Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Shiloh (post by Jackson)

[Note: due to technical issues, I posted this on behalf of Jackson.]

                Shiloh is known to be Hebrew for ‘place of peace’. However, it was the sight of one of the deadliest conflicts of the civil war. Fought in Tennessee, it is the first major battle in the war. In April of 1862, a Union army under General Ulysses S. Grant was camped out in front of the Tennessee River awaiting the arrival of reinforcements before heading south to attack the confederates. The Confederate Army and General Albert Sidney Johnston attacked the Union first. The confederates drove the Union Army back toward the Tennessee River. Nevertheless, the Union line held up at a place known as the ‘Hornets Nest’. There was no choice for Grant and the Union line, they had to hold their position at all costs. I can’t even begin to imagine what was going through the minds of the Union army. I imagine their nerves were running high, it was either kill or be killed. They did end up holding the line of defense and by the end of the day the ground was full of dead corpses.
                General Johnston was killed in the first days fighting. General P.T. Beauregard takes over confident that he will take the field the next day. Reinforcements come to help Grant and the Union in the middle of the night and the Union launches a counter attack the next morning. The result is a Union victory, but one where over 13,000 deaths occur from each the North and the South. In my opinion, the cost was greater than any battle in the war. It showed that the North and Grant were willing to pay whatever price was necessary to achieve their goal. Once that victory had been established, I think that it set the tone for the war that Union victory was going to happen because the Union resources and man power were much greater than those available to the confederates. However, would the Union be able to expend it? I believe that the Battle of Shiloh shows that yes it would.
It is scary to think people were in this fight at Shiloh. When the confederates attacked, it completely took the Union by surprise. Imagine waking up to eat breakfast or still sleeping in your tent and out of nowhere you’re being shot at and attacked. I think when people think of the this war they look past what the soldiers had to deal with. Poor food, disease, poor medical treatment, great distances to travel, poor equipment, poor military leadership in the lower ranks, no sanitation, little knowledge of germs. African Americans were facing all of this plus racial discrimination. It sounds like hell to me. 

Since we have been talking about the civil war in class, I have noticed that generals from both sides seem to care a lot about what the public thinks or says. So, what was the effect on American public opinion in the North and the South after the Battle of Shiloh? Did the Union forces learn anything from the battle? Did the Confederates? How did this battle effect lives and careers of Grant, Lew Wallace, Halleck, and Sherman for the Union and Albert Sidney Johnston , PGT Beauregard ,and Braxton Bragg for the Confederates?

1 comment:

  1. I thought it was ironic how one of the deadliest battles not just during the Civil War but in the world that was recorded took place at Shiloh because of the Hebrew meaning of the term "place of peace". Being in the "Hornets Nest" probably had to be one of the most frightening things that could happen to anyone, you think it would be so loud and bloody that people couldn't even think and keep their cool. The Union soldiers did keep their cool though which is amazing considering what was going on around them. I think Beauregard was killed and then Johnston took over though. The confederates were caught off guard because they weren't expecting the North to get reinforcements and with 13.000 killed on each side in my opinion it's difficult to call that a victory for either side it sounds more like a mass killing than a victory. I agree it did show that the Union was in this and they would do whatever it took to win. This battle changed the perception that this wouldn't be a quick and easy war it was going to be a long and bloody war. One that would change this country forever.

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