On this day, November 25, 1863, the Battle of Missionary Ridge occurred. During this military engagement, Union troops, led by General Ulysses S. Grant (1822-1885), defeated the Confederate forces commanded by General Braxton Bragg (1817-1876) at Missionary Ridge in Tennessee, successfully concluding the Siege of Chattanooga.
The outcome of the Battle of Missionary Ridge had major implications for the Confederate Army. It exposed vulnerabilities in their defensive strategies and highlighted the challenges of commanding a dispersed and demoralized force. In the aftermath of the defeat, General Braxton Bragg faced intense criticism from both his troops and Confederate leadership, which eventually contributed to his reassignment.
The success at Missionary Ridge marked a key turning point in the Civil War. It secured control of Chattanooga and opened up the Deep South for subsequent Union offensives. This triumph set the stage for General Sherman's Atlanta Campaign and his infamous March to the Sea. It also reinforced the Union's commitment to prevail against Confederate forces until the war's conclusion in 1865.
The success of Union forces during this battle underscored the importance of strong leadership and coordination among troops. General Ulysses S. Grant, known for his aggressive and strategic military tactics, was later appointed commander of all Union armies and played a pivotal role in the war's conclusion. He would later become the 18th president of the United States.
Today, Missionary Ridge is preserved as part of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park, where visitors can learn about the battle strategies, the soldiers' experiences, and the broader context of the Civil War.
The images come from the following books in our Civil War Collections:
Lee and His Generals by Capt. William P. Snow, published in New York by Richardson & Company in 1867.
Braxton Bragg, General of the Confederacy by Don C. Seitz, published in Columbia, S.C. by The State Company in 1924.
The Generalship of Ulysses S. Grant by Colonel J. F. C. Fuller, published in New York by Dodd, Mead and Company in 1929.
Personal Memoirs of U. S. Grant published in New York by C. L. Webster in 1885.
Life and Public Services of General Grant Being a Complete Life of the Great Hero Following His Career from the Cradle to its Close ... by William Ralston Balch, published in Chicago by J.S. Goodman in 1885.
SELF AFFIRMATIONS: No matter what I do or how badly I think I have messed up, I will never suck as hard or be hated by more people than Braxton Bragg or his brother-in-law Don Carlos Buell.
#OTD in 1862 – At the Battle of Perryville, Kentucky, “Little Phil” Sheridan is one of the key officers leading Union soldiers against the Confederate forces of Braxton Bragg.
#OTD in 1862 – At the Battle of Perryville, Kentucky, “Little Phil” Sheridan is one of the key officers leading Union soldiers against the Confederate forces of Braxton Bragg.
Phil Sheridan’s parents John and Mary Meenagh Sheridan had emigrated from Co Cavan. Sheridan’s diminutive stature of five feet five inches earned him the nickname “Little Phil”.
In his memoirs, Sheridan writes:
“My parents, John and Mary Sheridan, came to America in 1830, having been induced by the representations of my father’s uncle, Thomas Gainor, then living in Albany, NY, to try their…
The Battles for Chattanooga (November 23 to November 25, 1863) were a series of battles in which Union forces routed Confederate troops in Tennessee at the battles of Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge during the American Civil War (1861-65). The victories forced the Confederates back into Georgia, ending the siege of the vital railroad junction of Chattanooga and paving the way for Union General William Tecumseh Sherman’s Atlanta campaign and march to Savannah, Georgia, in 1864.
After the Confederate victory at Chickamauga in northwest Georgia in September 1863, the Union army retreated to the vital railroad junction of Chattanooga, Tennessee. Confederate General Braxton Bragg (1817-76) quickly laid siege to the city, cutting off access to Union supplies. In response, President Abraham Lincoln (1809-65) ordered Major General Ulysses S. Grant (1822-85) to Chattanooga. Grant, who arrived in October, soon refortified the city, opening up a desperately needed supply line, and began maneuvers to lift the siege.
The Battle of Chattanooga was launched on November 23 when Grant sent General George H. Thomas (1816-70), who was dubbed the Rock of Chickamauga for standing his ground against the Confederates at the Battle of Chickamauga, to probe the center of the Confederate line. This simple plan turned into a complete victory when the Yankees captured Orchard Knob and the Rebels retreated higher up Missionary Ridge. On November 24, the Yankees under Major General Joseph Hooker (1814-79) captured Lookout Mountain on the extreme right of the Union lines. The Battle of Lookout Mountain, also known as the Battle Above the Clouds, set the stage for the Battle of Missionary Ridge.
The attack took place in three parts. On the Union left, General William Tecumseh Sherman (1820-91) attacked troops under Patrick Cleburne (1828-64) at Tunnel Hill, an extension of Missionary Ridge. In difficult fighting, Cleburne managed to hold the hill. On the other end of the Union lines, Hooker was advancing slowly from Lookout Mountain, and his force had little impact on the battle. It was at the center that the Union achieved its greatest success. The soldiers on both sides received confusing orders. Some Union troops thought they were only supposed to take the rifle pits at the base of the ridge, while others understood that they were to advance to the top. Some of the Confederates heard that they were to hold the pits, while others thought they were to retreat to the top of Missionary Ridge. Furthermore, poor placement of Confederate trenches on the top of the ridge made it difficult to fire at the advancing Union troops without hitting their own men, who were retreating from the rifle pits.
The attack on the Confederate center turned into a major Union victory. After the center collapsed, the Confederate troops retreated on November 26 and Bragg pulled his troops away from Chattanooga. He resigned shortly thereafter, having lost the confidence of his army. (x)
I'm entirely sure that the people who wrote the Horus Heresy never heard of Braxton Bragg, but....
Perturabo fits in very well as a superhuman cosmically powered Braxton Bragg in retrospect. A logistical wunderkind whose ability to command broke down over self-created command difficulties and relishing petty quarrels and looking for slights where there were none. Capable of starting great feats but seldom able to properly finish them. Asked to do the shit jobs with the shit troops and bleeding to staggering proportions each time.
Given that I regularly reread Connelly's Army of Tennessee duology and the Iron Warriors as reminders of what happens when a lesser case of this trait without any actual impact on life off the Internet (admittedly thanks to Beervirus I haven't exactly been abundant in chances to see what it is or is not around actual human beings and I utterly and totally loathe my hometown to a point that seeing it wrecked by two hurricanes and regularly nut-punched by freezing and flooding merely leaves me feeling a twisted sense of schadenfreude that the Universe hates this shithole as much as I do and is finally, at last, fucking it over properly so.....yeah) goes too far....maybe I'm just influenced by too much interest in the Western theater and the kettle of catfish of personalities that make it such a delightful exercise in human failure at the highest levels.
Gen. Braxton Bragg has been called “The Most-Hated Man of the Confederacy.” Fort Bragg is named after him.
The Army should never have named installations after former Confederate military officers who fought against the United States, a historian who has long studied the issue says.
And now is the time to correct the error, says Duke University’s Michael Newcity.
“These men were, by definition, traitors who had conducted war against the United States,” said Newcity, deputy director for Slavic, Eurasian and East European Studies at Duke University.
After moving to North Carolina in 1992, Newcity said in a phone interview with The News & Observer, he began researching why one of the Army’s largest bases, Fort Bragg outside Fayetteville, was named for Gen. Braxton Bragg, one of the top-ranking officers of the Confederate Army.
Fort Bragg is one of 10 Army bases named for Confederates. They’re all in Southern states.
Half, including Bragg, were established during World War I and half during the 1940s.
“It just always mystified me why the Army, of all people, would have ever have thought it a good idea to name bases after these guys.”
Fort Bragg was established in September 1918, according to its website, as a place where the Army could do year-round artillery training.
Braxton Bragg’s history
Many of the millions of soldiers and civilians who have trained and worked on the base since then may have not known that it was named after Gen. Braxton Bragg, whom the American Battlefield Trust describes as “one of the most controversial figures of the Confederate army.”
The Trust says Bragg was born on March 22, 1817, in Warrenton, the son of a carpenter whose father was determined to send him to the U.S. Military Academy.
According to the biography, Bragg received an appointment to the academy at age 16 through the political connections of his older brother and graduated fifth in the class of 1837. He served in the Second Seminole War and the Mexican-American War before resigning from the military and moving to Louisiana to buy and run a sugar plantation, which relied on the labor of at least 125 slaves.
Bragg rejoined the military to serve in the Civil War, during which the Battlefield Trust says he “won partial victories — at places like Perryville, Stones River, and Chickamauga — but never delivered the finishing blow,” in part because his subordinate officers often hated him and refused to obey his battle orders.
Civil War historian Earl Hess wrote a biography of Bragg published by UNC Press in 2016, titled Braxton Bragg: The Most-Hated Man of the Confederacy, and said in a lecture at the Gettysburg College Civil War Institute conference in 2017 that while Bragg was a combative personality, he was unjustly painted by the press of his day as a failure in his personal life and military career.
Bragg was captured in 1865 and paroled in the same year. He held a series of civilian jobs after the war and died suddenly in Galveston, Texas, in 1876 at the age of 59.
The Congressional Research Service took up the question of whether it was appropriate to keep Bragg’s and other former Confederate generals’ names on modern-day Army installations in 2017, 10 days after a woman was killed in Charlottesville, Va., during a protest over a monument to Confederate Gen. Robert E. Lee.
The CRS’s four-page report reiterated a quote from Brig. Gen. Malcolm Frost, who was chief of Army Public Affairs in 2015 when he said the naming of installations is a memorialization of a distinguished individual.
“Every Army installation is named for a soldier who holds a place in our military history,” Frost said, according to the report. “Accordingly, these historic names represent individuals, not causes or ideologies.”
A preference for a shorter name
Newcity said the naming of the installations was much simpler than that.
“I think where the Army got itself into real problems was when they needed to create dozens of new camps during World War I,” he said, and it needed an easy method of naming them.
At the time, Gen. William J. Snow was the Army’s chief of field artillery, and it was his job to approve the names of the new facilities being set up to train the soldiers pouring into service. Newcity says that in his memoirs, Snow wrote that he told his subordinates the installations should be named for officers who had a connection to the place where they were located, and whose names had no more than five letters.
“Camp Zachary Taylor had been created, and Gen. Snow found it annoying to have to deal with a name that long when he was writing out communications,” Newcity said.
The establishment of the training bases coincided with the Jim Crow segregation era and the period during which the majority of Confederate monuments were commissioned and installed, according to the Southern Poverty Law Center.
Military installations located in Southern states, where most of the recruits would be from the South, were named after former Confederate officers. Installations in the North bore the names of former Union officers. Newcity said some National Guard camps set up in Southern states where Northern recruits would be sent to train also were named for former Union notables.
As recently as February, Pentagon officials dismissed the possibility of renaming bases bearing the names of Confederate leaders. But after sustained protests over the death of George Floyd in Minneapolis has drawn new attention to racial inequities, Politico reported that Army Secretary Ryan McCarthy was open to the possibility earlier this week. Citing a Pentagon source, Politico said Defense Secretary Mark Esper also supported the discussion.
A Fort Bragg spokesman referred calls on the matter to a military spokeswoman in Washington, who did not respond to a request for information about the discussion.
Pres. Donald Trump tweeted Wednesday he would approve no such thing.
“It has been suggested that we should rename as many as 10 of our Legendary Military Bases, such as Fort Bragg in North Carolina, Fort Hood in Texas, Fort Benning in Georgia, etc. These Monumental and very Powerful Bases have become part of a Great American Heritage, and a history of Winning, Victory, and Freedom,” the president tweeted.
“The United States of America trained and deployed our HEROES on these Hallowed Grounds, and won two World Wars. Therefore, my Administration will not even consider the renaming of these Magnificent and Fabled Military Installations.
“Our history as the Greatest Nation in the World will not be tampered with. Respect our Military!” Trump said.
North Carolina Sen. Thom Tillis also objected to the idea on Thursday. The Republican-led Senate Armed Service Committee approved an amendment to the annual defense spending bill that would require the renaming of those bases within three years, according to reports. Tillis, a Republican, voted against the amendment in a committee voice vote.
The Army accepted Black volunteers during the 1860s but didn’t have its first Black four-star general until 1975.
The military says more than 900,000 Black people served in World War II, but that the armed services didn’t deactivate the last segregated unit until 1954. In 2016, the U.S. Army had more than 1 million members, including active duty, reserve and National Guard. Of more than 471,000 active-duty members, 21% were Black, according to Army data.
‘Not the bases that are fabled’
Fort Bragg is now home to more than 52,000 active-duty soldiers, more than 12,000 reserve and temporary-duty personnel, nearly 9,000 civilian employees and 63,000 military family members, according to the Army.
“I don’t know,” Newcity said. “I guess maybe I invest too much significance to it. But how can you ask African Americans to fight on behalf of an armed forces that is so insensitive as to have bases named after, and honoring, men who fought to preserve slavery?
“They can say it’s about the individual and not the ideology, and they can talk about reconciliation. But there is certainly nothing in the record to suggest a spirit of reconciliation motivating the names of these bases, other than perhaps with Southern whites within the U.S. Army.
“There is no aspect of that that involves reconciliation with African Americans.”
Newcity said the president’s suggestion that renaming the bases — some have suggested using the names of Medal of Honor recipients — would be disrespectful or somehow diminish their fabled history is wrong-headed.
“It’s not the bases that are fabled,” Newcity said. “It’s what the guys on those bases have done that’s fabled.
“That’s what we remember.”
Staff writer Brian Murphy contributed to this report.
The most hilarious thing I have recently learned is: Braxton Bragg fucking sucked. I specifically mean that he sucked as a military leader—setting aside the question of why you would name a massive U.S. Army installation after a man who willingly and enthusiastically committed treason against the United States, killing thousands of U.S. soldiers in the process.
This is not even a spicy new take: it is widely acknowledged by historians that Confederate loser Braxton Bragg was just god-awful bad. (In the words of Kenneth W. Noe, Bragg's name has become "synonymous with pettiness, bitterness, incompetence, and in some cases even paranoia and insanity," adding that "Bragg’s men would write scathingly of their commander.")
The small city of Chattanooga, with 2,500 inhabitants, lay on the banks of the Tennessee River where it cut through the Appalachian Mountains. It was the crossroads for four major railroads. President Abraham Lincoln knew that if his army could capture Chattanooga, vital Confederate supply lines would be severed, and the war would be closer to an end.
In the summer of 1863, the Confederate army was reeling from a string of losses in the Western Theater, while the success of the Tullahoma Campaign bolstered the confidence of Union Maj. Gen. William Rosecrans. Targeting Chattanooga, Rosecrans outmaneuvered the Rebel army and forced Confederate general Braxton Bragg to relinquish control of the critical transportation hub without a fight.
Rosecrans assumed that Braxton Bragg’s demoralized army would retreat further south into Rome, Georgia. He divided his army into three corps and scattered them throughout Tennessee and Georgia. But Rosecrans made a mistake—Bragg had in fact concentrated his men at LaFayette, Georgia, where he was expecting reinforcements and was close to a vulnerable corps of Rosecrans’s army. When Bragg’s troops crossed Chickamauga Creek, the Federals had a fight on their hands.
Although Bragg’s original plan was the destruction of the Army of the Cumberland and the recapture of Chattanooga, the results of two days of bitter fighting at Chickamauga stalled him. He decided to occupy the heights surrounding Chattanooga and lay siege to the city instead. Just two months later, the reinforced Federals drove the Army of Tennessee from their positions around Chattanooga, permanently securing Northern control of the city. With that loss, the Southern victory at Chickamauga was turned into a strategic defeat.