Contents

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Page
WARTIME IMPORTANCE OF CHATTANOOGA AND EAST TENNESSEE 2
WINTER, 1863 4
THE TULLAHOMA CAMPAIGN 5
FROM TULLAHOMA TO CHICKAMAUGA 8
REINFORCEMENTS FOR GENERAL BRAGG 10
MANEUVER FOR POSITION 13
THE BATTLE OF CHICKAMAUGA 14
September 18—Preliminaries 15
September 19—First Day 18
September 20—Second Day 19
THE SIEGE OF CHATTANOOGA 24
REINFORCEMENTS FOR THE BESIEGED ARMY 27
LIFTING THE SIEGE—THE BATTLE OF CHATTANOOGA 33
Orchard Knob 33
Sherman Moves 35
The Battle Above the Clouds, November 24 35
Missionary Ridge, November 25 39
RELIEF OF KNOXVILLE 42
EFFECTS OF THE BATTLE OF CHATTANOOGA 44
THE WAR AFTER CHATTANOOGA 44
GUIDE TO THE AREA 47
Chickamauga Battlefield 47
Missionary Ridge 52
Point Park 55
THE PARK 56
HOW TO REACH THE PARK 56
ABOUT YOUR VISIT 57
RELATED AREAS 59
ADMINISTRATION 59
SUGGESTED READINGS 60

TABLES

1. Union Army at Chickamauga 16
2. Confederate Army at Chickamauga 17
3. Union Army at Chattanooga 34
4. Confederate Army at Chattanooga 35

Moccasin Bend of the Tennessee River from Point Park on Lookout Mountain.

Cannon and crew.

In and around strategically important Chattanooga, Tenn., in the autumn of 1863, there occurred some of the most complex maneuvers and hard fighting of the Civil War. The Confederate victory at Chickamauga (September 19-20) gave new hope to the South after the defeats at Gettysburg and Vicksburg in July of that year. At Chattanooga (November 23-25) Union forces under Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant blasted this hope and prepared the way for the capture of Atlanta and Sherman’s “March to the Sea.” Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, oldest and largest of the national military parks, commemorates the heroic soldiers of both North and South in the battles for the control of Chattanooga.

The year 1863 proved to be one of victory for the Union forces. Three great campaigns took place which shaped the destiny of the war. The first, a decisive blow at Gettysburg, forced a Confederate army under Gen. Robert E. Lee to abandon its attempt to invade Northern soil. Lee began an orderly retreat to Virginia on July 4.

On the same day, but far removed from the fields of Gettysburg, Lt. Gen. John C. Pemberton surrendered his army and the City of Vicksburg, Miss., to General Grant. The fall of Vicksburg, simultaneous with the victory at Gettysburg, gave heart and strength to the North, while Confederate morale dropped.

The third campaign, Murfreesboro to Chattanooga, slow and uncertain in its first phases, and including later the great Confederate victory at Chickamauga, culminated nearly 5 months after the other two in ultimate victory for the North in the Battle of Chattanooga.

                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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