NOVEMBER
30, 1864:
The Battle of Franklin,
Tennessee:
Over the last week General John Bell Hood C.S.A. has been fighting a
series of small-scale engagements (collectively known as “The Battle of
Columbia”) along the rail line leading north from Atlanta to Nashville in hopes
of disrupting the 30,000 men of the Federal Army of The Cumberland under
General George H. Thomas U.S.A., who have been effectively shadowing him since
Sherman left the smoking ruins of Atlanta. Hood is also desperate to keep
General John Schofield U.S.A.’s 30,000-man strong Army of The Ohio from linking
up with Thomas and giving the Union a better than 2-to-1 advantage in battle.
On
November 29th, Hood attempts to entrap Schofield’s forces at Spring
Hill. Not unsurprisingly, the tip of Hood’s spear, General Nathan Bedford
Forrest C.S.A. and his men along with General Patrick Cleburne C.S.A. and his
troops, manage to engage the Union force in a bold blocking action.
Hood
forgets, however, to advise General Benjamin F. Cheatham C.S.A. to guard the
flank, and after nightfall, Schofield’s entire army inexplicably marches right
past the Confederate encampment without anyone being the wiser and enters the outer
Union lines at Franklin. The Battle of Spring Hill is a relatively bloodless
engagement --- 350 Union casualties versus 700 Confederate casualties --- but
both tactically and strategically, it is a disaster for the South.
Hood
wakes up on the morning of the 30th “as wrathy as a rattlesnake” and
in a blistering Council of War accuses his subcommanders of cowardice and of
failure to engage the enemy. Ignoring his subordinates’ advise that he will be
attacking a reinforced enemy placed within longstanding well-entrenched lines,
Hood orders that the Army of Tennessee break through the outer Union defenses
at Franklin prefatory to taking Nashville.
Hood’s men begin marching north.
The
30,000 Federal troops at Franklin are ensconced behind three rings of
earthworks and obstacles. In order to attack this force, Hood’s 25,000 men will
be forced to march over two miles of open ground on a front two miles wide.
They are supported by just a single battery.
As
soon as Hood’s troops begin the long march (larger than Pickett’s Charge at
Gettysburg), the Union batteries open up, blowing huge holes in the line. As
the Confederates come within range of the three-tiered Union defenses, the
Federals begin firing a hail of musket fire. Many, many men go down. Six Confederate
General Officers are lost this day at Franklin, including the South Carolina
fire-eater States Rights Gist, and the much-honored and renowned Patrick
Cleburne.
On
the Union side, one little-known but historically important soldier is badly
wounded and nearly dies --- nineteen year old Colonel Arthur MacArthur, “The
Boy Colonel,” who will, after the war, become the father of General Douglas
MacArthur. Colonel MacArthur is eventually promoted to General’s rank and
receives the Medal of Honor for his Civil War service (Arthur MacArthur and
Douglas MacArthur are the only father and son to ever win the Medal of Honor).
World War II would have been much different had Arthur MacArthur died at
Franklin.
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States Rights Gist |
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Patrick Cleburne |
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Arthur MacArthur |
|
Douglas MacArthur |
The
Union loses 189 killed, 1,033 wounded, and 1,104 missing at the Battle of Franklin.
The Confederacy loses 1,750 killed, 3,800 wounded, and 702 missing. In all, the
Union toll is 2,300 of 30,000 on the field; the Confederate toll is 6,300 of 25,000.
Hood’s
army comes apart after the Battle of Franklin. The loss of so many top-echelon
commanders (beside the six generals killed, six were wounded, and scores of
lower-ranking officers and NCOs were killed or injured), effectively
decapitates Hood’s command structure, and his seeming indifference to his own
accountability enrages his men of the line, many of whom desert in droves. On
paper, Hood is supposed to have 50,000 men, but he has already lost at least half his numbers, if not more, to battle and
desertion, and so the disappearance of so many more men is catastrophic. He is
later accused of “mortally wounding” his army this day.
Nathan
Bedford Forrest, though nominally under Hood’s command, chooses to exercise the
command independence which he has demonstrated throughout the war, and takes
several thousand men away to continue raiding in Tennessee, further weakening
Hood’s Army of Tennessee. About 17,000
men remain in the ranks for now.
|
John Bell Hood |
As
the historical novelist Michael Shaara (The
Killer Angels) pointed out, some men make excellent small unit, brigade,
Divisional or even Corps commanders but are overwhelmed by the responsibilities
of leading larger forces. So it was with John Bell Hood, whose personal bravery
cannot be questioned --- he lost an arm at Gettysburg and a leg at Chickamauga
--- whose dedication to the cause is undoubted --- most other men in his
position would have opted for an honorable retirement or a sinecure command ---
but whose command decisions as the head of the Army of Tennessee have virtually
all been not just flawed but flatly wrong. Hood’s impulsive style of
leadership, his love for the slashing attack, his disregard for Military
Intelligence, his failure to understand battlefield topography, and his
blindness to larger all-encompassing issues of strategy or even politics, might
not have been quite so terrible if he had remained even a high-ranking
subordinate, taking direction from another. As the head of an army he fought
himself out of the war at an incalculable cost in blood and Confederate morale.