Georgia Sharpshooters

Georgia Sharpshooters
Active 1 June 1862 – 26 April 1865
Country  United States
Allegiance Confederate States of America Confederate States of America
Branch  Confederate States Army
Type Infantry
Size Battalion
Garrison/HQ Savannah, Georgia
Nickname(s) Georgia Sharpshooters
Engagements Battle of Fort McAllister (1863)
Battle of Jackson, Mississippi
Battle of Chickamauga
Chattanooga Campaign
Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
Battle of Peachtree Creek
Battle of Atlanta
Battle of Jonesborough
Battle of Spring Hill
Battle of Franklin
Battle of Nashville
Battle of Bentonville
Commanders
Notable
commanders
Robert H. Anderson
Arthur Shaaf


The Georgia Sharpshooters were authorized by an act in April, 1862 by the Confederate Congress, and were formed in Savannah, Georgia. The Sharpshooters were first organized in 1862 and served at Fort McAllister defending the coast of Georgia in the Battle of Fort McAllister (1863). They also saw action at the Battle of Jackson, Mississippi as well as the Battle of Chickamauga, and the Chattanooga Campaign. As Confederate forces moved south, falling back through Atlanta. The Sharpshooters fought to the end of the war, their last engagement being at the Battle of Bentonville in March, 1865.

History and lineage

On June 1, 1862 Major Robert H. Anderson, who graduated from the US Military Academy at West Point in 1857, was serving as inspector general at the headquarters of the Department of South Carolina and Georgia in Charleston, SC. On that day he wrote a letter to Major General John C. Pemberton. the department commander. In his letter, he asked the general to raise a battalion of four companies of sharpshooters from the regiments of in the brigade of Brigadier General William Duncan Smith, located in Savannah, Georgia. Pemberton gave his approval and Anderson visited Savannah on a recruiting mission. On June 20, Pemberton wrote to Adjutant and Inspector General Samuel Cooper in Richmond, VA nominating Anderson to be in command of the battalion.[1]

Coastal Defense

The battalion was formed by early August, and on the 21st marched from Camp Pemberton to Camp Anderson, named for the battalion's commander, located on Wildhorn Plantation, about 12 miles from Savannah.[2] Assigned to guarding strategic Fort McAllister in 1861,[3] they helped repulse seven US Naval engagements to capture Fort McAllister, which protected Savannah. By lining the riverbank with sharpshooters, the defenders rained projectiles on the Union ironclads, forcing them to withdraw, and winning the praise of Confederate generals and congressmen alike. Anderson was promoted to command the 5th Georgia Cavalry, with Major Shaaf given formal command of the battalion in April, 1863. On 5 may, they were ordered to Mississippi as part of General William H. T. Walker's brigade. The mission was to join the army being formed under General Joseph E. Johnston for the Battle of Vicksburg.

Battle of Atlanta

The Sharpshooters stayed with the Army of Tennessee throughout the remainder of the conflict, seeing action in Chattanooga, Dalton, and the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain. On June 27th Walker's Division and the Sharpshooters were posted at the base of the mountain, at a place called 'the dead angle' where some of the fiercest fighting took place. For the next month, they resisted Union advances on Atlanta, and on July 20th they moved north along Peachtree Road, striking a Federal division south of Peachtree Creek. After being repulsed, Walker's division along with Hardee's corps marched six miles south of the city, taking up position along the left flank of General McPherson's Union troops between Atlanta and Decatur.

On August 19th, the 1st Battalion Georgia Sharpshooters marched with Hardee from Atlanta to East Point in an attempt to protect Atlanta's last rail connection. On August 30th, they moved toward Jonesborough.

Then End Comes

On August 31, the 1st Battalion was heavily engaged in what proved to be the final loss of Atlanta and the near destruction of the Army of Tennessee. Of the remaining members of the 1st Battalion, fifty percent were either killed, wounded or captured in the Battle of Jonesborough. Hardee's defeat allowed Hood to evacuate Atlanta, clearing Sherman's path to the sea. The battered unit wandered throughout Alabama in the fall, with the end coming in December at Franklin and Nashville. They moved throughout Tennessee and North Carolina, fighting at Bentonville before surrendering to General William T. Sherman on April 25th, 1865 16 days after Appomattox.

Gallery

Notes

  1. Brown, p. 155
  2. Brown, p. 29
  3. Brown, p. 29

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 22, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.