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Collierville
November 3, 1863 Shelby County, TN Campaign:
Operations on the Memphis & Charleston Railroad (1863)
Col. Edward Hatch, USA Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers, CSA
A Union cavalry brigade sparred with a Confederate cavalry division three
times its size.
Union losses were just over 50, Confederate losses slightly under 100.
Four minor battles occurred in 1863 at Collierville, Tennessee, during a
three-month period. The November 3 fight was intended to be a Confederate
cavalry raid to break up the Memphis & Charleston Railroad behind Maj. Gen.
William T. Sherman’s XV Army Corps, then in the process of marching to the
relief of Chattanooga. But, when Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers, leading a cavalry
division riding up from Mississippi, learned that only two Union regiments
defended Collierville, he decided to attack. Union Col. Edward Hatch possessed
more men than Chalmers supposed, stationed at Collierville and at Germantown,
five miles to the west. Scouts warned Hatch of Chalmers’s approach from the
south, so he ordered Collierville’s defenders to be prepared and rode from
Germantown with cavalry reinforcements. Chalmers, as he had done only three
weeks earlier, attacked from the south. Col. Hatch arrived with help. Surprised
by the unexpected appearance of the enemy on his flanks, Chalmers concluded that
he was outnumbered, called off the battle, and, to ward off Union pursuit,
withdrew back to Mississippi. The Memphis & Charleston Railroad remained
open to Tuscumbia, Alabama, for Union troop movements.
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