Salem Cemetery Battlefield
Posted by: dalls
N 35° 37.777 W 088° 45.929
16S E 340132 N 3944303
This is a small battlefield near Jackson, TN where the Confederate and Union troops engaged in a two hour battle.
Waymark Code: WM1V9K
Location: Tennessee, United States
Date Posted: 07/11/2007
Views: 47
Unaware of the deadly ambush that lay ahead, General Nathan Bedford Forrest's cavalry column rode south down Cotton Grove Road toward Jackson on the morning of December 19, 1862. Federal troops lie just over the crest of the ridges on both sides of the road. When the head of the column reached a large oak tree next to the road, the Federals loosed a deadly volley killing or wounding both men and horses. The column retreated to the next ridge north, leaving four of the now dismounted troopers behind. Using their dead horses for cover, these men returned fire until captured during the ensuing fight. The Federals reformed behind the iron and wood fence around the cemetery and repelled a brisk cavalry charge, adding to the dead and wounded on the road. Forrest then unlimbered three previously captured artillery pieces and began a heavy shelling of the Federal position. Owing to the cavalry's inexperience with artillery, most of the early rounds fired went over the heads of the prone Yankees and exploded in the treetops around them. Shell fragments are often found in the south woods of the cemetery. As the Confederate gunners began to find their range, the Federal commander, Colonel Adolph Englemann ordered the withdrawal toward Jackson. Forrest had achieved his objective of pinning down the Federals behind their fortifications in Jackson, thus freeing him to make raids against the Federal rail and communication line in West Tennessee. To this end, he withdrew toward Humboldt to continue his campaign.
Approximately 1,500 men were engaged the four hour battle. The exact number of causalities is unknown, but it is estimated that Confederate losses were 65 killed, wounded, or missing. Federal losses were 2 killed and 6 wounded. Except for the paving of Cotton Grove Road, all of the natural features, and the road itself, remain unchanged form the time the battle occurred in 1862.
FEDERAL
5th Ohio Cavalry
11th Illinois Cavalry
2nd West Tennessee Cavalry
43rd Illinois Infantry
61st Illinois Infantry
CONFEDERATE
Alabama Cavalry Corps
1st Kentucky Cavalry
Morton's Battery (Freeman's Section)
Name of Battle: The Battle of Salem Cemetery
Name of War: Civil War
Entrance Fee: Not Listed
Parking: Not Listed
Date(s) of Battle (Beginning): Not listed
Date of Battle (End): Not listed
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Visit Instructions:
Post a photo of you in front of a sign or marker posted at the site of the battle (or some other way to indicate you have personally visited the site.
In addition it is encouraged to take a few photos of the surrounding area and interesting features at the site.