The Project Gutenberg eBook of Point Park Lookout Mountain and Chattanooga Battlefields, by Anonymous
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Title: Point Park Lookout Mountain and Chattanooga Battlefields
National Military Park, Georgia and Tennessee
Author: Anonymous
Release Date: July 19, 2021 [eBook #65875]
Language: English
Produced by: Stephen Hutcheson and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK POINT PARK LOOKOUT MOUNTAIN AND CHATTANOOGA BATTLEFIELDS ***
Point Park
Lookout Mountain
and Chattanooga
Battlefields
CHICKAMAUGA AND CHATTANOOGA
National Military Park
GEORGIA AND TENNESSEE
UNITED STATES
DEPARTMENT OF THE INTERIOR
National Park Service
The National Park System, of which this area is a unit, is dedicated to conserving
the scenic, scientific, and historic heritage of the United States for the benefit and
inspiration of its people.
Cover: Chattanooga and the winding Tennessee River
from Point Park, Lookout Mountain.
U. S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1961 0-618486 REPRINT 1961
1
Point Park, Lookout Mountain and Chattanooga Battlefields
CHICKAMAUGA AND CHATTANOOGA NATIONAL MILITARY PARK
The Battle of Chattanooga—a Union
victory in November 1863 which secured
that important railroad center
and opened the way for the Atlanta
Campaign
Chickamauga and Chattanooga National
Military Park, oldest and largest of the national
military park areas, was established in
commemoration of two important battles of
the American Civil War. On these battlefields
gallant soldiers of the North and the South
fought for control of Chattanooga, strategic
railroad center and gateway to the heart of
the Confederate States. Here, thousands of
men on both sides exemplified the true American
qualities of independence, courage, and
self-sacrifice, which constitute the enduring
strength of our democracy. At the dedication
of the park, a veteran of the battle said:
“Here ... we and they, the living and the
dead, Confederate and Federal, fought for
the right as each understood it, for the Constitution
as each construed it, and for the
liberty as each interpreted it.”
The Campaign for Chattanooga
Chattanooga was an important railroad
center at the time of the Civil War. Railroad
lines radiated in the four principal directions
and provided connections with Nashville,
Memphis, Atlanta, and Richmond. The location
of the city on the navigable Tennessee
River where there were gaps in the mountains
added to its strategic value. Its capture by
Union forces would be a severe blow to the
South. It would check the east and west passage
of men and supplies for the Southern
2
armies and provide a springboard for the
invasion of Georgia.
During the summer and early fall of 1863,
by skillful maneuvers, the Union Army of the
Cumberland forced the Southern Army of
Tennessee out of middle Tennessee and Chattanooga.
On September 19 and 20, at Chickamauga
Creek in Georgia, the two armies met
in one of the fiercest engagements of the war.
While this battle ended in Confederate
victory, the Union forces succeeded in retreating
northward into Chattanooga.
The Confederates now settled down to
siege tactics and attempted to force the surrender
of the Army of the Cumberland
through starvation. By occupying Lookout
Mountain and Missionary Ridge and by establishing
a line between the two heights,
they cut off all but the most difficult route by
which supplies could be brought into the city.
Within a month the Union Army in Chattanooga
was in a desperate situation and
was reduced to half rations. Ten thousand
horses and mules died and surrender seemed
inevitable.
The North, however, met this crisis by a
change of command and reinforcements.
Troops from the Army of the Potomac in
Virginia and from Grant’s Vicksburg forces
in Mississippi were sent hurrying to Chattanooga,
and General Grant arrived to take
the overall command.
The reinforcements arrived in time to save
the besieged army. A new supply route was
opened and was successfully defended. As a
result of this timely aid, the siege of Chattanooga
failed. Nevertheless, the Confederates
still held their positions. In November the
greatly strengthened Union Army assumed
the offensive.
Missionary Ridge from DeLong Reservation.
The Battle of Chattanooga
The Battle of Chattanooga was a 3-day
engagement, November 23 to 25. As planned
by the Union officers, victory was to be won
by a flanking movement against the Confederate
right wing on the north end of Missionary
Ridge. If this position were carried,
Union troops in the center were to join in an
effort to sweep the Confederates from their
base of supplies and communications and to
defeat them. The engagement, however, developed
much differently. While the main
force was maneuvered into position, a demonstration
attack was made on a Confederate
outpost at Orchard Knob, about a mile in
front of Missionary Ridge. This advance
movement was successfully carried out on
3
November 23 but it warned the Confederates
of danger on that right flank and prompted
them to strengthen their positions.
On the next day, while the maneuvering
force was still getting into position, the
Union officers tried another demonstration,
this time to divert the Confederates on their
left. Moving along the slopes of Lookout
Mountain from the western side, Union
troops gradually drove back the few Confederate
defenders. At Cravens Farm, however,
they met stubborn resistance from an entrenched
line of troops. Here the fighting was
most serious, the Confederates finally being
dislodged and forced to retreat to a new line
400 yards beyond. At this point the fighting
ended, and although the Confederates had
not yet been driven from the mountain, their
position was in danger. Rather than risk
being cut off from the main line of forces on
Missionary Ridge, the Confederate commander,
General Bragg, evacuated all troops
from Lookout Mountain and the valley below.
When Union soldiers scaled the palisades
the next morning, they found the mountain
deserted.
On the third day, the Union Army resumed
the attempt to gain a foothold on the north
end of Missionary Ridge, which it had previously
failed to take, but all attacks were
repulsed by the Confederates. The forces on
Lookout Mountain were ordered to advance
across Chattanooga Valley to attack the Confederate
left flank, but they advanced slowly.
Meanwhile, in order to relieve the situation
on both Union flanks, other troops were
thrown against the Confederate rifle pits
along the base of Missionary Ridge. In a rush
these Union soldiers carried the rifle pits.
Then in their enthusiasm, without waiting
for further orders, they charged up the mountain
slopes and broke the Confederate positions.
This precipitated a general retreat of
the Confederate Army across the border into
Georgia. Complete control of Chattanooga
and its approaches had at last been won by
the Union.
Tennessee River from Point Park, Lookout Mountain.
The Park
Chickamauga and Chattanooga National
Military Park is composed of separate areas,
the more important of which are: Chickamauga
Battlefield, in Georgia; Point Park
and the Battlefield of Lookout Mountain, and
Orchard Knob, in Chattanooga; a chain of
4
small reservations located on Missionary
Ridge; and Signal Point on Signal Mountain.
The park contains approximately 8,190 acres
of Federal land.
Point Park and Lookout Mountain Battlefield
You are urged to go first to Point Park on
Lookout Mountain, where from the terrace
of the Adolph S. Ochs Observatory and
Museum, high above the winding Tennessee
River, you may obtain a comprehensive view
of the Battlefield of Chattanooga. On the
parapet are markers to identify the more
important troop positions, and maps are
available to indicate the natural and historic
features of interest. You may get further
assistance from a National Park Service
attendant.
The observatory and museum bears the
name of one of the park’s major benefactors,
the late Adolph S. Ochs, publisher of the
Chattanooga Times and the New York Times.
He was responsible for the acquisition of
considerable land on Lookout Mountain for
inclusion in the park.
From Lookout Point interesting foot trails,
extending along eastern and western flanks
of the mountain, will reveal to you unusual
rock formations typical of the area and will
provide ever-changing and beautiful vistas of
the countryside below.
You can reach Point Park from Chattanooga
via U. S. 41, 64, 72, and 11 which
combine as they leave the city and skirt the
base of Lookout Mountain. You then turn off
on the Scenic Highway, which leads up the
mountain to the park entrance. You may also
visit the park by means of the St. Elmo buses
from Chattanooga, which connect with the
Lookout Mountain Incline Railway at the
foot of the mountain. The top of the incline
is within short walking distance of the Point
Park entrance.
Missionary Ridge
To commemorate the engagement on Missionary
Ridge, there are a series of park areas
located at important points on the ridge.
Access to these areas is provided by the Crest
Road which runs the entire length of the line
occupied by the Confederates during the
battle. Markers, monuments, tablets, and gun
positions will provide you with information,
and you can get excellent views of Chattanooga
along this drive. The more important
units of the park on Missionary Ridge are:
The Sherman Reservation, where Sherman’s
forces unsuccessfully attacked the north end
of the Confederate line; the DeLong Reservation,
site of one of the breaks in the Confederate
line; the Ohio Reservation, an area
set aside to commemorate the participation of
Ohio troops in the battles; and the Bragg
Reservation, where the Confederate commander
had his headquarters.
Orchard Knob
This unit of the park is located near McCallie
Avenue (U. S. 11 and 64), in Chattanooga.
It marks the site where the first action
of the Battle of Chattanooga took place.
Orchard Knob became General Grant’s headquarters
during the remainder of the battle.
Administration
Chickamauga and Chattanooga National
Military Park is administered by the National
Park Service of the United States Department
of the Interior.
At the park headquarters, located on the
Chickamauga Battlefield in Georgia, there are
a museum and reference library. The Fuller
gun collection of American shoulder arms is
an outstanding attraction of the museum.
Additional information may be obtained
by addressing the Superintendent, Chickamauga
and Chattanooga National Military
Park, Fort Oglethorpe, Ga.
Those who plan to visit in a group may
receive special service if advance arrangements
are made with the superintendent.
5
CHICKAMAUGA AND CHATTANOOGA
NATIONAL MILITARY PARK
GEORGIA AND TENNESSEE
Transcriber’s Notes
- Silently corrected a few typos.
- Retained publication information from the printed edition: this eBook is public-domain in the country of publication.
- In the text versions only, text in italics is delimited by _underscores_.
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