FORUM, Forum Discussion, Forum Gratuit, Nom de domaine, Nom de domaine gratuit, Redirection gratuite,

Forum The Common Ground - A Forum For Civil War Reenactors Administrators :Ken Cornett
Forum The Common Ground - A Forum For Civil War Reenactors
Not logged | Login
Online:4 guests are browsing the forum
Register Register | Profile Profile | Private messages Private messages | Search Search | Online Online | Help Help | Create a free blog

forum Forum index forumLooking Back To Today forumMay 30th

Author : Topic: May 30th  Bottom
 GrumpyDave
 moderator
 Posts : 1842
 Yes, if I'm registered for
the event; expect buckets of rain.
 GrumpyDave
  Posted 30/05/2008 06:50:30 AM
Send a private message to GrumpyDave
1861:
At a convention in Knoxville, a group of Unionists denounce Tennessee's secessionist actions.


1862:  
Confederates evacuate Corinth, Mississippi, and Union Forces occupy. On this day, the Confederates abandon the city of Corinth. After the epic struggle at Shiloh in April 1862, the Confederate army, under the command of P.T. Beauregard, concentrated at Corinth, while the Union army, under Henry Halleck, began a slow advance from the Shiloh battlefield toward the rail center at Corinth. Halleck had no intention of taking on Beauregard's army directly; he was more concerned with controlling the railroad junction.

Beauregard was in a difficult position. Halleck, the commander of Union forces in the West, had at his disposal Ulysses S. Grant's Army of the Tennessee, Don Carlos Buell's Army of the Ohio, and John Pope's Army of the Mississippi. With these forces, he had a more than two-to-one advantage over Beauregard.

Nearly a week before the evacuation, Beauregard assessed his situation with his lieutenants. Although he considered the city to be vital to the Confederacy, he also worried that his entire command could be captured or cut to pieces if a retreat was delayed. So he crafted a clever withdrawal from Corinth: His troops deployed a number of logs painted black ("Quaker guns") along his front lines to fool the Yankees into thinking they were facing substantial artillery. Meanwhile, he had his troops cook extra rations and cheer the arrival of empty boxcars to lead the Union troops to believe the Confederates were preparing for battle and receiving reinforcements.

On the night of May 29, Beauregard began slipping his forces out of Corinth. On May 30, the remainder of the army left the city and burned any remaining supplies. Halleck's men entered a deserted Corinth later that day. Although an important city had been forfeited to the Union army, Beauregard's army remained intact and, with it, Confederate hopes in the West.


Tuscumbia Bridge in Mississippi destroyed

Skirmishes near Fair Oaks and Front Royal, Virginia

Skirmish at Tranter's Creek, orth Carolina


1863:
Robert E. Lee restructures his Army of Northern Virginia, creating three corps under James Longstreet, Dick Ewell and A. P. Hill.
 
Affair at Point Isabel, Texas

Skirmish at Jordan's Store, Tennessee


1864:  
Combats at Shady Grove, Old Church, and Armstrong's Farm, Virginia

Skirmish at Greenville, Tennessee


Primary sources:
Official Records of the War of the Rebellion
A Compendium of the War of the Rebellion ; by Frederick Dyer;
The Civil War Day By Day: An Almanac 1861-1865 by E. B. Long with Barbara Long;
National Archives Guide Index

GrumpyDave Towsen
http://www.aceboard.net/kator/smiley148.abgif
A gutta percha sack coat and forage cap wouldn't keep you dry If I'm attending an event.

forum Forum index forumLooking Back To Today forumMay 30th
top
Go to :
  Add a quick reply

Add a quick reply