The Battle of Johnsonville was fought
November 4–5, 1864, in
Benton County, Tennessee, as part of the
Franklin-Nashville Campaign of the
American Civil WarIn an effort to check the
Union army’s advance through
Georgia, Maj. Gen.
Nathan Bedford Forrest led a 23-day raid culminating in an attack on the
Union supply base at Johnsonville, Tennessee. Swinging north from
Corinth, Mississippi, toward the
Kentucky border and temporarily blockading the
Tennessee River at Fort Herman, Forrest moved southward along the Tennessee River’s west bank, capturing several U.S. steamers and a gunboat, which he later had to abandon. On November 4, Forrest positioned his
artillery across the river from the Federal supply base and began landing at Johnsonville. In the afternoon, Federal observers discovered the Confederates finishing their entrenchments and battery emplacements. The Union gunboats and land batteries across the river engaged the Confederates in an artillery duel. The Rebel guns, however, were so well-positioned that the Federals were unable to hinder them, and Confederate artillery soon disabled the gunboats.
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