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See also: great See also: battle in the See also: American See also: Civil War, also called the battle of See also: Pittsburg Landing, was fought on the 6th-7th of See also: April 1862 between the Union forces under See also: Grant and
See also: Buell and the Confederates under A
.
S
.
See also: Johnston and Beauregard
.
In view of operations against See also: Corinth, See also: Mississippi, Grant's army had ascended the See also: Tennessee to Pittsburg Landing and there disembarked, while the co-operating army under Buell moved across country from See also: Nashville to join it
.
The Confederates concentrated above 40,000 men at Corinth and advanced on Pittsburg Landing with a view to beating Grant before Buell's arrival, but their concentration had See also: left them only a narrow margin of See also: time, and the advance was further delayed by the wretched condition of the roads
.
Beauregard advised Johnston to give up the enterprise, but on account of the See also: bad effect a retreat would have on his raw troops Johnston resolved to continue his advance
.
Grant meantime had disposed his divisions in camps around the Landing rather with a view to their comfort than in accordance with any See also: tactical scheme
.
No entrenchments were made; HalIeck, the Union commanding general in the West, was equally over-confident, and allowed Buell to See also: march in leisurely fashion
.
Even so, more by chance than ' intentionally, Buell's leading division was opposite the Landing, awaiting only a
See also: ferry, on the evening before the battle; Grant, however, declined to allow it to See also: cross, as he thought that there would be no fighting for some days
.
At 6 A.M. on the 6th of April, near See also: Shiloh See also: Church (2 M. from Pittsburg Landing), the Confederate army deployed in
See also: line of battle, and advancing dire,ctly on the Landing, surprised and broke up a brigade of the. most advanced Union division (Prentiss's) which had been sent forward from See also: camp to reconnoitre
.
The various Union divisions hurriedly prepared to defend themselves, but they were dispersed in several camps which were out of sight of one another, and thus the Confederate army lapped round the flanks of each See also: local defence as it encountered it
.
The two advanced divisions were swiftly driven in on the others, who were given a little time to prepare themselves by the fact that in the woods the Confederate leaders were unable to control or manoeuvre their excited troops . But theSee also: rear Union divisions, though ready, were not connected, and each in turn was isolated and forced back, fighting hard, towards the Landing
.
The remnant of Prentiss's division was cut off and forced to surrender
.
Another division had its See also: commander, W
.
H
.
L
.
See also: Wallace, killed
.
But on the other See also: side the disorder became greater and greater, many regiments were used up, and Johnston himself killed in vainly attacking on a point of Wallace's line called the Hornet's See also: Nest
.
The See also: day passed in confused and savage scuffles between the raw enthusiasts of either side, but by 5.30 P.M
.
Grant had formed a last (and now a connected) line of defence with Buell's leading division (Nelson's) and all of his own See also: infantry that he could rally
.
This line was
hardly 600 yds. from the Landing, but it was in a naturally strong position, and Beauregard suspended the attack at sunset
.
There was a last fruitless assault, delivered by some of the Confederate brigades on the right that had not received Beau-regard's See also: order against Nelson's intact troops, who were supported by the fire of the gunboats on the Tennessee
.
During the See also: night Grant's detached division (Lew Wallace's) and Buell's army came up, totalling 25,000 fresh troops, and at 5 A.M. on the 7th Grant took the offensive
.
Beauregard thereupon decided to extricate his sorely-tried troops from the misadventure, and retired fighting on Corinth
.
About Shiloh Church, a strong rearguard under See also: Bragg repulsed the attacks of Grant and Buell for six See also: hours before withdrawing, and all that Grant and Buell achieved was the reoccupation of the abandoned camps
.
It was a See also: Con-federate failure, but not a Union victory, and, each side being weakened by about ro,000 men, neither made any movements for the next three See also: weeks
.
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