Description: |
In the 1862 Confederate offensive into Kentucky, Gen. Braxton Bragg’s army left Chattanooga,
Tennessee, in late August. Followed by Maj. Gen. Don Carlos Buell’s Union Army, Bragg approached
Munfordville, a station on the Louisville & Nashville Railroad and the location of the railroad bridge crossing Green
River, in mid-September. Col. John T. Wilder commanded the Union garrison at Munfordville which consisted of
three regiments with extensive fortifications. Wilder refused Brig. Gen. James R. Chalmers’s demand to surrender
on the 14th. Union forces repulsed Chalmers’s attacks on the 14th, forcing the Rebels to conduct siege operations
on the 15th and 16th. Late on the 16th, realizing that Buell’s forces were near and not wanting to kill or injure
innocent civilians, the Confederates communicated still another demand for surrender. Wilder entered enemy lines
under a flag of truce, and Confederate Maj. Gen. Simon B. Buckner escorted him to view all the Rebel troops and
to convince him of the futility of resisting. Impressed, Wilder surrendered. The formal ceremony occurred the next
day on the 17th. With the railroad and the bridge, Munfordville was an important transportation center, and the
Confederate control affected the movement of Union supplies and men. |