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Day 2 September 20, 1863
A Confederate council the night of
September 19 was less formal. Bragg met with Leonidas Polk and some others and announced
with no forewarning that he was reorganizing his army yet again. There would now be two
wings: The right, consisting of Polk's, Hill's and Walker's corps, was to be commanded by
Polk; the left, including Hood, Buckner, and Longstreet's arriving forces, would be led by
General Longstreet - who was rumored to be in the area but had not yet made it to
headquarters. Hood found little enthusiasm among Bragg's officers for the next day's work.
As he put it: "Not one spoke in a sanguine tone regarding the result of the battle in
which we were then engaged."
Longstreet had indeed arrived. He had
stepped off his train at the depot in Ringgold at 2 p.m. and had been astonished and
exasperated to discover that Bragg had sent no one to brief him - or even to tell him
where to find the army's commander.
For two hours Longstreet paced the
platform of the little station, until his horse and his staff arrived on another train.
Then, accompanied by two aides, he went to look for Bragg, who was a good 20 miles away.
The men had no idea where to go; according to Colonel Moxley Sorrel, they "wandered
by various roads and across small streams in the growing darkness of the Georgia
forest," following the racket of gunfire ahead. They traveled along the narrow roads
amid ambulances, stragglers and the walking wounded coming in the opposite direction. At
one point they almost blundered into the Federal lines and certain capture. Not until 11
p.m. on the evening of the 19th did Longstreet finally track down Bragg - "about whom
by this time," Sorrel later wrote icily, "some hard words were passing."
Bragg had gone to bed, but he quickly got up, and for an hour the two men talked.
Bragg's strategy was exactly the same as
before: Smash the Federal left and drive Rosecrans into the trap of McLemore's Cove.
Polk's right wing would attack at daybreak; Longstreet would then follow suit. The attack
was to be in echelon, with the division on the extreme right leading off, and each unit
thereafter following the unit on its right into battle.
The orders for the complicated
reorganization and attack deployed the corps commanded by D. H. Hill - General John
Breckinridge's and Cleburne's divisions - on Polk's far right. Polk notified the two
division commanders of the new plans, which required Breckinridge to march from his
position on the left flank all the way to the leadoff position on the extreme right. But
Hill never got a copy of the orders. Polk assumed, he later said, that Bragg would pass it
along.

Morning
of 20 September
The next morning near dawn, about the
time the attack should have been starting, Hill finally learned from his division
commanders of Bragg's order for the assault. He then decided that his men must eat
breakfast before they fought. He notified Polk, saying his forces would not be ready to
attack for "an hour or more."
"Hour after hour passed,"
recalled Confederate Brigadier General Arthur Manigault, whose brigade was in General
Longstreet's line near the left flank. "Everything was as quiet as though no human
being was within miles, not even a scattering picket shot. Various were the surmises as to
the cause of the delay. Had the enemy retreated? Was the order of battle changed? Were we
to await the enemy?"
In the meantime, Bragg was fuming as his
disbelief mounted. At last he sent a staff officer to find out what was wrong. The officer
returned to report that he had found Polk reading a newspaper and waiting for his
breakfast. Bragg, according to one account, thereupon "uttered a terrible
exclamation, in which Polk, Hill and all his generals were included." Then he
personally ordered the battle to begin.
"Just as we began to breathe freely
and the intense suspense began to wear off," wrote Manigault, "the report of a
distant gun at the extreme right of our line sounded in our ears." More cannon were
heard, "and then in rapid succession the fire was taken up by half a dozen batteries
on either side." Next came the musketry, "gradually growing larger and
increasing in volume as the engagement progressed from right to left." The battle was
under way - at 9:45 a.m.
Breckinridge's three brigades led the
assault on the Federal left; two of them drove around the end of Thomas' position and
smashed into Negley's regiments, which were just arriving from farther south. Negley's
lead brigade, commanded by Brigadier General John Beatty, was forced back until it was
behind the Federal left flank. One of Beatty's regiments, the 88th Indiana, had to change
front from north to south as the Confederates stormed in behind it.
One of Breckinridge's brigades was led by
Brigadier General Benjamin Hardin Helm, a brother-in-law of Mary Lincoln, a graduate of
West Point and Harvard, and a man much admired by the President. Most of Helm's troops
were Kentuckians. While the War lasted, these soldiers could never return to their
Union-held state; they were therefore known as the Orphan Brigade.
The Orphans managed to advance to within
30 yards of Thomas' lines, but the fighting was murderous. Private John Green of the 9th
Kentucky said that the Orphans were "giving and taking death blows which could last
but a few minutes without utter annihilation." Indeed, men were falling all about
him, including his regimental and company commanders. General Helm was mortally wounded by
a bullet fired from the ranks of the Federal 15th Kentucky.
For a brief moment, Breckinridge's
division actually seized the road to Chattanooga, but it could not hold on. Beatty was
meanwhile calling desperately for help. The other two brigades of Negley's division never
arrived, partly because Negley's replacement in McCook's front line, General Thomas J.
Wood's division, had not appeared. When Rosecrans discovered that Wood had failed to march
his men forward from their position in reserve, he rushed to confront the division
commander and lost his temper. "What is the meaning of this, sir?" Rosecrans
shouted. "You have disobeyed my specific orders! By your damnable negligence you are
endangering the safety of the entire army, and, by God, I will not tolerate it! Move your
division at once, as I have instructed, or the consequences will not be pleasant for
yourself!"
Although this blistering public rebuke
must have been profoundly resented by Wood, he said nothing and quickly moved his division
into position, freeing Negley's remaining troops.
The attack by Breckinridge had been
followed by that of the next Confederate division in line, under General Cleburne. As
Cleburne's men forged ahead through a pine forest they were suddenly confronted by a line
of Federals sheltered behind a formidable log breastwork. The Confederate line was
staggered by volleys of musketry and deadly salvos of canister. One of Cleburne's brigade
commanders, General James Deshler, was struck in the chest by a shell and his heart was
torn from his body. Unable to break the Federal line, the Confederated took shelter behind
the trees and blazed away at the defenders.
As Cleburne's assault ground to a stop,
General Polk committed Walker's and Cheatham's division. Once again the Confederate troops
charged toward those forbidding log breastworks. Once again they were thrown back with
heavy losses.
Thomas' messages asking for reinforcement
were practically continuous now, and Rosecrans was pulling units away from the right flank
of his line and sending them to Thomas as fast as he could free them.
Then, about 10:30 a.m., one of Thomas'
staff officers, Captain Sanford Kellogg, returned from Rosecrans' headquarters with
alarming news: Passing along the Federal lines, he had noted a gap near the center,
presumably at a point where a division had been pulled out to help Thomas. Whatever the
reason, there was a hole, he told Thomas, between the division of General Wood and the
division to the north under Reynolds. Thomas immediately notified Rosecrans - and
Rosecrans reacted instantly with an urgent message to Wood: "The general commanding
directs that you close up on Reynolds as fast as possible, and support him."
Wood was puzzled. He knew that there was
no gap: The division of General Brannan was between Wood and Reynolds, although drawn back
into the forest, where it apparently had been invisible to Captain Kellogg. Nevertheless,
Wood was reluctant to invite another dressing down for not obeying Rosecrans' commands. He
began to move his division behind Brannan to join Reynolds.

Mid-Day
20 September
Around 11:30 a.m. Rosecrans ordered Davis
forward from his position in reserve to the south to take Wood's place. At the same time
two of Sheridan's brigades, in the line to the right of Wood, were sent north to support
Thomas. Now two Federal divisions and part of a third were in sidelong motion, and there
was a quarter-mile gap in the center of the line where Wood had been. At that moment,
entirely by chance, James Longstreet unleashed three divisions - Hood's and Johnson's
abreast, Brigadier General Joseph B. Kershaw's behind - directly into the Federal gap. As
the juggernaut of 23,000 troops stormed across the La Fayette road and through the fields
of the Brotherton farm, stark panic struck the Federal right.
Bushrod Johnson, in the vanguard of the
Confederate attack, later issued an official report that fairly glowed with exultation:
"The scene now presented was unspeakably grand. The resolute and impetuous charge,
the rush of our heavy columns sweeping out from the shadow and gloom of the forest and
into the open fields flooded with sunlight, the glitter of arms, the onward dash of
artillery and mounted men, the retreat of the foe, the shouts of the hosts of our army,
the dust, the smoke, the noise of firearms - of whistling balls and grapeshot and of
bursting shell - made up a battle scene of unsurpassed grandeur." Despite heavy
losses, Johnson's right-flank brigade under General Evander McNair surged toward two
batteries of Federal artillery. The gunners fired round after round into the gray tide
and, as the Confederates swarmed over their cannon, fought hand to hand. In desperation
some artillerymen hurled grapeshot and shells with their bare hands.
Just as Johnson's men paused in a
clearing near the Dyer farm to catch their breath, Hood rode up, his left arm still in a
sling from the wounding at Gettysburg. "Go ahead," he ordered Johnson, "and
keep ahead of everything." Johnson got his troops to their feet once again.
"With a shout along my entire front," Hood recorded, "the Confederates
rushed forward, penetrated into the woods, over and beyond the enemy's breastworks, and
thus achieved another glorious victory for our arms."
Suddenly a brigade of Federals
counterattacked, and Hood himself was shot - "pierced," he wrote, "with a
Minie ball in the upper third of the right leg." He toppled off his horse and was
caught by Texans of his old brigade. As Confederate reserves came into action, Hood was
tenderly borne to the rear, where the broken leg was amputated.
On Hood's left, Major General Thomas C.
Hindman's division was likewise gaining ground. In minutes the first Federal line,
Jefferson Davis' division, was shattered and fleeing in panic. The fugitives plowed into
the ranks of the second line, Sheridan's division, throwing those troops into disorder.
Soon the better part of McCook's corps was streaming rearward, toward Rosecrans'
headquarters at the Glenn house.
The only one of McCook's units to offer
resistance was a brigade commanded by Brigadier General William H. Lytle, a popular author
and poet who had become a hard-fighting and capable commander. Lytle halted on a hill just
north of the Glenn house, telling his officers that the brigade "would die in their
tracks, with their harness on." Then, as Hindman's Confederates surged toward the
front and both flanks, Lytle decided on a desperate stratagem. Spurring his horse to the
front of the Federal line, he shouted to his outnumbered command, "All right, men, we
can die but once. This is the time and place. Let us charge."
The hopeless attack was shattered almost
immediately. Lytle was shot in the spine but continued to ride among his men until three
more bullets knocked him to the ground. With their commander dying, the survivors joined
the stampede for the rear.
At Rosecrans' headquarters, Charles Dana,
who had been awake for much of the previous two nights, had stretched out on the grass and
gone to sleep. At the onset of Longstreet's attack, Dana recalled, "I was awakened by
the most infernal noise I ever heard. I sat up on the grass, and the first thing I saw was
General Rosecrans crossing himself - he was a very devout Catholic. 'Hello!' I said to
myself, 'if the general is crossing himself, we are in a desperate situation.'"
Dana leaped on his horse. "I had no
sooner collected my thoughts and looked around toward the front, where all this din came
from, than I saw our lines break and melt away like leaves before the wind."
Rosecrans' calm voice rose above the hubbub. "If you care to live any longer,"
he told his staff, "get away from here." Dana wrote: "Then the headquarters
around me disappeared. The graybacks came through with a rush, and soon the musket balls
and the cannon shot began to reach the place where he stood. The whole right of the army
had apparently been routed."
A mile or so to the northeast, Longstreet
was jubilant. "They have fought their last man," an artilleryman heard him say,
"and he is running." Bragg's instructions had been to exert pressure on the
left, to drive Rosecrans' army toward McLemore's Cove. But except for Wilder's brigade,
which was harassing the flank of Hindman's division, the Federal right had disintegrated.
Bushrod Johnson had begun to wheel toward his right, and Longstreet urged him on. If he
could destroy Thomas, Rosecrans' entire army would be a shambles.
The Federals had been fighting with their
backs to Missionary Ridge; with heavy fighting continuing across the Rossville road to the
north, the only avenue of retreat left to the soldiers fleeing before Longstreet was
McFarland's Gap, leading through the ridge to the west. Toward this narrow opening now
poured the disorganized units from the army's shattered right wing - the better part of
five Federal divisions. A reporter from the Cincinnati Gazette watched from the crest of
the ridge: "Men, animals, vehicles, became a mass of struggling, cursing, shouting,
frightened life. Everything and everybody appeared to dash headlong for the narrow gap,
and men, horses, mules, ambulances, baggage wagons, ammunition wagons, artillery carriages
and caissons were rolled and tumbled together in a confused, inextricable, and finally
motionless mass, completely blocking up the mouth of the gap."
Lieutenant Colonel Gates Thruston, an
officer on McCook's staff, saw Rosecrans trying to reach Sheridan for help; the commander
was repulsed by "a storm of canister and musketry," Thruston recalled. "All
became confusion. No order could be heard above the tempest of battle. With a wild yell
the Confederates swept on far to their left. They seemed everywhere victorious. Rosecrans
was borne back in the retreat." At the mouth of McFarland's Gap, Rosecrans and his
chief of staff, Brigadier General James A. Garfield, tried to take a side road back toward
the left wing and George Thomas, but enemy forces blocked their way; instead they pushed
on through the gap five miles farther to Rossville. There, amid what an eyewitness
described as "driving masses of teamsters, stragglers and fugitives," the two
men paused to consider - and to rest their horses, blown by the swift ride.
There was another crossroad at Rossville,
and therefore another opportunity to join Thomas. But the sounds of battle were now barely
audible; was he still fighting? Rosecrans and Garfield dismounted and put their ears to
the ground. They could hear little except occasional distant musketry. They sought
information from some disheveled soldiers around them - and were told that "the
entire army was defeated and in retreat to Chattanooga." The same soldiers said they
were from Negley's division; that unit, they declared, had been "knocked all to
pieces." Here was dismaying news. When Rosecrans had last seen Negley, the division
commander was on his way to join Thomas with two brigades; if Negley's command was
shattered, the entire left wing was doubtless defeated and in disarray.
Rosecrans was upset and distracted.
Nevertheless, he was determined to try to join Thomas and save what he could of the
wrecked army. He ordered Garfield to proceed to Chattanooga and prepare the defenses
there. The Confederates were sure to attack the town and much needed to be done; he issued
a long list of instructions.
At that, Garfield demurred. Rosecrans, he
said, must go to Chattanooga himself to lay out a new defensive line and position the
returning units along it. The orders would be complicated, and Rosecrans could spell them
out more effectively than anyone else. "I can go to General Thomas and report the
situation to you," Garfield said, "much better than I can give those
orders." Rosecrans agreed and made his way north.
Rosecrans, severely shaken, arrived at
the headquarters building in Chattanooga at 4 p.m. He was by then unable to dismount or to
walk unassisted. His aides helped the distraught general into the house. Once inside,
Rosecrans slumped in a chair, his head in his hands, the picture of despair.
Charles Dana arrived in Chattanooga soon
afterward and sent a grim telegram to Washington. "My report today is of deplorable
importance," it began. "Chickamauga is as fatal a day in our history as Bull
Run."

Evening
of 20 September
The battle was, in fact, far from over.
George Thomas, still only vaguely aware of what had occurred to the rest of Rosecrans'
army, was engaged in the fight of his life.
The right of this line, Brannan's
division and part of Wood's, faced south from the crest of an elevation that projected
from Missionary Ridge. A part of this rise was known as Snodgrass Hill, after a family
that lived nearby; the whole of the eminence may not have had a name, but it quickly
acquired one - Horseshoe Ridge. The main line, held by Baird's, Johnson's, Reynolds' and
Major General John Palmer's divisions, faced east from their original positions near the
La Fayette road. To the rear of the position were the roads leading west to McFarland's
Gap, and north to Rossville and Chattanooga.
As a result of Thomas' repeated calls for
reinforcements, he now had under him units from all three of Rosecrans' corps - perhaps
half of the Army of the Cumberland. And he was also collecting a ragtag-and-bobtail
assortment of units from company to brigade strength, plus a number of soldiers of all
ranks who had become separated from the rest of the army during the hard fighting on the
right. Many officers were behind the breastworks fighting as enlisted men.
Thomas was not given to dramatics, but as
he rode along the lines his very presence bolstered the morale of his battered,
powder-stained soldiers. When he came to Colonel Charles Harker's brigade on the left
flank he told its commander, "This hill must be held and I trust you to do it."
The scrappy Harker replied, "We will hold it or die here."
Among all his other worries, Thomas was
concerned about the location of Sheridan's division. He had asked that morning to have
Sheridan sent up from the Federal right but had heard nothing since. At last, around 2
p.m. he sent a messenger to find out what was wrong. The courier quickly returned to
report that a large force was approaching from the right rear, behind Reynolds.
From the crest of Snodgrass Hill, Thomas
peered out over the field. He could see troops coming through the dust - and they were
wearing blue. Could that be Sheridan at last? But Thomas was a careful man, and there had
been reports that some Confederates in this battle had blue uniforms. He instructed an
officer nearby to have his men wave Union flags. The flags quickly drew fire. These were
hostile forces - Longstreet's men, and they were renewing the attack.
Thomas ordered a brigade under Brigadier
General William B. Hazen into the line on Snodgrass Hill. The new arrivals were scarcely
in position behind some low breastworks, recalled Lieutenant Colonel Robert L. Kimberly of
the 41st Ohio, "when the Confederate storm burst. The slope in front of the brigade
was open ground, and in a moment this was covered with heavy masses of the enemy making
for the top. Hazen's regiments were lying flat. The foremost sprang to its feet, delivered
its volley ad went down again to load, and the next regiment just behind rose to fire and
fall flat while the third put in its work, and so on."
The attacking Confederates, several
brigades under the overall direction of General Kershaw, pushed to within 40 paces of the
Federal line. There they met such heavy and sustained fire that Kershaw ordered them back.
"The slope," said Kimberly, "was strewn with Confederate dead and wounded,
but not a man could reach the crest."
Kershaw struck again and again, one
ferocious assault after another. He finally stopped because his troops were out of breath;
Colonel William Oates of the 15th Alabama said his men were "panting like dogs tired
out in the chase."
Next Bushrod Johnson's and Thomas
Hindman's divisions launched another series of charges, aimed like a battering-ram at
Thomas's right and rear. It was evident to Thomas that the crisis was at hand; if he could
not push Johnson and Hindman back, his escape route would soon be cut off. Worse, his
soldiers were running out of ammunition. The men on Horseshoe Ridge were desperately
snatching cartridges from the dead and wounded. For a time it looked as if the Federal
line would break. "Our troops were driven from the crest, and the enemy's flag waved
above it," General John Beatty recalled. Beatty rallied his brigade and led it back
up the hill, "waving my hat and shouting like a madman.
The crest was retaken, but Thomas and his
troops were in dire straits and there was no solution in sight. Then, suddenly, help was
at hand.
All during the fighting of the 19th and
for most of the morning of the 20th, Major General Gordon Granger and his Reserve Corps -
consisting in its entirety of three inexperienced brigades - had stood guard with
increasing impatience over the Rossville road three miles north of the fighting, as
ordered by Rosecrans.
At 11 a.m. on the 20th, while Polk's
divisions marched to attack Thomas, Granger - a short, pugnacious West Pointer - watched
the dust rising in the distance and growled to Major Joseph S. Fullerton, his chief of
staff; "They are concentrating over there. That's where we ought to be." As the
sounds of battle came rumbling over the fields and more dust and battle smoke rose into
the air, Granger almost exploded with pent-up frustration. "Why the hell does
Rosecrans keep me here?" he cried out to Fullerton. "There is the battle!"
He climbed up on a haystack and stared into the distance through his field glasses, and at
last he could stand it no longer. He uttered an oath and declared: "I am going to
Thomas, orders or no orders!"
He commanded Colonel Dan McCook to guard
the road with his brigade and within minutes was marching off to join Thomas with the
remainder of his corps: a single division under General Steedman.
At Snodgrass Hill, with Hindman, Johnson
and Kershaw pounding him from the south, General Thomas stared through his field glasses
at the enormous column of dust approaching from the north. Once again he and his officers
wondered who was coming - "agitated," as General Beatty put it, "by doubt
and hope." Were these their saviors or more enemies? Someone said he thought he could
see a Union flag. "Do you think so? Do you think so?" asked Thomas anxiously. A
few minutes later Granger and Steedman were on the scene, and the defenders felt, in
Beatty's words, "a throb of exultation." The newcomers had brought not only
fresh soldiers but also fresh supplies of ammunition.
The burly Steedman galloped into action
at the head of his division. When the 115th Illinois wavered in the face of Confederate
fire, Steedman snatched up its flag and turned to face the enemy alone. "Go back,
boys, go back," he roared, "but the flag can't go with you!" The men
rallied and charged once again. Steedman's horse was shot out from under him, and the
general was badly bruised by the fall, but he continued to lead his men on foot, flag in
hand.
Steedman's' troops extended the line on
Brannan's right, where Hindman's Confederates were threatening to flank the Federals. In
the 20 minutes that followed, Steedman's green soldiers smashed Hindman's attack - but at
a terrible cost. Of Steedman's 3,500 Federals, 20 per cent were killed or wounded in those
few minutes; among the casualties were six regimental commanders.
By now all of Thomas' units had taken
heavy casualties. The total number of men who served under him during the day has been
estimated at 25,000; by one account only a quarter of these troops were still in action
when Granger showed up. Since that morning, Thomas had fought virtually every brigade in
Bragg's army, and toward the end he was fighting them all - Polk's troops as well as
Longstreet's.
And still Thomas held. As the shadows
deepened, Longstreet redoubled his efforts. He committed his single remaining division,
Brigadier General William Preston's, and by early evening he was hitting the Federal line
at every point. By Longstreet's own estimate he sent a total of 25 attacks against the
Federals. One of the last, and perhaps the fiercest, was the charge of a newly enlisted
brigade led by Brigadier General Archibald Gracie Jr. Leaping over the bodies of the dead
and dying from earlier assaults, Gracie's troops clawed their way to within feet of the
Federal breastworks. In places, the opposing soldiers grappled hand to hand before
Gracie's decimated regiments fell back. In the charge, the 1st Alabama Battalion lost
nearly 65 per cent of its men, while the flag of the 2nd Battalion was pierced by 83
bullets.
Around 4 p.m. James Garfield showed up,
having made a perilous trip down the Rossville road accompanied by two orderlies and a
captain acting as guide. They had come under sharp fire; both of the orderlies had been
killed and the captain injured. Garfield's horse, badly hurt, managed to get him to Thomas
before it collapsed.
At last Thomas learned what had happened
to the rest of Rosecrans' army and received instructions from Rosecrans to withdraw from
the field immediately. That was manifestly impossible. "It will ruin the army to
withdraw it now," Thomas told Garfield. "This position must be held until
night."
Garfield accordingly dispatched a message
informing Rosecrans in Chattanooga that Thomas was fighting off the Confederates and was
"standing like a rock." Reprinted in newspapers all over the country, the
message made a hero of the doughty XIV Corps commander, who would be known for the rest of
his life as the "Rock of Chickamauga."
As twilight descended over the
battlefield, Thomas went to work to get his men safely away. The Confederate attacks were
continuing with undiminished intensity, and Thomas was once again running low on
ammunition as he began his withdrawal. His plan was to withdraw his divisions in sequence,
starting with the southernmost, under Reynolds. Each division was to march behind those
still in line toward the safety of McFarland's Gap. But at 5:30 p.m., as Reynolds was
leaving, St. John Liddell's Confederates suddenly launched a savage blow straight toward
him, endangering the entire Federal position. General Thomas, who was on the scene,
commandeered the brigade led by General John Turchin and wheeled the troops around.
Gesturing toward the oncoming Confederates, Thomas said, "There they are. Clear them
out." Turchin launched a furious attack and sent the Confederates reeling back. In
the process his men captured 200 prisoners. Then Turchin rejoined Reynolds' retreating
division.
One by one, the hard-pressed units left
the field and hurried toward safety. In the end only three regiments remained on Snodgrass
Hill: the 21st and 89th Ohio and the 22nd Michigan. They were still fighting off attacks,
and as the rest of the Federals began their movement toward McFarland's Gap the three
regiments were threatened anew. Brannan hurried to Granger, who had been left in command
of the field while Thomas supervised the withdrawal, and cried: "The enemy are
forming for another assault; we have not another round of ammunition - what shall we
do?" Granger said, "Fix bayonets and go for them."
Granger's staff officer, Major Fullerton,
recalled: "Along the whole line ran the order, 'Fix bayonets.' On came the enemy -
our men were lying down. 'Forward,' was sounded. In one instant they were on their feet.
Forward they went to meet the charge. So impetuous was this counter-charge that one
regiment, with empty muskets and empty cartridge-boxes, broke through the enemy's line,
which, closing in their rear, carried them off as in the undertow." Brannan's charge
was gallant but ineffective. There was little the Federals could do without ammunition,
and within minutes the bloodied defenders were surrounded and overwhelmed by General
Preston's Confederates. In the three regiments, 322 soldiers were killed or wounded and
563 captured. Only one of the six regimental flags was saved.
The last Federal survivors slipped away
after darkness had fallen, when the Confederate fire was diminishing. Without light,
Bragg's troops were beginning to fire into one another from the opposite sides of the
salient. It had been a brilliant withdrawal under the nose of the enemy. "Like
magic," Longstreet wrote later, "the Union army had melted away in our
presence."
The Federal escape chafed Longstreet, but
his troops were only too pleased to discover that their enemy had retreated. When the
Confederates realized what had happened, they produced a loud and prolonged din of Rebel
yells to celebrate their victory. The sound seemed to envelop the fleeing Federals, said
Lieutenant Ambrose Bierce of William Hazen's brigade. "It was the ugliest sound that
any mortal ever heard," he wrote, "even a mortal exhausted and unnerved by two
days of hard fighting, without sleep, without rest, without food, and without hope. There
was, however, a space somewhere at the back of us across which that horrible yell did not
prolong itself - and through that we finally retired in profound silence and dejection,
unmolested."
For the soldiers in blue, the march to
Rossville was grim. Beatty recalled, "All along the road, for miles, wounded men were
lying. They had crawled or hobbled slowly away from the fury of the battle, become
exhausted, and lay down by the roadside to die. Some were calling the names and numbers of
their regiments, but many had become too weak to do this; by midnight the column had
passed by. What must have been their agony, mental and physical, as they lay in the dreary
woods, sensible that there was no one to care for them, and that in a few hours more their
career on earth would be ended."
General Thomas collected his battered
forces at Rossville and formed new lines in expectation of further fighting. The
Confederates, as well, made preparations for more action. "I ordered my line to
remain as it was," recalled General Longstreet, "ammunition boxes to be filled,
stragglers to be collected, and everything in readiness for the pursuit in the
morning."
Polk got Bragg out of bed to report that
the Federal army was in full flight and could be destroyed before Rosecrans had a chance
to throw up adequate defenses. But Bragg, said an aide who was present, "could not be
induced to look at it in that light, and refused to believe that we had won a
victory."
Bragg's generals produced a Confederate
soldier who had been captured and then had escaped. He had seen the Federal disarray for
himself and was brought before Bragg to testify that the enemy was indeed in full retreat.
Bragg would not accept the man's story. "Do you know what a retreat looks like?"
he asked, acidly. The soldier stared back and said: "I ought to, General: I've been
with you during your whole campaign."
Bragg had his reasons for not wanting to
continue to fight. His men were exhausted. Losses on both sides had been enormous, and
although no one yet knew the totals, Confederate casualties had been greater than those
suffered by the Federals. In two days he had lost more than 30 percent of his effectives.
Ten Confederate generals had been killed or wounded, including Hood who narrowly survived
amputation of his leg. Although the rebels had made a rich haul in captured guns and
equipment, Bragg's immediate concern was the ghastly spectacle of dead and wounded lying
thick on the ground. Half of his artillery horses had also been killed. Thus he refused to
heed the pleas of many for a rapid pursuit of the enemy.
Article source: Time-Life Books, Civil War Series
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