
Nathan Bedford Forrest
1821 - 1877
With no formal military training, Nathan Bedford Forrest
became one of the leading cavalry figures of the War for
Southern Independence.
The native Tennesseean had amassed a fortune, which he
estimated at $1,500,000, as a slave trader and plantation
owner before enlisting in the Confederate army as a private in
Josiah H. White's cavalry company on June 14, 1861. Tapped by
the governor, he then raised a mounted battalion at his own
expense.
His assignments
included: lieutenant colonel, Forrest's Tennessee Cavalry
Battalion (October 1861); colonel, 3rd Tennessee Cavalry
(March 1862); brigadier general, CSA July 21, 1862);
commanding cavalry brigade, Army of the Mississippi
(summer-November 20, 1862); commanding cavalry brigade, Army
of Tennessee (November 20, 1862 Summer 1863); commanding
cavalry division, Army of Tennessee (summer 1863); commanding
cavalry corps, Army of Tennessee (ca. August -September 29,
1863); commanding West Tennessee, (probably in) Department of
Mississippi and East Louisiana (November 14, 1863 - January
11, 1864); major general, CSA (December 4, 1863); commanding
cavalry corps, Department of Mississippi and East Louisiana
January 11 - 28, 1864); commanding District of Mississippi and
East Louisiana, Department of Alabama, Mississippi and East
Louisiana January 27 - May 4, 1865); also commanding cavalry
corps, Department of Alabama, Mississippi and East Louisiana
January 28 - May 4, 1865); and lieutenant general, CSA
(February 28, 1865).
When the mass
Confederate breakout attempt at Fort Donelson failed, Forrest
led most of his own men, and some other troops, through the
besieging lines and then directed the rear guard during the
retreat from Nashville. At Shiloh there was little opportunity
for the effective use of the mounted troops and his command
again formed the rear guard on the retreat. The day after the
close of the battle Forrest was wounded. After serving during
the Corinth siege he was promoted to brigadier general, and he
raised a brigade with which he captured Murfreesboro, its
garrison and supplies.
In December 1862
and January 1863 he led another raid, this time in west
Tennessee, which contributed to the abandonment of Grant's
campaign in central Mississippi; the other determining factor
was Van Dorn's Holly Springs raid. Joining up with Joseph
Wheeler, Forrest took part in the unsuccessful attack on Fort
Donelson which resulted in Forrest swearing he would never
serve under Wheeler again.
His next success
came with the capture of the Union raiding column under Abel
D. Streight in the spring of 1863. On June 14, 1863, he was
shot by a disgruntled subordinate, Andrew W. Gould, whom
Forrest then mortally wounded with his penknife. Recovering,
he commanded a division that summer and then a corps at
Chickamauga. Having had a number of disputes with army
commander Braxton Bragg, Forrest was humiliated by being
placed under Wheeler again. His request for transfer to west
Tennessee was granted and he was dispatched there with a
pitifully small force. Recruiting in that area, he soon had a
force large enough to give Union commanders headaches. Sherman
kept ordering his Memphis commanders to catch him.
When Forrest
captured Fort Pillow a controversy developed over reports of a
massacre of the largely black garrison. Apparently a massacre
did occur there are numerous Confederate firsthand accounts of
it. He defeated Samuel D. Sturgis at Brice's Crossroads and
under Stephen D. Lee fought Andrew J. Smith at Tupelo. He
again faced Smith during August 1864 and then provided the
cavalry force for Hood's invasion of middle Tennessee that
fall. Finally the force of numbers began to tell when he
proved incapable of stopping Wilson's raid through Alabama and
Georgia in the final months of the war. His diminished command
was included in Richard Taylor's surrender.
Wiped out
financially by the war, he resumed planting and became the
president of the Selma, Marion & Memphis Railroad, which
he helped to promote. Joining the Ku Klux Klan shortly after
the war, he was apparently one of its early leaders. At one
point when the Klan became excessively violent, Forrest called
for the organization to disband, and quit the Klan
himself. Forrest
once summed up his military theory as "Get there first
with the most men." He died, probably of diabetes, at
Memphis on October 29, 1877, and is buried there.