Battle of Johnsonville

The Battle of Johnsonville was fought November 4–5, 1864, in Benton and Humphreys counties, Tennessee, during the American Civil War. Confederate cavalry commander Major General Nathan Bedford Forrest culminated a 23-day raid through western Tennessee by attacking the Union supply base at Johnsonville. Forrest's attack destroyed a total of 28 Union boats and barges in the Tennessee River and millions of dollars of supplies, disrupting the logistical operations of Union Major General George H. Thomas in Nashville. As a result, Thomas's army was hampered in its plan to defeat Confederate Lieutenant General John Bell Hood's invasion of Tennessee, known as the Franklin–Nashville campaign. (Thomas eventually succeeded in repulsing Hood.)

Battle of Johnsonville
Part of the American Civil War
DateNovember 4–5, 1864
Location
Benton County / Humphreys County,
near Johnsonville, Tennessee
36.0708°N 87.9757°W / 36.0708; -87.9757
Result Confederate victory
Belligerents
United States (Union) CSA (Confederacy)
Commanders and leaders
Charles R. Thompson
Edward M. King
Nathan Bedford Forrest
Units involved
Johnsonville garrison Forrest's Cavalry Division
Strength
4,000
3 gunboats
Casualties and losses
150 captured 2 killed
9 wounded

Part of the battlefield has been preserved in Johnsonville State Historic Park. Much of the original battleground was submerged by the creation of Kentucky Lake in 1944.

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