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Invasion By River

1
Tennessee River Museum 507 Main St.,
Savannah, TN. 731-925-2364 or 1-800-552-3866. The Tennessee
River was the invasion route for the Union armies in the West
.Exhibits at the museum include: "The War on the River"
which begins with a one-half scale model of the bow of the USS
Cairo. The exhibit also contains many artifacts from
this ill-fated ironclad and other gunboats. The "Army"
exhibit features a collection of Shiloh field artillery, firearms
and personal items. The "Johnsonville" exhibit features
the story and equipage of Forrests cavalrymen. Open daily.
Admission is charged.
2 Shiloh
National Military Park
1055 Pittsburg Landing Rd., Shiloh, 38376,
731-689-5275. Shiloh was one of the Civil Wars major battles,
where Union and Confederate casualties totaled 23,746. General
Albert Sidney Johnstons Army of the Mississippi, marching
north from Corinth, attacked and partially overran Grants
Federal Army of the Tennessee at this site. Shiloh was the first
large-scale battle of the Civil War. Open daily. Admission is
charged. Related Links: Shiloh
National Military Park - National Park Service; Battle
of Shiloh - Summary- NPS
3 Clarksville/Montgomery
County Museum
200 Second St., Clarksville, 931-648-5780. County
history exhibits are featured, including Civil War diaries, photos,
weapons, flags, currency and a USCT regimental roll. Open Tues.-Sun.
Admission is charged. Fort Defiance/Fort Bruce P.O.
Box 383, Clarksville, 37041-0383, Comer of A Street and Pine Street,
931-648-5780. After the fall of Fort Donelson, Fort Defiance was burned
and abandoned prior to the capture of Clarksville. The recapture of
the city by Confederate soldiers and local citizens in August 1862
renewed interest in the fort. It was captured again by Union forces,
and the fort was commanded for the remainder of the war by Colonel
Sander D. Bruce, for whom it was renamed. Open daily. Admission is
free. Related Links: Fort Donelson National Battlefield
- National Park Service ; Fort
Donelson Battle Summary - NPS
4 Fort
Donelson National Battlefield
P.O. Box 434, 174 National Cemetery Drive, Dover, 37058.
931-232- 5706. Built by the Confederates to
control the Cumberland River, the fort was captured in February
1862 by the Union Army under the command of General Ulysses
S. Grant. The victory secured Union control of the Cumberland
River and caused the evacuation o Clarksville, Nashville and
most of Middle Tennessee. The earthen fort, river batteries,
outer earthwork, Dover Hotel and National Cemetery are accessible
by a 6-mile self-guided auto tour. Tour begins at the visitor
center, which includes a museum. Open daily. Admission is free.
The Dover Hotel P.O. Box 434, Dover, TN, 37058.
931-232-5706 - was the scene of Confederate General Simon Bolivar
Buckners surrender to General Grant. The house is the
only original surrender structure remaining from the Civil War.
Open June-Sept., daily. Admission is free. Related Links:
Fort Donelson
National Battlefield - National Park Service ; Fort
Donelson Battle Summary - NPS
5 Homeplace
1850 Mailing address: Land Between
the Lakes, 100 Van Morgan Dr., Golden Pond, KY 42211-9001. Physical
location: 13 miles north of Dover, TN, on the Trace in Land
Between the Lakes, 931-924-2054. Homeplace 1850 is a living
history, open-air museum that re-creates life on a mid-19th
century Tennessee farm. Authentically furnished houses and barns,
along with demonstrations of daily chores, bring to life a typical
Civil War soldiers boyhood. In the Civil War, the Cumberland
and Tennessee rivers were a gateway to Nashville and the all-important
railroads that fed the Confederacy its troops and supplies.
Homeplace 1850 considers the impact the war had on the yeoman
farmers of Tennessee. Open to Public: Mar: Wed-Sat 9am-5pm,
Sun 10am-5pm; Apr-Oct: Mon-Sat 9am-5pm, Sun 10am-5pm; Nov: Wed-Sat
9am-5pm, Sun 10am-5pm.
6
Tennessee State Capitol 6th and
Charlotte. Tennessee State Museum 5th and Deaderick Streets,
Nashville, 37243-1120, 615-741-2692. The Capitol was completed in
1859. Nashville became an occupied city in 1862 and remained so for
the rest of the war. Named Fort Johnson for Tennessees military
governor, the fortifications around the capitol consisted of anearthwork
connected by a stockade with loopholes. The State Museum includes
a large Civil War section with descriptions and artifacts from each
major battle in Tennessee, audio-visual presentations, firearms, uniforms,
paintings and photographs of soldiers and a large collection of battle
flags. State Capitol is open to visitors Mon.-Fri.; State Museum is
open Tues.-Sun. Admission to both sites is free.

Prologue
| Invasion by River | Fight
for West Tennessee | Contest for MiddleTennessee
| East Tennessee's Mountain War | Hood's Tennessee Campaign | Epilogue
| Civil War Discovery Trail | Civil
War Timeline | Tennessee's Civil War Heritage
Trail - A clickable map
A Path Divided
(the brochure in it's entirety - .pdf format)
(Download ADOBE
READER)
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