Online Encyclopedia

DALTON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 779 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DALTON  , a

city and the county-seat of Whitfield county,
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Georgia, U.S.A., in the N W.
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part of the state, loo m . N.N.W. of
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Atlanta . Pop . (1890) 3046; (1900) 4315 (957 negroes) ; (191o) 5324 . Dalton is served by the
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Southern, the
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Nashville,
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Chattanooga & St Louis, and the Western & Atlanta (operated by the Nashville, Chattanooga & St Louis)
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railways . The city is in a rich agricultural region;
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ships cotton, grain, fruit and ore; and has various manufactures, including canned fruit and vegetables,
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flour and foundry and machine
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shop products . It is the seat of Dalton
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Female College . Dalton was founded by Duff Green and others in 1848, and was incorporated in 1874 . Hither General Braxton Bragg retreated after his defeat at Chattanooga in the last week of November 1863 . Three weeks afterwards Bragg, in command of the army in
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northern Georgia in winter quarters here, was replaced by General Joseph E . Johnston, who, with his force of 54,400, adopted defensive tactics to meet Sherman's invasion of Georgia, with his 99,000 or 100,000 men in the Army of the Cumberland (6o,000) under General G . H .

Thomas, the Army of the
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Tennessee (25,000) under General J . B . M`Pherson, and the Army of the
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Ohio (14,000) under General J . M . Schofield . The Federal forces stretched for 20 M. in a position south of Ringgold and between Ringgold and Dalton . Johnston's
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line of defences included Rocky Face Ridge, a wall of rock through which the railway passes about 5 m. north-west of the city, Mill Creek (1 m. north-north-west of Dalton), which he dammed so that it could not be forded, and earthworks north and east of the city . On the 7th of May General M`Pherson started for Resaca, r8 m. south of Dalton, to occupy the railway there in Johnston's
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rear, but he did not attack Resaca, thinking it too strongly protected; Thomas, with Schofield on his
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left, on the 7th forced the
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Con-federates through
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Buzzard's Roost
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Gap (the pass at Mill Creek) north-west of Dalton; at Dug Gap, 4 M. south-west of Dalton, on the 8th a fierce Federal assault under Brigadier-General John W . Geary failed to dislodge the Confederates from a quite impregnable position . On the 11th the main
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body of Sherman's army followed M`Pherson toward Resaca, and Johnston, having evacuated Dalton on the
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night of the 12th, was thus forced, after five days' manoeuvring and skirmishing, to march to Resaca and to meet Sherman there . - See J . D .

Cox, The Atlanta
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Campaign (New York, 1882) ; Johnson and Buel, Battles and Leaders of the
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Civil War (4 vols., New York, 1887) ; and Official Records of the War of the
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Rebellion, series 1, vols . 32, 38, 39, 45, 49; series ii., vol . 8 . DALTON-IN-FURNESS, a market
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town in the North Lonsdale
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parliamentary division of
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Lancashire, England, 4 M . N.E. by N. of Barrow-in-Furness by the Furness railway . Pop. of urban
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district (1901) 13,020 . The church of St Mary is in the main a
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modern reconstruction, but retains ancient fragments and a font believed to have belonged to Furness Abbey . This
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fine ruin lies 3 M. south of Dalton (see FURNESS) . St Mary's churchyard contains the tomb of the painter George Romney, a native of the town . Of Dalton Castle there remains a square tower, showing decorated windows . Here was held the manorial court of Furness Abbey . There are numerous iron-ore mines in the parish, and ironworks at Askam-in-Furness, in the northern part of the district .

End of Article: DALTON
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