neyankee61
Sergeant
- Joined
- Oct 30, 2018
Yesterday on Oct. 7, 1862 the Battle of Perryville, KY, was fought. Though a tactical victory for the South, Gen. Braxton Bragg's Army of Tennessee retreated south, ending the invasion of Kentucky. Marching north with Gen. Kirby Smith's column, it was one of the five Confederate forces that mounted an offensive during the fall of 1862. Along with Lee's invasion of Maryland, it marked the last time the South would mount numerous offensive actions into the North.
Gen. Bragg maintained that his invasion was more successful than Lee's in terms of results, at less the cost.
He claimed he cleared East Tennessee and the threat to Chattanooga which allowed the farmers to gather their crops. He "succeeded in getting away with the largest number of provisions, clothing, etc. ever obtained by an army. He brought out 15,000 horses and mules, 8,000 beeves, 50,000 barrels of pork, a great number of hogs, and a million yards of Kentucky cloth. It was said Bragg's wagon train was 40 miles long." All of this was done at a cost of approx. 3,400 men at Perryville compared to Lee's loss of over 10,000 at Antietam.
Both Lee's and Bragg's invasion could be considered failures in terms of the number of recruits gathered. Western Maryland provided Lee with very few and Bragg was disappointed in his result. The governor of Kentucky blamed the lack of numbers of Bragg's failure to remain in the state long enough to organize the number available.
By December 1862, both armies had returned to positions in Va and TN that were similar to positions taken before their offensives.
Gen. Bragg maintained that his invasion was more successful than Lee's in terms of results, at less the cost.
He claimed he cleared East Tennessee and the threat to Chattanooga which allowed the farmers to gather their crops. He "succeeded in getting away with the largest number of provisions, clothing, etc. ever obtained by an army. He brought out 15,000 horses and mules, 8,000 beeves, 50,000 barrels of pork, a great number of hogs, and a million yards of Kentucky cloth. It was said Bragg's wagon train was 40 miles long." All of this was done at a cost of approx. 3,400 men at Perryville compared to Lee's loss of over 10,000 at Antietam.
Both Lee's and Bragg's invasion could be considered failures in terms of the number of recruits gathered. Western Maryland provided Lee with very few and Bragg was disappointed in his result. The governor of Kentucky blamed the lack of numbers of Bragg's failure to remain in the state long enough to organize the number available.
By December 1862, both armies had returned to positions in Va and TN that were similar to positions taken before their offensives.