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Fort
Henry
February 6, 1862 Stewart and Henry Counties, TN, and
Calloway County, KY Campaign: First Union Western Offensive
Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant, USA and Flag-Officer A.H. Foote, USN Brig.
Gen. Lloyd Tilghman, CSA
Grant had a couple of divisions with naval support against a badly-built
fort.
Total casualties were light, under 150.
By February 1862, Fort Henry, a small Confederate earthen fort on the
Tennessee River with seventeen outdated guns, was partially inundated and the
river threatened to flood the rest. Tilghman was working on one weakness of the
fort, and had started building Fort Heiman on the high ground across the
river. Before he could finish the job, Union troops arrived. On
February 4-5, Grant landed his divisions in two different locations, one on the
east bank of the Tennessee River to prevent the garrison’s escape and the other
to occupy the high ground on the Kentucky side which would insure the fort’s
fall; Foote’s seven gunboats began bombarding the fort. Tilghman realized
that it was only a matter of time before Fort Henry fell. While leaving seventy
artillerymen in the fort to hold off the Union fleet, he escorted the rest of
his force out of the area and sent them safely off on the route to Fort
Donelson, 10 miles away. (They escaped since the creeks were too high for Union
troops to cut them off.) Tilghman then returned to the fort and, soon
afterwards, surrendered to the fleet, which had engaged the fort and closed
within 400 yards. (Since the Confederate fort was basically at water level
the gunboats could easily and accurately shell it, while a fort on high ground
was a harder target and could use plunging fire. Fort Henry was a problem
waiting to happen for the South.) Despite a two-hour gun duel, armor plate
saved Foote’s ships from serious damage, and only the USS Essex needed much
repair. Fort Henry’s fall opened the Tennessee River to Union gunboats and
shipping as far as Muscle Shoals, Alabama. (Foote sent his three wooden gunboats
up the almost undefended river, holding his four ironclads to support the attack
on Fort Donelson.) After the fall of Fort Donelson, ten days later, the
two major water transportation routes in the Confederate west, bounded by the
Appalachians and the Mississippi River, became Union highways for movement of
troops and material.
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