
eBook - PDF
The Atlanta Campaign
Volume 2: From the Etowah River to Kennesaw Mountain, May 20 to June 27, 1864
- 609 pages
- English
- PDF
- Available on iOS & Android
eBook - PDF
The Atlanta Campaign
Volume 2: From the Etowah River to Kennesaw Mountain, May 20 to June 27, 1864
About this book
Details Sherman's grueling advance from the Etowah River to Kennesaw Mountain during the 1864 Atlanta Campaign.
The scope, drama, and importance of the 1864 Atlanta Campaign was on a par with Ulysses S. Grant’s Overland Campaign in Virginia. Despite its criticality and massive array of primary source material, the operations in North Georgia have lingered in the shadows. Award-winning author David A. Powell’s first of five installments, The Atlanta Campaign: Volume 1: Dalton to Cassville, May 1–19, 1864, treated the opening phase of the campaign—weeks of maneuver and several days of heavy fighting at Resaca, after which the Confederates slipped out of Sherman’s traps and escaped across the Oostanaula and Etowah rivers. This second volume, From the Etowah River to Kennesaw Mountain, May 20–June 27, 1864, marches with the armies and their leaders deeper into Georgia.
The heavyweight match unfolding between U. S. Grant and Robert E. Lee from the Wilderness to the trenches of Cold Harbor increased the pressure on Sherman to do everything he could to prevent Joe Johnston from sending troops to reinforce the Virginia army. Sherman had closed half the distance to Johnston’s base at Atlanta, but the Army of Tennessee had grown in numbers and the odds that were once 2 to 1 in his favor were now nearly even.
Sherman opened the second phase of the campaign on May 23 by throwing his army across the Etowah. Instead of moving down the railroad to Allatoona, however, he marched west of Marietta to Dallas. The next five weeks were by some measures the hardest of the entire summer as maneuvering gave way to trench warfare, first along the New Hope Line, then Pine and Lost mountains, along the Mud Creek Line, and finally, atop the imposing slopes of Kennesaw Mountain. The daily grind, punctuated by periodic assaults at New Hope Church, Pickett’s Mill, Gilgal Church, Pigeon Hill, and Cheatham Hill took a terrible toll on both armies. The heavy rain through most of June made life in the field a misery, sick lists spiked, and men and horses broke down or died. Neither side could claim victory as June drew to a close. Sherman remained undaunted. He would return to flanking. And this time Atlanta was a mere dozen miles distant.
This multivolume study is based heavily on hundreds of primary accounts (many of which have never been used), 21 original maps, a firm understanding of the terrain, and a keen grasp of military strategy and tactics. Powell’s The Atlanta Campaign is this generation’s definitive treatment of one of the most important and fascinating confrontations of the entire Civil War. And it will stand the test of time.
The scope, drama, and importance of the 1864 Atlanta Campaign was on a par with Ulysses S. Grant’s Overland Campaign in Virginia. Despite its criticality and massive array of primary source material, the operations in North Georgia have lingered in the shadows. Award-winning author David A. Powell’s first of five installments, The Atlanta Campaign: Volume 1: Dalton to Cassville, May 1–19, 1864, treated the opening phase of the campaign—weeks of maneuver and several days of heavy fighting at Resaca, after which the Confederates slipped out of Sherman’s traps and escaped across the Oostanaula and Etowah rivers. This second volume, From the Etowah River to Kennesaw Mountain, May 20–June 27, 1864, marches with the armies and their leaders deeper into Georgia.
The heavyweight match unfolding between U. S. Grant and Robert E. Lee from the Wilderness to the trenches of Cold Harbor increased the pressure on Sherman to do everything he could to prevent Joe Johnston from sending troops to reinforce the Virginia army. Sherman had closed half the distance to Johnston’s base at Atlanta, but the Army of Tennessee had grown in numbers and the odds that were once 2 to 1 in his favor were now nearly even.
Sherman opened the second phase of the campaign on May 23 by throwing his army across the Etowah. Instead of moving down the railroad to Allatoona, however, he marched west of Marietta to Dallas. The next five weeks were by some measures the hardest of the entire summer as maneuvering gave way to trench warfare, first along the New Hope Line, then Pine and Lost mountains, along the Mud Creek Line, and finally, atop the imposing slopes of Kennesaw Mountain. The daily grind, punctuated by periodic assaults at New Hope Church, Pickett’s Mill, Gilgal Church, Pigeon Hill, and Cheatham Hill took a terrible toll on both armies. The heavy rain through most of June made life in the field a misery, sick lists spiked, and men and horses broke down or died. Neither side could claim victory as June drew to a close. Sherman remained undaunted. He would return to flanking. And this time Atlanta was a mere dozen miles distant.
This multivolume study is based heavily on hundreds of primary accounts (many of which have never been used), 21 original maps, a firm understanding of the terrain, and a keen grasp of military strategy and tactics. Powell’s The Atlanta Campaign is this generation’s definitive treatment of one of the most important and fascinating confrontations of the entire Civil War. And it will stand the test of time.
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Yes, you can access The Atlanta Campaign by David A. Powell in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & 19th Century History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
Information
Table of contents
- Cover
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
- Preface
- Acknowledgments
- Introduction
- Chapter 1 - May 20 to 24: Across the Rubicon
- Chapter 2 - May 23 to 25: The Race to Dallas
- Chapter 3 - May 25: Hooker Approaches New Hope Church
- Chapter 4 - May 25: Clash at New Hope Church
- Chapter 5 - May 26: Sherman Sidles Left
- Chapter 6 - May 25 to 26: Inching Toward Dallas
- Chapter 7 - May 27: Howard Finds a Flank
- Chapter 8 - May 27: Pickettâs Mill
- Chapter 9 - May 27: The Fight Continues
- Chapter 10 - May 27: Final Shots
- Chapter 11 - May 27: Johnston Looks to His Flanks
- Chapter 12 - May 28: The Battle of Dallas
- Chapter 13 - May 29 to June 4: Abandoning New Hope
- Chapter 14 - June 5 to 10: Confederate Interlude
- Chapter 15 - June 1 to 10: Federal Reinforcements
- Chapter 16 - June 9 to 14: Shermanâs Next Move
- Chapter 17 - June 15: Shermanâs Forgotten Assaults
- Chapter 18 - June 16 to 20: Retreat to Kennesaw
- Chapter 19 - June 20 to 21: Wheeler Checks Garrard at Noonday Creek
- Chapter 20 - June 20 to 21: âThe boys are all for Joe!â
- Chapter 21 - June 22: Battle of Kolbâs Farm
- Chapter 22 - June 22 to 26: Sherman Changes Course
- Chapter 23 - June 22 to 26: Maneuvering for Advantage
- Chapter 24 - June 27: Dodge and Blair Feint
- Chapter 25 - June 27: Logan XV Corps Assaults Pigeon Hill
- Chapter 26 - June 27: Newtonâs IV Corps Division Attacks the Northern Shoulder of Cheatham Hill
- Chapter 27 - June 27: McCookâs Brigade Charges Cheatham Hillâs Dead Angle
- Chapter 28 - June 27: Mitchellâs Brigade Attacks the Southern Face of Cheatham Hill
- Chapter 29 - June 27: Gains and Losses
- Confederate Order of Battle: June 1
- Bibliography
- Index
- About the Author