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Atlanta
July 22, 1864 Fulton County, GA Campaign: Atlanta
Campaign (1864)
Maj. Gen. William T. Sherman, USA Gen. John Bell Hood, CSA
The main armies were involved.
Union losses were a bit under 4,000, while Hood lost about 8,500.
Following the Battle of Peachtree Creek, Hood determined to attack Maj. Gen.
James B. McPherson’s Army of the Tennessee. He withdrew his main army at night
from Atlanta’ s outer line to the inner line, enticing Sherman to follow. In the
meantime, he sent William J. Hardee with his corps on a fifteen-mile march to
hit the unprotected Union left and rear, east of the city. Wheeler’s cavalry was
to operate farther out on Sherman’s supply line, and Gen. Frank Cheatham’s corps
were to attack the Union front. Hood, however, miscalculated the time necessary
to make the march, and Hardee was unable to attack until afternoon. Although
Hood had outmaneuvered Sherman for the time being, McPherson was concerned about
his left flank and sent his reserves—Grenville Dodge’s XVI Army Corps—to that
location. Two of Hood’s divisions ran into this reserve force and were repulsed.
The Rebel attack stalled on the Union rear but began to roll up the left flank.
Around the same time, a Confederate soldier shot and killed McPherson when he
rode out to observe the fighting. Determined attacks continued, but the Union
forces held. About 4:00 pm, Cheatham’s corps broke through the Union front at
the Hurt House, but Sherman massed twenty artillery pieces on a knoll near his
headquarters to shell these Confederates and halt their drive. Maj. Gen. John A.
Logan’ s XV Army Corps then led a counterattack that restored the Union line.
The Union troops held, and Hood suffered high casualties.
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