|
U. S. CIVIL WAR
PHOTOGRAPHS
|
|
FORT DONELSON
PAGE 1 OF 3 PAGES
In the text, the icon is a link to the definition of the word it marks. Use your
browser's "back" button to return to the page.
  |
Battle of Fort Donelson--Capture of General S.B. Buckner and his army.
Kurz & Allison, Art Publishers [1887]. Lithograph, hand colored.
"No terms except an unconditional and immediate surrender can be
accepted."
|
Ulysses S. Grant, February 16, 1862
|
February 11-16, 1862
Estimated Casualties : 17,398 total
(US 2,331; CS 15,067)
After capturing Fort Henry on
February 6, 1862, Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant advanced cross-country to invest Fort Donelson. In the afternoon of
February 14, Andrew H. Foote's Union gunboat fleet, consisting of the ironclads
St. Louis, Pittsburgh, Louisville, and Corondolet, and the timberclads
Conestoga and Tyler, arrived from Fort Henry via the Tennessee and Ohio rivers
and exchanged fire with the guns of the Southern water batteries. During the battle Foote was wounded and,
due to extensive damage, the gunboats were forced to retreat.
First ironclad gunboat built in America. The Saint Louis, ca. 1862.
[The Union gunboat "St. Louis" (renamed "Baron De Kalb" September 8, 1862)
was sunk by a torpedo one mile below Yazoo City, Mississippi, on July 13, 1863.]
Despite this victory, the Confederate generals (John Floyd, Gideon Pillow, Simon
Buckner, and Bushrod Johnson) knew that Grant was extending his right flank, threatening to completely encircle the
Southerners. If the Confederates did not move quickly, they could be starved
into submission. Accordingly, in an effort to clear a route to Nashville, they
massed their troops for an attack against the Union right. The battle, in the
morning of February 15, saw the Union army being pushed back by the Confederates.
However, due to confusion among the Confederate commanders, the Southern troops
were ordered to return to their entrenchments. Grant immediately launched a
counterattack which regained
the ground lost and insured that the Confederate army would be blocked from
escape.
Early the next morning, February 16, Generals Floyd and Pillow turned over
command of the Fort to General Buckner and escaped with about 2,000 men.
Cavalryman Colonel Nathan Bedford Forrest and some men also escaped, by
crossing the swollen Lick Creek.
That morning Buckner asked Grant for surrender terms and received Grant's
famous "Unconditional Surrender" message (See above). The surrender
negotiations were held in the Dover Hotel.
(Text Source: U.S. Gov't, National Park Service)
|
  |
N.P.S. Fort Donelson Visitors Center
Fort Donelson Earthworks
Fort Donelson Earthworks
  |
The walls of Fort Donelson, a typical earthern fortification, were formed in
an irregular circle which enclosed about 15 acres. Confederate soldiers and
slaves built the walls by piling dirt over an inner-structure of trees which had
been cut down in the area. The fort itself never came under direct land attack,
and Union infantry had penetrated only halfway beyond the outer defenses when the
Confederates surrendered.
Fort Donelson - Dover Map
Confederate lines are in
red
and the N.P.S. tour route is in
blue
.
|
  |
PAGE TWO
>
Civil War Photos
>
Western Map
> Fort Donelson
>
Page Two
>
3
Notes
|
|