Chattanooga from Point Park, Lookout Mountain. The Cravens House
and portion of "Battle above the Clouds" battlefield around it are in
the foreground.
The War After Chattanooga
In the spring of 1864, the Union armies began to move
into the heart of the Confederacy. Grant attached himself to the Army of
the Potomac (General Meade) and began operations against Lee; Sherman
moved against Gen. Joseph E. Johnston in Georgia.
The Army of the Potomac launched a campaign against
Richmond. In the bitter battles of the Wilderness and Spotsylvania Court
House, in May 1864, Grant reduced Lee's offensive power. After being
repulsed at Cold Harbor, Grant moved against Petersburg and a 10-month
siege finally forced Lee to evacuate the city. Lee moved westward to
Appomattox Court House where on April 9, 1865, Grant forced him to
surrender.
While Lee and Grant fought it out in Virginia,
Sherman, using Chattanooga for his base of supplies, conducted a
strenuous campaign against the Army of Tennessee, first under Johnston
and then Hood, finally entering Atlanta on September 2. In November,
Sherman began his famous "march to the sea," reaching Savannah in late
December. From there he struck northward through the Carolinas and
forced the surrender of Joseph E. Johnston's army on April 26. By June
all isolated Confederate forces had laid down their arms.
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