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Copyrights: All pictures were taken by amateur photographer Bruce Guthrie (me!) who retains copyright on them. Free for non-commercial use with attribution. See the [Creative Commons] definition of what this means. "Photos (c) Bruce Guthrie" is fine for attribution. (Commercial use folks can of course contact me.) Feel free to use in publications and pages with attribution but you don't have permission to sell the photos themselves. A free copy of any printed publication using any photographs is requested. Descriptive text, if any, is from a mixture of sources, quite frequently from signs at the location or from official web sites; copyrights, if any, are retained by their original owners.
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Specific picture descriptions: Photos above with "i" icons next to the bracketed sequence numbers (e.g. "[1] ") are described as follows:
KENNMT_030829_001_STITCH.JPG: This is the Kennesaw side of the mountain. You can see it's not ripped up as much as the Atlanta side is but it will be shortly. Atlanta's growing way too quickly and, due to minimum lot sizes, it's spreading faster than it should.
KENNMT_030829_002_STITCH.JPG: Okay, so it was crappy weather and this didn't come out well but if you look hard, you can see skyscrapers on the horizon. That's Atlanta in the far distance.
KENNMT_030829_004.JPG: Look on the horizon and you'll see Atlanta
KENNMT_030829_014.JPG: This is on the side of the mountain opposite of Atlanta, pointing toward Kennesaw. If you put them together, you'll get a little panorama.
KENNMT_030829_039.JPG: In the distance is Pine Mountain where Confederate Lt Gen Leonidas Polk was killed by Union cannonballs on June 14, 1864.
KENNMT_030829_104.JPG: The sign in the foreground says:
Embattled Earthworks
These shallow ditches were once formidable earthen and log defenses. Confederate soldiers also felled trees and installed other barriers in front of the trenches to slow Union attackers.
The 3rd & 5th Consolidated Missouri Regiment, CSA, built and defended the earthworks here on Pigeon Hill. On June 27, the 6th Missouri Regiment, USA, took part in the Union assault on Pigeon Hill. Ironically, Confederate Missourians battled Union Missourians as Federal forces fought uphill to within 25 yards of these earthworks and took cover behind the boulders just ahead.
By the time they retreated from this hill, 154 Federals of Brig Gen Giles Smith's brigade lay dead, 10 of those from Missouri; the Confederate Missourians suffered 9 killed and 27 wounded.
Another sign in the area says:
Assault on Pigeon Hill
Union attackers failed to split the Confederate army here.
On the morning of June 27, 1864, three brigades totalling 5,500 soldiers from Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois charged toward Pigeon Hill. Advancing in battle lines astride Burnt Hickory Road, one Union brigade overran the Georgian-held rifle pits near this location with two other brigades crossed Old Mountain Road.
Once beyond the road, the attack ran into felled trees and other Confederate-built obstacles on Pigeon Hill. As the Federals struggled over the obstructions and rough terrain, the well-entrenched Southerners opened fire with musketry and cannon, some Confederates on Little Kennesaw even heaved boulders. The Union troops sought cover as the assault crumbled. ...
By noon the Union forces had withdrawn to Old Mountain Road and after dark they returned to their lines. The assault cost the Federals more than 850 killed, wounded, or missing soldiers; the Confederate casualties numbered about 250.
KENNMT_030829_121.JPG: The sign for these cannons says:
Camouflaged Cannons
Tennessee cannoneers positioned two 12-pounder howitzers within this redoubt. Maj Gen Benjamin F Cheatham ordered these artillery crews to camouflage the earthen mounds with cut underbrush and to hold their fire unless attacked. For the next week, they kept under cover as Union bombardments tried to weaken the Confederate lines.
On the morning of June 27, a Union barrage preceded close-packed Federal attackers. The gunners here waited silently as blue-clad columns pushed through the dense forest despite Confederate small arms fire. Finally, at point-blank range, the cannon crews opened fire. Flying canister stunned the Federal lines and, according to one Confederate officer, "did great execution."
Confederate artillery crews normally consisted of a gunner, in charge of seven cannoneers. Well-trained crews could reload and shoot four times a minute.
KENNMT_030829_130.JPG: Two signs here:
Field Fortifications
Confederate engineers and work crews started digging earthworks around Kennesaw Mountain a few days before their army fell back to this position on June 19. For the next week, Southern soldiers improved their earthwork defenses despite constant rain.
The Southerners dug deep, throwing the dirt toward the Union side of the trenches. The earthen wall -- called a parapet -- was topped with a braced log, leaving an open space beneath it for soldiers to shoot through. Fighting from behind these defenses, the Confederates held a great advantage over the attacking Federals during the Battle of Kennesaw Mountain on June 27, 1864.
Today within Kennesaw Mountain National Battlefield Park, 11 miles of shallow ditches remain from these formidable earthworks. Help preserve these fragile resources by staying on the park's trails.
Climax at Cheatham Hill
Confederate defenders here defeated the main Union assault.
On June 27, 1864, more than 8,000 Union infantrymen attacked an equal number of well-entrenched Confederates along this low-lying hill. One Tennessee veteran compared the assault to "ocean waves driven by a hurricane... sweeping on as if by irresistible impulse."
The Confederates repulsed the first Federal charges. While attempting to rally his eight Union regiments, 27-year-old Brig Gen Charles G Harker was shot off his white horse. Although one Federal brigade reached the Confederate lines 1/4 mile to your right, Union troops soon retreated in disarray.
About 1/4 mile to the left, two other Union brigades charged toward an angle in the Confederate defenses. This trail follows the Confederate earthworks to the area that both sides later named "The Dead Angle."
KENNMT_030829_183.JPG: This Illinois state monument stands in "The Dead Angle". From two signs:
The Dead Angle
This bend in the Confederate line became the battle's focal point.
At 9:00am on June 27, 1864, thousands of yelling, blue-clad soldiers charged across the distance field toward the Tennessee soldiers in these earthworks. As the Federals came forward at double time in successive lines, the Confederates raked the enemy with rifle-musket fire.
Despite hundreds of casualties, the Federals surged toward the protruding angle in the Confederate defense line. Union Col Daniel McCook, a brigade commander, fell mortally wounded on the brink of these earthworks while leading his troops. As Federals reached the Southern lines, savage hand to hand combat broke out.
Confederate Maj Gen Frank Cheatham's Tennesseans stubbornly held their line, and those Federals not shot, clubbed down, bayonetted, or captured sought shelter. The Union charge was broken. ...
Survivors from both sides named this area "The Dead Angle." Confederate Pvt Sam Watkins later wrote, "The ground was piled up with one solid mass of dead and wounded Yankees."
The Assault Falters
Beaten Federals entrenched within 30 yards of the Confederate earthworks.
As the Union attack stalled, two surviving Federal colonels hastily discussed retreat. Realizing that withdrawing under heavy fire would invite more bloodshed, they decided to dig in along this brow of the hill not covered by fire from the Confederate earthworks only 30 yards away.
While half of the Federals fired toward the earthworks, the rest furiously scooped shallow trenches with their bayonets and tin cups. After nightfall, the Federals brought up tools from the rear and built two lines of entrenchments.
For the next six days, both sides exchanged sniper fire, expecting an attack at any moment. Only a seven-hour truce to bury the dead on June 29 interrupted the tense stalemate.
As the standoff continued, the Federals started a tunnel here, intending to blow up the Southern earthworks on July 4. But during the night of July 2, the Confederates quietly slipped away, forced to retreat at Sherman's Union army outflanked them again. A small stone arch, erected in 1914, marks the tunnel entrance.
KENNMT_030829_187.JPG: This is the field the federals came charging across
KENNMT_030829_188.JPG: This marker is on a Union tunnel at "The Dead Angle." The sign on it says "This tunnel was planned with a view of blowing up the Confederate works which their evacuation made unnecessary."
KENNMT_030829_218.JPG: From the sign:
Battle of Kolb's Farm -- June 22, 1864
A costly Confederate attack here stopped the Union army's attempt to bypass Kennesaw Mountain.
On June 22, 1864, Confederate Gen Joseph E Johnston sent Lt Gen John Bell Hood's 13,000 troops down Powder Springs Road to stop the Federal army's threat to his flank. When Confederate skirmishers encountered Maj Gen Joseph Hooker's 11,000-man Union corps here at Kolb's farm, Hood ordered his troops to attack.
Hooker, having learned of Hood's plans from some captured Confederates, ordered his troops to dig in. At 4:00pm, Hood sent two of his three divisions toward the waiting Federals. After several unsuccessful charges through the woods, fields, and swamps across the road, the battered Confederates withdrew.
Wikipedia Description: Battle of Kennesaw Mountain
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Battle of Kennesaw Mountain was fought on June 27, 1864, during the Atlanta Campaign of the American Civil War. Despite its name, much of the battle was fought to the southwest of Kennesaw Mountain, near Marietta, Georgia. The main participants in the battle were the Union armies under the command of Gen. William T. Sherman and the Army of Tennessee under the command of Gen. Joseph E. Johnston.
Prelude:
All throughout north Georgia, Sherman had advanced his army southeast along the railroad from Chattanooga, Tennessee, towards Atlanta, Georgia. Johnston would take up defensive positions, only to retreat whenever Sherman marched his troops around the Confederate army to flank them. At Kennesaw Mountain, Johnston had a massive network of trenches and earthworks prepared to halt the Union advance. This time, when Sherman tried to march his army southwards around Kennesaw, he was met by an attack at Kolb's farm from Confederate troops under the command of John B. Hood. Although the Union soldiers turned back Hood's hastily prepared attack, Sherman's army could not flank the Rebel army any further. Muddy roads had become nearly impassable because of a series of June rainstorms. Sherman knew that in these conditions, a march further away from his supply line at the railroad would be too slow. Instead, Sherman believed that Hood's expansion of the southern end of the Confederate line had stretched Johnston's army too thin. The Union general drew up plans for an attack on the middle of the Confederate defenses.
The battle:
The Union army began the attack early in the morning with a thunderous artillery barrage on the entrenched Rebels. This was followed up by an infantry attack in three parts: the Army of the Cumberland under the command of George Henry Thomas would lead the main attack on William J. Hardee's soldiers in the center; to Thomas' left, the Army of the Tennessee under the comm ...More...
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Directly Related Pages: Other pages with content (GA -- Kennesaw Mountain Natl Battlefield Park) directly related to this one:
[Display ALL photos on one page]:
2006_GA_Kennesaw_Mtn: GA -- Kennesaw Mountain Natl Battlefield Park (20 photos from 2006)
1998_GA_Kennesaw_Mtn: GA -- Kennesaw Mountain Natl Battlefield Park (118 photos from 1998)
2003 photos: Equipment this year: I decided my Epson digital camera wasn't quite enough for what I wanted. Since I already had Compact Flash chips for it, I had to find another camera which used CF chips. That brought me to buy the Fujifilm S602 Zoom in March 2003. A great digital camera, I used it exclusively for an entire year.
Trips this year: Three-week trip this year out west, mostly in Utah.
Number of photos taken this year: 68,000.
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