Responses: 4
Hood was a disaster as an Army Commander. He was an aggressive sort who had never led more than a Division and when he was with Lee in Va it was noted that he was lacking in logistics and attention to detail in camp. After he was wounded at Chickamauga in Sept of 1863 he spent his convalescence time brown-nosing President Davis in Richmond.
He went to the Army of Tennessee as no more than a spy doing a hatchet Job on the current Commander, Joe Johnson . He sent backstabbing dispatches to Davis, undercutting him and all but trying to get him relieved. Within three months he lost Atlanta and by the End of the Year he had led the AOT to practical Annihilation outside Nashville.
He went to the Army of Tennessee as no more than a spy doing a hatchet Job on the current Commander, Joe Johnson . He sent backstabbing dispatches to Davis, undercutting him and all but trying to get him relieved. Within three months he lost Atlanta and by the End of the Year he had led the AOT to practical Annihilation outside Nashville.
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Hood was the one of the generals that helped the Union win. He followed up this with a series of actions that destroyed to Army of Tennessee will minimal Union effort.
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Thanks for reminding us that on July 20, 1864 TSgt Joe C. General John Bell Hood’s Confederate forces attacked William T. Sherman’s troops outside of Atlanta, Georgia at the Battle of Peachtree Creek, but are repulsed with heavy losses.
Here is a painting of that battle.
Here is a painting of that battle.
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