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Atlanta in the American Civil War

The city of Atlanta, Georgia, in Fulton County, was an important rail and commercial center during the American Civil War. Although relatively small in population, the city became a critical point of contention during the Atlanta Campaign in 1864 when a powerful Union Army approached from Union-held Tennessee. The fall of Atlanta was a critical point in the Civil War, giving the North more confidence, and (along with the victories at Mobile Bay and Winchester) leading to the re-election of President Abraham Lincoln and the eventual dissolution of the Confederacy. The capture of the "Gate City of the South" was especially important for Lincoln as he was in a contentious election campaign against the Democratic opponent George B. McClellan.[1]

The , established before the war, was significantly expanded and provided a major source for armor plating for Confederate Navy ironclads, including the CSS Virginia. It also refurbished railroad tracks.

Atlanta Rolling Mill

The Confederate Pistol Factory made .

pistols

The produced ordnance supplies.

Novelty Iron Works

Confederate was located at the northwest corner of Walton and Peachtree Street.

Arsenal

The Empire Manufacturing Company made Railroad cars and bar iron.

Winship Foundry produced great quantities of metal products, railroad supplies, freight cars, and iron bolts.

Atlanta Machine Works produced ordnance. The produced by the Atlanta Machine Works were rifled at the Western and Atlantic Roundhouse.

cannons

W. S. Withers and Solomon Solomon Foundry made buttons, spurs, bits, buckles, etc.

A Flour Mill was located at the northwest corner of Marietta and North Avenue.

Hammond Marshall Sword Factory manufactured .

swords

Atlanta Steam made leather goods for the army.

Tannery

The Naval Ordnance Works was set up in early 1862 by Lieutenant using stores and machinery he was able to move to Atlanta from New Orleans before it fell. The works produced gun carriages and 7-inch shells for the Confederate navy.[13]

David Porter McCorkle

The Confederate Iron and Brass Foundry produced all kinds of iron and brass works.

The city that would become Atlanta began as the endpoint of the Western and Atlantic Railroad (aptly named Terminus) in 1837.[3][4] Atlanta grew quickly with the completion of The Georgia Railway in 1845[5] and the Macon & Western in 1846.[6] The city was incorporated in 1847 and extended 1 mile in all directions from the zero-mile post.[7] In 1860, Atlanta was a relatively small city ranking 99th in the United States in size with a population of 9,554 according to the 1860 United States (U.S.) Census. However, it was the 13th-largest city in what became the Confederate States of America. A large number of machine shops, foundries and other industrial concerns were soon established in Atlanta. The population swelled to nearly 22,000 as workers arrived for these new factories and warehouses.


The city was a vital transportation and logistics center, with several major railroads in the area. The Western & Atlantic Railroad connected the city with Chattanooga, Tennessee, 138 miles to the north. The Georgia Railway connected the city with Augusta to the east and the Confederate Powderworks on the Savannah River.[5][8] The Macon & Western[6] connected Atlanta to Macon and Savannah to its south. The fourth line, Atlanta and West Point Railroad, completed in 1854, connected Atlanta with West Point, Georgia.[9] At West Point the line linked up with the Western Railway of Alabama, thus connecting Atlanta with Montgomery to its west. A series of roads radiated out from the city in all directions, connecting Atlanta with neighboring towns and states.


Thought to be relatively safe from Union forces early in the war, Atlanta rapidly became a concentration point for the Confederate quartermasters and logistics experts;[10][11] warehouses were filled with food, forage, supplies, ammunition, clothing and other materiel critical to the Confederate States of America armies operating in the Western Theater.


Some of the major manufacturing facilities supporting the Confederate war effort were:[11][12]


In addition to the transportation and manufacturing facilities, there were several hospitals in Atlanta.[14]


On July 5, 1864, General Joseph E. Johnston issued orders that all hospitals and munitions works in Atlanta be evacuated. On July 7, Colonel Josiah Georgas, ordnance chief in Richmond, issued orders to Colonel M. H. Wright, commanding the arsenal in Atlanta: "Send the bulk of machinery & stores to Augusta and to Columbia, S.C., send workmen in same direction when it becomes necessary."[15][16]


A number of newspapers flourished in Atlanta during the Civil War. Among the more prominent ones were the Atlanta Southern Confederacy and the Daily Intelligencer, both of which moved to Macon, Georgia, during the Union occupation in 1864. The Daily Intelligencer was the only Atlanta paper to survive the war and resume publication from Atlanta after Union forces began their "March to the Sea".[17][18][19]

Brig. Gen. , the home of Edward E. Rawson

John W. Geary

Maj. Gen. , the home of Lewis Scofield

David S. Stanley

Maj. Gen. , the home of William H. Dabney

Henry W. Slocum

Col. , Home of the Mayor, James Calhoun

William G. Le Duc

Bonds, Russell S. (2009). War like the thunderbolt: the battle and burning of Atlanta. Westholme.  978-1594161001. OCLC 370356386.

ISBN

Davis, Stephen (2012). What the Yankees Did to Us: Sherman's Bombardment and Wrecking of Atlanta. Mercer University Press.  978-0881463989.

ISBN

Dodge, Grenville M. (1910). The battle of Atlanta and other campaigns, addresses, etc. Monarch Print. Co.  2055872.

OCLC

Swan, James B. (2009). Chicago's Irish Legion: the 90th Illinois Volunteers in the Civil War. Southern Illinois University Press.  978-0809328901. OCLC 232327691.

ISBN

Garrett, Franklin M. (1954). Atlanta and Environs, A Chronicle of its People and Events. Lewis Historical Publishing, Inc.  978-0820309132.

ISBN

Ecelbarger, Gary (2010). The Day Dixie Died: The Battle of Atlanta. Thomas Dunne Books.  978-0-312-56399-8.

ISBN

Dyer, Thomas G. (1999). . The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-6116-0.

Secret Yankees: The Union Circle in Confederate Atlanta