Battle above the Clouds  
Lifting the Siege of Chattanooga and the Battle of Lookout Mountain, October 16 - November 24, 1863
Published by Savas Beatie
Publication Date:  Available in all formats
ISBN: 9781611213782
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In October 1863, the Union Army of the Cumberland was besieged in Chattanooga, all but surrounded by familiar opponents: The Confederate Army of Tennessee. The Federals were surviving by the narrowest of margins, thanks only to a trickle of supplies painstakingly hauled over the sketchiest of mountain roads. Soon even those quarter-rations would not suffice. Disaster was in the offing.

Yet those Confederates, once jubilant at having routed the Federals at Chickamauga and driven them back into the apparent trap of Chattanooga’s trenches, found their own circumstances increasingly difficult to bear. In the immediate aftermath of their victory, the South rejoiced; the Confederacy’s own disasters of the previous summer—Vicksburg and Gettysburg—were seemingly reversed. Then came stalemate in front of those same trenches. The Confederates held the high ground, Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, but they could not completely seal off Chattanooga from the north.

The Union responded. Reinforcements were on the way. A new man arrived to take command: Ulysses S. Grant. Confederate General Braxton Bragg, unwilling to launch a frontal attack on Chattanooga’s defenses, sought victory elsewhere, diverting troops to East Tennessee.

Battle above the Clouds by David Powell recounts the first half of the campaign to lift the siege of Chattanooga, including the opening of the “cracker line,” the unusual night battle of Wauhatchie, and one of the most dramatic battles of the entire war: Lookout Mountain.
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In October 1863, the Union Army of the Cumberland was besieged in Chattanooga, all but surrounded by familiar opponents: The Confederate Army of Tennessee. The Federals were surviving by the narrowest of margins, thanks only to a trickle of supplies painstakingly hauled over the sketchiest of mountain roads. Soon even those quarter-rations would not suffice. Disaster was in the offing.

Yet those Confederates, once jubilant at having routed the Federals at Chickamauga and driven them back into the apparent trap of Chattanooga’s trenches, found their own circumstances increasingly difficult to bear. In the immediate aftermath of their victory, the South rejoiced; the Confederacy’s own disasters of the previous summer—Vicksburg and Gettysburg—were seemingly reversed. Then came stalemate in front of those same trenches. The Confederates held the high ground, Lookout Mountain and Missionary Ridge, but they could not completely seal off Chattanooga from the north.

The Union responded. Reinforcements were on the way. A new man arrived to take command: Ulysses S. Grant. Confederate General Braxton Bragg, unwilling to launch a frontal attack on Chattanooga’s defenses, sought victory elsewhere, diverting troops to East Tennessee.

Battle above the Clouds by David Powell recounts the first half of the campaign to lift the siege of Chattanooga, including the opening of the “cracker line,” the unusual night battle of Wauhatchie, and one of the most dramatic battles of the entire war: Lookout Mountain.
Table of contents
  • Cover
  • Title
  • Copyright
  • Dedication
  • Table of Contents
  • List of Maps
  • Acknowledgments
  • Foreword by William Lee White
  • Prologue
  • Chapter One: Besieged
  • Chapter Two: New Arrivals
  • Chapter Three: Dissension in the Ranks
  • Chapter Four: Brown’s Ferry and Wauhatchie
  • Chapter Five: Smith and Tyndale Hills
  • Chapter Six: Interlude
  • Chapter Seven: Orchard Knob
  • Chapter Eight: Battle Above the Clouds
  • Chapter Nine: The Fight for Cravens House
  • Chapter Ten: Results
  • Driving Tour 1: Wheeler’s Raid and the Chattanooga Campaign
  • Driving Tour 2: Brown’s Ferry, Wauhatchie, and Lookout Mountain
  • Appendix A: The Myth of the Cracker Line by Frank Varney
  • Appendix B: A Tale of Two Paintings
  • Appendix C: Civil War Tourism: Lookout Mountain
  • Order of Battle
  • Suggested Reading
  • About the Author
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