloh Church


The Battle of Shiloh takes its name from a Methodist log church that stood during the battle. On the morning of Sunday, April 6, 1862, Brig. Gen. William T. Sherman, commander of the Fifth Division of the Union Army of the Tennessee, and his men were camped near Shiloh Church when surprised and assailed by the Confederates.
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #3 on: June 23, 2007, 10:28:35 pm »



Tennessee River, looking northeast from Pittsburg Landing




Tennessee River, looking southeast from Pittsburg Landing
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #4 on: June 23, 2007, 10:30:21 pm »



Fraley Field


THE BATTLE BEGINS

As dawn approached on Sunday, April 6, 1862, soldiers in the Union camps near Shiloh Church began to stir. While some continued to sleep, others prepared for breakfast. They didn't know that more than 40,000 Southerners with loaded rifle-muskets and bayonets were marching on them from the southwest.
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #5 on: June 23, 2007, 10:32:46 pm »



The Sunken Road. (The Hornets's Nest is the woods on the left.)
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #6 on: June 23, 2007, 10:33:51 pm »



The Iowa Monument on the Sunken Road
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #7 on: June 23, 2007, 10:35:22 pm »



Duncan Field from the Sunken Road
Ruggle Confederate cannon were
near the distant line of trees


After being driven from their camps by attacking Confederates about 9:00 a.m., more than 4,000 Union soldiers retreated to the woods and took position along the "Sunken Road," the dirt wagon trail shown above. Here on high ground commanding Duncan Field and the adjoining woods, Federal infantry took cover behind oak trees, fence rails, and dense undergrowth.

During the next eight hours, Confederate infantry charged the road and the wooded stronghold they called the "Hornets's Nest" eleven times. Repeatedly they were repulsed by swarms of minie balls. This was the scene of some of the most desperate and deadly fighting in the Civil War.
« Last Edit: June 23, 2007, 10:39:14 pm by William42 » Logged
Henry Moon
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« Reply #8 on: June 23, 2007, 10:36:53 pm »



Gen. Ruggles's Confederate Cannon aimed
at the Sunken Road and the Hornets's Nest
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Henry Moon
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« Reply #9 on: June 23, 2007, 10:38:52 pm »



The Hornets's Nest and Sunken Road are
in the distance across Duncan Field
in front of this Confederate Cannon.

After six hours of bloody fighting here, it became evident that Confederate Infantry alone would not break the strong Union defenses along the Sunken Road and the thickets beyond. Toward late afternoon, Brig. Gen. Daniel Ruggles brought forward eleven batteries of artillery and placed them in line along the wooded edge of Duncan field and beyond.

According to Ruggles official report, there were 62 cannon---the greatest concentration of field guns seen on a North American battlefield up to that time.
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