Battle Of Shiloh Essay

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The Battle of Shiloh, also referred as the Battle of Pittsburg Landing, was fought for two days on 6th and 7th of April 1862 in southwestern Tennessee. Plan aimed to defeat Army of the Tennessee led by major general Grant of Union, in a blitzkrieg operation spearheaded under General Johnston in the western theater. The deployed soldiers involved in the war from the side of Union and Confederate was 66000 and 44700 respectively, and it caused 13000 deaths in the Union side and 10700 in the side of the Confederate. The important events and places associated with this war include Hornet's Nest, Sunken Road, Ruggles’s Battery, Peach Orchard, and Defense of Pittsburg Landing. The war culminated in the victory for the Union (“Battle of Shiloh”). The Confederate forces led by Johnston mounted a sudden attack on Federal forces led by Grant camping around Shiloh Church and forced the latter to retreat to a defensive perimeter at the heights above Pittsburg Landing on the bank of Tennessee River. Johnston, who bled to death on being wounded in the legs in the afternoon and replaced by Gen. Pierre Gustave Toutant Beauregard, the commander of the Army of the Mississippi. Beauregard made a cardinal mistake in surmising that the army led by Grant was vanquished and that the reinforcement led by Buell …show more content…

As per available literature that after the Battle of Shiloh, the people of South never smiled. (“Battle of Shiloh”: Pearcy, 2014).According to Oslen (2006), this battle caused the death of 3500 persons, wounded over 165000 with another 2000 succumbing to injuries later. He termed this battle as the deadliest as around 5000 only died in the whole of the American Revolution. He wondered and asked God whether anything on earth could compensate the human slaughter of this magnitude (Pearcy,

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