Civil War Leaders Grant and Sherman
On the Georgia-Tennessee line in Sept., 1863, Bragg, having
temporarily halted his retreat, severely jolted the Federals, who were saved
from a complete rout by the magnificent stand of George H. Thomas , the Rock of
Chickamauga (see Chattanooga campaign ). Grant, newly appointed supreme
commander in the West, hurried to the scene and, with William T. Sherman ,
Hooker, and Thomas's fearless troops, drove Bragg back to Georgia (Nov. 25).
After Knoxville, occupied in September, withstood Longstreet's siege
(Nov.-Dec.), all Tennessee, hotbed of Unionism, was now safely restored to the
Union.
In Mar., 1864, Lincoln, for many years an admirer of
Grant, made him commander
in chief. Leaving the West in Sherman's capable hands, Grant came east, took
personal charge of Meade's Army of the Potomac, and engaged Lee in the
Wilderness campaign (May-June, 1864). Outnumbered but still spirited, the Army
of Northern Virginia was slowly and painfully forced back toward Richmond, and
in July the tenacious Grant began the long siege of Petersburg .
Although Jubal A. Early won at Monocacy (July 9), threatening the city of
Washington, the Confederates were unable to repeat Jackson's successful
diversion of 1862, and Philip H. Sheridan , victorious in the grand manner at
Cedar Creek (Oct. 19), virtually ended Early's activities in the Shenandoah
Valley. For his part, Sherman, opposed first by the wily Joe Johnston and then
by John B. Hood , won the Atlanta campaign (May-Sept., 1864).
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