Fort Henry
Other Names: None
Location: Stewart County and Henry County, Tennessee, and Calloway County,
Kentucky
Campaign: Federal Penetration up the Cumberland and Tennessee Rivers (1862)
Date(s): February 6, 1862
Principal Commanders: Brig. Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and Flag-Officer A.H. Foote
[US]; Brig. Gen. Lloyd Tilghman [CS]
Forces Engaged: District of Cairo [US]; Fort Henry Garrison [CS]
Estimated Casualties: 119 total (US 40; CS 79)
Description: By February 1862, Fort Henry, a Confederate earthen fort on the
Tennessee River with outdated guns, was partially inundated and the river
threatened to flood the rest. On February 4-5, Brig. Gen. U.S. Grant landed his
divisions in two different locations, one on the east bank of the Tennessee
River to prevent the garrison’s escape and the other to occupy the high ground
on the Kentucky side which would insure the fort’s fall; Flag-Officer Andrew H.
Foote’s seven gunboats began bombarding the fort. Brig. Gen. Lloyd
Tilghman, commander of the fort’s garrison, realized that it was only a matter
of time before Fort Henry fell. While leaving artillery in the fort to hold off
the Union fleet, he escorted the rest of his force out of the area and sent them
safely off on the route to Fort Donelson, 10 miles away. Tilghman then returned
to the fort and, soon afterwards, surrendered to the fleet, which had engaged
the fort and closed within 400 yards. Fort Henry’s fall opened the Tennessee
River to Union gunboats and shipping as far as Muscle Shoals, Alabama. After the
fall of Fort Donelson, ten days later, the two major water transportation routes
in the Confederate west, bounded by the Appalachians and the Mississippi River,
became Union highways for movement of troops and material.
Result(s): Union victory
CWSAC Reference #: TN001
Preservation Priority: IV.2 (Class B)