Dallas | May 28, 1864

Paulding County, Georgia

On May 28, 1864, Lt. Gen. William J. Hardee’s corps probed the Union line near Dallas held by Maj. Gen. John A. Logan’s XV Corps from the Army of the Tennessee. Hardee’s orders were to exploit any weakness or possible withdrawal in the Yankee line. The Confederates attacked Logan’s right and up the Powder Springs Road (modern day Main Street in Dallas). Fighting ensued but the Rebels were repulsed, suffering high casualties. Other divisions in Hardee’s corps like Maj. Gen. H. T. Walker’s further north pressured the Union line for three days, preventing an unobserved withdrawal. Sherman abandoned his lines at Dallas on June 1 and moved toward the Western and Atlantic Railroad, forcing Johnston to follow.

Various magazine covers stacked on top of one another, a baseball hat with an American Battlefield Trust logo and a man wearing a hoodie with an American Battlefield Trust logo design on it. Various magazine covers stacked on top of one another, a baseball hat with an American Battlefield Trust logo and a man wearing a hoodie with an American Battlefield Trust logo design on it.
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