NOVEMBER 25, 1863:
The
Battle of Chattanooga (Day Three):
Also known as the Battle of Missionary
Ridge, this battle broke the back of the Confederate offensive that had started
at Chickamauga two months earlier.
The Union set a three-pronged attack. On the Union left, General William T. Sherman began
an assault on Missionary Ridge. In difficult fighting, the Confederates managed
to hold on to their position. On the Union right, forces advanced slowly from Lookout
Mountain against little resistance. At the Union center, there was confusion.
Some Union troops received orders only to take the Confederate rifle pits at
the base of the ridge, while others received orders that they were to advance
to the top of the Ridge. Likewise, some of the Confederates heard that they
were to hold the pits, while others thought they were to retreat to the top of
the Ridge.
As a result, Confederate troops withdrew just where and as
Union troops advanced, essentially handing the Union a victory. Due to the
confused troop movements, Confederates holding the crest of the Ridge could not
fire on the Union troops without hitting their own men. Seeing the Confederates
immobilized, the Union center moved forward aggressively, and the Confederate
line collapsed. The Confederate forces withdrew completely from Missionary Ridge
on November 26th.
The Confederates suffered some 6,600 men killed, wounded,
and missing, and the Union lost around 5,800. But, after Chickamauga and two
months of siege, southeastern Tennessee was secured for the Union.
Following this defeat, General Braxton Bragg C.S.A. pulled
his troops away from Chattanooga. Fighting rearguard actions at Ringgold Gap
and Cat Creek over the next several days, Bragg’s men were able to bloody the
pursuing Union troops. While this boosted Southern morale slightly, it could
not counterbalance Bragg’s loss of Chattanooga. He resigned shortly thereafter,
having lost the confidence of his army.
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