Shiloh National Military Park (TN)
Read MoreU.S. Army of the Tennessee - Major General Ulysses S. Grant, Commanding
Present for Duty, April 5th: 39,830 Killed: 1,513 Wounded: 6,601 Missing: 2,830 Total Casualties: 10,944
C.S.A. Army of the Tennessee - General Albert Sidney Johnson, Commanding
Present for Duty, April 5th: 43,968 Killed: 1,728 Wounded: 8,012 Missing: 959 Total Casualties: 10,699
U.S. Army of the Ohio - Major General Don Carlos Buell, Commanding
Present for Duty, April 5th: 17,918 Killed: 241 Wounded: 1,807 Missing: 55 Total Casualties: 2,103
Major General Ulysses S. Grant - Headquarters
Arriving a bit late to the fight, Grant set up his headquarters near Pittsburg Landing in the late morning on April 6th after the battle had been raging for a number of hours. The site now sits within the grounds of the National Cemetery. The tablet reads: General Grant in his memoirs says:-"During the night rain fell in torrents and our troops were exposed without shelter. I made my headquarters under a tree a few hundred yards back from the river bank." The large oak tree referred to, standing where this marker now stands, was destroyed by cyclone October 14, 1909.
Brigadier General Stephen A. Hurlbut - Headquarters for the 4th Division, U.S. Army of the Tennessee
Located to the left side of the Union encampment, Hurlbut and his forces arrived here in mid-March. Hurlbut's 4th Division saw action in the Peach Orchard as well as on the Union left the second day. Of 7,825 men in the 4th Division listed as ready for duty at the start of the battle, 1,859 would be counted as casualties by the end (317 killed, 1,441 wounded, 111 captured)...
Colonel John D. McDowell - Headquarters, 1st Brigade, 5th Division, U.S. Army of the Tennessee
Posted at Sherman's far right, the 1st Brigade under Col. McDowell was engaged at Shiloh quite early on the First Day. Being the flank of Sherman's forces the soldiers under McDowell suffered severely in the fighting of April 6. The headquarters marked by this monument, along the Hamburg and Purdy Road, marks the location of the brigade the morning of battle. From here McDowell and his troops were driven back past Shiloh Church...
Colonel Julius Raith - Headquarters, 3rd Brigade, 1st Division, U.S. Army of the Tennessee
The 3rd Brigade under Col. Raith found itself in the unenviable position of holding Sherman's left flank at the start of the battle, which bore the brunt of Johnson's attack that morning. Later in the 6th, they found themselves at the center of the line enduring hours of withering crossfire in which Col. Raith himself was mortally wounded. The monument denotes the location of Raith's Headquarters on the morning of battle, the 6th, along the Hamburg and Purdy Road...
Colonel David Stuart - Headquarters, 2nd Brigade, 5th Division, U.S. Army of the Tennessee
Col. Stuart's brigade, centered here at the junction of the Hamburg and Purdy/Hamburg and Savannah Roads, marked the extreme left flank of the entire Union Army. Though the brigade didn't see action until around midday on the 6th it became the focus of Confederate attempt to turn the lines of the Union Army and cut them off from their supply lines on the Tennessee River. The mid-westerners under Col. Stuart fought back fiercely, however, and though they were eventually driven back they did not allow the Confederate attack to reach the vital Pittsburg Landing. Their fierce resistance had a price though, for example, the 55th Illinois under Stuart suffered over 50% casualties the First Day...
Assigned to the 2nd Division only four days prior to the battle, General Wallace's men would find themselves fighting in the most brutal battles of the First Day of the contest including the Hornets Nest and the Peach Orchard. General Wallace himself would be included amongst the fallen, killed around 6pm on April 6th... Of 8,408 men in the 4th Division listed as ready for duty at the start of the battle, 2,748 would be counted as casualties by the end (270 killed, 1,173 wounded, 1,306 captured)...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - Pre-Dawn - Seay Field
Tucked beyond the woodline of Seay, Wood's and Fraley Fields, the men of Sherman's 5th Division slept unaware of the massive Confederate force, 40,000 strong, approaching them from the southwest. Although there had been plenty of warning signs the Union generals, Grant included, did not expect a major attack...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - Pre-Dawn - Wood's Field
Tucked beyond the woodline of Seay, Wood's and Fraley Fields, the men of Sherman's 5th Division slept unaware of the massive Confederate force, 40,000 strong, approaching them from the southwest. Although there had been plenty of warning signs the Union generals, Grant included, did not expect a major attack...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 4:00am - Powell's Reconnaissance Patrol
Unhappy with the Union Command's lack of concern in what he considered an imminent Confederate threat, Colonel Everett Peabody (commanding the 1st Brigade of Prentiss' Division) ordered a reconnaissance patrol to be sent out by the 25th Missouri Regiment under Major James Powell. The 200-man set out through this woods before dawn in the direction of a neighboring field owned by a farmer by the name of Fraley...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 4:35am - Fraley Field
As the three company's of the 25th Missouri Infantry Regiment selected for the patrol stepped out onto Fraley Field the sun had not yet appeared over the horizon. Unaware of what lay in wait ahead of them, they proceeded forward...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 4:35am - Confederate Picket's
The first Confederates to spot the Union patrol as they entered Fraley Field were the soldiers of the 3rd Mississippi Infantry Battalion who had drawn picket duty that evening. They occupied this high ground on the far side of the field when they spotted the Missourians advancing towards them....
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 4:55am - The Battle Begins
When the Missouri troops closed to within 200 yards the Mississippians opened fire, the opening shots of the Battle of Shiloh. Each side quickly called for nearby reinforcements with neither line refusing to give way. For the next hour the fight see-sawed across Fraley Field until around 6am when the might of the oncoming Confederate forces began to overwhelm the thin Union lines...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 7:30am - The 6th Division Rallies
An hour and a half into the attack the surprised Union troops had been pushed back under the ever-increasing numbers of attacking Confederates. The 6th Division, who had borne the brunt of the assault to this point, managed to organize a defensive line along this ridge. At first the heavy shower of lead fired from this line staggered the Confederate advance but superiority in numbers soon prevailed and the Federals found themselves retreating through their camps...
First Day - April 6, 1862 - 8:30am - Retreat through the Camps
At this point things looked grim indeed for the Union Army. Though a fearful toll had been taken in the previous three hours the Rebel advance continued. Despite putting up a fierce fight, the 5,400 men under Union General Prentiss simply could not stand up for long against the 9,000 determined Rebels coming against them. Within an hour the Union defense fell apart and the men began a somewhat panicked withdrawal back through their camps...
kw
on August 21, 2014Humbling...... Beautifully put together and 'walking us through' these two days from a very difficult time in the history of our country! D & K