Battle of Sacramento (Kentucky)

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DateDecember 28, 1861
Result Confederate victory
Battle of Sacramento
Part of the American Civil War

The Battle of the Green River, Kentucky (by H. Mosler, Harper's Weekly, January 1862)
DateDecember 28, 1861
Location
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
Confederate States of America United States
Commanders and leaders
Confederate States of America Lieutenant Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest United States Maj. Eli H. Murray
Strength
200–300[1] 500[1]
Casualties and losses
2 killed, three wounded.[2] 10 killed and 13 captured according to Union sources, nearly 100 killed and thirty-five captured according to Confederate sources.[1][2]
Battle of Sacramento Battlefield
Battle of Sacramento (Kentucky) is located in Kentucky
Battle of Sacramento (Kentucky)
Battle of Sacramento (Kentucky) is located in the United States
Battle of Sacramento (Kentucky)
LocationJunction of Kentucky Routes 81 and 85 in Sacramento
Coordinates37°25′10″N 87°15′42″W / 37.41944°N 87.26167°W / 37.41944; -87.26167
Area30 acres (12 ha)
Built1861 (1861)
NRHP reference No.97000875[3]
Added to NRHPMarch 24, 1998

The Battle of Sacramento was an engagement of the American Civil War that took place in Sacramento, Kentucky on December 28, 1861. Confederate cavalry under Lieutenant Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest, numbering between 200 and 300, attacked, encircled and defeated a Union force of 500 under Major Eli H. Murray which had been watering south of the town after moving across the bank of the Green River. Though exact casualty information is disputed, with differing accounts from each side, several eyewitnesses attested to the personal courage of Forrest, and the Confederate commander was praised by his superiors for his bravery.

The engagement was one of the earliest of Forrest's career as a commander of the cavalry, and it featured several examples of tactics and traits which would become hallmarks of his military career, including the division of his forces, outflanking and encirclement, concealment, and personally leading cavalry charges. It was also an early battle for Brigadier-General Stovepipe Johnson, who was then a private. The Union force was decisively routed, and the battle became known as "Forrest's First Fight" and is annually re-enacted by local residents.

Both the Union Army and the Confederate forces recruited and drilled within Kentucky, as the state's population "displayed divided loyalties" during the early stages of the Civil War.[4] Confederate Major-General Leonidas Polk began taking Kentucky villages in September 1861 with the blessing of Jefferson Davis, despite the protests of Confederate commanders Simon Bolivar Buckner and Leroy Walker. Union Brigadier-General Ulysses S. Grant approached using the Ohio River and stationed himself at Paducah, arriving to face newly appointed Confederate General Albert Sidney Johnston.[4] By October, with both armies maneuvering in an attempt to gain the upper hand, Forrest's battalion was ordered to Kentucky from Memphis, Tennessee, reporting to Colonel Adolphus Heiman. Heiman was charged with constructing Fort Henry and Fort Donelson and had requested a unit of cavalry to support him.[4]

Forrest had with him eight companies recruited from Alabama, Kentucky, Tennessee and Texas. Drilled for close combat, the majority of the force was armed with shotguns.[4] He quickly established himself in the region, laying an ambush for a Union gunboat on November 20 and forcing it back.[4] He continued to skirmish with gunboats for the remainder of the month, captured a Union supply center on November 24 - narrowly avoiding a sniper's bullet that instead took the life of his surgeon - and received reinforcements of two new companies from Huntsville, Alabama.[4]

The battle

See also

References

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