Interpretive Themes
Battles and Leaders, 1861-1865
Because of Tennessee’s
strategic location, both the Union and the Confederacy
fought fiercely over the state. Indeed,
Tennessee’s position in the Upper South led President
Abraham Lincoln to characterize the state as “the keystone
of the Southern arch.” The state linked the Eastern
Theater of the war with the Mississippi River and early
became a natural offensive target for the Federal armies.
Both sides sought to control Tennessee's rich resources,
especially the state's rail and river routes. In the
end, approximately 2,900 military engagements were fought on
Tennessee soil; only the state of Virginia saw more armed
conflicts during the Civil War. In addition to the
sheer number of battles and skirmishes, Tennessee was the
site of some of the bloodiest fighting of the war, as
devastating battles took place at Shiloh, Stones River, and
Franklin.
Just eight months after
becoming the last state to leave the Union, Tennessee became
the first to fall to Federal troops. Early in February
1862, Union troops quickly captured Forts Henry and Donelson
on the Tennessee and Cumberland rivers. These successes
left the capital of Nashville vulnerable, and Confederate
forces abandoned the city. President Lincoln named Andrew
Johnson, the only southerner to choose to remain in the U.S.
Senate after secession, as military governor of Tennessee.
After the occupation of
Nashville, the Union Army sought to improve its supply lines
by extending the Nashville and Northwestern Railroad from
Kingston Springs to the Tennessee River. The Federals
impressed free blacks and escaped slaves to perform the
labor associated with the extension, and in 1863 many of
these men became soldiers in the United State Colored
Troops. As such, they continued to not only build the rail
line but to erect and man fortifications for its defense.
In all, more than 20,000 African-Americans from Tennessee
fought for the Union. The state ranked third in the supply
of United States Colored Troops.
In November 1864,
Confederate troops in Tennessee experienced one of their
most distinctive military victories in the state, as well as
one of their most devastating battles. Cavalry under
Major General Nathan Bedford Forrest destroyed the Union depot at
Johnsonville on the Tennessee River, the only time in the
war that a cavalry force destroyed a naval depot. Although
the battle had little effect on the outcome of the war, it
is remembered for demonstrating Forrest’s tactical prowess.
Later that month at Franklin, General John Bell Hood’s
troops were eviscerated during a frontal attack on Union
breastworks. The Confederates suffered more than three
times as many casualties as the Federals, including the loss
of six generals.
Shiloh, Fort Donelson,
Chickamauga/Chattanooga, and Stones Rivers are significant
Tennessee battles now interpreted by the National Park
Service as National Military Parks. Tennessee State Parks
has preserved the Civil War battlefields at Fort Pillow and
Johnsonville. Stories of these conflicts and the people who
fought them weave together the powerful chronicle that is
the Civil War in Tennessee.
In the end, 64,333
Confederate soldiers and 58,521 Union soldiers perished in
Tennessee, representing a total number of battle casualties
of 122,854.
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entry from The Tennessee
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