Browsing named entities in Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.). You can also browse the collection for Tyner's Station (Tennessee, United States) or search for Tyner's Station (Tennessee, United States) in all documents.

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Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book I:—eastern Tennessee. (search)
ed in a strategical position at Bridgeport; the rest of Polk's corps had concentrated at Chattanooga. Hardee's corps was camping still more in their rear, at Tyner's Station on the Knoxville Railroad. Forrest, watching at Kingston the eastern part of Tennessee, was too far for his outposts or reconnoitring-parties to be of any s Lieutenant-general D. H. Hill, whom we have seen figuring first in Lee's army and subsequently in North Carolina. His corps had fallen back, on the 3d, from Tyner's Station to Ringgold, after having sent a brigade of infantry to the banks of the Tennessee in order to mask this movement. Bragg's movement must involve Buckner's Bridgeport railroad, which passes around this point, is thus intersected. Forrest, supported everywhere by the infantry, brings back his exhausted troops to Tyner's Station, beyond the Chickamauga River, where they will rest. Wheeler, on the contrary, who has suffered less, is sent to the west in Lookout Valley; after having occ
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book II:—the siege of Chattanooga. (search)
hreatened, but his situation is nevertheless critical. In fact, on the 4th of November, Longstreet, having received Bragg's final orders, moves his troops to Tyner's Station, whence they will proceed by rail to Sweetwater Station, near Philadelphia. We have shown how inopportune was this enterprise. Longstreet had to crush his ahis troops. On the 5th and 6th of November numerous trains were despatched to Sweetwater to bring these two bodies of troops. After having deposited them at Tyner's Station, the trains took up Hood's and McLaws' divisions to carry them over the same road in an opposite direction. This going and coming, devised it seems, to delu passed in the afternoon of the 24th, after Sherman, the Tennessee, then the Chickamauga near its mouth, reached on the same evening the Cleveland Railroad at Tyner's Station. The destruction of this important depot would have sufficed to cause serious alarm to Bragg and great embarrassments to his quartermaster if, when the forme
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book III:—the Third winter. (search)
the banks of the Hiawassee. Long has come back without having reached the train he was seeking, but his manoeuvre has rendered uneasy the Confederates. He establishes himself at Calhoun, in front of Charleston, on the Hiawassee, so as to protect, in concert with Elliott, the overland road and the railway from Knoxville to Chattanooga. Sherman will bring back the rest of his troops to this last town. His columns, which are following only one road along the railway, by Cleveland and Tyner's Station, reach on the 16th and 17th the battlefield of November 24th. Davis' division is immediately returned to the Fourteenth corps: Howard joins Hooker in Will's Valley; and Blair, meeting with his fourth division under Osterhaus, conducts the Fifteenth corps to Bridgeport, where Sherman has established his headquarters. Grant has resolved to scatter his armies during the bad season in order the easier to subsist them, and to form at the same time a cordon able to resist a raid by the enem
Comte de Paris, History of the Civil War in America. Vol. 4. (ed. Henry Coppee , LL.D.), Book IV:—the war in the South-West. (search)
f Cleburne's soldiers, whom he thought at Demopolis, finally convinced Palmer of the uselessness of any further effort against Johnston. He could not contemplate taking Dalton by main force, and his demonstration had no further object, since the troops which might have been forwarded against Sherman had just disclosed their presence in front of him. He started his army corps on the 26th, and established himself on the 27th in the valley of the Chickamauga-Davis at Rossville, Johnson at Tyner's Station and Graysville, and Baird at Ringgold. Cruft returned to Red Clay, and Long halted at Cleveland. We will leave them in these positions until Sherman comes to lead them to new combats. Before relating the expedition undertaken by Forrest shortly after the check of Sooy Smith we must conclude in a few words the enumeration we have promised of the demonstrations made to support Sherman's campaign against Meridian. The projected landing in the vicinity of Mobile having been abandoned,