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The Second Battle of Franklin (more popularly known simply as The Battle of Franklin) was fought at Franklin, Tennessee, on November 30, 1864, as part of the Franklin-Nashville Campaign of the American Civil War. It was one of the worst disasters of the war for the Confederate States Army. Although the Union Army of the Ohio, commanded by Maj. Gen. John M. Schofield,
left the field after the battle, the Confederate Army suffered
devastating losses—including six generals killed or mortally wounded—in
its unsuccessful frontal assaults against the Union defenders,
sometimes called the "Pickett's Charge of the West." A further loss at the subsequent Battle of Nashville in December marked the end of Confederate General John Bell Hood's Army of Tennessee as a fighting force.
Background
The Battle of Franklin followed the Battle of Spring Hill
of the previous day. Hood's Army of Tennessee had allowed Schofield's
Army of the Ohio to slip by it relatively untouched during the night.
Hood had hoped to destroy Schofield before he could link up with the Army of the Cumberland, commanded by Maj. Gen. George Henry Thomas, in Nashville,
about 18 miles north of Franklin. That combined Union force would be
over 60,000 men. When the armies met at Franklin, however, Hood had
approximately 38,000 men to Schofield's 30,000.
Schofield's advance guard arrived in Franklin at about 6:00 a.m., after a forced march north from Spring Hill. Brig. Gen. Jacob Dolson Cox, a division commander temporarily commanding the Union XXIII Corps (and later governor of Ohio), immediately began preparing strong defensive positions around breastworks originally constructed for the First Battle of Franklin
in 1863. The defensive line formed approximately a semicircle around
the town, from northwest to southeast; the other half of the semicircle
was the Harpeth River.
Schofield's decided to defend at Franklin with his back to the river
because he had no pontoon bridges available that would enable his men
to cross the river; the bridges had been left behind in his retreat
from Columbia because they lacked wagons to transport them. He needed
time to repair one of the two permanent bridges spanning the river
(both of which had been burned) and to lay planking over the undamaged
railroad bridge to enable it to carry wagons and troops. His supply
train parked in the side streets to keep the main pike open, while
wagons continued to cross the river, first via a ford next to the
burned-out pike bridge, and later in the afternoon by the two makeshift
bridges. By the beginning of the assault, nearly all the supply wagons
were across the Harpeth and on the road to Nashville.
By noon the Union works, a strong exterior line fronted by a ditch
and a secondary support line some 65 to 40 yards (37 m) behind the
center, were ready. Counter-clockwise from the northwest were the
divisions of Maj. Gens. Nathan Kimball (IV Corps), Thomas H. Ruger (XXIII Corps), and Cox (XXIII Corps). Two brigades of Brig. Gen. George D. Wagner's
division of IV Corps were a half mile forward of the center, screening
the Confederate approach, with orders to fall back if pressed. Brig.
Gen. Thomas J. Wood's
division of IV Corps was posted north of the Harpeth to watch for any
flanking attempt. Schofield planned to withdraw his infantry across the
river by 6:00 p.m. if Hood had not arrived by then.
Hood's army began to arrive on Winstead Hill, two miles (3 km) south
of Franklin, around 1 p.m. Hood was noted for his aggressive, sometimes
reckless battlefield leadership, and had, since his assumption of
command of the Army of Tennessee, stung it with the criticism that the
troops were reluctant to fight except behind breastworks. Over the
objections of his top generals, he ordered a frontal assault
in the dwindling afternoon light against the Union forces, now strongly
entrenched behind two lines of breastworks, and with Wagner a half mile
in front. Many believe that Hood was still angry that the Federal army
had slipped past his troops the night before at Spring Hill. But Hood's
definite and immediate objective was to try to crush Schofield before
he and his troops could escape to Nashville. The Confederates began
moving forward somewhere between 3:30 p.m. and 4 p.m., with Maj. Gen. Benjamin F. Cheatham's corps on the left of the assault and Lt. Gen. Alexander P. Stewart's
on the right. The Confederates, without artillery support, had to
traverse two miles of open ground, in view of the Union soldiers.
Battle
Battle of Franklin Confederate Union
Hood's attack initially enveloped Wagner's forward brigades under
Lane and Conrad, which despite orders not to engage in front of the
works, stood their ground. Whether or not Wagner ordered the change in
orders from those issued by XXIII Corps commander Gen. Cox remains a
matter of controversy (Wagner claimed he did not; one brigade commander
contradicted him in official reports and Wagner was relieved of command
in December). The veteran soldiers of these brigades fled back to the
main breastworks, while untried replacements were reluctant to move
under fire and were captured. The fleeing troops were closely pursued
by the Confederates, eventually intermingling with them, so much so
that defenders in the breastworks could not fire without hitting fellow
soldiers.
Officers in Strickland's brigade (Ruger's division, west of the
turnpike) had understandably failed to prepare for such an event. This,
combined with the opening in the works through which the Columbia Pike
passed, caused a weak spot in the Union line at the Carter House. The
Confederate divisions of Maj. Gens. Patrick Cleburne, John C. Brown, and Samuel G. French
converged on this spot and a number of their troops broke through the
now not-so-solid Federal defenses. Strickland's regiments fell back to
avoid capture. A spontaneous counterattack, led by the brigade of Col. Emerson Opdycke
and fortified by rallied elements of Wagner's men, newly mustered
regiments such as the 44th Missouri, 175th and 183rd Ohio, and two
veteran Kentucky regiments, managed to seal the gap and kill, capture,
or repel the Confederates who had penetrated the defense, after brief
but vicious hand-to-hand combat.
By 5 p.m., when the sun set, the Union line was again firmly
entrenched. Meanwhile, on the east side of the battlefield, Maj. Gens. William W. Loring and Edward C. Walthall saw their troops torn apart. Maj. Gen. William B. Bate on the west side of the field fared no better, and no further assaults were attempted on the flanks.
In the center, however, the Confederates, believing that an
irreparable breach had been made and seeking to exploit it, made
repeated but uncoordinated assaults on the Union second line. After
dark, around 7 p.m., the division of Maj. Gen. Edward "Allegheny" Johnson
attacked and had no more luck than its predecessors, but was the only
division of Lee's intact corps to be ordered to attack. Large numbers
of Confederate troops became pinned down in the ditch fronting the main
line, and an intense firefight transpired for hours, each side firing
through embrasures or over the top of the parapets at close range in an
attempt to dislodge the other. That Union troops were armed with
repeating rifles added to the already considerable advantages of the
defenders.
By 9:00 p.m. the fighting had mostly subsided. The overall attack
had been awesome, described by some as a tidal wave, and known as the "Pickett's Charge of the West." But it was actually much larger than the famous charge at Gettysburg.
In the East, 12,500 Confederates had crossed a mile (1.6 km) of open
ground in a single assault lasting about 50 minutes. In Franklin, some
19,000 marched into the guns a distance of nearly two miles (3.2 km)
and conducted assaults in multiple waves that lasted over five hours.
Across the river to the east, Confederate cavalry commander Maj. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest attempted to turn the Union left flank, but the Union cavalry under Maj. Gen. James H. Wilson
repulsed his advance. As was usual during his career, Forrest's advice
as to the disposition of the enemy, and weaknesses discovered and
reported, was ignored by his superiors.
Schofield, who spent the battle in Fort Granger
(just across the Harpeth River, northeast of Franklin), ordered his
infantry to cross the river, starting at 11:00 p.m., despite objections
from Cox that withdrawal was no longer necessary. (Union reinforcements
under Maj. Gen. A.J. Smith
were already in Nashville.) Although there was a period in which the
Union army was vulnerable, straddling the river, Hood was too stunned
to take advantage of it. The Union army began entering the breastworks
at Nashville at noon on December 1.
Aftermath
The devastated Confederate force was left in control of Franklin,
but its enemy had escaped again. Typically, a Civil War battle was
deemed a victory for the army that forces its opponent to withdraw, but
here, Hood's "victory" came at a frightful cost. More men of the Confederate Army of Tennessee were killed in five hours at Franklin than in two days at the Battle of Shiloh.
The Confederates suffered 6,252 casualties, including 1,750 killed and
3,800 wounded. An estimated 2,000 others suffered less serious wounds
and returned to duty before the Battle of Nashville.
But the military leadership in the West was decimated, including the
loss of perhaps the best division commander of either side, Patrick Cleburne.
Fifteen Confederate generals (six killed or mortally wounded, eight
wounded, and one captured) and 53 regimental commanders were
casualties. The six generals killed or mortally wounded were Cleburne,
John C. Carter, John Adams, Hiram B. Granbury, States Rights Gist, and Otho F. Strahl.
Union losses were 189 killed, 1,033 wounded, 1,104 missing, most of
whom were prisoners, both wounded and unwounded. Many of the prisoners,
including all captured wounded and medical personnel, were recovered on
December 18 when Union forces re-entered Franklin in pursuit of Hood.
The Army of Tennessee was all but destroyed at Franklin. Nevertheless, Hood immediately advanced against the Union Army of the Cumberland and the Army of the Ohio,
firmly entrenched at Nashville, despite being outnumbered and exposed
to the elements, thus leading his battered forces to further, and
final, disaster in the Battle of Nashville.
In his Pulitzer Prize-winning book Battle Cry of Freedom, historian James M. McPherson wrote,
Having proved even to Hood's satisfaction that they could assault
breastworks, the Army of Tennessee had shattered itself beyond the
possibility of ever doing so again.
Battlefield today
Main article: Franklin Battlefield
| Franklin Battlefield |
| U.S. National Register of Historic Places |
| U.S. National Historic Landmark District |
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View of the battlefield from atop Winstead Hill, which served as General Hood's headquarters
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| Nearest city: |
Franklin, Tennessee |
| Built/Founded: |
1864 |
| Architect: |
Unknown |
| Architectural style(s): |
Greek Revival, Federal |
| Governing body: |
State |
| Added to NRHP: |
October 15, 1966 |
| NRHP Reference#: |
66000734[3] |
The Carter House,
which stands today and is open to visitors, was located at the center
of the Union position. The site covers about 15 acres (61,000 m2). The house and outbuildings still show hundreds of bullet holes. The Carnton Plantation,
home to the McGavock family during the battle, also still stands and is
likewise open to the public. Confederate soldiers swept past Carnton
toward the left wing of the Union army and the house and outbuildings
were converted into the largest field hospital present after the
battle. Adjacent to Carnton is the McGavock Confederate Cemetery, where 1,481 Southern soldiers killed in the battle are buried. Adjacent to the 48 acres (190,000 m2) surrounding Carnton is another 110 acres (0.45 km2)
of battlefield, which is currently being converted to a city park. Much
of the rest of the Franklin battlefield has been lost to commercial
development. The spot where Gen. Cleburne fell, for instance, was
covered until late 2005 by a Pizza Hut restaurant. Although the restaurant was purchased by a preservation group and demolished, the Civil War Preservation Trust
continues to rank the Franklin battlefield as one of the ten most
endangered sites. City officials and historic-preservation groups have
recently placed a new emphasis on saving what remains of the land over
which this terrible battle raged.
From Wikipedia
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