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Kennesaw
Mountain
June 27, 1864 Cobb County, GA Campaign: Atlanta
Campaign (1864)
Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, USA Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, CSA
The main armies in the west squared off against each other.
Union casualties were triple the Confederate losses of 1,000. On
the night of June 18-19, Gen. Joseph E. Johnston, fearing envelopment, withdrew
his army to a new, previously selected position astride Kennesaw Mountain. This
entrenched arc-shaped line, to the north and west of Marietta, protected the
Western & Atlantic Railroad, the supply link to Atlanta. Having defeated
General John B. Hood troops at Kolb’s Farm on the 22nd, Sherman was sure that
Johnston had stretched his line too thin and, therefore, decided on a frontal
attack with some diversions on the flanks. On the morning of June 27, Sherman
sent his troops forward after an artillery bombardment. At first, they made some
headway overrunning Confederate pickets south of the Burnt Hickory Road, but
attacking an enemy that was dug in was futile. The fighting ended by noon, and
Sherman suffered high casualties.
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