From
the Union camps around Chattanooga, the ridge rose like a wall—steep, wooded,
and crowned with Confederate rifle pits and artillery. An Iowa soldier said it
looked “as if the rebels had piled the hill on purpose to keep us out.” Another
said it was “a place no sane man would charge unless driven there by fate or
fury.”
Iowa
troops had already seen both.
By
November 1863, Iowa regiments were scattered through the Army of the Cumberland
and parts of Sherman’s force north of town. Men from the Second, Sixth,
Seventh, Eighth, Eleventh, and Fifteenth Iowa Infantry were present in the
Chattanooga campaign, worn down by months of marching, short rations, and the
long siege that had nearly starved the army into surrender.

