Catching Up With "Old Slow Trot"
Stubborn and deliberate, General George Henry Thomas was one of the Union's most brilliant strategists. So why was he cheated by history?
- By Ernest B. Furgurson
- Smithsonian magazine, March 2007, Subscribe
(Page 6 of 7)
Then, just when he was ready, a sleet storm froze both armies in place for days. Grant, furious that Thomas had failed to engage the enemy, decided to relieve him from command, first with one general, then another. Finally he started to go west to fire him in person. But before he left Washington, the ice melted in middle Tennessee.
On December 15, Thomas, unaware that Grant intended to fire him, roared out of his works against Hood. In two days his troops crushed the Rebel army. His infantry, including two brigades of U.S. Colored Troops, smashed into Hood's troops while the Union cavalry, dismounted with its fast-firing Spencers, curled around and behind the Rebel left. Almost a century later, historian Bruce Catton summed up the battle in two words: "Everything worked."
Thomas "comes down in history...as the great defensive fighter, the man who could never be driven away but who was not much on the offensive. That may be a correct appraisal," wrote Catton, an admirer and biographer of Grant. "Yet it may also be worth making note that just twice in all the war was a major Confederate army driven away from a prepared position in complete rout—at Chattanooga and at Nashville. Each time the blow that finally routed it was launched by Thomas."
Nashville was the only engagement in which one army virtually annihilated another. Thomas B. Buell, a student of Civil War generalship, wrote that in Tennessee, Thomas performed the war's "unsurpassed masterpiece of theater command and control....So modern in concept, so sweeping in scope, it would become a model for strategic maneuver in 20th-century warfare." After it, there was no more large-scale fighting west of the Blue Ridge.
When the bloodshed was over at last, after Lincoln was assassinated and the nation was recovering from the shock, 150,000 soldiers of all the Union armies converged on Washington for the most memorable victory parade in the nation's history. All of them, that is, except the Army of the Cumberland. When Sherman proudly passed in review before Grant, President Andrew Johnson and multitudes of cheering onlookers, Thomas had already said goodbye to his few remaining troops. Back in Nashville, in a message that his innate reserve did not let him utter in person, he described his thoughts as he watched their last parade:
"The coldest heart must have warmed" at seeing the men who had endured "this great, modern tragedy," he wrote—men "who had stemmed with unyielding breasts the rebel tide threatening to engulph the landmarks of freedom, and who, bearing on their bronzed and furrowed brows the ennobling marks of the years of hardship, suffering and privation, undergone in defense of freedom and the integrity of the Union, could still preserve the light step and wear the cheerful expressions of youth."
Thomas' own youth was long behind him. In four years of hard service, he had taken not a single day of leave. During Reconstruction, he commanded troops in Kentucky, Tennessee, Mississippi, Alabama and Georgia. He was considerate toward ragged defeated soldiers, but he was as strict as the angriest Northern Radical in opposing the Ku Klux Klan and defiant politicians. "Everywhere in the states lately in rebellion, treason is respectable and loyalty odious," he said. "This, the people of the United States, who ended the rebellion and saved the country, will not permit."
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Comments (15)
There are several good biographies of Thomas. The best is likely Francis McKinney's "Education in Violence" (http://www.amazon.com/Education-Violence-George-History-Cumberland/dp/0962529052). It really gives a positive, but fair view of GHT. Christopher Einholt's "George Thomas: Virginian for the Union (http://www.amazon.com/George-Thomas-Virginian-Campaigns-Commanders/dp/0806141212/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1332444400&sr=1-1) is also very good. Brian Steel Wills (who wrote perhaps the definitive biography of Nathan Bedford Forrest) has a new one out as well, which is likely very good. Thomas' gravesite in Troy is simple and very moving.
Posted by Glenn Raucher on March 22,2012 | 03:28 PM
I would agree whole-heartedly with the description of Thomas as "guileless". At Nashville somebody kept sending telegrams to Washington informing Stanton and Halleck that Thomas was incompetent, lacking confidence of his officers, etc. When John Schofield was caught red-handed by one of Thomas's staff sending a telegram to D.C., Thomas's response was "Why would he want to do that?" The officer had to explain that Schofield wanted Thomas's job. Thomas was stunned that a fellow officer would put politics above the national interest. When passing Thomas Circle on a bus in the fall of 2009, the driver and passengers all wondered who the statue was for, and I happily explained that it was to honor the one general who never lost a battle in the Civil War. They thought that was pretty neat. So did I.
Posted by John Hartman on January 19,2012 | 12:14 AM
A sidebar on George H Thomas' statue in Washington DC. The statue was paid for by contributions from his soldiers of the Army of the Cumberland. No tax payers funds were used. The ironical part and so appropiate is that the statue is made of bronze. The bronze source was captured Confederate cannon surrendered and melted down.
Posted by Dan Hughes on November 22,2011 | 04:07 PM
Thank you soooo much for this story. It was such a great help for my report on Thomas. The only thing I question is
"By late 1883, U.S. Colored Troops were filling some of the gaps opened in Federal forces by battle and disease."
-is 1883 supposed to be 1863?
It seems crazy that he was such a great hero but no one really even knows about him...
Posted by Breanna Naylor on October 30,2011 | 09:36 PM
incredible story, that if allowing assess what identifies us as a nation today, history is not forgotten and we should occasionally look in those who once gave everything for consseguir which millions enjoy today, freedom. excellent article.
Posted by Seguros online on October 24,2011 | 04:45 AM
"By late 1883, U.S. Colored Troops were filling some of the gaps opened in Federal forces by battle and disease."
Apparently the Civil War went on a lot longer than I thought it did.
Posted by William Stephens on February 4,2011 | 06:11 PM
That was a very enjoyable story, Thank-you! It's to bad his brother couldn't find him a Virgina bride.He certinly deserved it. Respectfully, John
Posted by John Bridges on February 4,2011 | 10:58 AM
I really learned a lot from this article. I was a Civil War buff in school and don't remember anything about Thomas.
PS- fix the picture caption.
Posted by CD Willliams on January 8,2011 | 06:13 PM
this is a good ariticle but yea as posted bii micheal i would like to know were is thomas burried
Posted by sylvia on December 9,2010 | 03:50 PM
this still dont answer mii question why was he created by history
Posted by sylvia on December 9,2010 | 03:24 PM
Thank You for the excellent article!
I just read Benson Bobrick's book, and then your article, immensely enjoying both. What is the best biography of Thomas, in your estimation? Also,has anyone done a systematic review of Grant and Sherman's alleged reconstruction of the war? Sounds like it started from the beginning, within days after Nashville.
-Bill Strubbe
Posted by William Strubbe on August 15,2010 | 09:53 PM
Thomas is buried in Troy, NY. A picture is on my website "Army of the Cumberland and George H. Thomas Source" (www.aotc.net). Click on Photos. See also my essay "Bring Thomas Home" (click on Archive).
Posted by Bob Redman on November 28,2009 | 03:54 PM
1. i would like to know where gen thomas burried and if possible a picture of the grave site. 2.who is the army of the cumberland? is it an ongong group of people?--who gave money for the 1879 equsterian statue. 3. an info fact sheet would povide essential fact on all washington dc statues and their locations by the smithsonian institution.
Posted by michael consiglio on September 7,2009 | 09:54 PM
The irony of Grant and Sherman's continued jealous belittlement of Thomas is that without Thomas's calculated as well as impromptu victorious deeds in the West (and I count Chattanooga as calculated rather than miraculous), the names of Sherman and Grant might today be remembered in an altogether different light; in fact, the outcome of the war itself may have changed. Great article.
Posted by Todd Norris on June 24,2009 | 05:21 PM