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WAR IS FOR FIGHTING AND FIGHTING MEANS KILLING.
THAT MOTTO GOT ME THROUGH THE UNRESTED YEARS OF THE CIVIL WAR. I'VE SEEN
MORE KILLING AND POVERTY THAN SHOULD BE ALLOWED IN A HUMAN RACE. UNDERSTAND
THAT WE ARE NOT BARBARIC. WE ARE PEOPLE OF OUR TIME. WE HAVE BEEN PUT
IN POSITIONS TO FORM UNIONS WITH OTHER SOUTHERNERS IN ORDER TO SURVIVE.
LET
ME TEACH YOU A LESSON AND YOU MUST LEARN FROM OUR MISTAKES.
- NATHAN BEDFORD FORREST
With no formal military training, Nathan Bedford Forrest
became one of the leading cavalry figures of the Civil War. The native
Tennesseean had amassed a fortune, which he estimated at $1,500,000, as
a slave trader and plantation owner before enlisting in the Confederate
army as a private in Josiah H. White's cavalry company on June 14, 1861.
Tapped by the governor, he then raised a mounted battalion at his own
expense.
His assignments included:
lieutenant colonel, Forrest's Tennessee Cavalry Battalion (October 1861);
colonel, 3rd Tennessee Cavalry (March 1862); brigadier general, CSA July
21, 1862); commanding cavalry brigade, Army of the Mississippi (summer-November
20, 1862); commanding cavalry brigade, Army of Tennessee (November 20,
1862 Summer 1863); commanding cavalry division, Army of Tennessee (summer
1863); commanding cavalry corps, Army of Tennessee (ca. August -September
29, 1863); commanding West Tennessee, (probably in) Department of Mississippi
and East Louisiana (November 14, 1863 - January 11, 1864); major general,
CSA (December 4, 1863); commanding cavalry corps, Department of Mississippi
and East Louisiana January 11 - 28, 1864); commanding District of Mississippi
and East Louisiana, Department of Alabama, Mississippi and East Louisiana
January 27 - May 4, 1865); also commanding cavalry corps, Department of
Alabama, Mississippi and East Louisiana January 28 - May 4, 1865); and
lieutenant general, CSA (February 28, 1865).
When the mass Confederate
breakout attempt at Fort Donelson failed, Forrest led most of his own men,
and some other troops, through the besieging lines and then directed the
rear guard during the retreat from Nashville. At Shiloh there was little
opportunity for the effective use of the mounted troops and his command
again formed the rear guard on the retreat. The day after the close of
the battle Forrest was wounded. After serving during the Corinth siege
he was promoted to brigadier general, and he raised a brigade with which
he captured Murfreesboro, its garrison and supplies.
In December 1862 and January
1863 he led another raid, this time in west Tennessee, which contributed
to the abandonment of Grant's campaign in central Mississippi; the other
determining factor was Van Dorn's Holly Springs raid. Joining up with Joseph
Wheeler, Forrest took part in the unsuccessful attack on Fort Donelson
which resulted in Forrest swearing he would never serve under Wheeler again.
His next success came with
the capture of the Union raiding column under Abel D. Streight in the spring
of 1863. On June 14, 1863, he was shot by a disgruntled subordinate, Andrew
W. Gould, whom Forrest then mortally wounded with his penknife. Recovering,
he commanded a division that summer and then a corps at Chickamauga. Having
had a number of disputes with army commander Braxton Bragg, Forrest was
humiliated by being placed under Wheeler again. His request for transfer
to west Tennessee was granted and he was dispatched there with a pitifully
small force. Recruiting in that area, he soon had a force large enough
to give Union commanders headaches. Sherman kept ordering his Memphis commanders
to catch him.
When Forrest captured Fort
Pillow a controversy developed over reports of a massacre of the largely
black garrison. Apparently a massacre did occur there are numerous Confederate
firsthand accounts of it. He defeated Samuel D. Sturgis at Brice's Crossroads
and under Stephen D. Lee fought Andrew J. Smith at Tupelo. He again faced
Smith during August 1864 and then provided the cavalry force for Hood's
invasion of middle Tennessee that fall. Finally the force of numbers began
to tell when he proved incapable of stopping Wilson's raid through Alabama
and Georgia in the final months of the war. His diminished command was
included in Richard Taylor's surrender.
Wiped out financially by
the war, he resumed planting and became the president of the Selma, Marion
& Memphis Railroad, which he helped to promote. Joining the Ku Klux
Klan shortly after the war, he was apparently one of its early leaders.
Forrest once summed up his military theory as "Get there first with the
most men." He died, probably of diabetes, at Memphis on October 29, 1877,
and is buried there. |
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