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  • Chattanooga/Chicky Map

    Local historians and preservationists have put the Civil War onto 21st Century maps of metro Chattanooga and soon will offer an interactive look to anyone with a computer.

    The history-meets-technology effort is not rewriting history, but it certainly can bring the events and personalities of yesteryear into the front and back yards of today's local residents, officials say.

    "Seeing that Main Street was the marching route from Lookout Mountain to Missionary Ridge for Union troops, seeing where campgrounds were and where troops engaged with one another in battle, and knowing what is there today -- It helped me to see a different Chattanooga, a kind of ghost of the time that was," said Kay Parish, executive director of Friends of the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park.

    Later this month, on Aug. 17, 18 and 20, park officials, friends and new map makers will unveil the new look at the region's history to the public in meetings around town.

    Ms. Parish and the mappers of today, Josh Boutwell and Max Schneider with Alexander Archaeology Consulting of Wildwood, Ga., said the effort is a first of its kind and likely will spark similar work anywhere good historical maps can be made to meet today's streets.

    "It's really pretty fascinating to have seen it with parcel information, to know who owns what pieces of the battlefield," Mr. Boutwell said.

    To accomplish the mapping project, one of only 32 in the nation, officials and the mappers converted six historic maps of area battlefields into geographic information data for integration into data already on hand in Hamilton County, according to Jim Ogden, historian for the Chickamauga and Chattanooga National Military Park.

    As time goes by, the maps easily can be updated when land uses change, Mr. Ogden said. More historic information and links also can be added, here and across the country.

    "This, in a lot of ways, is the foundation of something that can grow again and again," he said.

    Mr. Ogden and Ms. Parish say the park already preserves several important areas, but the city of Chattanooga and its smaller neighbors have grown up over what once was a giant field of battle.

    The Campaign for Chattanooga covered a large regional landscape and is viewed by many historians as a turning point in the war. The Union's victory here opened the Deep South to General Sherman's march to Atlanta and the sea, according to historians.

    Ms. Parish said the mappers "weighted" the different areas by measuring the Civil War activities in each district, so you can really rank areas with the most significance -- those with the most potential for still holding archeological evidence of the battles.

    "The GIS Civil War history layer brings to life the truth -- that the important events happened where we live, work and play today -- not just where the park was created on land that was available and could be set aside," she said.

    Aside from intriguing Internet learning, the resulting "new" maps, paid for with a $41,120 battlefield preservation grant from the National Park Service, also will serve a needed planning function, said Rick Wood, director of the Chattanooga office of Trust for Public Land, which is managed the project.

    The effort will enable officials to identify areas for future preservation, Mr. Wood said. Policymakers, developers and preservationists can know quickly if property may have historical significance in need of protection.

    The six historical maps, developed shortly after the war by then-Chattanooga engineer Edward E. Betts, proved to be very accurate, Mr. Schneider said.

    Mr. Betts, whose family still does engineering work locally, was commissioned after the war to make the maps, which show troop movements, engagements and encampments during the 1863 Campaign for Chattanooga.

    "It was really interesting to see the history take shape" on today's landscape, Mr. Schneider said.

    Ms. Parish said park officials hope the new "tool" will help urban planners, land developers and property owners learn more about what "extra value" they may be looking at when they look at a piece of property.

    "(This is) the value of the history that is ours as a community and that brings a million visitors to Chattanooga each year," she said.

    Drew

    "God knows, as many posts as go up on this site everyday, there's plenty of folks who know how to type. Put those keyboards to work on a real issue that's tied to the history that we love and obsess over so much." F.B.

    "...mow hay, cut wood, prepare great food, drink schwitzel, knit, sew, spin wool, rock out to a good pinch of snuff and somehow still find time to go fly a kite." N.B.

  • #2
    Re: Chattanooga/Chicky Map

    Drew, Thank you very much for posting this. I just returned from a weeklong trip to Chattanooga and got to spend time with the Chick/Chatt battlefields/engagement areas. And Missionary Ridge as a place I always wanted to see. This will be very helpful in the study of these fascinating places. Lookout Mountain, Brown's Ferry, Wauhatchie, MR, Chickamauga, Ringgold Gap, etc. etc. all fine places to see for the first time.

    Having modern overlay maps is a tremendous bonus.
    Joe Madden
    13th New Hampshire Vols.
    Co. E
    Unattached

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Chattanooga/Chicky Map

      Bully, for the hometown folks. It makes you feel good that our community takes pride in the history of the city. My wife works for Blue Cross on Cameron Hill, and thank goodness they have finally put back up the cannons and memorial, representing the up actions there. I am very fortunate to have a view of Missionary Ridge , Lookout Mtn. and Signal Mtn. from my house.
      Eric N. Harley-Brown
      Currently known to associate with the WIG/AG


      "It has never been fully realized, nor appreciated by the people of the North-the great part in preserving the Union, the brave, loyal,and patriotic Union men, in the mountainous parts of the Southern states, rendered" - Orderly Sgt. Silas P. Woodall (2nd grt. grnd...) member of "Kennemers Union Scouts & Guides"-organized in Woodville, Alabama 1863.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Chattanooga/Chicky Map

        Eric,

        You are very fortunate to live in such an enjoyable city. I'll look you up on my next trip there. I love the place. Point Park is a hidden gem!
        Joe Madden
        13th New Hampshire Vols.
        Co. E
        Unattached

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Chattanooga/Chicky Map

          Joe, I'd be happy to accommodate. One of my favorite spots on Lookout are the stoneworks "rifle pits" left by the AoT, just down the mountain. Also there are some great trails leading towards Sunset Rock, Cloudland Canyon, and Reflection Riding, which was the site of a large Cherokee village. I believe one of the last engagments of the Rev. War happened up there ( I'm not well versed on the deatils), as well as a large engagment between the Cherokees and early settlers. Lots of history up there. Another lesser known area is Lookout Valley just below the Mtn. where the Battle of Wauhatchie took place. Its' interesting because it was one of the few night "battles" of the war and helped establish the Cracker Line. Here's some info on it.
          Take care,


          ( Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker marched with three divisions from Bridgeport by following the railroad via Shellmound and the Running Water Creek gorge. On October 28, after a commendably rapid march, Hooker's column entered Lookout Valley to the astonishment of Generals Braxton Bragg and James Longstreet, who were having a conference on Lookout Mountain. Longstreet, obsessed with the possibility of a Union attack further to the southwest, had failed to properly scout Hooker's advance.

          Hooker, while his force passed through Lookout Valley on October 28, detached Brig. Gen. John W. Geary's division at Wauhatchie Station, a stop on the Nashville and Chattanooga Railroad, to protect the line of communications to the southwest as well as the road west to Kelley's Ferry. Once he reached his goal, "Hooker's dispositions were deplorable," with Howard's understrength IX Corps "bivouacked haphazardly" at Brown's Ferry.[2] Worse, Geary's division, only 1,500-strong after detaching railroad guards, was posted in isolation.



          Bragg ordered Longstreet to drive away the new Union force. Noting that a wagon train had stopped near Wauhatchie, Longstreet determined to crush Geary's force. He ordered Brig. Gen. Micah Jenkins's division to mount a night attack on the Union forces. While Law took his own and Brig. Gen. Jerome B. Robertson's brigades to block Hooker from reinforcing Geary, Jenkins's own 1,800-man[3] South Carolina brigade, led by Col. John Bratton would assault Wauhatchie Station. Law had Brig. Gen. Henry Benning's brigade would remain in support for both Law's and Bratton's efforts. Although the attack was scheduled for 10:00 p.m. on the night of October 28, confusion delayed it until midnight. Though Geary and his officers expected an attack and had thrown out pickets, its suddenness took them by surprise. Enveloped from the north by Bratton, the Union defenders formed into a V-shaped battle line, facing north and east. Geary's son, an artillery lieutenant, was killed in the battle, dying in his father's arms.

          Hearing the sounds of battle, the XI Corps quickly fell into ranks near Brown's Ferry. Hooker bypassed Maj. Gen. Oliver Otis Howard in the chain of command and ordered Maj. Gen. Carl Schurz to march to Wauhatchie Station as reinforcements. In the confusion, Brig. Gen. Adolph von Steinwehr got his division on the road first. Col. Orland Smith's brigade of Steinwehr's division was fired on by Law's Confederates, who were positioned on a 200-foot high hill that dominated the road from Brown's Ferry. Smith veered to the east and began climbing the hill. Meanwhile, Hooker mistakenly deployed units from both XI Corps divisions against Law and Benning, leaving no one to go to Geary's aid. Though Law's 2,000 men were greatly outnumbered by Hooker's force, the hilltop position was naturally strong. In the darkness, the only unit in direct contact with Law was Smith's 700-man brigade. Several vigorous assaults by Smith were repulsed. Then, after Law received some erroneous reports, he decided to pull back. Just as his men left their entrenchments, Smith's men spilled over them, capturing some stragglers and scattering a regiment that failed to get the order to retreat. Meanwhile, Hooker agreed to let Howard proceed to Wauhatchie with some cavalry.

          Geary's men continued to hold fast, though they began to run low on ammunition. Just as Bratton began to sense victory, he received a note to retreat since Union reinforcements were arriving in his rear. Bratton withdrew to Lookout Mountain, successfully covered by Benning's brigade. In the Wauhatchie fight, Bratton lost 356 men while Geary's casualties numbered 216.[4]


          Aftermath :
          A rumor circulated through the Union camps that Union mules stampeded by the fight had made the Confederates believe they were being attacked by cavalry, causing the Southern retreat; the Union soldiers joked that the mules be "breveted as horses".[5] In truth, the Hampton Legion was disordered by the mules for only a short time. However, this lull allowed the 137th New York to plug a gap in the Federal line.[6]

          Union losses in the battle were 78 killed, 327 wounded, and 15 missing. Confederate losses were 34 killed, 305 wounded, and 69 missing. One account says Bratton lost 408 men while Law lost only 52.[3]

          The Union army now had its window to the outside and could receive supplies, weapons, ammunition, and reinforcements via the Cracker Line. The way was clear for the start of the Battles for Chattanooga on November 23.

          Relatively few night engagements occurred during the Civil War; Wauhatchie is one of the most significant )
          Eric N. Harley-Brown
          Currently known to associate with the WIG/AG


          "It has never been fully realized, nor appreciated by the people of the North-the great part in preserving the Union, the brave, loyal,and patriotic Union men, in the mountainous parts of the Southern states, rendered" - Orderly Sgt. Silas P. Woodall (2nd grt. grnd...) member of "Kennemers Union Scouts & Guides"-organized in Woodville, Alabama 1863.

          Comment

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