Stryker65
Captain
- Joined
- Jun 5, 2023
- Location
- William & Mary
What was Nathan B. Forrest's biggest tactical victory? I would suppose these to mean actions in which he should have lost, numerically speaking, but won.
Some initial thoughts:
- First Murfreesboro: With only two cavalry regiments, defeated two infantry and one cavalry units, and captured those plus an artillery battery.
- Okolona: Effectively demolished William Sooy Smith's cavalry corps, with his own cavalry force barely half-formed of Mississippi militia, partisan rangers, and Tennessee recruits.
- Brice's Crossroads: With a force smaller than the Union's cavalry component, he defeated that PLUS an infantry division.
- Streight's Raid: This, I think, needs no explanation. With less than a thousand men, he defeated what could have been a very dangerous Union cavalry expedition across northern Alabama.
In this discussion, I think we can exclude smaller battles/raids in which a Confederate victory was all but assured (Sulphur Creek Trestle, Fort Pillow, Memphis, etc.) and his defeats (Tupelo, Selma, Third Murfreesboro, etc.)
What are your thoughts?
Some initial thoughts:
- First Murfreesboro: With only two cavalry regiments, defeated two infantry and one cavalry units, and captured those plus an artillery battery.
- Okolona: Effectively demolished William Sooy Smith's cavalry corps, with his own cavalry force barely half-formed of Mississippi militia, partisan rangers, and Tennessee recruits.
- Brice's Crossroads: With a force smaller than the Union's cavalry component, he defeated that PLUS an infantry division.
- Streight's Raid: This, I think, needs no explanation. With less than a thousand men, he defeated what could have been a very dangerous Union cavalry expedition across northern Alabama.
In this discussion, I think we can exclude smaller battles/raids in which a Confederate victory was all but assured (Sulphur Creek Trestle, Fort Pillow, Memphis, etc.) and his defeats (Tupelo, Selma, Third Murfreesboro, etc.)
What are your thoughts?