Description: |
The engagement at Jackson occurred during Brig. Gen. Nathan Bedford Forrest’s Expedition into
West Tennessee, between December 11, 1862, and January 1, 1863. Forrest wished to interrupt the rail supply
line to Maj. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant’s army, campaigning down the Mississippi Central Railroad. If he could destroy
the Mobile & Ohio Railroad running south from Columbus, Kentucky, through Jackson, Grant would have to
curtail or halt his operations. Forrest’s 2,100-man cavalry brigade crossed the Tennessee River on December
15-17, heading west. Maj. Gen. Grant ordered a troop concentration at Jackson under Brig. Gen. Jeremiah C.
Sullivan and sent a cavalry force out under Col. Robert G. Ingersoll, to confront Forrest. Forrest, however,
smashed the Union cavalry at Lexington on December 18. As Forrest continued his advance the next day, Sullivan
ordered Col. Adolph Englemann to take a small force northeast of Jackson. At Old Salem Cemetery, acting on the
defensive, Englemann’s two infantry regiments repulsed a Confederate mounted attack and then withdrew a mile
closer to town. To Forrest, the fight amounted to no more than a feint and show of force intended to hold
Jackson’s Union defenders in place while two mounted columns destroyed railroad track north and south of the
town and returned. This accomplished, Forrest withdrew from the Jackson area to attack Trenton and Humboldt.
Thus, although the Federals had checked a demonstration by a portion of Forrest’s force, a major
accomplishment, other Confederates had fulfilled an element of the expedition’s mission. |